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! colspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Godzilla film series]]'' character
! colspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Godzilla film series]]'' character
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! colspan="2" style="text-align:center; font-size: larger; background-color: #001; color: #ffa;" |Zilla
! colspan="2" style="text-align:center; font-size: larger; background-color: #001; color: #ffa;" |American Godzilla
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| colspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | [[Image:Zilla98 01.jpg|250px]]
| colspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | [[Image:Zilla98 01.jpg|250px]]

Revision as of 05:48, 14 January 2010

For the software naming trend see -zilla
Godzilla film series character
American Godzilla
File:Zilla98 01.jpg
Species Giant Mutant Marine Iguana
Alias Godzilla (American film and animated series)
Height 60[1]-90[2] m (197-295 ft)
Weight 500 tons[1]
Abilities Speed
Swimming
Asexual reproduction
Burrowing
Jumping
Wind breath
Atomic flame breath (animated series only)
Origins Nuclear testing in French Polynesia
First appearance Godzilla
Created by Roland Emmerich
Dean Devlin
Patrick Tatopoulos

Zilla (ジラ, Jira) is Toho Studios's official name for the title character of the 1998 TriStar Pictures film Godzilla.

Created from a French nuclear test, Zilla is a mutated marine iguana. Before Toho officially dubbed the creature Zilla, many fans developed several nicknames, such as GINO. (Godzilla In Name Only).[citation needed]

Appearances

Film

Godzilla (1998)

In the American Godzilla a marine iguana egg is irradiated by French nuclear tests in French Polynesia. Godzilla makes his presence known years later when he attacks a Japanese fishing ship. He then heads to New York City, dragging three trawlers under the sea on the way, then creating havoc in the Fulton Fish Market, before rampaging through the city. Manhattan is evacuated and the military attempt to kill Godzilla, first luring him out with a huge pile of fish. He takes the bait, but then is scared off by small arms fire. Godzilla is then chased by three AH-64 Apache attack helicopters. They fire, only to knock down the top two dozen stories and spires of the Chrysler Building. Godzilla escapes, but not before it is realized that he is pregnant, and is collecting food not only for himself, but also for his offspring. The military lures Godzilla out again, into the waters of the Hudson River and seemingly kill him with a torpedo. Meanwhile, hundreds of eggs are discovered in Madison Square Garden. The baby Godzillas begin to look for food, but are incinerated when the building is bombed. The adult Godzilla emerges from the wreckage, and is lured to the Brooklyn Bridge where he becomes entangled in the steel suspension cables, and is an easy target for the fighters. After Godzilla is hit with several missiles, he screams in pain and falls to the ground, his heart beating slowly until he breathes his last breath. All seems well until we see in the smoking ruins of the Garden, a single egg has survived and hatches revealing another baby Godzilla.

Animated series

The animated Godzilla from Godzilla: The Series

Godzilla: The Series, a Saturday morning cartoon not to be confused with the original series from Hanna-Barbera, continued the story of Godzilla's surviving offspring from the American film in a role reminiscent of the Japanese films of the late Shōwa era (1954-1975).

The series revolves around the only surviving offspring of the first Godzilla seen in the climax of the film. It imprints on Nick Tatopoulos and with Tatopoulos' monster hunting team HEAT, they travel around the world battling giant monsters.

The Godzilla from the series differs from the one from the film. The animated Godzilla cannot reproduce asexually, but can breath powerful blasts of radioactive fire. The creators of the show intended this Godzilla to be much more like the original Japanese version.

Godzilla: Final Wars

In Godzilla: Final Wars, Toho's rendition of the character attacks Sydney, Australia. It is one of the many monsters that suddenly attacked major cities until it was mind controlled by the Xilians. The Xilians later dispatched it against Godzilla but it was killed without putting up much of a fight.

Other appearances

  • The American Godzilla made an appearance in a 2006 Doritos commercial, in which it picks up a truck of Doritos and shakes chips into its mouth. In another Doritos commercial, it devours a spicy variant of Doritos, roars in pain, and dives into the Hudson River. Both were meant to parody the bait scene in the 1998 movie.
  • At the time of the release of the American film, Godzilla made several commercials for Taco Bell, crossing paths with the Taco Bell chihuahua.
  • Toys of the American Godzilla appear in Armageddon alongside Japanese Godzilla toys during the opening sequence in New York. This was a friendly jab at Roland Emmerich.
  • In the Robot Chicken episode That Hurts Me, the segment Godzilla Remade Again features Dean Devlin and Roland Emmerich remaking Godzilla once more; the segment goes on to show a scene of baby Godzillas attacking, only to begin inexplicably roller skating and dancing in a rink. When the studio head bemoans the fact that he trusted Devlin and Emmerich to make a decent Godzilla film, for a second time, and that they instead have produced an unmarketable pile of crap, for a second time, Devlin and Emmerich give each other a high-five.
  • The events of the American Godzilla are jokingly referenced in the opening of the 2001 Millennium Godzilla film Godzilla, Mothra and King Ghidorah: Giant Monsters All-Out Attack.

Video games

References

  1. ^ a b "Godzilla [American]". Retrieved 2007-06-06.
  2. ^ Zilla [Millennium]