SHIN GODZILLA. A scaled-down model of Godzilla is displayed at a movie
theater in Tokyo. Godzilla is back in its homeland of Japan after a 12-year
absence, still breathing fire and mercilessly stomping everything in its
way. The latest in the giant reptile Godzilla movies, Shin Godzilla,
or New Godzilla, is now showing in theaters in Japan and is promised
for the U.S. and other countries later this year. (AP Photo/Koji Sasahara)
From The Asian Reporter, V26, #16 (August 15, 2016), pages 2 & 4.
Godzilla comes back to Japan, in ways fresh and familiar
By Yuri Kageyama
The Associated Press
TOKYO — Godzilla is back in its homeland of Japan after a 12-year
absence, still breathing fire and mercilessly stomping everything in its
way. The Associated Press noted four ways the new film Shin Godzilla,
or New Godzilla, breaks from its past, and other ways it is
reassuringly familiar. It’s now showing in theaters in Japan and is promised
for the U.S. and other countries later this year.
What’s different
The Americans: Japan’s most important ally sends scientists and
other advisers, their participation depicted at times as a nuisance. A
Japanese-American special envoy, played impudently by Satomi Ishihara, asks
where the nearest Zara store is, but mainly mediates between Japan and the
U.S., which is worried Godzilla might reach its shores. She resists a U.S.
proposal to nuke Godzilla. "Is Japan going to have the atomic bomb dropped
for the third time?" she asks mournfully. Given that the 2014 Hollywood
Godzilla helped Toho film studio decide to revive the series it originated,
the U.S. has proved a true ally for Godzilla’s silver screen survival.
The man behind the monster: Godzilla is not a man wearing a
rubber suit, like in the 1954 original. Toho used motion-capture technology
based on the movements of Mansai Nomura, an actor in traditional kyogen
theater whose casting was a secret until opening day. The center of gravity
is kept low during kyogen moves, similar to noh dance, except that
kyogen specializes in comedy. Nomura said he was honored to be chosen for
the role, stressing that he hoped to communicate the spiritual and the
ghostly in Godzilla. "I am thrilled that the DNA of kyogen, which has more
than 650 years of history, will now be part of the DNA of the pride of
Japanese cinema — that life called Godzilla," he said in a statement.
The 2011 Fukushima disaster: Godzilla is no longer a result of
nuclear testing. Instead, the monster recalls the March 2011 quake, tsunami,
and nuclear disaster that devastated northeastern Japan. In the film, people
measure the radiation around them and share information on social media, as
they did five years ago. News conferences and meetings are filled with
confusion and jargon, and government officials on screen even use the same
word that was used to describe how unprepared Japan had been for the
tsunami, soteigai, or "beyond expectations." Scenes of people fleeing
from torrents of water, and later huddled in gymnasiums, bring back
heartbreaking memories of the 2011 disaster.
Defending itself: Post-World War II Japan has repeatedly stressed
it will abide by pacifism. When Godzilla crashes onto its shores, Japan
debates how far it can go in defending itself. That reflects a modern debate
over using Japan’s military beyond its self-defense role. Bureaucrats try
their best to find Japanese-based solutions, treating Godzilla as a crisis
requiring military might and vowing the nation can be rebuilt from scratch —
as it was after World War II. The original monster symbolized the tragedy of
nuclear power and, through it, the ability of humankind to destroy itself.
Now the threat we perceive could be anything, but is almost certainly a
horror we brought on ourselves.
What’s familiar
The monster: Godzilla at first looks like a snake or an eel
slithering through the cityscape. Nearly an hour into the movie, it stands
upright like the Godzilla we know, with protruding scales lining its back
and a giant tail lashing uncontrollably. As it was with the way the 1954
original was scripted, Godzilla is more about our anticipation, the
nightmare that reflects our deepest fears. The new Godzilla glows red as
though embers electrified by atomic power flicker beneath its jagged skin.
The destruction: The new film is inspired by the storyline of the
1954 original, more than the rest of Toho’s 28-film series that had Godzilla
battling oversized moths, evil robots, and other fantastic creatures. It
smashes the same landmarks as all the other Godzillas, such as Tokyo
Station, the parliament building, and the Wako department store with the
clock tower. And all that the masses of people can do is run from it in
sheer terror.
The sounds: That same eerie screech, created by scratching
contrabass strings, is heard. And this film pays homage to the original
music. When the credits roll, with Nomura’s name closing the 329-strong
actors’ lineup, it’s the same composition by Akira Ifukube from the original
movie that plays, a fitting ending for the Japanese comeback Godzilla.
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