Essential Daikaiju

This entry comes as a fill-in while I’m working on a number of interview articles for Undead Backbrain. It is potentially controversial — at least for those who find being controversial in regards to giant monster films a reasonable way to pass the time.

A while ago I was contacted by a PhD student who was working on his thesis project — “the development of a digital game about a kaiju of [his] own design”. He was trying to familiarise himself with the genre, to understand how it was shaped, its meaning and its underlying narrative. He wrote: “I’m looking to develop a sort of critical argument for the value of kaiju, what makes good kaiju, and hopefully extrapolating that into where we might look to next in various media.”

After I directed him to some of my own writings on the subject — especially an article on the history of daikaiju eiga and its metaphorical underpinnings that appeared a few years ago — he asked me my opinion as to which of the enormous number of films on the giant monster movie list attached to the Backbrain I would consider it most essential for him to see. Specifically he was curious as to my thoughts on the most important/significant titles in lieu of his interest in daikaiju design and narrative development.

The following was how I answered. He had a lesser interest in dinosaurs, giant snakes and dragons and the like — the things that appear in the “Relatively Giant” section of the list — so that governed my response somewhat, though not by much.

Feel free to argue.

The Most Important/Significant Daikaiju Films

Though a list of essential giant monster movies (leaving out the ones I’ve listed under “Cameo” and “Relatively Giant”) would probably change every time I did it, here it is for now. The absolutely major ones, the status of which would never change, are marked with an *:

The Lost World (1925)* — yes, it’s a dinosaur movie, but it started the genre and set many of the tropes. That Brontosaurus rampaging through London is the Father of them all.

King Kong (1933)* — he may be just a giant ape, but he influenced everything to come and was the first, and one of the few, to achieve “classic” status beyond the genre.

The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms (1953)* — still a dinosaur, but a fictional one. The Rhedosaur led to the next in line, the Real King.

Gojira (Godzilla)* (1954) — I’m talking about the Japanese version here, which is now available in the US. The US-adapted one (“Godzilla, King of the Monsters”, 1956) is a much lesser movie, though it is largely thanks to its popularity that the daikaiju eiga genre took off in Japan. The money, you know.

Mothra (1961) — with this film, and the next one below, the daikaiju eiga genre started to take shape as its own thing, rather than simply replicating the Hollywood giant monster film.

Godzilla vs Mothra (1964, aka “Godzilla vs the Thing” in the US)*

King Kong vs Godzilla (1962) — this apparently remains the biggest box-office success among Godzilla films in Japan. But you need to see the Japanese version to appreciate it. As that is a rather difficult thing to do, try not to judge it on the truly awful US re-edit! Remember, the original was meant to be a comedy.

Now it gets hard. Part of me says you should try and see ALL the other Godzilla films, but I’ll list what I see as the best/most influential. The caveat that you should see them in original versions, subtitled, applies throughout. As most of them have now been released in this form in the US, it shouldn’t be impossible:

Ghidrah, the Three-Headed Serpent
Godzilla vs. Monster Zero (aka Invasion of the Astro Monster)
Son of Godzilla
Destroy All Monsters*
Godzilla vs Hedorah (aka Godzilla vs the Smog Monster)*
Godzilla vs Gigan — mainly for the weird monster opponent; it’s not a great film
Terror of Mechagodzilla
Godzilla 1984 — a sort of remake that re-started the series. But watch only the original version, not the one with Raymond Burr.
Godzilla vs Biollante — a brilliant opponent monster!
Godzilla vs King Ghidorah* — this one simply has everything and is wonderfully, unashamedly absurd.
Godzilla vs Mothra (1992)
Godzilla vs Mechagodzilla (1993)
Godzilla vs Space Godzilla — much denigrated but it has its value
Godzilla vs Destroyer*

[I have included all the Heisei or 1990s films because of the way the monster designs have become so influential. But they’re pretty good films, too.]

Godzilla Millennium 2000 — the Japanese version is better and one of my favourites, but you’ll probably have to watch the US version. It’s OK, though more comically exaggerated
Godzilla vs Megaguiras
Godzilla, Mothra, King Ghidorah: Giant Monsters All-Out Attack* — controversial re-working but I love it for its SFX and its pretensions
Godzilla Against Mechgodzilla
Godzilla, Mothra, Mechagodzilla: Tokyo SOS
Godzilla Final Wars* — they’re all there. It’s one big celebration!

[OK, I’ve ended up listing most of the G films, but for your purposes, that’s not a bad thing. And it is inevitable.]

Gamera the Invincible (1965)*
Gamera vs. Gaos

[The old Gamera films were for kids, but the monsters are very weird, so you might want to hunt all of them up.]

Gamera, Guardian of the Universe*
Gamera 2: Advent of Legion*
Gamera 3: The Revenge of Iris**

[This modern series is essential viewing because it was such a stunning re-think of the monster and they are such good films. The last is, I think, the best daikaiju eiga apart from the original Godzilla, hence the two “stars”.]

Gamera: The Brave — lovely film, if less full-on than the above Gamera films.

Dogora, the Space Monster
Frankenstein Conquers the World — weird weird stuff
War of the Gargantuas* — according to Stuart Galbraith in “Monsters Are Attacking Tokyo: The Incredible World of Japanese Fantasy Films”, this is the most influential daikaiju eiga in Japan, apart from “Gojira”
Daimajin — there were three of these giant living statue films. They’re all good, but very similar. Any one would do.
The X from Outer Space — bad film, awful dubbing, but I love the monster! And now there’s a sequel.
King Kong Escapes
Space Amoeba* [aka Yog, Monster from Space] — the original is essential because of the monsters
Rebirth of Mothra — there are three films in this series. I like them; they are for kids largely and very colourful.

[Try and find some Ultraman. The original series is not, in my opinion, the best, but it is available in the US, subtitled, and it is Ultraman that took the design of the monsters to an extreme. The recent Ultraman Max would be the one to see, but it isn’t available in the US. Ultraman Nexus is brilliant — again, not available, and also not as many monsters. This one went for realism. Not so useful for you perhaps.

There are a few Ultraman films available in the US. Try to find Ultraman Tiga and Ultrman Gaia: The Battle in Hyperspace. It’s one of my favourites in terms of its colourful extravagance of idea, if slightly juvenile.]

Ultraman The Next* — it’s available in the US and an excellent film with a great monster.

US films (not strictly speaking “daikaiju”, but they do form a “giant monster” genre of their own):

Them!*
It Came From Beneath the Sea*
Tarantula
The Black Scorpion
The Deadly Mantis
The Giant Behemoth
The Giant Claw
Kronos
Twenty Million Miles to Earth
The Blob — the older one is the most famous, but the 1980s remake is a much better film
Gorgo*
Reptilicus
Valley of Gwangi — a dinosaur, but such a good one! And there’s cowboys! And a running battle in a cathedral.
The Mighty Peking Man
Q- the Winged Serpent*
Pulgasari (1985) — hard to get, but if you can, its back story is way too interesting to neglect
Jurassic Park
Anaconda — if one must include giant snakes
Deep Rising
Godzilla (US) — a bad Godzilla film but an okay remake of “The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms”!
Eight Legged Freaks

As for recent ones, you’re guess is as good as mine, but I would venture to include:

The Host*
Cloverfield*
Transformers

Oh, and I want to add:

Jason and the Argonauts
The Seventh Voyage of Sinbad
(and Ray Harryhausen’s other Sinbad movies) — for the mythological slant (and they’re good films, with great stop-motion monsters).

Posted in Daikaiju, Film, Giant Monsters, Godzilla, Idle Thoughts, List | 6 Comments

Archive: A [Fake] Shot of Reptisaurus

Reptisaurus flies

From clubdesmonstres.com via Kaiju Search-Robot Avery

[Note: check the comments to find out about this shot. Seems it’s a “manipulated” picture. Reptisaurus was not even there at the time! When asked about it, he commented: “I’ve never been to Club Med, though I’ve heard the guests are quite delicious there.”]

Posted in Archival, Film, Fraudulent information, Giant Monsters, Update | 6 Comments

A Monstrous Conversion?

Apparently Eli Roth, director of “torture porn” horror movies such as Hostel, has decided to turn his attention to the giant monster subgenre — and a PG-13 rating.

Yahoo! Movies reported that he was “shooting for a family crowd” with his next project.

Roth told reporters on Wednesday [23 April 2008] he is two weeks away from finishing a script for a science-fiction action film inspired by the mainstream hits Cloverfield and Transformers.

“This will be my first big-budget, PG-13, mass-destruction movie,” he said backstage at the music industry’s NME Awards in Los Angeles. “I want total chaos and pandemonium.”

He declined to detail the plot ahead of a “big announcement” next month.

Read the full interview here.

Via Horror Movies &Stuff forum and Kaiju Search-Robot Avery

Posted in Film, Giant Monsters, Interviews, News | 4 Comments

DreamKeeper (2003)

DreamKeeper (Canada/US-2003; TV; dir. Steve Barron)

This film is based on Native American mythological tales, recounted to a culturally recalcitrant youngster by his traditionalist grandfather. It is a Hallmark TV movie and was the winner of an Emmy for Visual SFX and Best Film at the American Indian Film Festival, as well as being nominated for a Saturn Award.

You can see how effective the SFX are from this excellent sequence featuring a mythological warrior fighting the lake serpent Uncegila — videoed from a TV broadcast by the look of it, with Croatian subtitles and an added musical soundtrack:

Posted in Film, Giant Monsters, Lake Monsters, Trailers, TV | 1 Comment

The Passing of a Monster Maker

As you would have heard by now, one of the greatest cinematic monster makers of all time died on 16 June, succumbing to multiple myeloma, which he’d been fighting for seven years. Stanley Winston, who was 62, will be missed not only by his family and friends, but by his numerous colleagues at the Stan Winston Studios and by his legions of fans.

Stan Winston

For a long time Winston has been the “face” of genre special effects and SFX make-up — a superstar in the field, whose name is almost as much of a draw-card as those of the great directors he worked with (who included Tim Burton, John Carpenter, James Cameron, Neil Jordan, Steven Spielberg, Joe Dante, Terry Gilliam, Tobe Hooper, Peter Hyams, Stephen Hopkins, Frank Marshall, Steve Miner, Michael Bay, Fred Dekker, Gary Sherman and others — a virtual role-call of genre filmmakers). From his gargoyles in 1972, through a parade of aliens, predators, things, dinosaurs, robots, ghosts, demons and other assorted creatures to his recent work in constructing Iron Man, he has done more to create the icons of modern horror and science fiction than almost anyone. In his directorial debut film Pumpkinhead (1988), he created one of my favourite monster designs.

Pumpkinhead maquette

Winston has won four Oscars for his work in Jurassic Park, Terminator 2: Judgment Day, and Aliens, but has won 17 other film awards and has been nominated 31 times. Check out his amazing filmography for yourself on IMDB.

I have known Stan Winston’s name — and have considered it a guarantee of quality monster or SFX design if it appeared on the credits of a movie, however effective the specific film itself may or may not have been — for nearly as long as I have watched movies. I will definitely miss his expertise.

Below is a collection of images, mainly taken from auction material, that illustrate the extent of his talent. They are all maquettes made by Winston himself, or under his guidance, that were used on-screen in the various films in which they featured.

Velociraptor from Lost World: Jurassic Park 2

Velociraptor from Jurassic Park 2

The Creature from the Black Lagoon from The Monster Squad (1987)

Creature from Monster Squad

The Mummy from The Monster Squad (1987)

Mummy from The Monster Squad

The Queen from Aliens (1986)

The Queen from Aliens (1986)

Eggs from Aliens (1986)

Eggs from Aliens (1986)

Kothoga from The Relic (1997)

Kothoga from The Relic (1997)

The Spitter from Jurassic Park (1993)

The Spitter from Jurassic Park (1993)

Spinosaurus Head from Jurassic Park 3 (2001)

Spinosaurus Head from Jurassic Park 3

Pteradon from Jurassic Park 3 (2001)

Pteradon from Jurassic Park 3 (2001)

Thermian from Galaxy Quest (1999)

Thermian from Galaxy Quest (1999)

Demon from End of Days (1999)

Demon from End of Days (1999)

Scavenger demon from Constantine (2005)

Scavenger demon from Constantine (2005)

And of course his great Godzilla for Jan De Bont’s unmade 1994 version of Godzilla

Godzilla 94 full front

Posted in Horror, News, Obituary | 7 Comments

Zombie Death Tax Amendment

UK Zombies ‘liable for own death duties’, rules Taxman

Following recent legislation which extended the powers of Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs, the un-dead are now eligible for tax on earnings as well as their own death duties. A spokesperson for HMRC said, “These changes are good news for the living. By placing the onus on paying inheritance tax onto the walking dead, it means that anyone who rises from the grave is immediately in arrears with the Inland Revenue.”

British zombies have reacted angrily. “It’s basically not worth me coming back from the dead at all in this country,” claimed Vic Thomson, a former accountant turned zombie from Reading. “We may have to move abroad, and are currently looking at graveyards on the Canary Islands.”

Scandalous!

Read the full story here.

Posted in Fraudulent information, Zombies | Leave a comment

Update: New Zero Trooper F Trailer

Remember the low budget Ultraman take-off that I’ve mentioned before? The one that was looking mighty good, despite its non-existent budget? Well, now an official trailer has appeared:

For past posts — including the film’s opening sequence — go here.

Source: Twitch via Kaiju Search-Robot Avery

Posted in Daikaiju, Film, Giant Monsters, Trailers, Update | 1 Comment

Update: Cleavagefield Teaser Poster(s)

Cleavagefield promo 1

Cleavagefield Teaser

Click on the image to see the monsters bigger.

Source:

  • First image from horror-movies.ca
  • Second image: straight from Jim Wynorski (Thanks, Jim)
Posted in Ads, Giant Monsters, Teaser | 4 Comments

Once Again Monsters Sell Cars

And:

DVD stores, too:

Posted in Ads, Giant Monsters, Lake Monsters | 1 Comment

Doctor Grordbort’s Contrapulatronic Dingus Directory (Catalogue Edition)

A catalogue of wondtabulous merchandise has just become available. Produced by the good folk at WETA studios (SFX creators for such films as Peter Jackson’s Lord of the Rings trilogy and King Kong), in conjunction with Dark Horse Books, it is a visually spectacular and conceptually ironic collection of weapons and other devices of great use to Imperial Interplanetary conquerors and their constituents.

Just look at this testimonial!

Crudmobot 370

Crudmobot 370, a fine piece of Grordbortian manufacturing if ever we saw one, was initially programmed for helping the elderly and gardening. But not anymore!

“Dear Doctor, I just wanted to inform you that I think my head is partially repurposed wave weapon components. While changing Eldritch Fuddle Senior’s man-diaper, to stop himself from slipping, he grabbed my head to balance. Something clicked. In a blinding flash of electricity and excremental vapour his entire mid section was gone.
That was a surprise, for both of us. My surprise circuits almost melted in fact, and my regret valve just imploded, fused solid. Anyoldway, just thought you might be interested to know that, and that my new job as a truck mounted heavy gun for the French Foreign Legion is going spiffingly. I am now disintegrating minorities I had never even heard of!”

The catalogue looks fabulous and is eminently useful for all you folk out there intent on establishing the superiority of the Empire.

Here is the cover:

Doctor Grordbort cover

And a couple of useful pages (click to see a bigger, more readable version):

Guns

Moon buggies

Robots

Here’s an ad that is designed to convince anyone of a suitably heroic disposition:

Advertising

And here pictures of some satisfied customers!

Hunter 1

Hunter 2

Check out the website for a wealth of fantastic information, including a Bestiary of the Cosmos, a multitude of rayguns and the adventures of Lord Cockswain.

Posted in Books, Graphic novels, News, Pictorial art, Robots | 2 Comments