Title: Godzilla (2014)
Director: Gareth Edwards
Cast: Aaron Taylor Johnson, Bryan Cranston, Juliette
Binoche, Ken Watanabe
There’s a bit of resurgence in giant monster movies
as of late, a renaissance if you will. It all started with Guillermo del Toro’s Pacific Rim (2013), which was a huge winner in my book, it showed that Kaiju movies could be cool and
bombastic and just plain awesome. My big worry after seeing Pacific Rim was how
Gareth Edward’s Godzilla could top it. As far as I’m concerned, Pacific Rim set
the bar pretty in the land of giant monster movies, so Godzilla would have to
be a pretty freaking cool monster movie in order to beat Pacific Rim. So…did
it? But I’m getting ahead of myself here. Getting back to Godzilla, just who
the hell is this Gareth Edwards guy? Well, a while back Edwards directed a
straight to dvd monster movie called Monsters (2010); a cool little alien
invasion flick that showed that Mr. Edwards knew his way around a monster
movie, he ‘got’ them, he understood them; to top things off, Monsters showed
that Edwards could do a lot on a small budget. So, Hollywood decided to give Edwards
his big break to show what he’s made of, the result is the Hollywood’s second
attempt at getting Godzilla right. Did it work? Was it a good Godzilla movie?
In Godzilla a mining operation discovers a giant
egg, which just so happens to be a Kaiju egg. The creatures inside are these
moth like (actually more like roach like) creatures who fly around the city
sucking up anything that’s radioactive, including nuclear power plants! This of
course spells certain doom for many nuclear plants around the world.
Fortunately, Godzilla has also awakened and has emerged from the ocean! Will
Godzilla protect or destroy the world from these giant radioactive cockroaches?
First things first, the filmmakers behind this movie
got Godzilla absolutely freaking perfect! Unlike Roland Emmerich’s Godzilla (1998),
which tried it’s very hardest to get away from the cheesier elements from the
Japanese Godzilla films, Gareth Edward’s Godzilla actually embraced Godzilla
exactly how he is depicted in the Japanese films, but with an added element of
reality to it. This isn’t just a guy in a suit; nope, this is a gigantic,
walking, stomping, atomic breathing King of All Monsters! So thanks go out to
Gareth Edwards for giving us the Godzilla we always wanted, a Godzilla that I’m
sure even the Japanese people can feel proud of and enjoy. On this film you
will see everything you want to see in a Godzilla film, you will see Godzilla
emerge from the ocean and go back into it, you will see him brawling with other
giant monsters and he most certainly fires his atomic breath! So feel assured,
if you’re a Godzilla fan, you will be pleased.
Aside from the awesomeness of Godzilla itself, the
film has an amazing asset going for it, which I felt they could have exploited
a bit more and that is actor Bryan Cranston, a solid actor if there ever was
any. While he is in the movie, the movie flows perfectly well; the performances
where believable and intense; unfortunately when he disappears half way through
the film as does Juliette Binoche, things loose believability. You have two
great actors and then you have them do a vanishing act to leave us with Aaron
Taylor Johnson for the rest of the film? Not that I have anything against Aaron
Taylor Johnson, but damn, Bryan Cranston could eat him for breakfast when it
comes to acting! Why this cheap ass exchange? I would have found a way to keep
Bryan Cranston on for the entire film!
The only real problem with this new Godzilla is the
human side which felt clichéd and unconvincing. A good actor can make or break
a film, and in this sense, this new Godzilla satisfied me only half way. Had
they found a way to keep Bryan Cranston throughout the whole film, this movie
would have gotten a perfect score from this reviewer, alas, we get clichéd characters
and forced situations instead. For example, there’s this whole sequence in
which Aaron Taylor Johnson has to save a little kid and you get the feeling
that they did this simply to turn him into a hero; this sequence, while
exciting, felt soooo forced and fake. Worse yet is that the kid disappears in a
few seconds after he is saved, without a word or a thanks. It’s like you served
your purpose in the plot kid, now scram! What the--? Characters weren’t well
developed because one, you take away the good actors and leave us with the less
experienced ones, and two, you have characters doing things simply to fulfill a
character type or a purpose in the plot. It’s like, you’re hero, you’re the
wife, you’re the soldier, you’re the scientist and you will do exactly what is
expected of your archetype and that’s it. Ugh. My advice is next time, work on
better human characters and the film should be better. Not that it’s an awful
film acting wise, but characters felt like archetypes, not real people. I
should add that this is a problem that many Japanese Godzilla films suffer from
as well, a weak human side.
But aside from that, this movie rocked the house.
Trust me when I say that whenever Godzilla is on, he is most certainly ON!
Godzilla commands that screen whenever it appears! So much so that when he disappears
you are left wanting more; which reminds me that what this movie needed more of
was Godzilla! There’s this thing that Edward’s does in the film, he shows us
Godzilla, teases us with this cool beast and then bam, the camera turns away!
And you’re left wanting more Godzilla! Which is cool in my book, he kind of
wets your appetite and the tortures ya by taking away what you want the most. I
guess this technique was done on purpose, to keep us wanting more, to make us
want a sequel; which by the way has just been approved! You will see Godzilla
stomp the world again! You see, this Godzilla film made close to 100 million in
one weekend alone! It’s a raging success! It is poised to make even more money
than Pacific Rim did, but that’s to be expected because Godzilla is a brand
name, and Pacific Rim was an original product. Still, if you ask me, if I had
to compare this new Godzilla to Pacific Rim, I say Pacific Rim is still the
superior of the two. It’s just more bombastic, bigger, more epic. But Godzilla
is a damn fine Kaiju film, not a disappointment in the least and a cinematic
experience not to be missed; go see Godzilla roar! It’s an experience!
Rating: 4 out of 5
I still think the ludicrously under-rated 1998 film is a better movie.
ReplyDeleteA lot of people hate it, I happen to think it's a fun monster movie. Had it been named something else, people would not hate it as much.
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