Godzilla at 60
Looking
hardly a day over 60 million, Godzilla turned 60 this year, brought back to
life as Hollywood resuscitated the slumbering giant monster and turned what had
been and is a Japanese icon into an American smash hit of global proportions.
The new Godzilla is a reboot of the franchise
which set a record of earning $196 million in its first weekend when it opened
in May, putting it on track to becoming one of the highest grossing movies of the
summer if not all time.
The new
movie was produced by Legendary Pictures in partnership with Warner Brothers
and on license from Toho Productions, the Japanese studio that invented
Godzilla in 1954 and produced another 27 movies featuring the stomping giant
until retiring from active production in 2004.
Toho’s 50-year
production history makes Godzilla the longest running franchise in film
history, and, given the success of the American sequel in rejuvenating a tired brand,
it may be on track for another 50-year run.
Yet it
is not the first American version. Tri-Star State Pictures produced its own Godzilla in 1998, but it failed to catch
on. This older version was so poorly received that it may have damaged the
brand, as no other follow up was attempted until this year’s version, 16 years
later.
While
the 2014 version has a storyline of its own, it is faithful to many of the
familiar Godzilla tropes. It (Godzilla
is neither male or female) is born out of and sustained by nuclear radiation,
in this case a Japanese nuclear power plant; it stomps through cities smashing
buildings right and left (Las Vegas) and culminates in a battle with another
monster, Muto (Massive Unidentified Terrestrial Organism).
When
Toho Productions released its first Godzilla in 1954 (the name is an English
version of the Japanese Gojira linking
the words for gorilla and whale), it did not know that it would be producing
one of the most instantly and universally recognized icons of Japanese culture.
Nor did they know that they would be making a long-standing series.
“We had
no plans for a sequel in 1954,”recalled the late Ishiro Honda, Godzilla’s initial director in an
interview before he died. Indeed, the monster is killed off in the first movie.
(never an obstacle to reviving the him in subsequent productions).The Toho
Productions soon changed its mind, and the second film, Godzilla the Fire Monster was made and released the next year.
Initial
reviews of Godzilla were cool. Some
dismissed it is “junk.” Yet, the original has now come to be ranked as one of
the best 20 Japanese movies of all time, up there with Akira Kurosawa’s The Seven Samurai, which, coincidentally,
was released the same year. In 2004 Godzilla achieved the ultimate accolade when
his name was placed on a star on Hollywood’s Walk of Fame.
The plot
of the original Godzilla was inspired by a headline event in the spring of
1954. A Japanese fisherman whose boat, the Lucky
Dragon-5, was hit by radioactive fallout from an American H-bomb test over
the Bikini Atoll in the South Pacific, died of Leukemia. By autumn Gojira was trading on the audiences’
twin fears of prehistoric carnivores and modern nuclear arms, it being only
nine years removed from the Hiroshima bombings.
Ever
since, nuclear radiation has played some role in subsequent movies. Indeed, it
was one condition of Toho’s granting a license that it somehow involve nuclear
radiation, which is why the revived Godzilla
is born in a Japanese nuclear power plant in the new version.
Though
never a “message” movie per se, the Godzilla series have been attuned to the
current pulse of Japanese. In Godzilla
versus King Ghidora (1991) the rampaging reptile turned his attention to
ostentatious displays of wealth in the Bubble Economy era by obliterating the
new 60-story Tokyo city hall, usually accompanied by cheers from the audience,
The
monster has actually grown in height as Tokyo’s skyline has risen. In the first
movie, he was about 50 meters tall. That was roughly the height of the highest
Ginza building at the time of the film was made. He has gradually grown to
nearly 100 meters in height as more high rise buildings dotted Tokyo’s skyline,
and the new American version makes him, a little over 100 meters, the tallest
version in the series.
Although
many people assume that Godzilla, the name and figure, are in the public
domain, the fact is that Toho is just as aggressive in defending its copyright
and trademarks as Disney is in protecting Mickey Mouse. Anyone thinking to add
the suffix “zilla” to a product name can expect to receive a cease and desist
letter from Toho’s Los Angeles-based law firm, Greenberg Gluskar,
Just
this week a New Orleans brewery agreed to change the name of one of its new
beers from Mechahopzilla by the end of the year after it was sued by these same
attorneys acting for Toho. The studio had sued New Orleans-based Lager &
Ale Brewing Company claiming the name and logo were copycats of Godzilla’s monster
opponent of that name. Mechahopzilla figures in some Godzilla movies.
The
litigation has kept Godzilla’s brand thriving and has helped to pave the way
for extremely lucrative commercial and merchandising tie-ins that will accompany
the monster’s return to the big screen. Japan itself is dotted with numerous
Godzilla -themed products from jigsaw puzzles to T-shirts. Godzilla’s image is
for sale, but you have to pay for it.
Godzilla has, of course, already been
released in the US, Europe, Asia and the Middle East. But curiously, Japanese
will have to wait more than a month to see their favorite monster back in the theater,
as it isn’t scheduled to hit the big screens in Japan until July 25.
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