Coobzilla03 wrote:I'd say it did.UltramanGoji wrote:The 1962 Godzilla didn't exactly have a unique roar to begin with.
It was the same roar used for the majority of the Showa series. It's nothing noteworthy.
Coobzilla03 wrote:I'd say it did.UltramanGoji wrote:The 1962 Godzilla didn't exactly have a unique roar to begin with.
I guess I hear things differently, then.UltramanGoji wrote:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=86MO-JWTNjoCoobzilla03 wrote:I'd say it did.UltramanGoji wrote:The 1962 Godzilla didn't exactly have a unique roar to begin with.
It was the same roar used for the majority of the Showa series. It's nothing noteworthy.
It was definitely a unique roar for its time regardless of how much it got used in the later films.Coobzilla03 wrote:I guess I hear things differently, then.UltramanGoji wrote:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=86MO-JWTNjoCoobzilla03 wrote:
I'd say it did.
It was the same roar used for the majority of the Showa series. It's nothing noteworthy.
UltramanGoji wrote: Cranky because you got mad I implied GFW isn't a good movie aren't you
Chrispy_G wrote:I'll say it one last time, Trump wins in a landslide.
I'll gladly eat crow if it doesn't turn out that way....but at this point it feels painfully obvious, as it has for months.
I knew it.Goji wrote:A couple things..the 1962's roar is actually "unique", as it's only heard in King Kong vs. Godzilla. There's a reason its presented by itself on HOWL (the audio CD collection of monster roars) as "Godzilla (2nd Generation-1)".
The grace of God is a greater gift than we can truly fathom; undeserved mercy is a kindness humbling in its sheer scope.KaijuCanuck wrote:It’s part of my secret plan to create a fifth column in the US, pre-emoting our glorious conquest and the creation of the Canadian Empire, upon which the sun will consistently set after less than eight hours of daylight.
I think that award goes to Godzilla vs. Megaguirus, but I can see where you're coming from. Whatever message the movie had, or could have had, in response to the original's themes gets all kinds of muddled.LockBite wrote:In that sense, it's the franchise's biggest betrayal of his anti-warhead roots.
See, I would disagree because 1) Dimension Tide failed to do anything and 2) that version of Godzilla was largely removed from the nuke angle. Heisei Godzilla was in the same canon as the original.Rodan wrote:I think that award goes to Godzilla vs. Megaguirus, but I can see where you're coming from. Whatever message the movie had, or could have had, in response to the original's themes gets all kinds of muddled.LockBite wrote:In that sense, it's the franchise's biggest betrayal of his anti-warhead roots.
My issue with the Dimension Tide is that it receives rah-rah support from the human cast, and therein asks it of its audience as well, through its entire run time. It's a deadly, paradigm-shifting super weapon which, despite bringing the movie's villain into being, is never really depicted as a potential problem. It fails, sure, but it's about as close as you can get to spitting in the face of the themes of the original movie without showing the cast cheering on a nuclear bomb.LockBite wrote:See, I would disagree because 1) Dimension Tide failed to do anything and 2) that version of Godzilla was largely removed from the nuke angle. Heisei Godzilla was in the same canon as the original.
Or Godzilla vs Megalon......think about it. Megalon was awakened by the Seatopians to stop humans from using nukes........and Godzilla stops them.Rodan wrote:I think that award goes to Godzilla vs. Megaguirus, but I can see where you're coming from. Whatever message the movie had, or could have had, in response to the original's themes gets all kinds of muddled.LockBite wrote:In that sense, it's the franchise's biggest betrayal of his anti-warhead roots.
Not really it appears in a lot of wiki but seems like just a fan theory to explain what happened.gzillafan17 wrote:Are there any sources to back up the fact that Godzilla superheating the ground resulted in Destroyah exploding?