Godzilla, Mothra and King Ghidorah: Giant Monsters All-Out Attack (2001)
Directed by Shusuke Kaneko
Genres - Action, Adventure, Drama, Fantasy, Horror, Science Fiction |
Sub-Genres - Creature Film, Sci-Fi Action |
Release Date - Dec 15, 2001 (USA - Unknown), Aug 31, 2003 (USA) |
Run Time - 105 min. |
Countries - Japan |
MPAA Rating - NR
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Synopsis by Jonathan Crow
After sandblasting away years of camp and bad scripts from the Gamera franchise to form a couple of tight-scripted, vastly entertaining flicks, Shusuke Kaneko gives the same treatment to the granddaddy of kaiju eiga characters: Godzilla. The film opens with Godzilla waking up from his underwater hideaway. Unseen since his 1954 attack on Tokyo, the monster is spotted by a Japanese submarine. Though government officials seem reluctant to confront the problem, Navy Admiral Tachibana (Ryudo Uzaki), who witnessed the rampage when he was a child, is more than a little alarmed. Meanwhile, Tachibana's daughter Yuri (Chiharu Niiyama), who works at a struggling TV station, is making a documentary in the mountains of Niigata Prefecture. One night, they experience a massive earthquake and that next morning they learn that a gang of motorcycle punks were crushed in a mountain tunnel and witnesses reportedly saw some sort of fire-breathing creature in the rubble. Later, a group of campers in southern Kagoshima prefecture are crushed by some Thing that crawled out of Lake Ikeda. Soon Japan is awash with monsters -- including Baradon, a monster that looks like a pug terrier with Mickey Mouse ears, and King Gidora, a three-headed beast with a lethal 50-meter tail -- busting up things north, south, east, and west.
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Moods
Keywords
daughter, earthquake, Godzilla, monster, submarine, filmmaker, government-official