by
Christopher Barr
- Dr.
Ichiro Serizawa
……….Let them fight.
Godzilla ゴジラ is back in theatres
and for the most part, it was a pretty decent version of the Japanese
icon. There were some wooden characters,
the only character that was three dimensional and had potential was killed off
less than half way through the film. But
aside from some minor plot holes and a little silly dialogue, Godzilla was a
thrilling ride at the movie theatre. The
special effects were top notch, realizing the mammoth creature in all his
potential. I enjoyed the tension that
was created, especially in the first act of the film.
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Poseidon’s behemoth slumbered for eons before being
woken up to fight a battle that ends up destroying cities. Godzilla is covered in tumorous-looking scars
intended to resemble those experienced by victims of radiation. He is truly a massive creature clocking in at
350 feet. He is a wrath of nature that
has come to punish those that have abused it; this is certainly odd when you
look at it literally within the sense of the movie. Godzilla is an environmentalist? No, Godzilla is and will always remain a
metaphor against the misuse of radiation technology to benefit greed and power.
This American version brought the monster out of the
culture of Japan and onto the streets of San Francisco. There is a somewhat disturbing irony found
here, Godzilla is a Japanese creation to help disseminate the atrocities that
the country underwent in WW2 to their Japanese viewers. Now the very nation responsible for these
atrocities in the first place has co-opted the Asian beast and made it their own.
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The 1954 original Japanese version of the film Gojira (Godzilla) helped lift the
Japanese out of their past World War 2 depression, by restoring a portion of their
national pride and began a healing process from the festering wound sewn into
the fabric of their society. The film was obviously bad, save the
spectacular score, but that was fine because it ended up becoming an instant
cult classic as a result. It was also unflinchingly bleak, dark and
deceptively powerful, it was a film by a wounded filmmaker living in a wounded
country that could still feel the pain of hell on earth. The film
portrayed the first mass media character that warned us of the horrors unchecked
by atomic weapons. The opening scenes of the film show the monumental
force of such a holocaust. An American reworked version of the film
called Godzilla:
King of the Monsters was released
in the states in 1956. Their version removed a lot of the blatant atomic
connections to the beast simply because they were responsible for that
connection in reality a decade earlier.
On August 6th 1945, the American Military Forces
dropped “Littleboy” a uranium atomic bomb on Hiroshima. Three days later
on August 9th they
dropped “Fat Man” a plutonium implosion-type atomic bomb on Nagasaki.
Within the next couple of months of the blasts, upwards to 166,000 people were
killed in Hiroshima and 80,000 in Nagasaki; half of which were annihilated on
the first day and the remaining victims suffered agonizing deaths as the months
passed by while the effects of burns, radiation sickness and other such
injuries slowly claimed the rest of them.
Prior to these Atomic bomb drops, United States’
Operation Meetinghouse saw the firebombing of the city of Tokyo along with a
number of other cities being napalmed, releasing a scourge of disaster across
the island of Japan. There never has been a city in the history of
warfare where as many bombs on Tokyo were dropped. But after all this
devastation it wasn’t until March 1st of 1954, when the United States’
Castle Bravo thermonuclear device test at Bikini Atoll, near the Marshall
Islands, that a lonely tuna fish ship called Daigo Fukuryū Maru, otherwise
known as the Lucky Dragon 5, got hit with the fallout of a nuclear blast. The
ship, with its 23 seamen aboard, was inside the danger zone which the U.S.
government had declared in advance, that being said, the test ended being twice
as powerful as expected and the fallout, in the form of fine ash went outside
the danger zone. The
following months after the blast the men started to die one by one of radiation
poisoning.
This incident, along with the last decade of
devastation to their country, showed the Japanese that man has gone too far,
man can now willfully tear apart and destroy the fundamental particles of the
universe. It showed them that ‘the bomb’ was still very much alive and
that the atomic nightmare, they have been just through, wasn’t relegated to
World Wars but was an omnipresent threat to their nation. This tragedy
galvanized an emerging movement in Japan against the future use of these
potential global killers, eradicating them for good. This movement was a
symbolic protest against the proliferation of weapons that are capable of annihilating
all life from the surface of the Earth.
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Godzilla, in 1954, is awoken from his underwater sleep
by a nuclear detonation and travels to the city of Tokyo and unleashes his fury
just as the atomic bombs did, crumbling Hiroshima and Nagasaki. He was to
become the first major expression in pop culture of the unspeakable tragedy
Japan suffered during the war.
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The city is like a post-apocalyptic landscape frozen
in time, a place where the radiation is deadly and land uninhabitable, the
Janjira disaster in the new film has clearly drawn comparisons to the real life
Fukushima meltdown. Radioactive isotopes are spilling into the ocean and
having a drastic effect on the sea life as it travels with currents across the
ocean to Canada, the US and as far as Mexico. All the Japanese have been
able to do to slow the radioactive flow of water into the ocean, is to pump it
into leaking, monstrous holding tanks. These tanks are quickly built and
filled within a day and half leaving the remaining overflow into the sea.
This is only an inadequate immediate solution to a long term problem that, as
far as experts are concerned, is unfixable, it is also believed that the
technology required to fix the problem is years away from being realized.
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“Power does not corrupt. Fear
corrupts….perhaps the fear of a loss of power.”
- John Steinbeck
Hmm. I wonder. I've always saw Mr. Godzilla as a externalization for capital gone a muck. In two senses; the mount of money tossed at the movie to make it, and the sense that it destroys everything in its path. But, from the Japanese point of view I could see how Godzilla could be used to re-narrate the events of the Atomic bombs dropped in their back hard. And ugly space-alien-dinosaur up to no good.
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