GOJIRA REBOOT. This photo taken from a scene of the 1954 film Godzilla
and provided by Toho Co., shows Godzilla breathing fire. Godzilla is
stomping back. And this time, it’s Made in Japan, like the original. An
announcement from Japanese film studio Toho comes after the success earlier
this year of the Hollywood Godzilla, directed by Gareth Edwards, which
grossed more than $500 million worldwide. (AP Photo/Toho Co., Ltd.)
From The Asian Reporter, V24, #24 (December 15, 2014), page 5.
Made in Japan Godzilla is back after Hollywood hit
By Yuri Kageyama
The Associated Press
TOKYO — Godzilla is stomping back. And this time, it’s Made in Japan,
like the original.
The announcement this month from Japanese film studio Toho comes after
the success earlier this year of the Hollywood Godzilla, directed by
Gareth Edwards, which grossed more than $500 million worldwide.
Toho said in 2004 it had made its last Godzilla film, the 28th in
the series centered on the irradiated monster, which first stomped into the
world in 1954.
Over the years, Godzilla movies fell out of favor even among
Japanese fans.
But the latest Hollywood Godzilla, complete with spikes down its
back and a terrifying roar, received relatively favorable reviews in Japan,
unlike the 1998 Hollywood Godzilla, directed by Roland Emmerich,
which purist fans hated.
Toho said recent innovations in computer-graphics technology were behind
its decision to revive Godzilla.
The Toho Godzilla is set for release in 2016, before Edwards
releases his sequel for Legendary Pictures and Warner Brothers in 2018.
Toho has not yet picked a director for the upcoming reboot.
The Tokyo-based company, which owns the rights for Godzilla, declined to
say whether it would bring back the man-in-a-rubber suit behind the original
Godzilla or rely on computer graphics — or have both.
Japanese movies such as Toho’s latest, Parasyte, about alien
creatures taking over human bodies, utilize sophisticated computer-graphics
technology although it may be hard for Toho to match Hollywood’s dazzle.
The widely praised original black-and-white Godzilla was directed
by Ishiro Honda.
Other directors took over for the subsequent Japanese works, which at
times became absurdly comical, featuring battles with manga-like, or
cartoonish, monsters.
Godzilla, or gojira, as the Japanese say it — a combination of the
words for "whale" and "gorilla" — was a mutation that emerged from the
Pacific because of nuclear testing.
The giant reptilian creature has crushed just about every famous building
in Japan including the Tokyo Tower and the parliament building.
Japan, the only nation in the world to suffer atomic bombings, has a soft
spot for the fire-breathing creature as representing the suffering unleashed
by nuclear weapons.
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