Thursday, May 22, 2014

Godzilla



Ben’s Review of Godzilla

Once again I was able to doop my wife into thinking we were heading to a garden nursery but instead took her to see Godzilla.  But I was wary about seeing our fat lizard friend.  History shows again and again that Hollywood can screw a large monster movie.  But why hasn’t the monster movie worked?  Well basically the formula has been very uninspired.  The 1998 Roland Emerich version of Godzilla followed the same recipe as Titantic and Pompei which is have a lot of death, destruction, and special effects and an ending where the government somehow stops the monster.  Last year’s disappointing Pacific Rim failed to deliver.  Even the original Jurrasic Park, while visually stunning, had basically no plot.  Peter Jackson’s King Kong might have been the closest we have come to something believable but even that really did not go anywhere.  So why try this again?  If there is any hope for society it may reside in the fact that the movie going audience requires more than just wanton death and destruction.  With failure of Pacific Rim and RIPD audiences to make a profit, this might show that the movie audience is not willing to drop $10-$17 to go to a theatre unless there is something behind the death and destruction.  The Dark Knight Trilogy showed us that you can make a believable, albeit dark, superhero movie.  The Avengers showed us that you can make supernatural flick that is funny but not goofy.  This brings us to the latest version of Godzilla.  Warner Bros. has decided to abandon the fat guy in the rubber suit and Roland Emmerich and instead attempt to have a believable Godzilla movie.  But can a balance be struck for supplying a plot and still providing enough special effects to make the IMAX price worth it?

The movie begins with Brian Cranston’s character, (I don’t remember his name so let just call him Walter for now) working as nuclear engineer at a Tokyo nuclear plant with his wife Julliette Binochette who is a nuclear engineer type person.   A strange earth shaking anomaly occurs.  Walter notices that this seismic activity is not consistent with the patterns of an earth quake and, being the brave man he is, allows his wife to check this out.  This anomaly destroys the nuclear power plant and kills Binochette.  An area of Tokyo, including Walter’s house, is quarantine because of nuclear contamination   Fast forward 15 years and Cranston is now unemployed and labeled lunatic because he believes that it was something other than an earthquake that destroyed the nuclear power plant where he used to work.  Cranston’s son, fresh off his stint in the military and posing for Calvin Klein, is forced to go to Tokyo and bail his father out of jail for trying to get back into the ruins of the nuclear plant.  After the son bails him out, Cranston convinces him to enter the radiation quarantine zone where his former house was located.  Upon entering the quarantine zone Cranston and son discover the truth which is that it was not an earthquake that caused the destruction of the power plant but something else. Something that has been awakened and is now looking to feed. What is this something else?  Is it Godzilla?  Rodan?  Mothra?  That guy that ate all the hot dogs but the lost the American guy who ate all the hotdogs?

This Godzilla succeeds where other versions of Godzilla failed by deciding to have a plot.  Is this great plot on par with The Dark Knight or Schindler’s List?  No.  But it does attempt to give a plausible explanation why Godzilla and some other creatures exist and why they are destroying cities.   The destruction is not gratuitous and no portion of this movie is done in a tongue and cheek way that makes goofy.  This is probably what would happen if there was a Godzilla type issue today.  This Godzilla has a story line that develops through the entire movie and gives the audience something to be interested in and not just senseless destruction and national monuments falling apart.  Oh and if you are going to dump $17 on IMAX this movie delivers.   This movie takes a while to get going but once it does look out.   This movie is exciting, scary, but not disturbing or overly dark.  What I really enjoyed is that the destruction in this movie occurs in places other than New York. 

I give this movie four Fukishyma cover ups out of five.

Something Extra/Spoiler Alert- Warner Bros. has excercised its options for two sequels so make sure and save your 3d glasses for 2016.

Elisa's Review of "Godzilla"


“Godzilla” is exactly the type of movie that inspired the “Movies I watch with my Husband” blog, in that my husband knew there was a script three years ago, probably knew the director, and knew what the release date would be six months ago. In contrast, I thought I had already watched the most recent “Godzilla” remake. When I protested sitting through another recent reincarnation, the husband was puzzled. “You know, the one with Jack Black,” was my clever response. “That was “King Kong,” he replied. 

My loud miserable sigh and whining was not enough to deter the husband to dragging me to the IMAX 3D Theater, the one with terrible concessions, on a Sunday afternoon. I am just thankful the responsibilities of work did not allow us to attend the Thursday night special release. There was a line 40 minutes before a Sunday matinee. A line full of Geeks, and there I was holding our place in line with them, while the husband bought the crappy popcorn. I do not mean to offend the Engineers, IT specialist, or any other the other nerds and geeks in the world that I love more than anyone. But—this was not a line where anyone was wearing a button-down shirt, a baseball hat—or deodorant.  

This movie review is short on the review and heavy on the “Seriously???” complaints. I am an honest movie reviewer:  I slept through the first 40 minutes. We went to 7:30 a.m.  Mass. I wish I had slept longer.  Despite waking up after “plot development” I understood what was happening through my 3D glasses. A giant Chinese monster was crossing the Pacific Ocean to attack another giant monster.  Predictably, the US military was tracking Godzilla through the ocean with a lot of big boats. What happened next was actually devastating: Godzilla destroyed Diamond Head, Waikiki Beach and most of downtown Honolulu. Next, Godzilla destroyed Las Vegas, not as pretty as Hawaii, but sad for the naked dancers and Elvis impersonators. Finally, he destroyed San Francisco, with the predictable demolition of the Golden Gate Bridge. Not creative Hollywood.  Of course a military hero and an Olsen twin helped save the day.

This movie was not good. There was nothing surprising, interesting or unique. It was a sub-par “Monster Movie” and I think that is what the people wanted. Just not the wife.