
So basically when it comes to updated sci-fi properties I'd like Godzilla emulate but not precisely rip off Star Trek and Rise of the Planet of the Apes. I think looking at comic book stuff is the wrong idea. Godzilla is a cinematic character to begin with and he should be approached that way.
TokyoVigilante wrote:So basically when it comes to updated sci-fi properties I'd like Godzilla emulate but not precisely rip off Star Trek and Rise of the Planet of the Apes. I think looking at comic book stuff is the wrong idea. Godzilla is a cinematic character to begin with and he should be approached that way.
This is true and while I do think that a no-frills purely cinematic treatment is probably the simplest way to go about it, Godzilla is unique in film in that he doesn't really have any counterpart for the size of the filmography the vastness of material that was created for it that is ripe to be explored. It would be a shame to miss out on golden opportunities to use some of that already established material to its absolute fullest and emulating some of the techniques that Marvel has been doing is one of the best ways of doing that, IMHO.

Living Corpse wrote:I'm willing to bet that anyone here younger than, like, 40, is a fan because of the films they watched on TV growing up. Stuff like Son of Godzilla or Godzilla vs. Monster Zero. Point is, I feel like a lot of Godzilla fans forgot why they love Godzilla in the first place and want it to be something it really isn't. =/
My first G film was King of The Monsters at age 6 after I got it for Christmas. So I can't speak for anyone else but when I think of Godzilla the 1954 version is the first one that pops in my head and is to me the Godzilla. Just saying.
NUMQUAM OBLIVISCEMUR MICHAELIS CRICHTONIS
Varan Bon Ziller wrote:Spiders. One of the few thongs that make me scream like a little girl.

TokyoVigilante wrote:I think the real heart of the way Marvel works and how Abram's was able to adapt Star Trek successfully is to not treat your material like it is broken. All of Emmerich and Devlin's creative decisions come off as them trying to "fix" Godzilla (which is part of my problem with this insistence on dark-n-gritty content).
While I don't much care for atleast 60% of the creative choices that Nolan has made with Batman, those decisions don't feel like attempts at fixing. This applies to the content as well; the finale of The Dark Knight with Harvey and Gordon's family is almost crushingly grim and bleak, but it's been built up to this powerful moment and it's earned. It's not "HEY LOOK BATMANS NOT FOR KIDS LOOK HOW HARDCORE THIS ALL IS" which, again, alot of what I've seen in regards to the request for the LP Godzilla film.

Cimmerian Dragon wrote:Living Corpse wrote:I'm willing to bet that anyone here younger than, like, 40, is a fan because of the films they watched on TV growing up. Stuff like Son of Godzilla or Godzilla vs. Monster Zero. Point is, I feel like a lot of Godzilla fans forgot why they love Godzilla in the first place and want it to be something it really isn't. =/
My first G film was King of The Monsters at age 6 after I got it for Christmas. So I can't speak for anyone else but when I think of Godzilla the 1954 version is the first one that pops in my head and is to me the Godzilla. Just saying.
My first Godzilla was 1985, followed by KotM and Mothra vs Godzilla. Although I saw Monster Zero and others shortly thereafter, the fact that my first three films depicted the Big Guy as a serious, deadly, frightening character have led me to think of him in a generally serious light. That doesn't stop me from loving the camp aspects of the later films, but I can't help seeing that depiction of Godzilla as a deviation from the character's norm, rather than an equally valid interpretation, regardless of whether the majority of films fall on the campy side of the spectrum.
In the end, I prefer Godzilla as a serious figure, but also one that is vaguely anthropomorphized. My personal Godzilla is a mental hybrid. This means that I can enjoy GMK and G2K on different but equal levels. Now, Megalon crosses a line for me, going too damn goofy and turning Godzy into a big, harmless teddy bear. On the other hand, Godzilla dancing in Monster Zero or playing rock-tennis in Sea Monster isn't a problem for me, since he is shown as a legitimate and violent threat at other points.
I see no reason why Godzilla can't be a nasty monster, and still have his occasional moment of camp fun. Likewise, I don't see why we can't have a serious "message-movie" in the franchise now and then, and then follow it up with a simple kaiju action-flick sequel. As others have stated, Godzilla's malleability is his strength.
So basically when it comes to updated sci-fi properties I'd like Godzilla to emulate but not precisely rip off Star Trek and Rise of the Planet of the Apes. I think looking at comic book stuff is the wrong idea. Godzilla is a cinematic character to begin with and he should be approached that way.
Varan Bon Ziller wrote:....What ever happened to the innocence of monster banging others brains out...


Svitska Donkun wrote:The plot is broken, and I mean broken, with various plot threads appearing constantly, contradicting each other, crammed full of characters with no clear motives that act nonsensically?
Svitska Donkun wrote:Is this movie REALLY what people want Godzilla to be like?


Svitska Donkun wrote:I just would like to chime in that Gamera 3 is an example of making things dark for no reason whatsoever.
Svitska Donkun wrote:In August Ragone's segment on the MST3K DVD set, at one point he said some people cheered when all those people flew up into an explosion. Like seriously? Are people that desperate for their franchise to be taken seriously that they'll flip out over a good but nonsensical effect?
Svitska Donkun wrote:Yet people still ignore all that and call it the best Kaiju film since Godzilla '54 because its dark and has good effects. That's all. And it skreeonk disgusts me. Is this movie REALLY what people want Godzilla to be like?

Tohosaurus wrote:I would have to respectfully disagree. Ayana is driven by rage throughout the entire movie, and that is taken advantage of; moreover, she's in many ways unable to cope with the loss of her family, which again fuels her hatred of Gamera to the point of wanting to kill him. Having such lust for vengeance is a very dark thing, indeed. That makes the dark undertone pretty digestible to me. Now I have said before that despite the fact that I think a lot of Gamera 3, I do find it to be somewhat over-rated.
Tohosaurus wrote:While I would hardly cheer at the sight of it, scenes like that can be appreciated because they depict the events on a human level, somewhat similar to Godzilla following the crowd of running people in G85. Too often we just see Gamera or whoever just walking along city streets and such. Clips such as these show that amidst the monster action we're watching, people are dying, their homes and businesses are being destroyed. It's very dangerous and, well, awful.

Svitska Donkun wrote:This has no indication on the quality of the overall film. I can go into detail of what drives a character at face value, and in G3 its very obvious, but that doesn't make the film any better. Her character is still handled terribly, as are most of the other characters, in a plot that is broken. Just because revenge is what the story is about doesn't make the film any decent.
Svitska Donkun wrote:That entire sequence is completely out of character for Gamera in a way that's never properly explained. He hundreds of people in that scene wihtout caring or thinking, contrary to his previous appearances. It's violence for the sake of violence. That's it. Gamera killed way more people in that sequence than I can ever recall a Gayos killing. And then they try to back track all that murder with Gamera deciding to protect one kid. It's skreeonk stupid. They're just being dark and violent because they can. there's no real explanation and the military has every right to want to kill Gamera, which is not what you want the audience to think. IT seems like the script is trying to be ambitious here in discussing the ethics of a Monster destroying things in the name of our protection, but that falls flat on its face when Gamera destroys all of Shinjuku without a single skreeonk given.

Svitska Donkun wrote:That entire sequence is completely out of character for Gamera in a way that's never properly explained.
Biollante wrote:Tohosaurus wrote:That entire sequence is completely out of character for Gamera in a way that's never properly explained.
Didn't Gamera 2 imply that Gamera broke his bond with Asagi and now has to absorb mana from the mean old world, hence why he was being a dick?

Again, this is another matter entirely. But depicting the horrors of what's actually happening to humanity is not a vain effort. And you know what? Let's just say they were trying to be dark and violent for the sake of it. My response would then be: so what? If a person doesn't like it they don't have to watch it, much less like it. But to chastise it as being inferior JUST because it's pointlessly dark or violent in whatever manner is simply being intolerant.


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