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Thread: Godzilla

  1. #16
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    I want one

    It would sit nicely next to the present Godzilla on my desk.

    Shochu Brand Choujugura Releases Godzilla-Shaped Bottle
    2014/06/22 FOOD
    Choujugura Godzilla 破懐王 SAKEゴジラ


    Choujugura Godzilla 720ml Porcelain Bottle and Box
    TM & © 1989 TOHO CO. LTD

    Japan’s Konishi Brewing Company has released a special collector’s edition of their Choujugura shochu in a bottle shaped like Godzilla from the recent American film.

    The 720ml bottle is a detailed model of the modern-day Godzilla. The bottle was originally an online-only release in 2011, and is being revived for general sales. Godzilla is currently experiencing a boom in popularity in Japan due to the recent digital remasters of older Godzilla films and the upcoming July 25th release of this year’s American-made Godzilla movie in Japanese theaters.

    The shochu, a type of Japanese grain alcohol, is distilled from 100 percent barley and made with carefully selected water. After drinking, the porcelain bottle can be displayed as a collector’s item, just like any other figure.

    Plans for the bottle started in 2009, during the 55th anniversary celebration of the first Godzilla movie, originally released on November 3rd, 1954. The bottle was created by sculptor Shigeaki Ito, under the supervision of Koichi Kawakita, the director of the series of six “Heisei Godzilla” films that started with “Godzilla vs. Biollante”.

    The bottle retails for 10,000 yen, plus tax. Ordering details are available on the official Choujugura site.
    Choujugura Godzilla 破懐王 SAKEゴジラ


    The detailed bottle is based on the Godzilla that appeared in “Godzilla vs. Biollante”.
    TM & © 1989 TOHO CO. LTD
    Choujugura Godzilla 破懐王 SAKEゴジラ


    Side view
    TM & © 1989 TOHO CO. LTD
    Choujugura Godzilla 破懐王 SAKEゴジラ


    The bottle is an impressive replica.
    TM & © 1989 TOHO CO. LTD
    Choujugura Godzilla 破懐王 SAKEゴジラ


    Reverse view
    TM & © 1989 TOHO CO. LTD
    Gene Ching
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  2. #17
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    Godzilla...I mean Gojirra!!

    New, Japanese-made Godzilla movie to start filming next summer
    Casey Baseel about an hour ago



    Terrible as it was, there was one good thing that came out of the 1998 American Godzilla movie. It was apparently so bad that franchise creator Toho Co. couldn’t bear to let it be the final on-screen appearance for the King of the Monsters, so the company made six more of its own Godzilla movies, culminating with 2004’s Godzilla: Final Wars.

    Now, after a 10-year break, Toho is going back to its deepest kaiju well, announcing that a new, Japanese-produced Godzilla film will start filming next year.

    This time, though, the reason for waking up Godzilla isn’t the embarrassing disappointment of an American-made offshoot. Just the opposite, as the impetus is the impressive box office performance of Legendary Picture’s 2014 Godzilla. Legendary’s reboot has earned some US$525 million worldwide, including 32 billion yen ($267 million) at theatres in Godzilla’s birthplace of Japan.

    Filming is expected to start next summer and finish sometime in the fall, with the domestic theatrical release scheduled for 2016. The new Japanese film has no story connection to the 2014 version, so Legendary’s MUTOs won’t be making any appearances.

    ▼ The lower-calorie Japanese diet, though, means moviegoers probably stand a better chance of seeing Godzilla’s neck this time around.


    Toho is yet to announce the new movie’s cast and ostensible villain monster, not has the company made any comment about whether or not the upcoming film is a standalone project or the jumping-off point for a new series of Japanese-made Godzilla movies. But while Godzilla, the character, is birthed by radiation, Godzilla movies come from ticket and merchandise sales, so provided that the big guy does as well at the box office in 2016 as he did in 2014, we might be seeing a lot of him over the next decade.
    Here's my very belated review of Godzilla 2014:
    I was excited to see one of my fav actresses, Juliette Binoche, in the opening credits. I thought, 'cool, maybe it's not as bad as they say.' Well, that didn't last long. Having lived there, it's always kinda fun to see SF destroyed, even if its an alternate universe SF where the Golden Gate leads to Oakland and you can make from Chinatown's Confucius Gate to a harbor on foot in 15 minutes hand-carrying a missile. NOT. It wasn't even a dragon missile. Man in rubber suit Gojira was better IMHO. Hollywood sux. Back to Shaw Brothers and Bollywood.
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  3. #18
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    Quote Originally Posted by GeneChing View Post
    Man in rubber suit Gojira was better IMHO. Hollywood sux. Back to Shaw Brothers and Bollywood.
    Agreed 100%.

    Although I thought that the CGI monsters in Godzilla 2014 were well-done, they lack the soul of the old rubber-suited Godzilla and other monsters. Americans in particular like to make fun of the 'man in a rubber suit stomping on a miniature Tokyo', but those old movies/old effects were MUCH harder to set up and pull off than modern CGI. My fave are still the original Godzilla/Gojira and War of the Gargantuas, but even into the late 1960s, when the kaiju films catered more to children, the effects would be **** difficult to recreate today...like the final monster battle in Destroy All Monsters. Not to mention the extreme difficulties for the men wearing those suits.

    To this day, I still feel that some of the best and most effective uses of CGI were in Terminator 2 and the first Jurassic Park. In JP, the combining of full-scale robotics, models, stop-action animation, and CGI were near-perfect. Going back even further to 1981, the dragon in Dragonslayer was probably an example of *very* early CGI, and IMO is still the best 'live-action' movie dragon. CGI, used in moderation, is great. But most effects-driven movies today over-rely on it to the point of laziness, and everything comes across looking the same and cartoonish.
    Last edited by Jimbo; 12-08-2014 at 11:09 AM.

  4. #19
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    The Man Who Was Godzilla

    Gene Ching
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  5. #20
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    Godzilla: King of the Monsters

    It looks like Godzilla: King of the Monsters is the sequel to the last Hollywood Godzilla, not the Toho Godzilla: Resurgence

    JUNE 08, 2017 5:20pm PT by Borys Kit
    Zhang Ziyi Joins Kyle Chandler in 'Godzilla: King of the Monsters'


    Courtesy of Legendary
    Zhang Ziyi

    The actress will also play a role in Legendary and Warner Bros.' burgeoning Monsterverse.

    Zhang Ziyi, the international star of Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, has joined Legendary and Warner Bros.’ creature feature Godzilla: King of the Monsters.

    But wait — that’s not all. The deal calls for the actress to join not just that movie but to figure prominently in their Monsterverse, what the studios are calling their monster-based cinematic universe.

    Zhang will first appear in the sequel to 2014's Godzilla, joining Kyle Chandler, Vera Farmiga and Millie Bobby Brown in the follow-up that is set several years after the events of the original pic.

    Michael Dougherty is directing from a script by Dougherty and Zach Shields.

    The actress will then appear in other monster installments, including Godzilla vs Kong, as her character is a key figure in the covert, creature-cataloging Monarch organization established in those films.

    Godzilla: King of the Monsters is set to be released March 22, 2019. Godzilla vs Kong is slated to bow in 2020.

    Zhang, who also appeared in Chinese-language hits Hero and House of Flying Daggers, recently wrapped production on a sci-fi thriller produced by J.J. Abrams that is connected to his Cloverfield movies.

    She is repped by ICM Partners and Mosaic.
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  6. #21
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    アニメーション映画『godzilla 怪獣惑星』特報1

    Gene Ching
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  7. #22
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    A little late...

    ...but we'd be remiss if we didn't include this here.

    Haruo Nakajima, the First Actor to Play Godzilla, Dies at 88
    By RUSSELL GOLDMAN AUG. 8, 2017


    Haruo Nakajima, who played Godzilla, at his home in Sagamihara, Japan, in 2014. To perfect the monster’s notoriously destructive gait, he spent hours at the zoo, studying how elephants and bears walked. Credit Junji Kurokawa/Associated Press

    Haruo Nakajima, the Japanese actor who played the movie monster Godzilla in a dozen films and whose booming steps in a 200-pound rubber suit sent the denizens of Tokyo running into cinematic history, died on Monday. He was 88.

    His daughter, Sonoe Nakajima, said the cause was pneumonia. She did not say where he died.

    Mr. Nakajima was a 25-year-old stunt actor with just four movies to his credit when he was cast in what are perhaps Japan’s two most famous films of that era, both released in 1954: Akira Kurosawa’s masterpiece “Seven Samurai,” in which he had a bit part, and “Godzilla.”

    In “Godzilla” he played the title character: a gigantic, irradiated lizard whose mutated form and destructive power wreak havoc on Tokyo. The first movie in a long-running franchise, it was released nine years after the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki as a not-so-thinly veiled fable about the dangers of nuclear weapons.


    Video by TheSerenityEnd

    “One might remotely regard him as a symbol of Japanese hate for the destruction that came out of nowhere and descended upon Hiroshima one pleasant August morn,” Bosley Crowther of The New York Times wrote of the monster in a 1956 review of “Godzilla: King of the Monsters,” the English-dubbed version of the film released in North America. “But we assure you that the quality of the picture and the childishness of the whole idea do not indicate such a calculation. Godzilla was simply meant to scare people.”

    Mr. Nakajima would eventually put on the heavy rubber monster costume 12 times from 1954 to 1972 in a series of movies that became an international phenomenon.


    Mr. Nakajima in 1966. He donned the Godzilla rubber monster costume 12 times from 1954 to 1972. Credit Kyodo, via Reuters

    The success of Godzilla kicked off Japan’s golden age of tokusatsu, or “special filming” movies, in which rubber-costumed actors portraying colossal, terrifying creatures typically destroyed scale-model sets, creating illusions of reality that would one day be generated even more spectacularly by computers.

    “We had to improvise, and make it all look real on screen,” Mr. Nakajima told The Times in 2013.

    He recalled Godzilla’s creator, Eiji Tsuburaya, struggling amid Japan’s postwar shortages and rationing to find enough rubber and latex to construct the costume.

    “You don’t learn this from a textbook but by doing,” Mr. Nakajima said of those early days. “There is no chance to learn now.”


    Godzilla destroys a train in a scene from the film. Credit Toho Co. Ltd.

    Wearing a hot, heavy suit beneath the soundstage’s bright lights had him sweating so much, he said, that at the end of a day’s shooting he could wring enough perspiration from his undershirt to fill half a bucket.

    To perfect the monster’s destructive gait, Mr. Nakajima spent hours at the zoo studying how elephants and bears walked. He wanted the monster to be believable, he said in interviews.

    Mr. Nakajima was born on Jan. 1, 1929, in Yamagata, Japan. He was 16 when Japan surrendered to the Allies, ending World War II. His first credited acting role was in “Sword for Hire,” in 1952, when he was 23.

    As a contract actor for the Japanese studio Toho, Mr. Nakajima starred in dozens of other monster movies, including “King Kong Returns,” a 1967 Japanese production in which he again played the title character, this time in an ape costume.

    He retired from acting in 1973. Beginning in the 1990s, he made frequent appearances at conventions of comic-book and movie fans. He lived in a suburb of Tokyo. There was no immediate information on survivors, besides his daughter.

    Mr. Nakajima was the first iteration of Godzilla but not the last. Toho produced 27 more Godzilla films after Mr. Nakajima hung up his rubber suit in 1972. Since then, Hollywood has produced three “Godzilla” movies. The next will star Ken Watanabe and is scheduled for release in 2019.

    Follow Russell Goldman on Twitter @GoldmanRussell.
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  8. #23
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    RIP, Haruo Nakajima.



    I finally got to see Shin Godzilla, and it's a good one. Though, IMO, the original 1954 Gojira (WITHOUT Raymond Burr edited in) remains the all-time best Godzilla movie.

    Shin Godzilla returns to the general spirit of the original, but takes it much further, in terms of the creature's mutation, size and destructive capabilities. Particularly interesting (and in all likelihood boring and frustrating for fans who were expecting another Godzilla tag team smackdown) are the endless logistics and bureaucracy that occur before, during and after a monster's attack on a city, and in planning and launching a counterstrike against it. It gives the movie a much more realistic feel than any other kaiju movie, whether Japanese or an American adaptation. Much more complex than the 1950s and 60s-era monster movies, where only a couple of scientists, and the military, were utilized to deal with the monster. This new Godzilla is a juggernaut of such massive proportions that he seems to not even be aware of the tiny humans on the ground. It's quite obvious that much of the inspiration for this was the Fukushima nuclear disaster, although that is not mentioned.

    I watched the Japanese language w/English subs option, and IMO, they probably could've used better American actors. When the Americans spoke (English, of course), most of them sounded as if they were reading off of a teleprompter.

    I enjoyed the fact that the makers of the new movie paid tribute to Akira Ifukube's classic soundtracks by using two or three from the original Gojira, as well as at least one from Invasion of Astro-Monster (a.k.a., Monster Zero).
    Last edited by Jimbo; 08-17-2017 at 09:39 AM.

  9. #24
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    Linking some threads: Ultraman+Godzilla+Tokusatsu

    I was a huge Tokusatsu fan growing up. Still am actually so these new anime versions of Ultraman don't quite do it for me. Although I must confess that I really enjoyed the new Godzilla animes (I should review those on the forum some day).

    Being Asian, the only role models on TV that were my race were Mr. Sulu, tokusatsu characters like Ultraman and of course, Kung Fu movies. Much of my family is in Hawaii so when growing up, I visited often. There was a whole expanded world of tokusatsu there because Hawaii imported a lot of Japanese TV. So I was more of a fan of Ultra-Seven and the extended Ultra family because it was cooler. But truly, it was all about Kikaider for me. There was a live-action reboot of that a few years ago, but I still have yet to see that.

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  10. #25
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    Shin Japan Heroes Universe

    Feb 14, 2022 9:18pm PT
    Godzilla, Ultraman and Kamen Rider Join Forces in Shin Japan Heroes Universe From Rival Studios and Anno Hideaki

    By Mark Schilling

    Studio Khara
    Leading Japanese entertainment firms Toho, Toei, Studio Khara and Tsuburaya Productions are joining forces to launch the Shin Japan Heroes Universe, a project modeled on the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Shin Japan Heroes brings together such iconic characters as Godzilla, Ultraman and Kamen Rider, as well as the world of anime maestro Anno Hideaki’s Evangelion sci-fi franchise.

    Details in Monday’s announcement were scanty, but the project team has revealed an emblem and visual showing all four “heroes” together, as well as a website.

    A starting point for the project was “Shin Godzilla” (translation: “New Godzilla”), the 2016 smash hit live-action film that Anno scripted and co-directed. It was followed by last year’s hit anime “Evangelion: 3.0+1.0 Thrice Upon a Time,” which was also directed by Anno for his Studio Khara anime house as the fourth and final film in the “Rebuild of Evangelion” film franchise. Released in March of last year by Toho and Toei, it became the highest-earning film of 2021 in Japan, with total box office of $92 million.

    Also, slated for release on May 13, 2022 is “Shin Ultraman,” a live-action film based on the iconic Ultraman sci-fi TV show with Anno scripting and producing and his “Shin Godzilla” co-director Higuchi Shinji directing. Toho will distribute. Finally, set for release in March of 2023 is “Shin Kamen Rider,” which Anno is scripting and directing. Toei is the distributor.

    A core company behind the project is Tsuburaya, the effects production house that has worked with both Toho (“Godzilla”) and Toei (“Ultraman,” “Kamen Rider”), which are ordinarily fierce rivals at the Japanese box office.

    The new project will also encompass merchandize, events and other tie-ins derived from the Shin Japan Heroes Universe concept.
    threads
    Godzilla
    Kamen-Rider
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    Shin Japan Heroes Universe
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  11. #26
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    Godzilla & Nissin Cup Noodles

    GODZILLA X NISSIN CUP NOODLES® LANYARD AND PIN SET (2022 CON EXCLUSIVE)
    $ 30.00
    Limited to 800 pieces worldwide!

    Take the world’s most famous kaiju with you anywhere! The Godzilla x Nissin Cup Noodles® Lanyard and 4pc Pin Set features Godzilla and the incredibly delicious Cup Noodles® for a tasty mashup that will help you keep track of badges, keys, and more. It includes a colorful printed lanyard and a 4-pack of 1.5” enamel pins to enjoy!
    Noodles
    Godzilla
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  12. #27
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    'Godzilla' crocodile ramen

    Taiwan restaurant launches 'Godzilla' crocodile ramen
    Customer says steamed crocodile resembles chicken, braised version tastes like pork feet
    By Lyla Liu, Taiwan News, Staff Writer
    2023/06/26 16:08

    A restaurant in Douliu City introduces "Godzilla" ramen featuring crocodile meat as its main ingredient. (Facebook, Nu Wu Mao Kuei photo)
    TAIPEI (Taiwan News) — A restaurant in Douliu City, Yunlin County debuted its "Godzilla" ramen featuring crocodile meat as its main ingredient.

    Nu Wu Mao Kuei (女巫貓葵) announced on Facebook the launch of its "Godzilla" ramen, which is prepared by steaming or braising the front leg of a crocodile. In a clip, a young female customer samples both flavors and describes the dish as surprisingly delicious.

    She says the steamed version of the dish resembles chicken, while the braised meat has a taste similar to pork feet. The soup contains over 40 spices, and the owner reportedly learned how to make the spicy "witch soup" during a trip to Thailand, SETN reported

    The crocodiles used for this dish are sourced from a farm in Taitung. The owner was inspired by the giant isopods ramen, which went viral at another restaurant.

    The owner has reportedly received private messages from those expressing interest in the dish, but so far, only several bloggers have tried it. Taiwanese actress Ning Chang (張鈞甯) visited the store and complimented their beef noodle, according to the Facebook page.

    The dish is priced at NT$1,500 (US$48) per bowl and is exclusively available for dining inside. The restaurant requires online bookings, as the farm provides only about two portions per day.

    "Godzilla" ramen features crocodile meat in spicy soup. (Facebook, Nu Wu Mao Kuei video)
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  13. #28
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    24-Hour Godzilla Channel Coming to Pluto TV

    24-Hour Godzilla Channel Coming to Pluto TV With Exclusive Films
    By NICK VALDEZ - June 27, 2023 10:00 am EDT

    Godzilla is coming to Pluto TV with a huge new channel dedicated to showing off tons of Godzilla movies and shows 24 hours a day with some exclusive films to boot! TOHO's famous Kaiju has been stomping through many eras since the giant monster was first introduced back in the 1950s, and has since amassed a massive library of TV shows and movies that fans still enjoy to this day. Now Pluto TV has made checking out your favorite Godzilla projects easier than ever before with a new streaming channel with the platform highlighting all of the biggest and best Godzilla outings over the years!

    Pluto TV has announced a new Godzilla channel filled with not only classics such as the original 1954 Godzilla debut film, Godzilla vs. Megalon, and more but even left-field additions such as the animated Godzilla: The Series from the late '90s and early '00s. But the biggest surprise is that this new Godzilla channel will also offer up seven Godzilla films that are exclusive to Pluto TV as fans won't be able to find them streaming anywhere else. Read on to see the massive list of movies and TV shows coming to Pluto TV's new Godzilla channel launching on July 1st.


    (Photo: Pluto TV)
    Godzilla Movies and Shows Coming to Pluto TV

    All Monsters Attack (Godzilla's Revenge)
    Godzilla 1999
    Godzilla 2000
    Godzilla (1954)
    Godzilla Raids Again
    Godzilla: King of the Monsters (1956)
    Mothra
    Ghidorah, The Three-Headed Monster
    Mothra vs. Godzilla
    Invasion of the Astro-Monster
    Ebirah, Horror of the Deep (Godzilla vs. The Sea Monster)
    Son of Godzilla
    Destroy All Monsters
    Godzilla vs. Hedorah
    Godzilla vs. Gigan
    Godzilla vs. Megalon
    Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla
    Terror of Mechagodzilla
    The Return of Godzilla / Godzilla 1985 (Pluto TV Exclusive)
    Godzilla vs. Biollante (Pluto TV Exclusive)
    Godzilla vs. King Ghidorah (Pluto TV Exclusive)
    Godzilla vs. Mothra (Pluto TV Exclusive)
    Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla 2 (Pluto TV Exclusive)
    Godzilla vs. SpaceGodzilla (Pluto TV Exclusive)
    Godzilla vs. Destroyah (Pluto TV Exclusive)
    Rebirth of Mothra
    Rebirth of Mothra 2
    Rebirth of Mothra 3
    Godzilla: The Series
    Godzilla vs. Megaguirus
    Godzilla, Mothra, and King Ghidorah: Giant Monster All-Out Attack
    Godzilla Against MechaGodzilla
    Godzilla: Tokyo S.O.S.
    Godzilla: Final Wars
    Pluto TV teases the new 24-Hour Godzilla channel as such, "The King of the Monsters has made landfall on Pluto TV! Emerging in 1954, Godzilla has become a global icon and symbol that has transcended time and pop culture. After debuting as a terror that descended upon Tokyo, Godzilla has fought numerous foes and gained new allies over several distinct eras. While each film stands alone in its own moment in time, the evolution of Godzilla followed advancements and film and technology along with cultural trends, yet always staying rooted in the origins from 1954. Today, fans can celebrate one of the world's most renowned entertainment characters with Godzilla channel collection and experience their favorite movie moments from the never-ending clash between kaiju and humankind."
    I know friends who will totally get into this...
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  14. #29
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    GODZILLA MINUS ONE Official Teaser

    Gene Ching
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  15. #30
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    Happy Godzilla Day!



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