Tag Archives: Godzilla Minus One

408 – Godzilla Minus One

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A new, low-budget, Japanese-produced Godzilla movie takes us by surprise. Toho, with whom the series began in 1954 and who have produced over 30 Godzilla films since, have given Godzilla Minus One a wider release than usual, and we’re glad of it. Unburdened by the lore and worldbuilding of the Legendary Pictures MonsterVerse films, writer-director Takashi Yamazaki tells a story of Japan’s post-World War II depression, a spiritual and blood debt a pilot feels for shirking his wartime duty, and a community brought together in defiance of both a culture that treated their lives as expendable, and of course, a monster attacking their city.

Godzilla Minus One looks sensational for a film of its budget – reported to be under $15 million – and while hitting all the beats you’d expect of a blockbuster, arguably exhibits a subtly different pace and style of storytelling than Western audiences are used to, Mike suggesting that it gives an audience tired of having relentlessly convoluted cinematic universes foisted upon them a change in cinematic attitude for which they’re hungry. It’s not a perfect film – some of the performances let its emotional moments down, and there’s little you can’t see coming – but Godzilla Minus One is thoughtful entertainment that’s really worth seeing at a cinema.

With José Arroyo of First Impressions and Michael Glass of Writing About Film.