Godzilla

Előzetes 3
Akció / Kaland / Thriller / Sci-Fi
Egyesült Államok / Japán, 2014, 123 perc

Tartalmak(1)

A világ legismertebb, legfélelmetesebb és persze legnagyobb szörnye újjászületik. A radioaktív szennyeződés teremtette, hősök pusztították el, ám most kiderül: csupán átmenetileg sikerült megszabadulni tőle – a szendergéséből felébredő rém teremtői ellen fordul, és nincs, aki megállítsa. Legfeljebb más szörnyek... (InterCom)

Recenziók (19)

POMO 

az összes felhasználói recenzió

magyar Egy olyan film, amely bár biztonságos klisékben, gyerekes hozzáférhetőségben mozog, és senkit sem lep meg, de legalább egyben tart (a Tűzgyűrű merészebb és vagányabb volt, de dramaturgiailag diszfunkcionális). Emmerich változatával ellentétben ez ráadásul tiszteletben tartja a japán kultusz szabályait, és a hollywoodi technikai lehetőségek segítségével a japánok úgy élvezhetik nemzeti betyárjukat, ahogyan még soha nem látták. A karakterek, bár tisztelt és kasszasikerekben nem látott színészek játsszák, másodlagosak, lényeg az epikusság és a Spielberg kalandjainak szellemében készült hangulatos látványvilág. Erre emlékeztetnek az olyan konkrét jelenetek, mint a nyitó helikopteres repülés a szigetre, vagy a gyerekek ismételt elhelyezése minden egyes izgalmas akcióba. Ma elégedettség, öt évvel ezelőtt még elragadtatás lett volna. ()

Lima 

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angol It couldn't have gone better and Edwards delivered what he promised. He artfully walks the line between paying homage to his beloved Spielberg (so that, like Spielberg in Jaws, he entices us with mere hints for much of the runtime) and paying homage to all 29 of Toho's giant lizard movies and the four Godzilla generations that began in 1954 and closed up shop with great aplomb in 2004. Especially with the last two – the alternate reality series and the following new generation series – the new Godzilla has a lot of similarities in characters and narrative style. I laugh at some of the criticisms of the wise-cracking teens here, who at most have seen Emmerich’s movie and marvel (quite rightly, of course) that Godzilla shoots flames, swallows nukes and has legs like an elephant; that’s how they show their ignorance. I applaud Edwards for doing the almost impossible – finding a balance between classic Hollywood and the Japanese poetics of the Godzilla franchise, where everything was, is and hopefully will be possible. PS: The actors here, as with the Japanese originals, are essentially redundant, and the resolution of their family ties is also no different from their Japanese brethren, so it's pointless to fret over it. ()

Matty 

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angol SPOILERS AHEAD. Godzilla is like playing a video game made up exclusively of cutscenes. The characters are there more or less only so that through their eyes we can marvel at the monsters, which the film tries to obscure much less than in Jurassic Park, for example. The film acknowledges that people are important for it primarily as means of focalisation, so that, for example, we don’t see a fight that was not witnessed by any humans or, at the very least, by a main or supporting character (even though the “earthbound” human perspective here is not maintained as consistently as in Battle Los Angeles). The characters are repeatedly deprived of their agency (the impossibility to rescue one’s wife trapped in the exclusion zone) or it is made explicitly clear that they cannot do much against the monster and they won’t be able to coordinate their actions anyway. The real power belongs to nature and instinct, not to rationally behaving humans (regardless of whether they represent the military or science, or stand apart from established institutions), who are turned into a mere negligible part of an uncontrollable ecosystem (the only time I have felt similar helplessness from an American film was at the end of The Incredible Shrinking Man). People don’t have control over either the present or the future (their plans don’t work out for them); they can only learn from the past, which is an idea that is subordinated to the spiralling dramaturgy of the narrative with clearly indicated parallels between the situation in which Brody senior finds himself at the beginning and the situation in which Brody junior finds himself later. By constantly passivising the human protagonists and the predictability of the one-dimensional characters (the film is built on the most banal gender-based allocation of roles: a woman is a caring nurse, a man is a protective soldier), the Oedipal formula with an absentee father is sidelined in favour of the remarkable transformation of Godzilla, which bears the hallmarks of a villain (indestructibility, terrifying appearance), yet functions as a positive hero in the narrative (because it is the only one that can restore order). Using human characters to causally connect the individual scenes, the plot is developed in such a way that we end up siding with the monster, which is what whole film is about. How else should it be with a monster movie? Before I forget…the film also has brilliant sound effects (after all, using echolocation to track the monsters is one of the motifs of the narrative) and very convincing visual effects (i.e. I believe that a giant lizard could really look and move like that), while also offering breathtaking scenes as if from an art film, impressive only in how they look and how imagery and sound are harmonised within them (the night jump). The bar for other summer blockbusters has been set monstrously high. 85% ()

J*A*S*M 

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angol Indie directors shouldn’t get into commercial blockbusters, so I wouldn’t look forward to it only to be disappointed. There’s enough action, I believe, but it’s not exciting, which is a far bigger problem than if there was not enough action. The most interesting characters are removed in the first act, and for the remainder of the film, everyone stands staring like a moron, or either think up some bullshit (the bomb here is used in the same weird way as in the last Batman from Nolan) or try to arouse the emotions of the viewer (unsuccessfully). If they had “forgotten” about the story and just let the monsters beat the crap out of each other, it would’ve been better. But they didn’t and the result is painful several times. Visually it’s great, as expected, I would love to print out some frames and hang them on the wall, but when things move it’s really bland. And what pissed me off the most was that the unidimensional protagonist always shows up by chance exactly where the monster is heading. Were the Japanese Godzilla from the past the same? If that is the case, the bullshit has remained bullshit. And I don’t like bullshit. ()

Isherwood 

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angol Watching a blockbuster that is heavily schematic (the family archetype of soldier-sibling, the chessboard of supporting characters) while in many ways scrupulously circumventing genre stereotypes (the edited monster fights!), all the while building up space with precise camerawork and unnerving music, is simply a pure joy that is amplified several times over in the final battle to the required epic scope. Or it's been a long time since a destruction genre film made me so happy by actually being a conversational drama. PS: It will probably not be possible to beat the visual highlight of skydiving this year. ()

Malarkey 

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angol Unfortunately, it’s impossible to avoid comparisons to the previous Godzilla movie. I’m not reviewing the movies as such, but rather the times when I saw them. I think I would give both movies the same review today, but the first American Godzilla will forever remain the better movie for me because I didn’t have to stand in line at the video store to see this one and it wasn’t talked about so much, either. Also, I was younger and I didn’t really notice all the stupid stuff that Emmerich squeezed into his movie. I simply took it for a fact that everything was supposed to be so monumental and I sort of enjoyed the whole thing. Here I take it for a fact that Gareth Edwards finally managed to make a Godzilla movie that a Japanese person wouldn’t complain about. I also like that the story actually contains a whole different world, which is something I’m actually glad about. Emmerich’s Godzilla was a brutal piece of nonsense and had nothing in common with the original Godzilla. I also like the way Edwards approached the digital effects. Despite the fact that with a movie like this it might actually have been a bad idea. He did the same thing he did in Monsters and I‘m not sure a lot of people will like it. I don’t think this underground approach really works for Godzilla. Night action scenes where I could barely see anything really pissed me off. On the other hand, they still have their magic, which is why I’m going to stick with a three-star review. ()

Marigold 

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angol The screenplay builds on the clash of civilization with nature and is clearly based on the assumption that humanity is a relic of the past. How else can you explain that the characters are stenciled, sometimes speak like they have ingested psychotropic substances, and have no meaningful dramatic arcs? Only the most shabby vicissitudes of all remain - dad has to find his family. The rest is quickly zipped into bags and dismissed by a few approximate sentences. There is no realism, deeper psychology and provocative work with familiar motives (perhaps only death / generally serious stylization are unusually frequent guests here). The second covert (apparently) misanthropic element is the actions of human command, which he plans with the ingenuity of the Stone Age, and if anyone sees a deeper meaning in his actions, please let me know, preferably in writing and with drawings. So what we have left is Godzilla vs. MUTO + an ant human perspective, which can fragment the monster clash, cover it in time or inadvertently see it in all its gigantic majesty. People are simply not here to act and be interesting in and of themselves, but to be able to watch, and the film can be saturated with their views. Here, Gareth Edwards and his crew demonstrate that sometimes it is simply enough to supply nutritious food for the eyes and ears, and the effect still appears in the middle of a dysfunctional human story. Intoxicated by the scale of the monster, its clever aestheticization and framing in photogenic compositions is the meaning of Godzilla as a whole, which is slower and more majestic than usual. Similar to a couple of well-timed scenes and the old school thunder of Alexandre Desplat in the orchestra pit. The monsters from the depths have exactly the ballbusting vibration I expected from Pacific Rim. I finally get it in edible form a year later. We can speculate whether next year someone will deliver what was expected of Godzilla for a change. [75%] ()

DaViD´82 

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angol Waiting for Godot... Uh, no, Godzilla. Which wouldn't matter if it was waiting for “a battering" and not a "wannabe father figure Spielberg"; after all, with its focus on the action side "from the subjective point of view of human ants who worship the family above all", standing on insinuation and the unseen rather than full frontals, it is perhaps too reminiscent of Jaws or War of the Worlds. This is mainly due to the overuse of this approach, because what is pleasantly hidden and inspiring in the first half, becomes tiresome in the second half to the point that one loses interest, because if you are merely insinuating for the hundredth time but nothing happens, and for the hundredth time again at the last possible moment… nothing happens, then what’s the point of it all? Just a filler plot and shallow characters, more filler, more filler, Watanabe explaining "what the hell is happening" and all interlaced with "I have to return to my family and although I will not be able to see Godzilla, her roars will be heard constantly" in a thousand and one variations, and without at least one interesting character. To make matters worse, in this scheme that takes itself so deadly serious, this otherwise likable classic that honors the concept of a heroic monster is like Godzilla in a china shop. After all, when the best and the most playful parts of the movie are the opening credits, there must be something wrong. ()

novoten 

az összes felhasználói recenzió

angol What was promised the most, namely a new look at that notorious destroyer of skyscrapers, ultimately never came. The human factor brings a lot of unnecessary subplots and surprisingly transparent clichés, while the scientific background hides an elusive mass of rapid-fire technical jargon. And it is in vain that Gareth Edwards painstakingly conceals the monster in all its glory, so much so that I was literally exhausted from the eternal waiting and postponement even before the main attractions arrived. Given how high this was aiming, the letdown at the beginning of the closing credits was painfully sobering. The numerous explicitly nerve-racking scenes (the tunnel) thus manage to salvage at least some kind of experience only occasionally. ()

JFL 

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angol I understand the concept and I see the ambition of the filmmakers, but I can’t help it, the emperor has no clothes. The new American Godzilla is emblematic of our times – a typically exceedingly sophisticated film that’s informed by its roots, which it tries to update and recapture. This time, however, it works only on paper. Yes, we have here an attempt to make an American movie that is more faithful to the Japanese style of kaiju films, but it also embraces the influence of the (from a later perspective, atypical) serious first Godzilla. At the same time, the ambition here is to make a spectacular monster movie, but one in which people will be reduced to tiny creatures who are helpless against nature while also being conceived of as a simple anti-blockbuster in which everything will be conditioned by an ant’s perspective and the viewers will see what the characters themselves see instead of genre money shots. And the reason it doesn’t work is, paradoxically, what they tried to build the film on in the first place: the screenplay and the characters. The secret of the success of the in many ways similar Cloverfield and The Host lies in the consistent adherence to and use of the concept. Cloverfield sticks with the found-footage technique and its characters remain one-dimensional in the interest of giving priority to the monster as a catastrophe that towers over the tiny humans. Conversely, by developing its characters and highlighting the contrast between the commonplace and the monster, as well as the films unpredictable anti-genre nature, The Host manages to express the true nature of the monstrosity towering over the humans with its incomprehensibility. Edwards seems to want to have it both ways, but he doesn’t stick with either. The characters’ perspective and the denial of an ideal point of view become mere quirks when he regularly comes up with compensation in the form of a money shot from a splendid angle. The characters represent a completely absurd manifestation of the attempt to fake a sense of depth. What sense does it make to fill almost all of the major roles with established character actors (with the exception of the protagonist played by a walking pudding) and then give them ridiculously formulaic characters that even the best actor or actress can’t squeeze anything out of? I don’t understand how some reviewers can praise the passivisation of the characters when the film plays by the usual rules. Though it’s true that the most destructive weapons have no effect on the monsters this time, a more essential role is played by the gumption of the central all-American good guy, who not only eliminates all of the embryos of the other monsters, but at the same time also saves Godzilla’s neck in a showdown with the gigantic vermin. Not to mention the way he impeccably reunites strangers and even his own family and survives everything from the long journey home to nuclear explosions unscathed. The result is another contribution to the category of lavishly informed and well-thought-out remakes and adaptations in which experts can show off their ability to discern influences and transformations in comparison with the originals that inspired them. When we take a more detached view, however, all that remains is a burst bubble that may be mesmerising in the cinema with its subtly spectacular nature, but it comes up short at home (even on a big-screen TV). On the other hand, it’s necessary to acknowledge that if one survives the first hour of dysfunctional exposition and then submits to the ridiculous utilitarianism and contrivance of the smallest details, the fiercely serious American Godzilla provides as much of a campy spectacle as the classic, playful adventures of its Japanese inspiration. () (kevesebbet) (több)

gudaulin Boo!

az összes felhasználói recenzió

angol Japanese mega-monsters were some of my first movie theater experiences in ancient times, and for a five-year-old boy, they were incredibly impressive with their sneaky special effects. Since then, a lot of time has passed, and my demands have multiplied many times over. I am not a fan of blockbusters and genre-wise, I am not interested in the genre of Edwards' film, so my expectations were low, and if the television hadn't served the film right under my nose, I wouldn't have bothered with it. I consider the subject matter even more infantile and outdated, especially in a time of booming special effects-based fairy tales for the whole family. However, with proper oversight, craftsmanship, and the ability to work with exaggeration appropriately, something interesting could have been created. Unfortunately, the film does not meet even minimal expectations. Once again, I had the feeling that someone had put my testicles in a vice. Edwards' Godzilla ultimately fails as an undemanding, entertaining big-budget spectacle, and it fails again in that it wants to break free from this label, using alternative elements and being more distinctive. Above all, it is simply stupid. Even within the framework of a fictional world, there should be some rules, motivation, and behavioral patterns. This is made for viewers with the intellectual level of a five-year-old child. I don't blame Godzilla for not being realistic and intelligent. You simply can't expect that from it. I do blame it, however, for not being smarter than its 70-year-old predecessors. I may have appreciated Edwards' debut film made in modest circumstances (appropriately), but here I get the feeling of insulting mediocrity. Sure, with such a high budget and technical means, it might be impossible not to shoot a few impressive, atmospheric shots, but as a whole, Godzilla is a painful defeat. An entirely different chapter is the enthusiastic comments and high ratings from some film critics, where one would expect expertise, objectivity, and an analytical perspective. Instead, I feel like they behave as if they are in a joke where a blind, deaf, and armless person is supposed to analyze an elephant. I declare that I will never watch a film about overgrown radioactive lizards again. Overall impression: 5%. ()

3DD!3 

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angol A tribute to the original Godzillas. As a kid I used to gulp down this type of movie via satellite and it seems that Edwards had the same diet. But this more realistically conceived disaster movie is miles away from my popcorn chum of the 1990s. Tubby is presented here as the good guy and people appear only to be trampled or devoured. A big shame about the shaky screenplay that on the one hand deftly fills us in on the entire mythology very refreshingly, on the other it fails on a human level, where, also thanks to the appalling Aaron Taylor-Johnson, the viewer feels nothing towards the main protagonist and often curses human stupidity in general (in a way this is due faithfulness to the originals, but that’s unnecessary). Just Bryan Cranston squeezes the maximum from his character and is a passable foil to the monster. The effects are first-class, the ending a revue of eye pleasing shots that combine the modern filming style with the Japanese kaiju movie tradition. Change the people and bring on part 2! ()

Kaka 

az összes felhasználói recenzió

angol Something between Emmerich and the classic. It takes the strong visuals from the former, which are similarly high-quality, with equally strong panoramas and even more detailed visuals, while it takes the appearance of the monsters and the main storyline pattern mainly from the classics. Emmerich was much more flashy and spectacular, but this one is heavily effective and within the limits of down-to-earth filmmaking, although it doesn’t lack a big finale. The linear intensification of the atmosphere is great, the main characters and their presence on the screen are unexpectedly variable, and Godzilla's appearance brings a smile to your face. It is an interesting blockbuster, not as robust as its predecessor perhaps, but certainly smarter, more cleverly crafted, not relying solely on destruction of everything possible and formal attractiveness, but also on directing actors, screenplay, editing, and above all, it carries a sense of homage to the original films in the air. ()

D.Moore 

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angol Once the you know what to expect and have no problem accepting Edwards's imaginative and daring play, there is simply no choice but to be thoroughly satisfied with Godzilla and enjoy it from start to finish. ()

lamps 

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angol A big beater that goes about it differently – and very cleverly. Thanks to Edwards's thoughtful staging, choice of camera angles and point-of-view shots, we don't just watch the protagonists, we are them or with them most of the time. And the expectation game set up with this, which often misses a spectacular scene at its best (the absolutely phenomenal sequence at the Hawaiian airport is a prime example). This may annoy some people, as the monsters have long been shown only on the basis of visual cues from the human perspective, but for me it's an unbeatable masterstroke that builds an atmosphere almost as dense as James Wan's. The story is not overwhelmed by unnecessary diversion, but rather balanced between its Japanese models and the requirements of American blockbusters (spectacular action and visuals + clearly developed personal conflicts and the story of the main character). The spectacular action is truly spectacular (the entire final half hour in "hell" and the breathtaking parachute jump), and the human heroes are not annoying, both because of the brilliant casting (even the routine role of the militant boss is played by the charismatic Strathairn), and because they serve a secondary function in the eyes of the narrative, and their actions and perspective continually set the stage for the main stars – the monsters. In short, everything is so well put together that the story itself doesn't even have to make complete sense – an incredible win for a monster blockbuster. 90% By the way, it amazes me that the editors of Moviezone, people so widely familiar with filmmaking language and genres, can't appreciate such an impressive big film. Perhaps they should stop with the navel gazing every now and then. ()

Othello 

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angol It’s been a while since I’ve seen a movie that you can talk about so much and so well. Judging by some of the reviews already, some are already enthralled by the creative team's pious reverence for the Japanese original (atomic breath!), others by the director's method of following the peripeteia of the giant monsters always from the position of an anonymous humanoid, others by the transformation of the central character into a giant monster who deserves our love but is never able to return it. I too must confess that when, at the end, the camera chased the sinking Gojiru, but did not go underwater with it again, I was moved by my smallness and insignificance compared to a creature so perfect and wise, who would no doubt never have known of my feelings for him and I would have pursued him to the ends of the earth. And I’m not into chubbies. Edwards fully lives up to what we expect from an aspiring indie director when someone injects 160 million into his veins. It's packed with auteurism and individual ideas. I liked the incorporation of crucial scenes from modern video games (fighter jets falling from the sky à la Modern Warfare 2, a submarine being blown up in the jungle with an insectoid creature in the background – Crysis, soldiers jumping out of a plane into the rising sun – Battlefield 2), I loved the religious rapture of the pidihumanoids towards something so vastly unreachable, I loved every entrance of the giant lizard onto the scene (flares), I was tense during the silent scene on the railroad bridge, I enjoyed the incredibly destructive picnic of the ancient creatures in San Francisco. No point then in addressing the total lack of logic or the unnecessary main human storyline right after Bryan Cranston jumps in. The movie should have been shot entirely from the perspective of random bystanders. Ken Watanabe and Sally Hawkins (for her, of course, as usual) were practically unwatchable. But these are minimal compromises compared to what the film offers. I can understand the lower rating – this movie really doesn't shine when you watch it on a bus with your cell phone. ()

kaylin 

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angol I won't be so critical as to not see any mistakes in this film, there are quite a few of them in terms of logic, but this is still a movie that is based on kaiju films and essentially on B-movie production, where the story is usually a bit secondary and it's mainly about the monsters. I like that they are the main focus here because the human characters are not worth it. I was hoping that this would be somewhat like Japanese classics and in fact, it kind of fulfilled that for me. The American scenes also contribute to it, but the monsters are the winners and that's simply beautiful. I was expecting a messed up film, but I'm really glad with the result. ()

Ediebalboa 

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angol Gojira! Gareth Edwards went back to his roots. In his enthusiasm, however, he forgot several circumstances that ultimately bring his Godzilla down. Ironically, it's the human storyline of the film that Gareth apparently didn't care much about and inserted it just to fulfill the standard outline of an American blockbuster. The combination of a bad script, the performances of the actors and the dialogues make you pray for the giant lizard to reappear on the screen. The most charismatic character dies incomprehensibly in the first third without causing any breaking point in the film. In the end, all you have left is the visual aspect, which was heavily promoted in the trailers all along, but that's about it. ()

wooozie 

az összes felhasználói recenzió

angol After watching this movie, I felt such peace of mind concerning a potential alien invasion. If all the armies, Avengers and Justice League fail, we still have Godzilla as backup, so there’s absolutely no doubt we would win the battle for the future of our world. Otherwise, as far as the movie is concerned, it's not a complete disaster and it has quite a good pace, but for me, there will only be one Godzilla. ()

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