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DVD Title |
| Godzilla
vs. King Ghidorah/Godzilla
& Mothra: The Battle for Earth |
| International Title |
| Godzilla
vs. King Ghidorah/Godzilla
vs. Mothra |
| DVD Length |
Original Length |
| 103 & 102 Minutes |
104 & 103 Minutes |
| Company |
Year of Manufacture |
| Tristar |
1998 |
| Language |
Subtitles |
| English |
None |
| Region |
Number of Discs |
| 1 |
1 (Double Sided) |
| Aspect Ratio |
Sound |
| 1.33:1 |
2.0 Stereo |
| Extras |
|
|
| Captures |
|
|
| Review |
| The first "Double Feature" Toho
disc from Tristar, the Godzilla vs. King Ghidorah/Godzilla
vs. Mothra DVD is one of the earliest Toho
entries to enter the DVD market. I'm sure that
some, who first purchased the disc back in 1998,
can also recall that it used to retail for the
unreasonable $35-40 price range. Essentially,
consumers were paying for the fact that they were
getting two films, despite that they were sandwiched
on only one disc. Thankfully, the price has gone
down significantly since it first debuted, as
the title now retails in the $20 range. However,
early titles to the format often don't fare well
when compared to their more modern counterparts,
and this DVD is certainly no exception. In fact,
the video, audio, and extras all fail to entice
on this release.
|
| Video: |
 |
| Depending on one's standards, this disc's
video might be acceptable or not, although without
question there is a great deal of room for improvement.
First off, yes, this disc is a heavily cropped
full screen, or 1.33:1, presentation of the two
films. At the time this was nothing out of the
ordinary, in fact the Godzilla
vs. SpaceGodzilla/Godzilla vs. Destoroyah
DVD made headlines for the simple fact that the
movies weren't presented in full screen. In retrospect,
though, full screen really doesn't fly anymore,
as, thankfully, the DVD format has moved in the
direction of standardizing the movie's original
formats, which in this case was 1.85:1.
This aspect of the video aside, the presentation
here is generally decent for a disc this age.
Like Tristar's much later Godzilla
vs. Mechagodzilla II release, this DVD
does suffer from a very significant amount of
grain, which plagues both of the movies. On the
bright side, this disc is nearly void of digital
inconsistencies, though, as even edge enhancement,
which would become a favorite method by the firm
in later years, is unnoticeable. As for the colors,
they are acceptable. Although Godzilla vs.
King Ghidorah appears more muted in this
regard than Godzilla vs. Mothra, which
has a far deeper shade of black and other notable
depths of color.
|
| Audio: |
 |
| The audio quality, for both movies, is acceptable.
There is only one audio track present for each
film, which is a 2.0 stereo presentation of Toho's
International dubbing for the two movies. To Tristar's
credit, neither track features any distortion,
as the audio comes through crystal clear. Speaker
distinction is a little on the weak side, but
nothing severe. Of course, it goes without saying
that it's unfortunate that neither of the original
Japanese audio tracks are to be found on this
release.
|
| Extras: |
 |
| There are two trailers present on this disc,
which are the original Japanese trailers for the
two features, and in their original aspect ratios
of 1.85:1 none the less. Unfortunately, these
trailers feature the same extremely loose subtitling
that is found on the GODZILLA
DVD. To give a quick idea of how bad these are,
most should be able to spot the sequence where
Miki mentions Biollante in the Godzilla vs.
King Ghidorah trailer, yet her name is never
mentioned in the subtitles. Most discs don't even
bother to subtitle the Japanese trailers, though,
and the incredibly loose translations wouldn't
be that bad if they could be toggled off, which
unfortunately they can't. What makes this depressing,
though, is that these measly two trailers easily
trumps the extras found on most, with only a few
exceptions, of Tristar's subsequent Godzilla discs.
|
| Overview: |
 |
Bottom line, the disc represents the only chance
for most US fans to get either film presented
here on region 1 DVD. So, this release will likely
make its way into most kaiju fans collections,
regardless of the quality. However, I would advise
bargain shopping for this one, as even at $20
it's not a great deal, especially in contrast
with the recent Universal King Kong set for the
two Toho films.
This disc is also featured in the DVD box set:
50th
Anniversary Godzilla Collection.
|
-Anthony Romero |
|
Buy
this DVD |
|
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