You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
-Short Attention Span Theater-
Godzilla to Retire
2004-03-05
sic transit gloria mundi ...
Five decades after Godzilla first rose from the ocean, this monstrous movie star is about to take a break from show business.
It's off to the old fire-breathing lizards' home...
Hit by slumping box office sales for the iconic series, Japan’s Toho Co. is planning to shelve its Godzilla films after this year’s finale. Toho studios’ executive producer, Shogo Tomiyama, said Thursday that the latest movie -- marking 28 releases and 50 years of "Godzilla" films -- would probably be the last one for at least a decade.
Tokyo: Safe at last!
"We have done all we can to showcase Godzilla, including using computer-graphics technology. And yet we haven’t attracted new fans," Tomiyama told The Associated Press. "So we will make the 50th anniversary film something special, a best-of-the-best, and then end it for now."
"It's kinda silly to continue beating a dead lizard..."
"Godzilla: Final Wars" is set to premiere in Japan in December, with a U.S. release to follow. The giant, genetically altered dinosaur will fight to the finish against 10 different foes, new and old. Tomiyama refused to discuss the script, but said director Ryuhei Kitamura’s epic would touch on Godzilla’s past.
"Godzilla: The Early Years"
The budget will top Toho’s past record of $9 million. Known in Japan as "Gojira," from a combination of the words for gorilla and whale, the monster born in a nuclear accident first appeared in director Ishiro Honda’s 1954 black-and-white classic. It featured an actor in a rubber suit emerging from the sea to stomp through a miniaturized Tokyo. For a nation rebuilding from the World War II atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the dark allegory about the global nuclear arms race was a familiar one -- and Japanese packed theaters to see it. Inspired by the turnout, Toho made one sequel after another, tapping into worries about Armageddon. Part cautionary tale, part campy fun, the films have shown Godzilla hamming it up while saving humankind from crises of its own making: the Cold War, pollution, nuclear energy and biotechnology. Although Toho says nearly 100 million people have seen its Godzilla series, over the years, stale story lines and outdated special effects have eroded Godzilla’s broad appeal. "Unlike the early Godzilla films, most of the remakes only draw either fanatics or children," said Risaku Kiridoshi, an essayist on Japanese pop culture.
There are only so many time you can come up with an excuse to stomp Tokyo...
An 1998 American production starring Matthew Broderick and a computer-generated Godzilla was critically panned ("a big, ugly, ungainly device to give teenagers the impression they are seeing a movie," wrote Roger Ebert). It earned $136 million at the box office after costing about $125 million to make. Godzilla’s dwindling popularity has led Toho to consider retiring the mutant monster before. In 1968, Toho announced it would end the series with "Destroy All Monsters," which had Godzilla battling a dozen other creatures. Its unanticipated success inspired Toho to bankroll six more. After the 1975 flop "Terror of Mechagodzilla," Toho again seemed eager to say goodbye to its star. But a 1984 revival that became a box office smash prompted Toho to make 11 more over the next two decades. Even if the new movie makes money, it will be at least a decade before Godzilla returns, Tomiyama said. He declined to say how the next-generation Godzilla might look, saying only that the filmmakers would have to make a clean break from past sequels. Kiridoshi hopes Toho doesn’t completely abandon its origins -- like the actor in the rubber suit. "Without a person acting as Godzilla, it would just be animation," Kiridoshi said. "That’s no different from Hollywood’s ’Jurassic Park.’ "
Posted by:sort of a fan of his

#14  Ã‚ I'll never get another decent role.
True...but you can still pursue your passion for orchids and wine.
Posted by: Rex Mundi   2004-3-5 4:17:35 PM  

#13  I'll never get another decent role.
Posted by: Raymond Burr   2004-3-5 3:58:03 PM  

#12  "THE perfect end to Godzilla's long and illustrous career - "Godzilla eats Hillary". I'll be glad to write it..."
LMAO Old Pat...

"Godzilla takes on the PLO" etc etc...who says he has to retire? bwaaaahhhhhhhhhhh
Posted by: dataman1   2004-3-5 1:20:12 PM  

#11  gloria mundi ...
...hey now why did ya have to go and drag my mom into this? And no....Ken is not her illegitimate love child (though the resemblance is ....curious)
Posted by: Rex Mundi   2004-3-5 12:55:23 PM  

#10  THE perfect end to Godzilla's long and illustrous career - "Godzilla eats Hillary". I'll be glad to write it...
Posted by: Old Patriot   2004-3-5 12:50:33 PM  

#9  "Unlike the early Godzilla films, most of the remakes only draw either fanatics or children," said Risaku Kiridoshi" That is because the later films were written for children.

I bought the Godzilla dvd box set, it included a misc of Godzilla movies from throughout his long career. The earlier ones were okay, then they had Godzilla's Revenge about a kid who is bullied by other kids on the way to school. He dreams himself to Monster Island and Godzilla and baby Godzilla teach him to stand up for himself. I'm sorry, that was written by children for children. It's hard to attract adults to that sort of thing.

Godzilla needs a do-over. A Dark Knight Returns sort of revision of the myths. They need to make a grown up, satircal, horror-comedy. Imagine Godzilla is a monster again and not the protector of Japan. Imagine the Yanks want to blast him, the terrified Japanese people want him blasted, and the Peaceniks around the world and the UN talk about the US waging war against Japan (as they did in Afghanistan). If properly done it could be both funny, and scary, and make a lot of money to revive the franchise. If they are just gonna produce more Godzilla's Revenges they might as well retire the big fella.

Posted by: ruprecht   2004-3-5 11:57:40 AM  

#8  *sniff* I'm gonna miss the big green lug.

Since Godzilla movies usually try to touch on the themes of the day, I will bet that the latest involves some anti-globalization screed in some way...
Posted by: Carl in N.H   2004-3-5 11:54:39 AM  

#7  sic transit gloria mundi ...

...Tuesday is usually worse.
Posted by: mojo   2004-3-5 11:37:38 AM  

#6  If it ain't some guy in a green rubber suit tearing up downtown Tokyo. It AIN'T Godzy!!!... I shall miss him. And hope he returns soon. Tanned, rested and ready to fight other monsters throughout the world!
Posted by: Jack Deth   2004-3-5 11:02:00 AM  

#5  I think hes going on a world tour with Blue Oyster Cult.

oh, no the say hes got to go,go,go godzilla...
Posted by: Frank Martin   2004-3-5 11:01:18 AM  

#4  Godzilla vs. The Cars of Death!

I'm going to miss Godzilla, but really - hasn't Tokyo learned its lesson by now?
Posted by: BH   2004-3-5 10:48:38 AM  

#3  Always had a soft spot in my heart for the Giant Rubber Monster genre.
Posted by: Mike   2004-3-5 10:46:10 AM  

#2  Godzilla vs al-Qaidasaur

Japanese peacekeeping forces are attacked by a giant turban clad sand lizard who spits explosives and farts poison gas until Godzilla rises up from the Gulf and dukes it out with him. Final battle levels the evil monsters lair in Saudi Arabia.
Posted by: Steve   2004-3-5 9:54:06 AM  

#1  Hmmm... Godzilla Does Tora-Bora.
Posted by: Shipman   2004-3-5 9:31:56 AM  

00:00