Jump to content

Godzilla vs. SpaceGodzilla: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 24: Line 24:
}}
}}
{{nihongo|'''''Godzilla vs. SpaceGodzilla'''''|ゴジラVSスペースゴジラ|Gojira tai SupēsuGojira}} is a [[1994]] [[kaiju]] [[film]] directed by Kensho Yamashita and written by Hiroshi Kashiwabara. It was the twenty-first film released in the ''[[Godzilla]]'' series and sixth in the Heisei series of films. It is the second film to feature the [[Moguera]] and [[Godzilla Junior|Little Godzilla]] and also the seventh film to feature [[Mothra]]. It is the only film to feature [[Spacegodzilla]].
{{nihongo|'''''Godzilla vs. SpaceGodzilla'''''|ゴジラVSスペースゴジラ|Gojira tai SupēsuGojira}} is a [[1994]] [[kaiju]] [[film]] directed by Kensho Yamashita and written by Hiroshi Kashiwabara. It was the twenty-first film released in the ''[[Godzilla]]'' series and sixth in the Heisei series of films. It is the second film to feature the [[Moguera]] and [[Godzilla Junior|Little Godzilla]] and also the seventh film to feature [[Mothra]]. It is the only film to feature [[Spacegodzilla]].
_________________________________________________
_______________________________________________


==Story==
==Story==

Revision as of 17:06, 4 September 2009

Godzilla vs. SpaceGodzilla
Official Japanese poster
Directed byKensho Yamashita
Written byHiroshi Kashiwabara
Produced byTomoyuki Tanaka
Shogo Tomiyama
StarringMegumi Odaka
Jun Hashizume
Zenkichi Yoneyama
Akira Emoto
Towako Yoshikawa
CinematographyMasahiro Kishimoto
Music byTakayuki Hattori
Isao Shigetoh
Akira Ifukube (Godzilla theme)
Distributed byToho
Release dates
December 10, 1994
Running time
108 min.
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese
BudgetUS $10,300,000

Godzilla vs. SpaceGodzilla (ゴジラVSスペースゴジラ, Gojira tai SupēsuGojira) is a 1994 kaiju film directed by Kensho Yamashita and written by Hiroshi Kashiwabara. It was the twenty-first film released in the Godzilla series and sixth in the Heisei series of films. It is the second film to feature the Moguera and Little Godzilla and also the seventh film to feature Mothra. It is the only film to feature Spacegodzilla. _________________________________________________

Story

In 1995, a group of soldiers and scientists are setting up at Birth Island to try Project T against Godzilla. The plan is to plant a device on Godzilla which will allow the G-Force to control the mutant dinosaur telepathically, but the project fails. Meanwhile, Mothra sends a Fairy Mothra from space to Earth, and the scout uses a message from the Cosmos to warn the humans of grave danger. A space monster is planning to destroy Godzilla and conquer Earth, and with Mothra gone, the Earth will have to rely on Godzilla to save the planet. At the same time, a space monster indeed appears and attacks a NASA space station. Moguera, created from the remains of Super Mechagodzilla, is sent out to stop the monster but is defeated.

The monster lands on Birth Island and fights Godzilla. However, Godzilla is knocked out by the monster's corona beam while protecting Little Godzilla. Little Godzilla is captured in a crystalline prison below ground. The monster, for unknown reasoning, retreats, with Godzilla following him, in an attempt to free his imprisoned son. The scientists discover that the space monster is a clone of Godzilla, so they name it SpaceGodzilla.

The Japanese Mafia captures psychic Miki Saegusa and brings her back to their base, in an attempt to use Project T to gain control of Godzilla. However, their plan backfires. A recovery team is successfully dispatched and Miki and the team escape before SpaceGodzilla arrives and destroys the building. SpaceGodzilla lands in Fukuoka and destroys it in a matter of minutes, creating large crystals from the ground and turning the city into its fortress. Moguera arrives to once again fight SpaceGodzilla but is still no match for it. However, Godzilla arrives and fights SpaceGodzilla. It is discovered that SpaceGodzilla is using a large tower in the city as a power source and is absorbing the energy through its shoulder crystals. After taking advantage of this weakness, Godzilla destroys SpaceGodzilla (along with Moguera) by using his spiral ray and frees Little Godzilla. The G-force now accepts Godzilla as their new protecter. Miki, with her telepathic powers, gets the control device off of Godzilla.

The film ends with Godzilla swimming back to Birth island and the Fairy Mothra returns to outer space.

Cast

Box office

Release on December 10, the film sold approximately 3,200,000 tickets in Japan and grossed around $20,000,000 (32,000,000 world wide).

Critical reaction

Critical reaction to Godzilla vs. Spacegodzilla was mixed. Toho Kingdom said the film is "far from terrible" and "an underrated movie" but felt it suffered from an "overly complicated story," "underdeveloped characters," and "forgettable" music.[1] Monster Zero called the film "a curiously uninvolving effort" that "disappoints in nearly all aspects of the production" [2] American Kaiju criticized the "wildly uneven pacing," "uneven special effects," and "exceedingly lumpy story," but added that "most of the special effects are pretty fair" and "the monster battles are mostly fun."[3] DVDCULT said "It does have some great destruction scenes and monster battles; two things that make these films worthwhile to begin with. The monster Space Godzilla is excellently designed, and is certainly far more menacing than anything Dean Devlin and Roland Emmerich ever dreamed up."

Trivia

  • A children's television show centered around Little Godzilla was meant to be spun off from the film, but for various reasons never made it past the planning stages.
  • The Godzilla suit was in poor repair due to being in the water for so many scenes. At one point when Godzilla submerges into the water, the tip of his tail falls off.

DVD release

Columbia TriStar (Sony)

  • Released: February 1, 2000
  • Aspect Ratio: Widescreen (1.85:1) animorphic
  • Sound: English (2.0)
  • Region 1
  • Note: A double feature with Godzilla vs. Destoroyah. On the U.S. DVD release, the final scene in which Godzilla is in the water while Echoes of Love (Date of Birth) plays is cut; however, it is left in the TV, on demand and Japanese DVD versions.

Awards

In 1995, the film won the Best Grossing Films Award - Silver Award.

References

  1. ^ Review Anthony Romero, Toho Kingdom, February 6th, 2003
  2. ^ Review Ed Godziszewski, Monster Zero, June 10, 2002
  3. ^ ReviewMike Bogue, American Kaiju
  • Godzilla vs. SpaceGodzilla at IMDb
  • Godzilla vs. SpaceGodzilla at AllMovie
  • Godzilla vs. SpaceGodzilla at Rotten Tomatoes
  • "ゴジラvsスペースゴジラ (Gojira tai SupēsuGojira)" (in Japanese). Japanese Movie Database. Retrieved 2007-07-19.
  • Godzilla vs. SpaceGodzilla/Godzilla vs. Destoroyah toho kingdom page 1
  • Godzilla vs. SpaceGodzilla/Godzilla vs. Destoroyah toho kingdom page 2