Posted on 10/17/2004 6:59:08 PM PDT by Land_of_Lincoln_John
It is an excuse to travel using University money, and cheat on their spouses.
Well, the monster was a metaphor for the Bomb,
and the Japanese were not really at liberty (nor
inclined) to crank out WW-II movies like Hollywood
was doing, but I doubt the conference will get
much more insightful than this.
....Godzilla was the Anti-christian evolutionist answer to the 'Rising sun Japan'......
Rather than bow the knee to Jesus,.....'they' invented/substituted.......'Godzilla'.....(Godzilla was 19-K)...
/sarcasm
(Some of the '90s updatings are quite good.)
However, if Godzilla sprang back to life and trampled and destroyed Lawrence KS, it would get significantly more insightful.
Godzilla shows man's inhumanity against man and godzookie represents the problems of fatherhood in post fedual Japan.
-how exactly does Godzilla show any of that??
look its a guy in a giant rubber monster suit! do I have to spell it out for you!!! Yeesh, philistine.
For example, the first Godzilla film came only eight months after the United States tested a hydrogen bomb in the South Pacific.The movie in which H-bomb testing disturbs Godzilla's undersea habitat and transforms him into a behemoth with fiery, radioactive breath reflects anxiety and a feeling of helplessness in the face of a nuclear threat, Igarashi said.
I think that Toho made a Godzilla film in the 1990s (King Ghidorah?) that altered this aspect of the character's history. It showed Godzilla coming to the aid of Japanese troops and killing some American GIs. That would be pre-bomb drop.
It is also reeks of nationalism at what should be considered a LOW point of Japanese history.
>> but I doubt the conference will get much more insightful than this
> However, if Godzilla sprang back to life and trampled
> and destroyed Lawrence KS, it would get significantly
> more insightful.
Can't argue with that, and I live in KS. I'd vote
to make him the state mascot.
> It is also reeks of nationalism at what should
> be considered a LOW point of Japanese history.
They were pretty shaken by losing a war, particularly
the final two acts, artificial rising suns over two
cities - and then discovering that the enemy was a
hell of lot more gracious in victory than they would
have been. They were searching for a new identity.
The conflicted characters in their "westerns" (samurai
movies) reflect that as well.
Godzilla's legacy? He's the best clutch hitter in pinstripes.
If it not some guy in a scaly rubber suit tearing up downtown Tokyo, atomicpossum.
IT AIN'T GODZY!!!
Jebus! You'd think they'd come up with a more intriguing topic.
Jack.
Absolutely. I'm talking about the JAPANESE films from the 90s, not the Matthew Broderick garbage (what drek!).
The continuity for the Godzilla films is absolutely horrible-- there truly isn't one. Films contradict each other, the character returns after being destroyed in the previous film with no explanation, etc.
The last time I looked, Godzilla was tearing up Boston.
Weegee to overpaid scholars: Keep repeating "It's only a movie! It's only a movie!"
Here's the trailer:
http://www.apple.com/trailers/independent/godzilla.html
I can't wait for the DVD to be released.
Oh, yeah, and Raymond Burr is NOT NOT NOT in it! (yay!)
You haven't heard of the new degree, "PhD in Godzilla Studies"?
Beats workin' for a living, I suppose. At least they could study "Star Trek" by renting a bunch of movies and going to a fan convention. Now *that* would be relevant.
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