Godzilla Movie Analysis

759 Words2 Pages

Godzilla (1954) is the first movie I remember watching as a child. I admire Godzilla in all his incarnations. Furthermore, I love him as the lumbering rubber suit behemoth as an allegory for the superpowers during World War II, and as a protector of Japan fighting other monsters of galactic proportions. The creature is arguably the most well-known movie monsters to grace the silver screen (such as likes of King Kong and the Universal Frankenstein.); Moreover, it’s one of the most important foreign films out there, and I believe it is still a magnificent classic. That being said, with the help of three film reviews, I can better support and defend my judgement of the film to accurately review the original film released in 1954, Gojira, The film begins when a Japanese fishing boat is attacked by a mysterious volley of energy from under …show more content…

However, I greatly enjoyed the back and forth between depicting Godzilla’s various rampages and the fallout of said attacks. It really gave the viewer a sense of consequence. “Its roster of frightening images — cities in flames, overstuffed hospitals, irradiated children — would have been all too familiar to cinemagoers for whom memories of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were still less than a decade old, while its script posed deliberately inflammatory questions about the balance of postwar power and the development of nuclear energy.” The stomping of buildings and nuclear blasts were not just there to be flashy and action packed, there were severe consequences to Godzilla’s actions, as could be seen when we were given a close look at the many patients within a hospital. We see children with grave injuries, and the pain on the parents’ faces when they realize they may not make it out of this alive. It is a level of depth and emotion that I personally wish was displayed in more large-scale monster

Open Document