Top 20 Craziest Kaiju: Number 19

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19

 

The Big Bird

 

from The Giant Claw (US-1957; dir. Fred F. Sears)

Giant Claw poster

“Something, he didn’t know what, but something as big as a Battleship has just flown over and past him.”

This is definitely one of the silliest kaijus to ever appear on the big screen. Planes begin disappearing left and right with reports of some sort of UFO, but nothing shows up on any radar screens, much to everyone’s bemusement. Soon it is discovered that a bird the size of a battleship from outer space has decided that the earth would be the perfect planet to build its nest. Apparently the creature is able to generate some sort of impenetrable forcefield around itself that makes it invisible to radar. The “Big Bird” looks like a cross between a giant vulture and an ostrich. It may not be the most elegant of monsters, but it’s certainly memorable.

Giant Claw 1

Giant Claw 2

The trailer:

Big Bird eating a parachutist:

IMDB

Coming Tomorrow: Kaiju Search-Robot Avery’s Top 20 Craziest Kaiju Countdown Number 18!

Top 20 Craziest Kaiju Countdown articles:

 

Posted in Craziest Kaiju Countdown, Film, Giant Monsters, Kaiju Search-Robot Avery | 5 Comments

Willis O’Brien’s Frankenstein

I’ve long been familiar with this sketch by Willis O’Brien (famed animator of the 1933 King Kong):

King Kong vs Frankenstein

But I only stumbled upon this one yesterday while looking for something else:

Frankenstein sketch

Source

These are both conceptual sketches by Willis O’Brien. O’Brien conceived a script (in the 1960s) that he called “King Kong vs Frankenstein”, planned as a second “sequel” to his original 1933 film. It was never made, though in the end, as “King Kong vs Prometheus”, it was sold to Toho Studios in Japan, who re-conceived the project as Kingu Kongu tai Gojira [King Kong vs Godzilla] (1962; dir. Ishiro Honda) — and then again, sans Kong, as Furankenshutain tai chitei kaiju Baragon [Frankenstein vs the Subterranean Monster Baragon] (1965; dir. Ishiro Honda) aka Frankenstein Conquers the World (US, 1966).

Of course, O’Brien felt betrayed by what Toho did to his script, though I believe he died before actually seeing King Kong vs Godzilla itself. If he’d had a chance to see the original Japanese version (as distinct from the appalling US re-edit), maybe he would have gotten the joke … I doubt it, though. O’Brien was committed to stop-motion SFX and his “King Kong vs Frankenstein” would have had both monsters animated using this technique, rather than the trademark suitmation of Toho Studios. (Interestingly, director Ishiro Honda was considering using stop-motion for his “King Kong vs Godzilla”, but it would have been too expensive for Toho’s available infra-structure.)

Oh well. That’s another great Willis O’Brien project that we’ll never see; compare the Backbrain War Eagles article.

Posted in Film, Giant Monsters, Where's the Film? | 4 Comments

Top 20 Craziest Kaiju: Number 20

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20

 

The Monster Crystals

 

from The Monolith Monsters (US-1957; dir. John Sherwood)

Monolith Monsters poster

“Rocks, Joe? Towers of rock crashing down and then growing up again?”

The monsters in this “atomic age” classic are skyscraper-sized obsidian crystal towers. They arrive on earth attached to a meteor that is shattered upon entrance into earth’s atmosphere. The remnants of the meteor begin to grow by absorbing the water and silicon out of everything with which they come in contact, including humans. The absorbing of these elements causes the crystals to grow skyward until all of the resources have been exhausted, then they break apart from within and come crashing down — destroying everything in their paths. Then the one becomes many as the fragments of these monoliths instantly begin to absorb elements and grow. Their inexorable progress toward the township is akin to the march of a more traditional giant monster, and potentially as deadly. It’s a unique concept and makes for many eerie scenes in a movie that is too often ignored.

Monolith Monsters - still 1

Monolith Monsters screenshot 2

Here’s the classically ’50s opening narration and credit sequence from the film:

And here’s a low-quality version of the trailer:

IMDB

Coming Tomorrow: Kaiju Search-Robot Avery’s Top 20 Craziest Kaiju Countdown Number 19!

Read the Top 20 Craziest Kaiju Countdown Introduction.

 

Posted in Craziest Kaiju Countdown, Film, Giant Monsters, Kaiju Search-Robot Avery | 26 Comments

Update: Guilala Still (and Godzilla 3-D)

Some daikaiju updates from DreadCentral:

First, further to the recent Backbrain article regarding the new film, Girara-no Gyakushuu Touyaku Samitto Kiki Ippatsu [lit. Guilala’s Counter Attack: the Touyaku Summit One-Shot Crisis] (dir. Minoru Kawasaki) [aka The Monster X Strikes Back: Attack the G8 Summit], the website Gomorrahy has posted a still from the production — a still that seems to confirm the presence of at least one more kaiju.

Guilala still

Also, I have neglected to mention this: there has been some indication that Yoshimistsu Banno’s much-anticipated, but not altogether rock solid, sequel to Gojira tai Hedora [trans. Godzilla vs Hedorah] (1971; dir. Yoshimitsu Banno) [aka Godzilla vs. the Smog Monster (US, 1972)] is back on the cards. In a press release on an unrelated film, Brent Friedman of production company Electric Dreams Entertainment apparently listed Godzilla 3-D! as one of the projects he’s working on.

For those who don’t know, the film was planned as an iMax 3-D extravaganza, with the following plot statement coming from Banno:

The world’s largest monster comes to the worlds largest screen format in “Godzilla: 3D To The Max.” In this environmentally conscious effort Godzilla is again matched against Hedorah (Renamed Deathla for this film) a monster who lives on pollution and human waste. The two monsters duke it out in a free for all that begins in the Brazilian rain forest and climaxes on the streets of Las Vegas. Like in “Godzilla: Final Wars” a lot of location shooting will take place in areas stretching from Brazil to Las Vegas.

Not much by way of confirmation, but it’s something.

Posted in Daikaiju, Film, Giant Monsters, News | 1 Comment

Craziest Kaiju Countdown

Over the next month, Undead Backbrain will be running a special feature put together by Kaiju Search-Robot Avery. The Backbrain has a propensity for lists and that’s what Avery has created — a Top 20 list that has sparked his imagination and will hopefully spark yours. Follow the progress of the list as we work our way toward Number 1 on the hit parade — and stay on the look-out for a competition the Backbrain will be running in conjunction with it. Welcome to:

Craziest Kaiju Countdown logo

Introduction by Kaiju Search-Robot Avery

What scares you? This is a question that cinema has been asking since the lights first dimmed and the celluloid started to roll. Perhaps you’re most afraid of a vengeful spirit, or a corpse resurrected from the dead and craving the taste of human flesh? Maybe it’s an incredibly charming Count with an unnatural appetite for human blood? Or the hideous creation of a mad scientist, brought to life through the use of body parts from the deceased and a good dose of electricity?

Or is size the thing? Perhaps massive scale scares you — the helplessness that comes from feeling small and insignificant? What of the giant that could stomp his massive foot and destroy with ease the very place that you so fondly call home, your safe haven? What of the huge monstrosity that, with the slightest flick of its humongous tail, could reduce an entire city block to rubble? For such a beast to appear anywhere would cause the masses to flee through the streets in panic, trying to escape its unnatural hugeness. Over the years filmmakers have exercised their creative talents in bringing these fearsome gargantuans to life using the SFX magic of cinema, whether it be a giant hairy ape or a skyscraper-sized scaly reptile. Cinema offers the perfect means to create the illusion that such creatures are possible and, given half a chance, the filmmakers went for it, claws and all!

At times, though, some of these creative scaremongers have let their imaginations run riot and have brought to life some very ‘unique’, if not insane, monsters.

The Top 20 Craziest Kaiju Countdown is a list that pays tribute to the most bizarre behemoths, honours those over-sized creations that display an excess of imagination (or a massive amount of drug use). Whether head-shakingly outlandish or mind-bogglingly inconceivable, some of cinema’s most awe-inspiring goliathan stars will be showcased in the coming days.

However, in order to keep the list manageable there had to be rules. This is a list to honour those monsters that have graced the big screen and towered over us as we cringed in fear at their massive size. Hence, I have included only big screen stars — no TV titans. Those small-screen giants deserve a list all in their own, but for the sake of this particular exercise I decided to leave them out. Also these are the daikaiju that carried their own starring vehicles or were able to steal the show in their on-screen cameo debuts; no supporting nemesis that took second billing in another more upmarket daikaiju’s film. Again, this list is to honour ‘creativity’ and ‘inventiveness’ on the filmmaker’s behalf, not to reward those that simply took a pre-existing idol or myth and used its design in creating their own monster. Hence, I have included only original creations.

Most importantly, you should remember that we are not evaluating the artistic value or significance of particular films here. This isn’t the Top 20 Best Giant Monster Films, or the Top 20 Most Important Kaiju. I wanted to probe the heights of the Bizarre, to spotlight the Weird and the Wonderful…

This is Kaiju Search-Robot Avery’s Top 20 Craziest Kaiju Countdown.

Enjoy!

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Posted in Competition, Craziest Kaiju Countdown, Daikaiju, Giant Monsters, List, News | 5 Comments

Crawler aka Killdozer Redux

Kaiju Search-Robot Avery asks: “Does this count as a kaiju?”

I’m a bit dubious myself. It might be 50 tons of terror, but is unnatural size really an issue?

What do y’all think?

Posted in Film, Giant Monsters, Kaiju Search-Robot Avery, Trailers | 13 Comments

New: 20th Century Boys

20th century boys

Though I’m not entirely sure what it is, it looks big, robotic and partial to destruction. At any rate we get a momentary glimpse of it in the trailer for the upcoming live-action film of Naoki Urasawa’s manga 20-seiki shônen [aka 20th Century Boys].

20-seiki shônen [aka 20th Century Boys] (Japan-2008; dir. Yukihiko Tsutsumi)

20th century boys poster detail

Apparently this first film is to be followed up by 20-seiki shônen: dai-2-shô [aka 20th Century Boys: Chapter Two], again directed by Yukihiko Tsutsumi, in 2009 (IMDB)

In the words of Wikipedia, the plot of the manga goes like this:

Growing older is pretty rough and Kenji is finding out just how hard it can be as life starts wearing down on him. On top of trying to make ends meet running a convenience store he has to care for the niece that his missing sister left in his care. Memories of youth make it easier, until those memories come back to haunt him.

Kenji and his old friends are slowly being drawn into a mysterious conspiracy that could threaten the world. Who is the mysterious “Friend” and how does he tie into Kenji’s youth? Why are there disappearances and deaths tied into Ochanomizu University? Their memories hold the keys to the puzzle, but time and age have clouded their minds.

The strange occurrences and the reach of the “Friend” conspiracy grow by the day. It will all culminate on New Year’s Eve 2000. Will Kenji and the others be able to put together the puzzle and save the world?

Sounds big and apocalyptic, eh?

I’m guessing the giant robot turns up on NYE…

Source: The Quiet Earth

Official website

Posted in Daikaiju, Film, Giant Monsters, Mecha, Robots | 1 Comment

More Sushi…

For Kaiju Search-Robot Avery, who runs a Squid Training School:


The Monster

Posted in Ads, Giant Monsters | 3 Comments

Sushi anyone?

Razortooth (US-2006; dir. Patricia Harrington)

Razortooth appears

Deep in the Florida Everglades, something is alive that should have died eons ago. Something is feeding, when it should be full. Something is moving, in ways that seem all but impossible to its pursuers. It’s moving in the dark…under the surface of the waters…with an appetite that makes no distinction between man or beast. Now, it’s up to an unlikely band of locals, an animal control officer, a small town sheriff, and a scientist’s team of college youth to stop the threat…before it’s too late.

IMDB

Posted in Film, Giant Monsters, Trailers | 7 Comments

Ya Game, Ultradude?

A rather nice compendium of Ultra-kaiju weirdness in this video for the Ultraman FE3 game, even if they’re animated rather than suited up.

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