Godzilla Raids Again All Godzilla Forms
" | The monster Godzilla against the newly-actualization fierce dragon Anguirus! The great story of the terrifying spirits that binge through Japan! (怪獣ゴジラ対新登場の暴龍アンギラス 日本全土狭しと暴れ廻る驚天動地の巨篇!) | „ |
— Japanese tagline |
" | Godzilla challenged by new monster... Angilas! | „ |
— International tagline |
" | Cipher like it ever before! | „ |
— American taglines |
Godzilla Raids Over again (ゴジラの逆襲, Gojira no Gyakushū, lit. Godzilla's Counterattack) is a 1955 tokusatsu kaiju picture produced by Toho, and the 2d installment in the Godzilla serial as well every bit the Showa series. The film was released to Japanese theaters on Apr 24, 1955,[3] and to American theaters on May 21, 1959.
The get-go of many sequels to the original Godzilla, Godzilla Raids Again introduced the serial' staple of pitting Godzilla confronting another monster, in this case the behemothic Ankylosaurus known as Anguirus. The film follows pilots Shoichi Tsukioka and Koji Kobayashi, who notice a second Godzilla locked in battle with Anguirus and report their story to Japanese authorities. As Godzilla and Anguirus' boxing threatens to decimate the pilots' beloved home of Osaka, the two men volition play a central role in the decisive battle to save Nippon from Godzilla'southward wrath.
Plot [edit | edit source]
Pilots Shoichi Tsukioka and Koji Kobayashi are scouting the body of water for schools of fish for Marine Fisheries KK, located in Osaka. Suddenly, the engine for Kobayashi'due south aeroplane malfunctions and he makes an emergency landing on the remote Iwato Island. Hidemi Yajima, Tsukioka'south lover and the daughter of the company's possessor, informs him of the situation, and he immediately flies to the isle to rescue his friend. Tsukioka sees Kobayashi's plane sitting atop the water about the island, with Kobayashi himself waving at Tsukioka's airplane from the island. Tsukioka lands and reunites with Kobayashi, who has only suffered a sprained wrist in the incident. The ii men hear foreign noises coming from the cliffs on the island, and then look to find two huge monsters battling on the island. Tsukioka immediately recognizes 1 of the monsters as Godzilla, just cannot identify the other. The grappling monsters tumble off the island into the bounding main below, after which they both disappear.
Upon returning to Osaka, Tsukioka and Kobayashi report their story to the government. A conference with the JSDF, several scientists, including Kyohei Yamane, and the two pilots is held in Osaka, where they determine that the monster Godzilla was fighting is a beast called Anguirus. Co-ordinate to a report from a Polish scientist, Anguirus is a roughshod dinosaur that lived during the same time as Godzilla, and harbored an intense hatred of trigger-happy creatures similar Godzilla. Like Godzilla, Anguirus had been living deep secret only to be disturbed and awakened past recent nuclear testing. When asked how they can hope to stop Godzilla, Dr. Yamane shows footage recorded of the first Godzilla's raid on Tokyo the previous twelvemonth, then regretfully states that there is no believable way to defeat this Godzilla. Yamane mentions that the first Godzilla was killed past the Oxygen Destroyer, a chemical weapon invented past Daisuke Serizawa, but unfortunately Serizawa had taken his ain life to ensure the weapon could never be used once again. Yamane offers one piece of advice: Godzilla harbors a strange instinct towards lights, possibly due to their reminding him of the atomic bomb that awakened him. If a blackout is enforced and flares are dropped offshore, Yamane believes Godzilla can be lured away from the mainland.
When Godzilla unexpectedly surfaces in Osaka Bay, a coma is immediately enforced on the city as citizens are evacuated. Fighter jets wing over the bay and begin dropping flares, which successfully lure Godzilla abroad from the urban center. Meanwhile, a group of prisoners phase an escape from the truck transporting them, beginning a lengthy hunt with the constabulary across the port area. After the prisoners hijack a fuel truck, two pursuing officers get into a car driven past Tsukioka and ask him to follow the truck. Somewhen, the truck flies off a ramp and crashes into a refinery, starting a raging fire that apace consumes the port area. The fire before long draws Godzilla's attending, and he approaches Osaka once again. Anguirus also comes ashore, and resumes his boxing with Godzilla. The JSDF opens fire on the kaiju, but their weapons have no event as Godzilla and Anguirus begin tearing the metropolis apart. Their boxing destroys countless buildings, including the tuna cannery that Tsukioka and Kobayashi piece of work for. Eventually, the ii monsters accomplish Osaka Castle, which is destroyed every bit Godzilla tackles Anguirus into it. Godzilla then bites downward onto Anguirus' neck, causing him to bleed profusely before falling into the moat below. Godzilla fires his atomic breath at his foe, burning him to death and leaving Godzilla the victor. He leaves Osaka ablaze and in ruins.
In the backwash of the devastation, Tsukioka and Kobayashi discover the cannery in ruins. Their boss informs Kobayashi that he will exist transferred to the company'south Hokkaido branch while he and his daughter clean upwardly in Osaka. Later he has been working in Hokkaido for some time, Kobayashi is informed that Mr. Tajima, Hidemi, and Tsukioka will be arriving in Hokkaido soon, and meets them one night at a company party. While Tsukioka and Kobayashi are catching upward, they larn that ane of the company's ships has merely been sunk somewhere off the coast. Knowing Godzilla must be responsible, Tsukioka gets into his plane and begins scouring the surrounding waters despite Hidemi'south protests. Tsukioka eventually finds Godzilla coming ashore on the remote icy Kamiko Island, and alerts the JSDF. Kobayashi switches shifts with Tsukioka to keep an eye on Godzilla while he flies to a JSDF base. Every bit the war machine begins arriving on the island to assault Godzilla, Kobayashi notices the monster beginning to get out the island. He dive-bombs Godzilla with his plane, simply to be blasted by his atomic jiff and killed upon impact with the slopes of the island. As Tsukioka grieves for his friend, he notices an avalanche of ice falling from the area Kobayashi'southward plane struck, giving him the idea to bury Godzilla nether ice. Tsukioka tells his plan to the JSDF, which begins an functioning to blast the slopes of the island using fighter jets. After a few minutes, Godzilla is cached in snow upward to his waist, equally the JASDF pilots return to base to refuel and reload.
To forbid Godzilla from escaping the isle, the JSDF lines the shore of the island with gasoline barrels and lights them on fire. Presently, the fighter jets render, with Tsukioka flight i. The jets open fire on the slopes again, and although some are shot downward by Godzilla's atomic breath, Tsukioka and the JASDF are successful in completely burying Godzilla under the water ice. With the menace finally halted, Tsukioka solemnly looks to the sky and says, "Kobayashi, we buried Godzilla for you lot."
Staff [edit | edit source]
- Main article: Godzilla Raids Once again/Credits.
Staff role on the left, staff member's name on the correct.
- Directed by Motoyoshi Oda
- Written by Shigeaki Hidaka and Takeo Murata
- Story by Shigeru Kayama
- Produced by Tomoyuki Tanaka
- Music by Masaru Sato
- Cinematography past Seiichi Endo
- Edited by Kazuji Taira
- Production Design by Teruaki Abe, Takeo Kita, and Akira Watanabe
- Special Effects by Eiji Tsuburaya
Gigantis, the Fire Monster [edit | edit source]
Staff part on the left, staff fellow member'south name on the correct.
- Directed by Hugo Grimaldi
- Produced by Paul Schreibman, Edmund Goldman
- Edited by Hugo Grimaldi
Bandage [edit | edit source]
Actor'southward name on the left, graphic symbol played on the right.
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Gigantis, the Burn down Monster [edit | edit source]
Actor's name on the left, graphic symbol played on the correct.
- Keye Luke as Shoichi Tsukioka (voice)
- Marvin Miller as Koji Kobayashi (phonation) / Narrator
- Paul Frees as Doctor Kyohei Yamane / Captain Terasawa / Kohei Yamaji (vocalisation)
- George Takei as Ikeda (vox)
Appearances [edit | edit source]
Gallery [edit | edit source]
- Main article: Godzilla Raids Again/Gallery.
Soundtrack [edit | edit source]
- Chief article: Godzilla Raids Once again (Soundtrack).
Alternate titles [edit | edit source]
- Godzilla's Counterattack (literal Japanese title)
- Gigantis, the Fire Monster (United states; Gigantis, el Monstruo de Fuego; Mexico)
- The Return of Godzilla (Le Retour de Godzilla; France; French Belgium; De Terugkeer van Godzilla; Dutch Belgium)
- Godzilla Returns (Godzilla kehrt zurück; West Frg)
- The King of the Monsters (Il Re dei Mostri; Italy; El Rey de los Monstruos; Spain)
- Godzilla: The Sea Monster (Godzila: Morsko Čudovište; Yugoslavia)
- The Fire Monster (O Monstro de Fogo; Brazil)
- Godzilla Counterattacks (Godzilla contraataca; Spanish video title; Godzilla Contra-Ataca; Brazilian Blu-ray championship)
- The Fauna That Ruined Cities (Şehirleri Mahveden Canavar; Turkey)
Theatrical releases [edit | edit source]
View all posters for the motion picture here.
- Japan - April 24, 1955
- Usa - May 21, 1959
- France - October 1, 1957
- Italy - 1957
- Belgium - 1957
- Westward Germany - Feb 24, 1958
- Spain - 1958
- Uk - April 1960[iv]
- South korea - May 17, 1960
- United mexican states - June 30, 1960
- Yugoslavia
- Brazil - January 1961
Foreign releases [edit | edit source]
U.Due south. release [edit | edit source]
Following the successful U.S. release of Godzilla, Rex of the Monsters!, Toho sold the American distribution rights to Godzilla Raids Again to Harry Rybnick and Edward Barison. Their thought was to create a new moving-picture show for AB-PT Pictures Corporation using the special effects sequences from Godzilla Raids Once more. Ib Melchior and Edwin Watson drafted a screenplay, titled The Volcano Monsters, in which Godzilla and Anguirus, now respectively referred to as a Tyrannosaurus rex and an Ankylosaurus, are discovered in a volcanic cavern. Toho shipped new Godzilla and Anguirus suits to Hollywood to allow the producers to film new footage of the monsters. Ultimately, AB-PT Pictures Corp. closed down in 1957 before product started on The Volcano Monsters. The monster suits were eventually lost.
In 1958, the film'southward U.S. distribution rights were acquired past producer Paul Schreibman, who hired Hugo Grimaldi to re-write and re-edit the film, re-titling it Gigantis, the Fire Monster. Aside from changing Godzilla's name to "Gigantis," Grimaldi's version changes the origins of the monsters: "Gigantis" and Anguirus are described as two related species of prehistoric fire monsters. The sound effects of the monsters were contradistinct to reverberate this, with several shots of Godzilla augmented with Anguirus' roar. Additionally, virtually all of Masaru Sato'southward original score was replaced with library music, almost of which was composed by Paul Sawtell and Bert Shefter for other science fiction films. Stock footage from other science fiction films featuring dinosaurs was also added into the film. For years, it was believed that the reason for these changes was that Warner Bros. did not have the rights to Godzilla'due south name. Withal, Paul Schreibman said that he inverse Godzilla'due south name to "Gigantis" to give the audience the impression that they were seeing a new monster, believing an original film would sell better than a sequel. He has since claimed he came to regret that determination
The English dubbing, also supervised and directed past Grimaldi, was recorded at Ryder Sound Service, Inc. in Hollywood. The voice cast featured veteran performers Keye Luke, Marvin Miller, and Paul Frees, every bit well as a very young George Takei of Star Trek fame. Luke was cast as Tsukioka, whose grapheme now narrated the events of the moving picture. In add-on to voicing Kobayashi, Miller narrated a pre-credit stock footage montage detailing man's scientific progress.
Subsequently completing the Americanization of the picture, Paul Schreibman sold the theatrical rights to Warner Bros., which released the film on May 21, 1959. Gigantis, the Burn down Monster was presented on a double feature with Teenagers from Outer Space, which Warner also purchased from Schreibman.
Gigantis, the Burn Monster did not enter standard goggle box syndication later on its theatrical run. The film remained obscure in the U.South. until its reappearance on cablevision Television in 1984, followed past syndicated airings and a VHS release via Video Treasures in 1989. A video generated title card restoring Toho's English language title, Godzilla Raids Again, accompanied the film in syndication in the belatedly 1980s and early 1990s. This version was released on DVD alongside the Japanese version by Archetype Media on November vii, 2006. The Due north American distribution rights to Godzilla Raids Over again are currently held by Janus Films, who released it forth with all of the other Showa Godzilla films in The Benchmark Collection's Blu-ray box set up titled Godzilla: The Showa-Era Films, 1954-1975 in 2019.
United Kingdom release [edit | edit source]
Eros Films brought Gigantis, the Fire Monster to UK theaters in April 1960, as part of a double characteristic with The Nights of Lucretia Borgia.[5] Information technology received an A rating from the British Board of Film Censors, preventing children under 11 from seeing it unless accompanied past a parent or guardian. Sony released Godzilla Raids Again on Blu-ray in 2022 as office of the The Criterion Drove'due south Godzilla: The Showa-Era Films, 1954–1975 box ready.
West German release [edit | edit source]
Godzilla Raids Once again was released in Westward Germany on Feb 24, 1958 by Donau Picture.[6] Less than a infinitesimal of footage was excised.[vii] Among other mistakes, the opening credits erroneously requite directorial credit to production designer Teruaki Abe instead of Motoyoshi Oda.
Box part [edit | edit source]
Godzilla Raids Again sold approximately viii,340,000 tickets in Nihon, less than its predecessor but still more than every Godzilla motion-picture show that followed, save for Rex Kong vs. Godzilla. It grossed around ¥170,000,000, becoming Toho's 4th-highest earner in 1955, and 10th amongst Japanese films overall.[eight]
Reception [edit | edit source]
The film was generally poorly received by fans and critics, who criticized information technology as a rushed sequel. It is, however, notable for being the first Godzilla motion-picture show to introduce the formula of Godzilla contesting other monsters, which would get a staple of the franchise.
Video releases [edit | edit source]
Toho DVD (2001)
- Region: 2
- Discs: 1
- Audio: Japanese (two.0 Mono)
- Subtitles: Japanese
- Special features: Sound commentary by Sadamasa Arikawa and Tomioka Motoyoshi, isolated score, massive prototype gallery (several chiliad)
Classic Media DVD (2006)[9]
- Region: ane
- Discs: 1
- Sound: Japanese (ii.0 Mono) and English language (2.0 Mono)
- Subtitles: English
- Special features: Audio commentary by Steve Ryfle (for the American version), The Fine art of Accommodate Acting featurette (xiv minutes), affiche slideshow
- Notes: The American version of the moving picture has a video-generated Godzilla Raids Once again championship carte du jour in place of the original Gigantis the Fire Monster title card. Reissued in 2012; both releases are out of print.
Splendid DVD (2009)[10]
- Region: 2
- Discs: 1
- Sound: German (1.0 Mono), Japanese (ane.0 mono)
- Subtitles: German language
- Special features: Trailers
Toho Blu-ray (2014)[xi]
- Region: A/1
- Discs: 1
- Audio: Japanese (LPCM 2.0)
- Subtitles: Japanese
- Special features: Audio commentary by Sadamasa Arikawa and Tomioka Motoyoshi, isolated score, dispatch trailer, radio ads for Godzilla (1954) and Godzilla Raids Once more, image gallery (12 minutes), "Godzilla'south Creation! Yoshio Suzuki" featurette (xx minutes)
Splendid Blu-ray (2014)
- Region: B/two
- Discs: one
- Audio: Japanese (DTS-HD Principal Audio 2.0), German language (DTS-Hard disk Master Audio two.0)
- Subtitles: German, Dutch
- Special features: None
The Criterion Drove Blu-ray (2019) [Godzilla: The Showa-Era Films, 1954–1975]
- Region: A/1 or B/2
- Discs: eight
- Audio: Japanese
- Subtitles: English language
- Special features: All bonus features on Criterion'southward Godzilla Blu-ray, 1990 Ishiro Honda interview by Yoshimitsu Banno, interview with director Alex Cox, interviews with actors Bin Furuya and Tsugutoshi Komada, 2011 interview with critic Tadao Sato, unused effects sequences from Toho releases including Destroy All Monsters, trailers, illustrated hardcover book with an essay by Steve Ryfle and liner notes on each film by Ed Godziszewski[12]
- Notes: Uses a new English subtitle translation past Kerim Yasar. Sony distributed a Region B/2 version of the set in the United Kingdom.
Videos [edit | edit source]
Trailers [edit | edit source]
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Miscellaneous [edit | edit source]
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Trivia [edit | edit source]
- Godzilla Raids Once more was the first Godzilla film to feature ii monsters.
- The Godzilla suit used for this motion picture, the GyakushuGoji, was slimmer and lighter than the previous ShodaiGoji suit used in the first moving picture, putting less force per unit area on the histrion, and making every fight scene with Anguirus easier.
- The JSDF's tactic of enforcing a blackout in Osaka to protect it from Godzilla is the same tactic used past Nippon at the end of Earth War II to protect cities from Allied bombing raids.
- Godzilla Raids Once again is the only Godzilla movie to appointment where Godzilla's dorsal fins consistently do not glow prior to him releasing his atomic breath. Later films would only occasionally not prove the discharge, often by mistake.
- Godzilla Raids Again is one of only two Godzilla films in which the JSDF defeats the monster at the end with existing technology, along with The Return of Godzilla.
- There are no scenes which feature Godzilla using his atomic heat ray from the full conform-view. Every time he does, the hand-operated boob caput is used. This is due to the fact that the suit'due south mouth could not open wide enough.
- Gigantis, the Burn Monster was distributed in the United States by Warner Bros., who would distribute Legendary Pictures' Godzilla and its sequels over 55 years afterwards.
- After this film's release, Toho took a 7-year intermission from making Godzilla films. However, during these seven years they continued to make kaiju films, and introduced ii of the other most recognizable monsters from the Showa era: Rodan and Mothra.
- In the Kaiju Guide for Bandai Namco'southward Godzilla, Anguirus' bio states that he once battled a monster chosen "Gigantis," who has since been banished from this airplane of beingness, an inside joke relating to the American version of Godzilla Raids Again.
- Godzilla Raids Again is the last Godzilla motion picture to be filmed in black and white and the Academy attribute ratio.
- Two shots of newspapers identify the events of Godzilla Raids Over again in January of 1955, possibly stretching into February.
- In the scene at the Yayoi eatery in Hokkaido, the song that the fishermen are singing is the Hokkaido ocean shanty Sōran Bushi (ソーラン節).
External links [edit | edit source]
- List of changes in the American version
References [edit | edit source]
This is a listing of references for Godzilla Raids Again. These citations are used to identify the reliable sources on which this article is based. These references appear inside articles in the form of superscript numbers, which expect like this: [ane]
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| Godzilla Raids Again (Gallery) |
| Godzilla (GyakushuGoji) • Anguirus • Original Godzilla |
| Shoichi Tsukioka • Kojikawa Kobayashi • Kyohei Yamane |
| Hiroshi Koizumi • Minoru Chikai • Takashi Shimura • Haruo Nakajima • Katsumi Tezuka |
| Motoyoshi Oda • Shigekai Hidaka • Shigeru Kayama • Takeo Murata • Shigeru Kayama • Masaru Sato • Eiji Tsuburaya |
| Soundtrack |
Films | |
---|---|
| Godzilla (1954) • Godzilla Raids Once more • King Kong vs. Godzilla • Mothra vs. Godzilla • Ghidorah, the Three-Headed Monster • Invasion of Astro-Monster • Ebirah, Horror of the Deep • Son of Godzilla • Destroy All Monsters • All Monsters Set on • Godzilla vs. Hedorah • Godzilla vs. Gigan • Godzilla vs. Megalon • Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla • Terror of Mechagodzilla • The Render of Godzilla • Godzilla vs. Biollante • Godzilla vs. Rex Ghidorah • Godzilla vs. Mothra • Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla II • Godzilla vs. SpaceGodzilla • Godzilla vs. Destoroyah • GODZILLA (1998) • Godzilla 2000: Millennium • Godzilla vs. Megaguirus • Godzilla, Mothra and King Ghidorah: Behemothic Monsters All-Out Attack • Godzilla Confronting Mechagodzilla • Godzilla: Tokyo SOS • Godzilla Final Wars • Godzilla (2014) • Shin Godzilla • GODZILLA: Planet of the Monsters • GODZILLA: City on the Border of Battle • GODZILLA: The Planet Eater • Godzilla: King of the Monsters • Godzilla vs. Kong |
| "Godzilla vs. Charles Barkley" • Monster Planet of Godzilla • Godzilla: The Real 4-D • Dream Claiming: Godzilla Appears in Sukagawa • "The Faceless Star" • Godzilla vs. Evangelion: The Real iv-D • Godzilla Interception Operation Awaji • Godzilla Appears at Godzilla Fest • Godzilla the Ride: Behemothic Monsters Ultimate Battle • "The Impact of a Blue Day" • Godzilla vs. Hedorah • 1000 vs. G 2 |
| Gamera (1965) • Gamera vs. Barugon • Gamera vs. Gyaos • Gamera vs. Viras • Gamera vs. Guiron • Gamera vs. Jiger • Gamera vs. Zigra • Gamera: Super Monster • Gamera vs. Garasharp • Gamera: Guardian of the Universe • Gamera 2: Attack of the Legion • Gamera iii: Revenge of Iris • Gamera the Brave • GAMERA (2015) |
| Male monarch Kong (1933) • Son of Kong • King Kong vs. Godzilla • King Kong Escapes • King Kong (1976) • King Kong Lives • The Mighty Kong • Kong: Rex of Atlantis • King Kong (2005) • Kong: Return to the Jungle • Kong: Skull Island • Godzilla vs. Kong |
| Invisible Man • Half Human • Rodan • The Mysterians • The H-Man • Varan • Monkey Lord's day • The 3 Treasures • Battle in Outer Space • The Secret of the Telegian • The Homo Vapor • Mothra • The Concluding War • Gorath • Matango • Atragon • Dogora • Frankenstein vs. Baragon • The War of the Gargantuas • Latitude Zero • The Vampire Doll • Space Amoeba • Lake of Dracula • Daigoro vs. Goliath • Horror of the Wolf • Submersion of Nippon • ESPY • Evil of Dracula • Prophecies of Nostradamus • House • The War in Space • Magnitude seven.9 • Goodbye-Bye Jupiter • Princess from the Moon • Gunhed • Mikadoroid • Reiko, the Psyche Resurrected • Orochi, the Viii-Headed Dragon • Rebirth of Mothra • Rebirth of Mothra 2 • Rebirth of Mothra 3 • Rosetta the Masked Affections: Rosetta vs. Freia • Become! Godman • Super Armada Sazer-X the Movie • Sinking of Japan • Attack on Titan the Movie: Part 1 • Assault on Titan the Movie: Function two • Monster Hunter • The Bang-up Yokai War: Guardians • Shin Ultraman • Blockbuster Monster Moving picture |
| The Invisible Man Appears • Warning from Space • The Invisible Human vs. The Human Wing • Kujira Gami • Daimajin • Return of Daimajin • Daimajin Strikes Again • Yokai Monsters: Along with Ghosts • The Neat Yokai War • The Great Yokai State of war: Guardians |
| Japanese King Kong • The Cracking Buddha Arrival (1934) • The King Kong That Appeared in Edo • Fearful Attack of the Flight Saucers • Super Giant • Super Giant Continues • Super Giant: The Space Mutant Appears • Magic Snake • The 10 from Outer Space • Gappa • Goké, Body Snatcher from Hell • The Terminal Dinosaur • Fable of Dinosaurs and Monster Birds • Behemothic Monsters Announced in Tokyo • Negadon: The Monster from Mars • Reigo: King of the Bounding main Monsters • Monster X Strikes Dorsum: Attack the G8 Summit • Geharha: The Dark and Long Haired Monster • Demeking, the Body of water Monster • Raiga: God of the Monsters • Expiry Kappa • The God of Dirt • Giant God Warrior Appears in Tokyo • Jellyfish Eyes • Day of the Kaiju • Kaiju Mono • The Great Buddha Inflow • God Raiga vs. King Ohga: War of the Monsters • Howl from Beyond the Fog • Monster Seafood Wars • The 12 Mean solar day Tale of the Monster that Died in 8 • Nezura 1964 • Yatsuashi • What to Exercise With the Dead Kaiju? • Brush of the God • Yuzo the Biggest Battle in Tokyo |
| The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms • The Giant Claw • The Giant Behemoth • Gorgo • Reptilicus • Bulgasari • Gogola • Space Monster Wangmagwi • Yongary, Monster from the Deep • A*P*E • War God • The Mighty Peking Man • Pulgasari • Zarkorr! The Invader • Kraa! The Bounding main Monster • Reptilian • D-War • Cloverfield • Mega Shark vs. Behemothic Octopus • Mega Shark vs. Crocosaurus • Pacific Rim • Mega Shark vs. Mecha Shark • Mega Shark vs. Kolossus • 10 Cloverfield Lane • Colossal • The Cloverfield Paradox • Pacific Rim Insurgence • Rampage • Monster Island • Notzilla • Ape vs. Monster • The Kaiju Score • untitled Cloverfield sequel • untitled MonsterVerse film |
| Toho Unused Special Effects Consummate Drove • Godzilla, King of the Monsters • GAMERA1999 • Bringing Godzilla Down to Size • The Dawn of Kaiju Eiga • Godzilla's Leading Ladies |
| Bambi Meets Godzilla • Wolfman vs. Godzilla • Godzilla vs. the Netherlands • Gamera 4: Truth • Waiting for Gorgo • Megan • One thousand vs. G • Godziban (pilot) • Hedorah Silent Spring • Heritage |
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