01 December 2013
REVIEW ALL MONSTERS! - PLAN 0 FROM OUTER SPACE
We have arrived at a personally exciting point for me in this retrospective of Godzilla picture. Up until 1964's Ghidorah, the Three-Headed Monster, I had already seen all of the movies, if only in a compromised English dub. But from this point, it's several weeks straight of movies entirely new to me.
And what a doozy to kick things off! We now arrive at 1965's Invasion of Astro-Monster, first released in an English dub as Monster Zero, which is the probably the more appropriate title. Either way, it's the film where the Godzilla films (of which it is the sixth) finally committed themselves entirely to the business of being artistically dubious B-movie, inasmuch as they hadn't been B-movies before this. Still, there's a qualitative jump from the things that even King Kong vs. Godzilla or Ghidorah, the Three-Headed Monster are, to the thing that Invasion of Astro-Monster is. Even that more official English title promises a certain degree of disreputable juvenalia (much more so than the original Japanese The Great Monster War, at least), and this promise is entirely fulfilled. With Invasion of Astro-Monster, we have the first - but not the last! - marriage of a Godzilla vehicle with a space invaders plot, of a sort much more characteristic of the 1950s than the 1960s. And as any habitué of Japanese space invaders films can tell you, they come in a very... special form, in that country. A sort of aura of a well-heeled high school drama club project, you might say, in which the most conspicuous feature of the sets and costumes is how visibly they've been redressed from stuff everybody could go out to the store and buy.
By all means, Invasion of Astro-Monster is closer to the best of these films than the worst, and while Toho might have decided by this point to downgrade their iconic daikaiju from the A-list star to matinee figure (or whatever the Japanese equivalent to a Saturday matinee would be), the full effects of that shift weren't to be felt in this film yet. I take this to be in no small part thanks to Honda Ishirō, who had at this point directed four consecutive Godzilla films, that streak ending hereafter. Even when he plainly did not care for the direction that Sekizawa Shinichi's at times very flighty screeenplays were going, Honda nearly always treated the material with respect and dignity, and this emerges in Invasion of Astro-Monster in a weirdly serious movie for such junky material, with the actors all kept tightly reined in from the traditional fluffiness that would almost inevitably have crept into any other film made from this scenario. I don't know if that's necessarily enough to make Invasion of Astro-Monster "good", but it's presented in such a strait-laced, camp-free way by the directing, the Koizumi Hajime cinematography, and the Ifukube Akira music (which has much more of a rousing, militant flair than most of his scores in the franchise) that it has a sheen of potency and quality that even manages to make the weird costume and make-up used to create the inhabitants of the mysterious Planet X look like something out of a legitimate movie, no matter how objectively ridiculous they look. Which is pretty goddamn objectively ridiculous.
The film takes place in that old standby, 196X, meaning that it couldn't be more than four years in the future when the UN sends a two-man spacecraft, the P-1, to investigate the newly-discovered Planet X out beyond Jupiter. These astronauts are the American Glenn (Nick Adams, who appeared in Frankenstein Conquers the World earlier in the same year), who lacks a surname, and the Japanese Fuji (Takarada Akira), who lacks a given name. Meanwhile, back on earth, Fuji's sister Haruno (Sawai Keiko) is dating the hapless geek inventor Tetsuo (Kubo Akira), who has just invented some kind of ludicrous noisemaker and sold it - the first success of his professional career - to a toy company representative, Glenn's new girlfriend Namikawa (Mizuno Kumi). This coincidence isn't, as it eventually turns out, but long before then, Glenn and Fuji make landfall on Planet X, where they meet the not at all suspicious Controller (Tsuchiya Yoshio), who makes a not remotely too good to be true offer: if the people of Earth will allow Planet X to borrow Godzilla and Rodan, the X-ish scientists will share their cure for cancer. And why does Planet X need a pair of daikaiju? Because they've been under attack for some time by a being they call Monster Zero, better known to us Earth people as the three-headed space dragon King Ghidorah.
It's not remotely surprising - especially because of the Controller's evil, purring laugh when the humans head back to Earth - that this deal is just a blind: the Conroller can use mind control over all animals, and King Ghidorah, Godzilla, and Rodan are all under his power; the alien civilisation thus is able to start wreaking havoc on Earth until humankind submits to Xian rule. But all is not lost! It turns out that Tetsuo's ridiculous gadget makes a certain kind of noise deadly to the people of planet X, which is why Namikawa - a robot spy sent to destroy Earth's defensive capabilities - wanted to hide it away. But time spent with Glenn has taught her the Power of Love, and she defies her programming to communicate the knowledge needed to save the world from the giant monsters' all-out attack.
It is all very dumb.
But there are gradations of being dumb, I'd argue, and Invasion of Astro-Monster, kept aloft through some very solid filmmaking, manages to be effective and engaging regardless. Even Sekizawa isn't completely wallowing in his own silliness; the story he provided this time out is one of the tautest in the Godzilla series, in which there's not even the slightest gap between the human and monster elements of the film, for indeed they aren't "elements": there is one dramatic conflict, one throughline, and the humans in space, on Earth, and the giant monsters around them are all part of that. It's clean and efficient in a way that Godzilla movies rarely are.
That being said, its intelligent and story-driven use of the monsters is only so much of a comfort when the monster action is this impoverished: with footage copied from both Ghidorah and Rodan, this is not the first Godzilla film to steal footage from elsewhere in the series, but it's the first one where that theft is so ineptly done and obvious. And the new material isn't really all that good either, owing in large part to the massively redesigned Godzilla and Rodan suits; Rodan looks probably a bit better (certainly less bird-like) than he did in the last film, but the new Godzilla is the worst-looking since 1954's Godzilla started the franchise with its uncertain, rubbery mess of a monster. This was a conscious effort on Toho's part. Now that Godzilla was officially a good guy, he couldn't look as scary, so his snout was rounded down, his muscles were smoothed out, and his eyes were enlarged and brought forward - it is the Muppet Godzilla, in effect, pleasant and warm and cute and this is not my Godzilla. The only real upshot is that Nakajima Haruo, in the Godzilla suit, seems to have been much aware of the new freedom granted to him by the transformation of his character from gigantic, symbolically destructive hell-lizard into a giant human being with a tail and dorsal spines, and he's playing an especially human Godzilla this time around in a way that isn't great for the drama or action, but makes for a more personal and charming Godzilla than ever before. There are certainly problems, most significantly an infamous victory dance on Planet X - improvised by Nakajima and enthusiastically endorsed by effects director Tsuburaya Eiji, disliked greatly by Honda, and included in the final cut only after much hand-wringing - but for the most part, Godzilla is enough fun to watch here that I'm somewhat inclined to say that the film's unimaginative fight scenes and the limited screentime given the monsters are a smaller problem than might easily have been the case.
Besides, there's a lot of good effects work to make up for it: considering what was obviously a reduced budget (if nothing else, Mothra had to be written out when the filmmakers discovered they couldn't afford her), Tsuburaya gets some fine shots put together on the surface of Planet X, and there are explosions near the end whose abrupt, unfussy cheapness ends up making them seem somehow more unique and startling than they might easily have been.
It's all pretty trivial sci-fi adventure nonsense, defensible only in that it has been made with unusual care and gravity, but trivial sci-fi doesn't have to be unenjoyable, and this much, Invasion of Astro-Monster certainly is. Perhaps it is the first Godzilla movie which feels like it materially lacks imagination and and spectacle - it absolutely will not be the last - but the transformation to a genre even more threadbare and goofy than the daikaiju eiga was handled with unexpected skill and fluidity here. Kiddie B-movies, after all, can be well-made or not, like anything else, and Honda was too good of a craftsman at this point to sign off on careless junk.
And what a doozy to kick things off! We now arrive at 1965's Invasion of Astro-Monster, first released in an English dub as Monster Zero, which is the probably the more appropriate title. Either way, it's the film where the Godzilla films (of which it is the sixth) finally committed themselves entirely to the business of being artistically dubious B-movie, inasmuch as they hadn't been B-movies before this. Still, there's a qualitative jump from the things that even King Kong vs. Godzilla or Ghidorah, the Three-Headed Monster are, to the thing that Invasion of Astro-Monster is. Even that more official English title promises a certain degree of disreputable juvenalia (much more so than the original Japanese The Great Monster War, at least), and this promise is entirely fulfilled. With Invasion of Astro-Monster, we have the first - but not the last! - marriage of a Godzilla vehicle with a space invaders plot, of a sort much more characteristic of the 1950s than the 1960s. And as any habitué of Japanese space invaders films can tell you, they come in a very... special form, in that country. A sort of aura of a well-heeled high school drama club project, you might say, in which the most conspicuous feature of the sets and costumes is how visibly they've been redressed from stuff everybody could go out to the store and buy.
By all means, Invasion of Astro-Monster is closer to the best of these films than the worst, and while Toho might have decided by this point to downgrade their iconic daikaiju from the A-list star to matinee figure (or whatever the Japanese equivalent to a Saturday matinee would be), the full effects of that shift weren't to be felt in this film yet. I take this to be in no small part thanks to Honda Ishirō, who had at this point directed four consecutive Godzilla films, that streak ending hereafter. Even when he plainly did not care for the direction that Sekizawa Shinichi's at times very flighty screeenplays were going, Honda nearly always treated the material with respect and dignity, and this emerges in Invasion of Astro-Monster in a weirdly serious movie for such junky material, with the actors all kept tightly reined in from the traditional fluffiness that would almost inevitably have crept into any other film made from this scenario. I don't know if that's necessarily enough to make Invasion of Astro-Monster "good", but it's presented in such a strait-laced, camp-free way by the directing, the Koizumi Hajime cinematography, and the Ifukube Akira music (which has much more of a rousing, militant flair than most of his scores in the franchise) that it has a sheen of potency and quality that even manages to make the weird costume and make-up used to create the inhabitants of the mysterious Planet X look like something out of a legitimate movie, no matter how objectively ridiculous they look. Which is pretty goddamn objectively ridiculous.
The film takes place in that old standby, 196X, meaning that it couldn't be more than four years in the future when the UN sends a two-man spacecraft, the P-1, to investigate the newly-discovered Planet X out beyond Jupiter. These astronauts are the American Glenn (Nick Adams, who appeared in Frankenstein Conquers the World earlier in the same year), who lacks a surname, and the Japanese Fuji (Takarada Akira), who lacks a given name. Meanwhile, back on earth, Fuji's sister Haruno (Sawai Keiko) is dating the hapless geek inventor Tetsuo (Kubo Akira), who has just invented some kind of ludicrous noisemaker and sold it - the first success of his professional career - to a toy company representative, Glenn's new girlfriend Namikawa (Mizuno Kumi). This coincidence isn't, as it eventually turns out, but long before then, Glenn and Fuji make landfall on Planet X, where they meet the not at all suspicious Controller (Tsuchiya Yoshio), who makes a not remotely too good to be true offer: if the people of Earth will allow Planet X to borrow Godzilla and Rodan, the X-ish scientists will share their cure for cancer. And why does Planet X need a pair of daikaiju? Because they've been under attack for some time by a being they call Monster Zero, better known to us Earth people as the three-headed space dragon King Ghidorah.
It's not remotely surprising - especially because of the Controller's evil, purring laugh when the humans head back to Earth - that this deal is just a blind: the Conroller can use mind control over all animals, and King Ghidorah, Godzilla, and Rodan are all under his power; the alien civilisation thus is able to start wreaking havoc on Earth until humankind submits to Xian rule. But all is not lost! It turns out that Tetsuo's ridiculous gadget makes a certain kind of noise deadly to the people of planet X, which is why Namikawa - a robot spy sent to destroy Earth's defensive capabilities - wanted to hide it away. But time spent with Glenn has taught her the Power of Love, and she defies her programming to communicate the knowledge needed to save the world from the giant monsters' all-out attack.
It is all very dumb.
But there are gradations of being dumb, I'd argue, and Invasion of Astro-Monster, kept aloft through some very solid filmmaking, manages to be effective and engaging regardless. Even Sekizawa isn't completely wallowing in his own silliness; the story he provided this time out is one of the tautest in the Godzilla series, in which there's not even the slightest gap between the human and monster elements of the film, for indeed they aren't "elements": there is one dramatic conflict, one throughline, and the humans in space, on Earth, and the giant monsters around them are all part of that. It's clean and efficient in a way that Godzilla movies rarely are.
That being said, its intelligent and story-driven use of the monsters is only so much of a comfort when the monster action is this impoverished: with footage copied from both Ghidorah and Rodan, this is not the first Godzilla film to steal footage from elsewhere in the series, but it's the first one where that theft is so ineptly done and obvious. And the new material isn't really all that good either, owing in large part to the massively redesigned Godzilla and Rodan suits; Rodan looks probably a bit better (certainly less bird-like) than he did in the last film, but the new Godzilla is the worst-looking since 1954's Godzilla started the franchise with its uncertain, rubbery mess of a monster. This was a conscious effort on Toho's part. Now that Godzilla was officially a good guy, he couldn't look as scary, so his snout was rounded down, his muscles were smoothed out, and his eyes were enlarged and brought forward - it is the Muppet Godzilla, in effect, pleasant and warm and cute and this is not my Godzilla. The only real upshot is that Nakajima Haruo, in the Godzilla suit, seems to have been much aware of the new freedom granted to him by the transformation of his character from gigantic, symbolically destructive hell-lizard into a giant human being with a tail and dorsal spines, and he's playing an especially human Godzilla this time around in a way that isn't great for the drama or action, but makes for a more personal and charming Godzilla than ever before. There are certainly problems, most significantly an infamous victory dance on Planet X - improvised by Nakajima and enthusiastically endorsed by effects director Tsuburaya Eiji, disliked greatly by Honda, and included in the final cut only after much hand-wringing - but for the most part, Godzilla is enough fun to watch here that I'm somewhat inclined to say that the film's unimaginative fight scenes and the limited screentime given the monsters are a smaller problem than might easily have been the case.
Besides, there's a lot of good effects work to make up for it: considering what was obviously a reduced budget (if nothing else, Mothra had to be written out when the filmmakers discovered they couldn't afford her), Tsuburaya gets some fine shots put together on the surface of Planet X, and there are explosions near the end whose abrupt, unfussy cheapness ends up making them seem somehow more unique and startling than they might easily have been.
It's all pretty trivial sci-fi adventure nonsense, defensible only in that it has been made with unusual care and gravity, but trivial sci-fi doesn't have to be unenjoyable, and this much, Invasion of Astro-Monster certainly is. Perhaps it is the first Godzilla movie which feels like it materially lacks imagination and and spectacle - it absolutely will not be the last - but the transformation to a genre even more threadbare and goofy than the daikaiju eiga was handled with unexpected skill and fluidity here. Kiddie B-movies, after all, can be well-made or not, like anything else, and Honda was too good of a craftsman at this point to sign off on careless junk.
2 comments:
Just a few rules so that everybody can have fun: ad hominem attacks on the blogger are fair; ad hominem attacks on other commenters will be deleted. And I will absolutely not stand for anything that is, in my judgment, demeaning, insulting or hateful to any gender, ethnicity, sexual orientation, or religion. And though I won't insist on keeping politics out, let's think long and hard before we say anything particularly inflammatory.
Also, sorry about the whole "must be a registered user" thing, but I do deeply hate to get spam, and I refuse to take on the totalitarian mantle of moderating comments, and I am much too lazy to try to migrate over to a better comments system than the one that comes pre-loaded with Blogger.
There are quite a few notable Firsts in this movie, actually. Most significantly, it is the point where Godzilla's Fire breath officially transitioned from the strange, almost-gas-like form it had taken since the original 1954 movie, and instead became a full-on beam of energy (a form it is so recognized in that it is easy to subconsciously write it over the previous version; I know it took me MANY years to realize the difference, myself). Fitting, given that this is the movie wherein the franchise fully embraced flighty Science-Fiction.
ReplyDeleteIt is also the first time Ifukube would revisit his Military March from the original "Godzilla", fleshing it out into what is now known as the Monster Zero March. It's another of my personal favorite pieces of Ifukube's, and I agree it does give this movie's overall score a decidedly more Martial edge than is necessarily usual for his work. Yet its pounding rhythm and bouncing melody are pretty hard to resist, and the bridge is one of the very best Ifukube ever did, in my personal estimation.
It's also interesting to note that, even as the design tries (and fails; only the very last of Godzilla's many coming redesigns for the original series would be at all effective in making this idea work, in my opinion) to create a nicer, friendlier Godzilla, the script does not yet seem to have fully embraced this idea. After all, both here and in the following film, the plot moves in such a way as to allow Godzilla to still get up to some serious city-smashing, and the human characters still treat Godzilla and Rodan under entirely hostile terms; Glenn in particular is pretty clearly thrilled to be rid of them when the humans leave the duo behind on Planet X.
Beyond that, we're back in the land of Mostly In Agreement; it's a surprisingly good version of what it is, and for my money the story winds up holding together MUCH better than its immediate predecessor. It's not hard to see why this one is still a Fan-Favorite, camp and all.
I thought that was the case, in re: the military march, but I choked on actually saying it, because I wasn't certain. Thanks for the clarification, and as always, thanks for your lengthy and considered thoughts!
ReplyDelete