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Godzilla vs.The Sea Monster/Ebirah,Horror of the Deep (1966)

 
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Bogmeister
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PostPosted: Mon Dec 16, 2013 11:24 pm    Post subject: Godzilla vs.The Sea Monster/Ebirah,Horror of the Deep (1966) Reply with quote

a.k.a.Godzilla, Ebirah and Mothra: Great Duel in the Southern Sea



I've always had a soft spot for this Godzilla entry.

My mind may be playing tricks on me, but I'm fairly sure that I saw this in a theater, a re-release in the early seventies, which may explain the strong impression I have of this one from my childhood. Or maybe I just saw this at a very early age on TV (maybe, even, it was one of the first films I saw in color).

It's a smaller scale entry than previous Godzilla films, which used the entire world as their canvas (or at least much of Japan). This one mostly takes place on a South Seas island. But it's this different approach — of focusing on a colorful, exotic small locale — that lends such a charm to this monster movie.



ABOVE: drop-kicking a boulder; and, Godzilla was bigger in the actual film

Much of the different approach stemmed from a shift to aim this at teens. There's even a quasi-rock soundtrack at times and a sense of 'young man's adventure.'

The plot follows a trio of young men and a slightly older 'hero-guy' thief who end up on an island ruled by the sinister 'Red Bamboo' organization (a kind of secret government, straight from the James Bond films).

Red Bamboo uses captured natives from Mothra's island as slave labor to manufacture a yellow chemical which keeps Ebirah at bay. Ebirah is a giant lobster which guards the island. It usually first shows its giant claw as it rises up from beneath the surface of the ocean. Red Bamboo's ultimate goals involve nuclear weaponry, presumably to either threaten or rule the world (again, see almost any Bond or Bond-copy films in the sixties).

Unknown to Red Bamboo, however, Godzilla (in his 7th film) is slumbering inside a cave on the island. The heroes devise a means to awaken Godzilla. Uh-oh.




This film was originally meant to be the latest Japanese King Kong film, but that didn't work out, so Godzilla was substituted.

This explains the scene when Godzilla is briefly fascinated by a native girl, and also the attack by a giant bird — typical Kong elements.

Mothra appears briefly at the end after being prayed to for most of the film. I found this one to be pretty action-packed, a result of being directed by Jan Fukuda, known for that style. Godzilla would be back in Son of Godzilla (1967)
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Doctor Kaiju
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Joined: 09 Nov 2014
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PostPosted: Sun Nov 09, 2014 2:33 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I've probably seen this movie more than any other Godzilla film, for some reason it was always on television when I was a kid.

That giant bird is called Ookondru. Poor thing never had a chance! It had just enough time to squawk.

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Bud Brewster
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PostPosted: Thu Feb 29, 2024 6:54 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

This sounds like a movie even a non-Godzilla fan like me might enjoy. Who can resist a fight between a giant dinosaur-hero and a killer lobster from the ocean floor? Shocked

Frankly, however, I've never been able to enjoy the Japanese monster movies from the 50s and 60s. The silly rubber monster suits are so ridiculous that I can't take the movies seriously! Shocked

In fact, at my age, even some of the better American sci-fi films from the 1950s now look embarrassingly dated! Sad

Fortunately, modern film makers have transformed the traditional Japanese monsters like Gordzilla into impressive CGI creations in recent movies! So, I finally get to enjoy imaginative versions of those silly Japanese creations from the 1950s and 1960s! Rolling Eyes

At yet I still think the 1998 American Godzilla is my favorite version of the highly over-rated origin movie.

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