Posts Tagged ‘Shout! Factory’


Gamera vs. Viras

August 28th, 2010 | article by | 12 Comments »
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film rating:
disc rating:
a.k.a. Gamera tai Uchu Kaiju Bairasu
(lit. Gamera against Space Monster Viras)
Destroy All Planets
company: Daiei Motion Picture Co.
year: 1968
runtime: 81′
director: Noriaki Yuasa
cast: Kojiro Hongo, Toru Takatsuka,
Carl Craig, Peter Williams,
Carl Clay, Michiko Yaegaki,
Junko Yashiro, Koji Fujiyama
writer: Nisan Takahashi
cinematography: Akira Kitazaki
music: Kenjiro Hirose
Reviewed from a screener provided
by Shout! Factory, LLC.
Pre-order this film from Amazon.com

Click here for Gamera vs. Gyaos

If Gamera vs. Gyaos was the high water mark of the first Gamera cycle then the following year’s Gamera vs. Viras marked the beginning of its steady decline. Working with resources whose limitations are often painfully obvious, Viras relies far too heavily on stock footage from the previous three entries while offering far too little original material in exchange. Though director Noriyaki Yuasa’s longtime personal favorite undoubtedly played better with contemporary audiences, offering a sort of hit parade of earlier monster footage, it has aged especially poorly, and rarely seems anything more than one of the cheapest outings of the franchise.

The film follows Masao (Toru Takatsuka) and Jim (Carl Craig), members of the Japanese and American boy scouts who find themselves kidnapped by the globe-conquering denizens of deep space planet Viras, who have themselves implanted a brain control device onto the neck of the monster Gamera. With the United Nations opting to surrender to the invaders rather than sacrifice the two boys, it’s left to Masao and Jim to find a kink in the Viran’s plans and put an end to the invasion for good.

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Dark and Stormy Night

August 23rd, 2010 | article by | No Comments »
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film rating:
disc rating:
company: Bantam Street
year: 2009
runtime: 93′
director: Larry Blamire
cast: Jim Beaver, Jennifer Blaire,
Larry Blamire, Brian Howe,
Dan Conroy, Robert Deveau,
Bruce French, Betty Garrett
writer: Larry Blamire
cinematography: Anthony J. Rickert-Epstein
music: Christopher Caliendo
Reviewed from a screener provided
by Shout! Factory, LLC.
Order this film from Amazon.com

Dark and Stormy Night made its DVD premiere on the 17th of August courtesy of Shout! Factory, and can currently be ordered through Amazon.com and other online retailers.

Plot: A motley assortment of people converge on an old mansion to hear the reading of a will, only to be murdered one by one by an unseen assailant.

Ah, Larry Blamire strikes again. In the interest of full disclosure I’m no fan of the writer / director / actor, and my only other experience with his work (The Lost Skeleton Returns Again, released on DVD day and date with this) left me utterly underwhelmed and even a little pissed that I had expended the minimum of effort required to screen it. Dark and Stormy Night improves slightly upon that picture, if only because it never devolves into a protracted and clumsy back and forth over double negatives, but that’s faint praise indeed.

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Starcrash

August 15th, 2010 | article by | 3 Comments »
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film rating:
disc rating:
company: New World Pictures
year: 1979
runtime: 92′
director: Luigi Cozzi
cast: Caroline Munro, Marjoe Gortner,
Judd Hamilton, Joe Spinell,
David Hasselhoff, Christopher Plummer,
Nadia Cassini, Robert Tessier
writer: Luigi Cozzi
and Nat Wachsberger
cinematography: Paul Beeson
and Roberto D’Ettorre Piazzoli
music: John Barry
Reviewed from a screener provided
by Shout! Factory, LLC.
Pre-order this film from Amazon.com:
DVD | Blu-ray

Starcrash is due out on 2-disc special edition DVD and Blu-ray from Shout! Factory on September 14th. Both releases are currently available for pre-order through Amazon.com and other online retailers.

Plot: The best spaceship pilot in the galaxy, sultry Stella Star (Caroline Munro), blasts into the haunted stars with faithful companions Akton (Marjoe Gortner) and robot Elle (Judd Hamilton) to find the lost son of the kindly Galactic Emperor (Christopher Plummer) and put an end to the scheming of evil Count Zarth Arn (Joe Spinell).

Absurd, incongruous and hilarious in more or less equal measure, Luigi Cozzi’s Starcrash is a monumental exercise in high camp produced with infectious enthusiasm and possessed of an unflinching adoration for old-school genre sensibilities. Though pushed into production by the success of the box office juggernaut Star Wars (the title, credited to producer Nat Wachsberger, is one of its more obvious allusions to the Lucas film), Star Crash owes itself to a far older science fiction and fantasy tradition – something writer and director Cozzi makes absolutely no bones about.

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Piranha

August 2nd, 2010 | article by | 1 Comment »
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film rating:
disc rating:
company: New World Pictures
year: 1978
runtime: 94′
director: Joe Dante
cast: Bradford Dillman, Heather Menzies,
Kevin McCarthy, Keenan Wynn,
Dick Miller, Barbara Steele,
Belinda Balaski, Melody Scott
Paul Bartel, Bruce Gordon
writer: John Sayles
and Richard Robinson
cinematography: Jamie Anderson
music: Pino Donaggio
Reviewed from a screener provided
by Shout! Factory, LLC.
Pre-order this film from Amazon.com:
DVD | Blu-ray

Piranha is due out on special edition DVD and Blu-ray from Shout! Factory on August 3rd (the 32nd anniversary of its original theatrical debut). The title can currently be pre-ordered through Amazon.com and other online retailers.

Plot: While investigating the disappearance of a pair of teenagers a private detective and an alcoholic recluse inadvertently release a swarm of genetically engineered Vietnam-era weapons-grade piranha into a river just upstream from a recently constructed tourist trap.

A king among low budget cult films, Piranha is easily one of the most successful and best remembered of the movies produced by and released through Roger Corman’s New World Pictures. Directed by Joe Dante (Gremlins) from a sharp script by John Sayles (Alligator, Passion Fish) and cast with an impressive slate of name stars and cult icons including Bradford Dillman (Bug, The Swarm), Kevin McCarthy (Invasion of the Body Snatchers), Keenan Wynn (Once Upon a Time in the West) and Barbara Steele (Black Sunday, Shivers), the film blends gory horror with a wickedly sardonic sense of humor to make inimitable B-movie gold.

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The Lost Skeleton Returns Again

July 23rd, 2010 | article by | 4 Comments »
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film rating:
disc rating:
company: Bantam Street
year: 2009
runtime: 93′
director: Larry Blamire
cast: Frank Dietz, H. M. Wynant,
Brian Howe, Christine Romeo,
Kevin Quinn, Fay Masterson,
Robert Deveau, Daniel Roebuck,
Larry Blamire, Susan McConnell
writer: Larry Blamire
cinematography: Anthony J. Rickert-Epstein
music: John W. Morgan
and William T. Stromberg
Reviewed from a screener provided
by Shout! Factory, LLC.
Pre-order this film from Amazon.com

Plot: Two bands of adventurers, one good, one bad, and one including a man possessed by a living skull, head into the Valley of the Monsters on the hunt for Geranium, a rare element that will . . . something . . .

Writer, director and actor Larry Blamire has made something of a name for himself in cult film circles for his low budget send-ups of the B-grade science fiction of old, and is best known for the prequel to this film – 2004’s The Lost Skeleton of Cadavra. Picked up and released through Sony Pictures, The Lost Skeleton… proved pretty successful for a no-bugdet niche production with limited appeal beyond its target audience of bad cinema aficionados. A sequel seemed inevitable and, after the similarly themed 2007 effort Trail of the Screaming Forehead, the inevitable came to pass.

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Cover art for Shout! Factory’s upcoming ‘Gamera’ double features

July 17th, 2010 | article by | 2 Comments »
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Shout! Factory is preparing two Gamera double features for release on September 21st – Gamera Vs. Gyaos / Gamera Vs. Viras and Gamera Vs. Guiron / Gamera Vs. Jiger. While there are no specific details yet for either release, the finalized cover art for each has been revealed.  Looks good to me!

Both double features have a retail price of $19.93 (less than $10 per film) and can currently be pre-ordered through Amazon.com at a slightly discounted price:

Gamera Vs. Gyaos / Gamera Vs. Viras |  Gamera Vs. Guiron / Gamera Vs. Jiger



Gamera vs. Barugon

June 19th, 2010 | article by | No Comments »
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a.k.a.: Daikaiju Ketto: Gamera tai Barugon
(lit. Giant Monster Duel: Gamera Against Barugon)
film rating:
disc rating:
company: Daiei Motion Picture Co.
year: 1966
runtime: 100′
director: Shigeo Tanaka
cast: Kojiro Hongo, Kyoko Enami,
Koji Fujiyama, Takuya Fujioka,
Yuzo Hayakawa, Akira Natsuki,
Yoshiro Kitahara, Bontaro Miake
writers: Nisan Takahashi
cinematography: Michio Takahashi
music: Chuji Kinoshita
Reviewed from a screener provided
by Shout! Factory LLC
Order this film from Amazon.com

Gamera vs. Barugon is slated for release on special edition DVD from Shout! Factory on July 6th, and is available for pre-order through Amazon.com and other online retailers.

Anxious to capitalize on the unexpected success of 1965′s Gamera, the Giant Monster, Daiei managed to push a bigger budgeted sequel into theaters less than six months after the fact (at the same time slating the production of their period monster trilogy Daimajin, the first of which premiered alongside this film).  Shot in ‘Scope and color by veteran director Shigeo Tanaka (The Great Wall) with …the Giant Monster director Noriaki Yuasa in charge of special effects, Gamera vs. Barugon is both bigger and bolder than its predecessor, and quite the serious affair in spite of the ludicrous monster antics.

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Galaxy of Terror

June 17th, 2010 | article by | No Comments »
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a.k.a.: Mind Warp: An Infinity of Terror
film rating:
disc rating:
company: New World Pictures
year: 1981
runtime: 81′
director: Bruce Clark
cast: Edward Albert, Erin Moran,
Ray Walston, Bernard Behrens,
Zalman King, Robert Englund,
Taeffe O’Connell, Sid Haig,
Grace Zabriskie, Jack Blessing
writers: Mark Siegler,
Bruce Clark and William Stout
cinematography: Jacques Haitkin
and Austin McKinney
music: Barry Schrader
Reviewed from a screener provided
by Shout! Factory LLC
Order this film from Amazon.com:
DVD | Blu-ray

Galaxy of Terror is due out on Special Edition DVD and Blu-ray from Shout! Factory on July 20th, and is currently available for pre-order from Amazon.com and other online retailers.

The anonymous ‘Planet Master of Xerxes’ (a man whose features are obscured by orange light) orders a mission to the far off planet of Morganthus after all contact is lost with a starship there.  He hand picks the crew of rescue ship Quest without their knowledge, gathering a motley assortment of officers and engineers with variety of psychological conditions (one is claustrophobic, another traumatized by a past mission, etc.).  After a crash landing on Morganthus the crew begins to disappear, killed by their own subconscious fears after an ancient alien pyramid renders them all too real.

I fondly remember the salacious ad art for Galaxy of Terror, featuring a vulnerable beauty in scraps of clothing being menaced by a variety of unlikely beasts (including a buggy skeletal bat thing hovering with obviously impure intent), staring up at vintage late ’80s me from the seedy depths of the local rental store’s horror shelf.  Only elementary school-aged at the time, I’d never have dreamt of trying to sneak something like that passed my observant mother (the prominent cleavage on the cover would have stopped her cold long before she glimpsed the ‘R’-rating), but that didn’t keep me from wondering what horribly disgusting (and inherently exciting) events might dwell behind such an illustration.  I was a long time in catching up to the film, one of a seemingly endless number I remember passing over in youth, but it was easily worth the wait.
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More Gamera on the way from Shout! Factory in September!

June 16th, 2010 | article by | No Comments »
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With their release of Gamera vs. Barugon less than a month away, Shout! Factory’s next round of Gamera series titles is already up for pre-order at Amazon.com.

Comprising two double feature DVDs to be released on September 21st, Gamera vs. Gyaos, Gamera vs. Viras, Gamera vs. Guiron and Gamera vs. Jiger will all finally be making their official debuts on domestic DVD.  There is no word yet as to the specific details of either release, but I’ll be sure to pass along that information as it is released.

The double feature discs are priced at just $19.93 each (less than $10 per film and a far cry from the $40+ each for Region 2 Japanese imports)  and can can be pre-ordered online at a discount price of $17.99.

Preorder links:
Gamera Vs. Gyaos / Gamera Vs. Viras | Gamera Vs. Guiron / Gamera Vs. Jiger



Shout! Factory’s ‘Gamera vs. Barugon’ DVD details

June 10th, 2010 | article by | 2 Comments »
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Just under a month from now, on July 6th, Shout! Factory will be unleashing the second of their Gamera collection, 1966′s Gamera vs. Barugon.  The film concerns a group of greedy explorers who plunder a jungle cave for jewels, unwittingly unleashing the giant monster Barugon upon the world.  Can Gamera, released from his Plan Z space capsule by a wayward meteor, stop the beast before it’s too late?

The first of 7 original Gamera sequels, Gamera vs. Barugon benefits from a more lavish production budget than either Gamera, the Giant Monster or the other entries that were to follow it.  Noriaki Yuasa was made director of special effects for this outing, with Shigeo Tanaka (The Great Wall and several films in the Woman Gambler series) picking up the task of directing a name cast headed by Kojiro Hongo (Wrath of Daimajin) and Kyoko Enami (Whale God).  The improbable monster Barugon, with its freezing breath and rainbow-shooting spines, made a suitably bizarre opponent for hero Gamera, hinting at the more outlandish villains that were to come.

Shout! Factory’s special edition DVD of Gamera vs. Barugon will feature a new transfer of the film sourced from the latest high definition masters, presented in its original Japanese with English subtitles.  Supplements are to include a feature commentary track with August Ragone and Jason Varney, a gallery of publicity images and an essay by star Kojiro Hongo (to be included in the accompanying booklet).  Given the quality of May’s Gamera, the Giant Monster, this is looking to be another fine package from Shout!.

Gamera vs. Barugon is priced at a reasonable $19.93 and can be pre-ordered from Amazon.com and other online retailers, and will be available in stores nationwide on July 6th.



G.I. Joe: The Movie (Shout! Factory, 2010)

June 9th, 2010 | article by | 1 Comment »
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G.I. Joe: The Movie is currently available for preorder on both
DVD and Blu-ray / DVD combo pack at Amazon.com.

’80s cartoon fans itching to fill the final slot in Shout! Factory’s expansive G.I. Joe A Real American Hero: The Complete Collection rejoice, for the company’s re-issue of 1987′s G.I. Joe: The Movie is almost upon you.  Shout! will be re-issuing the film to special edition DVD on July 27, day and date with its debut on high def Blu-ray.  I have to admit to never really being a fan of the various G.I. Joe television series, having watched them only rarely as a kid, but this screener has come close to making a convert of me.  Cobra-la-la-la-la-la-la!

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Rock ‘n’ Roll High School and Suburbia

May 25th, 2010 | article by | No Comments »
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Rock ‘n’ Roll High School (DVD / Blu-ray) and Suburbia (DVD)
are both available for purchase at
Amazon.com

These special edition DVDs of Rock ‘n’ Roll High School and Suburbia have already seen their street dates (the former is now out on Blu-ray as well), released roughly two weeks ago, and while the screeners didn’t arrive in time for me to provide advance coverage I see no reason not to give the discs the same treatment Shout!’s Gamera, the Giant Monster and Death Race 2000 have received here.  As with those, these are merely my first impressions of the discs – more comprehensive coverage of each will follow in short order.

I had the great pleasure of being more or less unfamiliar with both of these films when their screeners arrived in the post.  I had heard of Rock ‘n’ Roll High School in passing, having friends who were fans of it and The Ramones, but had seen neither picture.  These Roger Corman’s Cult Classics editions make for an excellent viewing experience, particularly for first-timer’s like myself.
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Death Race 2000 (Shout! Factory, 2010)

May 12th, 2010 | article by | 2 Comments »
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preorder this film from Amazon.com: DVD | Blu-ray

Another day, another new screener!  Paul Bartel’s violent sci-fi comedy classic Death Race 2000 is due out from Shout! Factory on the 22nd of June, and here’s a sneak peek at what you can expect from the release (which will be hitting Blu-ray same day and date).  You’re welcome.

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Shout! Factory bringing ‘The Stepfather’ to Blu-ray June 15th

May 4th, 2010 | article by | No Comments »
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Just when I thought it was going to be a slow week, the disc announcements keep on coming!  From the Shout! Factory press release:

80′s cult classic horror flick The Stepfather is set for Blu-ray release for the first time ever, remastered and featuring new bonus features otherwise only available on Shout! Factory’s 2009 DVD release of the film. Available on Shout! Factory on June 15, the film stars Terry O’Quinn (Lost), in a role that won him a nomination for Best Actor at the 1988 Independent Spirit Awards and the Saturn Awards. The Stepfather was selected as one of the year’s Top 10 movies by Vanity Fair, Village Voice and LA Weekly and featured on Bravo’s 100 Scariest Movie Moments special. A remake of the film from Screen Gems, starring Dylan Walsh
(Nip/Tuck) and Sela Ward (The Guardian, Once and Again), hit theaters in 2009.

Jerry Blake (Terry O’Quinn) is a man obsessed with having the perfect ”American Dream” life – including the house with the white picket fence in the suburbs, an adoring wife and loving children. He believes he’s found it when he marries Susan Maine (Shelley Hack) and becomes the stepfather to Susan’s 16-year-old daughter, Stephanie (Jill Schoelen). But Stephanie gets an uneasy feeling when she is around Jerry with his ”Father Knows Best” attitude – she can see that there is a darker side behind his cheerful exterior. Could he be the same man who brutally murdered his family just one year earlier? . . .

Special features include an audio commentary with director Joseph Ruben, film trailers (HD), a still gallery, and The Stepfather Chronicles – an all-new retrospective featuring interviews with director Joseph Ruben, producer Jay Benson, actress Jill Schoelen, author Brian Garfield and others on the making of the film and its enduring legacy (HD).

I’ve never seen this film and didn’t bother with the recent remake, but this release is looking to be up to Shout!’s usually high standards (the company released the film to DVD in October of last year).  I dare say I’m looking forward to it!  The Stepfather Blu-ray is up for pre-order at Amazon.com at a reduced price of $19.99 (26% off retail).



Gamera, the Giant Monster

April 28th, 2010 | article by | No Comments »
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a.k.a. Daikaiju Gamera
rating:
company:
Daiei Motion Picture Co.
year: 1965
runtime: 78′
country: Japan
director: Noriaki Yuasa
cast: Eiji Funakoshi, Harumi Kiritachi,
Junichiro Yamashiko, Yoshiro Ichida,
Michiko Sugata, Yoshiro Kitahara,
Jun Hamamura, Kenji Oyama,
Munehiko Takada, Yoshio Yoshida
writer: Nisan Takahashi
cinematography: Nobuo Munekawa
music: Tadashi Yamauchi
disc rating:
disc company: Shout! Factory
release date: May 18, 2010
retail price: $19.99
disc details: Region 1 / NTSC / dual layer
video: 16:9 anamorphic / 2.26:1 / progressive
audio: Dolby Digital 2.0 monophonic (Japanese)
subtitles: English
special features: Audio commentary with
August Ragone, Retrospective documentary,
image galleries, original theatrical trailer
order this disc from Amazon.com

Reviewed from a screener provided by Shout! Factory, LLC

1965 was a banner year for kaiju eiga. Toho’s Godzilla series was becoming a full-fledged franchise after the double whammy success of Mothra vs. Godzilla and Ghidrah the Three Headed Monster the previous year, and was utterly unchallenged in the Japanese market except, perhaps, by Toho’s own deluge of effects productions.  But Daiei Motion Picture Co. and executive producer Masaichi Nagata were about to change all of that forever, and unleash their own iconic monster hero upon an unsuspecting public.

From humble beginnings (according to anecdote, Nagata had a vision of a tortoise sailing through the clouds while traveling by plane and returned to Daiei, ordering his staff to turn that vision into a film) Gamera, the giant flying turtle and unlikely savior of children far and wide, would rise, spawning a profitable franchise that still boasts legions of fans both in Japan and abroad today.  The first of eight, Gamera, the Giant Monster was an experiment for Nagata, taking his first giant leap into Toho-style monster mayhem (he would go on to produce the Daimajin and Yokai trilogies along with 7 Gamera sequels).  Filmed in black and white, directed by the then inexperienced Noriaka Yuasa and plagued with the production troubles from start to finish, Gamera paid off big time for Daiei, and proved for the first time that others could hold their own against Toho’s seemingly unstoppable special effects juggernaut.

Godzilla‘s warning against nuclear proliferation had obviously fallen on deaf ears by the time of Gamera’s production, and the possibility of our world being reduced to a few irradiated ruins seemed very, very real.  Not surprisingly it’s a skirmish between the Russians and the Americans, not the irresponsible testing of nuclear weaponry, that awakens Gamera from his slumbering, fissuring the Arctic ice and spewing him forth amidst fountains of slush and steam.  Hungry for fuel stuffs, the monster makes short work of a scientific research vessel before diving into the sea and making an inevitable bee-line for the busy streets of Tokyo.

Hot on Gamera’s trail is Dr. Hidaka (Eiji Funakoshi, Fires on the Plain), a survivor of the research expedition violently interrupted by the monster’s arrival, assistant Kyoko (Harumi Kiritachi) and reporter Aoyagi (Junichiro Yamashiko) who, with the help of kindly old Professor Murase (Jun Hamamura, Prophecies of Nostradamus: Catastrophe 1999), look for ways to end the creature’s destructive rampage while trying to uncover the truth behind an old Eskimo tablet graced with Gamera’s image.


Complicating things is young Toshio Sakurai (Yoshiro Uchida, re-christened Kenny in the infamous Sandy Frank dub), the motherless son of a lighthouse operator who hasn’t a friend in the world save for a beloved pet turtle.  Papa Sakurai (Yoshiro Kitahara) is none to fond of the critter, and demands that his son set it free – a sentiment echoed by Toshio’s older sister Nobuyo (Michiko Sugata).  No sooner has Toshio fulfilled the wishes of his family than Gamera appears at their proverbial doorstep, simultaneously destroying their lighthouse and rescuing Toshio from certain doom.  Convinced that Gamera is a good-hearted turtle, Toshio goes on a one-boy quest to sway public opinion and save his new best friend from the utterly ineffectual schemings of the JSDF.

The story for Gamera, the Giant Monster is too convoluted for its own good, a byproduct of writer Nisan Takahashi trying to please too many audience demographics at once while realizing Nagata’s absurd vision of a gigantic flying tortoise, and much of it is just plain dull.  The pseudo-documentary scientific angle that comprises a third of the picture fares particularly poorly.  Such scientific exposition was reduced considerably in subsequent efforts, always taking a back seat to the more usual human drama, but the necessity of explaining Gamera‘s presence pushes it blandly to the forefront here.  The worst of it is a tepid romantic subplot between reporter Aoyagi and Hidaka’s assistant Kyoko,  in which the former’s stalkerly advances come across as far more creepy than sweet.

Takahashi must have realized the considerable limitations of that aspect of Gamera‘s dramatics and, seeking to keep the younger audience members tuned-in, added an identifiable child character to the mix.  Toshio is granted a suitably sympathetic backstory – his mother died just after he was born, and the nomadic lighthouse life of his father keeps him moving from school to school.  It’s a great starting place for a character.  After all, what child can’t relate to that feeling of not fitting in?  Unfortunately, Toshio’s affinity for turtles large and small compels him to leap headlong into increasingly dangerous situations, even putting other human life at risk for the sake of his obsession.  He climbs crumbling lighthouse steps, hitches a ride on a line of oil tankers and even smuggles himself into a military operation, all to be closer to his beloved Gamera.  Future series sidekicks would be cut from saner cloth, but Gamera, the Giant Monster makes a sound argument for keeping its kiddie protagonist under lock and key.

For all the faults of the human element, the monster is certainly interesting – Toho never thought of anything so bizarre as a jet-propelled turtle with a soft-spot for prepubescents.  The original Gamera presents the monster as a far more ambivalent entity than its sequels would suggest.  Viewed by adults as an unstoppable menace and by Toshio as a cuddly, good-hearted creature, the truth of this Gamera lies somewhere in the middle.  Hungry after his millions of years on ice and just too big to keep from getting into trouble, Gamera is less malicious than a few eons out of place, not above crushing a few hundred fleeing civilians while on the hunt for his next fix but not so unconscionable as to let an innocent child fall to his death.  In spite of his city-stomping inclinations, Gamera proves just too lovable (er, unstoppable) for authorities to destroy, leading to one of the most humane monster movie resolutions outside of 1960′s Gorgo – the top secret Plan Z, which puts the invincible creature on a one-way flight to distant Mars.


In spite of limitations in both budget and experience (none of Daiei’s more accomplished staff would lead the project after the collapse of the earlier effects vehicle A Swarm of Beasts Nezulla), Gamera, the Giant Monster boasts an accomplished effects production that easily bests that of other contemporary Toho derivations.  A lengthy attack on a geothermal plant and the climactic destruction of Tokyo are both expansive miniature setups, and Gamera’s emergence from the irradiated and bomb-shattered Arctic ice is perhaps the most impressive visual of the series.  A reputation for crudity, largely the product of poor quality pan-and-scanned video editions, is mostly undeserved.  Full scope presentations reveal intricately constructed miniatures, detailed mattes and fine process photography.  Those on the lookout for supposed gaffs will find easy pickings in visible wires and the like, but those willing to check their modern expectations will have a great time enjoying the production for what it is.

Gamera, the Giant Monster has its problems to be sure, and both Gamera vs. Barugon and Gamera vs. Gaos would be marked improvements over in in their own ways.  Noriaki Yuasa and the rest of the Gamera production team would become more confident as the series progressed, leading to a few real gems even as Daiei’s mismanagement led to ever more severe budget cuts.  Gamera, the Giant Monster is where it all began and all of the iconic elements of the series to come, like turtle-loving kids and ludicrous anti-monster military operations, are there.  Imperfect as it is Gamera is still worth checking out, especially for fans of giant monster cinema.  Recommended!


Shout! Factory presents the original Japanese cut of Gamera, the Giant Monster on DVD in the USA for the first time, and boy is this release a beauty!  I don’t often commend a disc for its wrappings, but Shout! Factory deserves praise for their efforts at presenting Gamera in a quality package.  The interior of the disc insert reveals a anatomical illustration of everyone’s favorite giant flying turtle, easily visible through the clear Amaray-style case.  A 12-page liner booklet repeats the illustration, but also offers an essay by departed director Noriaki Yuasa, character bios, a reproduction of the awesome Japanese theatrical poster and full credits for the DVD production staff.  Tying everything together are the disc / front art and attractive menu designs, all based on production stills and rendered in appropriately icy blues.

The film itself is transferred from Kadokawa’s latest HD master and looks absolutely fantastic.  Progressive and anamorphic in the original aspect ratio of 2.26:1, Gamera, the Giant Monster looks better than ever before.  Detail is strong and contrast natural, with film grain visible throughout.  Damage is minimal, limited to speckles here and there and the occasional scratch.  Digital manipulation, if any, is slight, and this new transfer is free of the artificial sharpening that plagues the 2002 Daiei / Toshiba DVD releases.  The end result is a great looking DVD presentation that upconverts beautifully for those with high-def televisions or projection systems.  Audio is a clear Dolby Digital 2.0 monophonic Japanese track augmented with an excellent optional English subtitle translation by August Ragone (the disc’s special features producer and author of Eiji Tsuburaya: Master of Monsters), one of the best I’ve seen for a foreign genre release.


Many have already lamented the exclusion of the 1966 US theatrical cut, Gammera the Invincible, the only known 35mm print of which is stored at the UCLA Film and Television Archive (which was reportedly uncooperative, though I don’t know the details).  This was, honestly, not much of an issue for me.  Those interested in that cut should consider picking up Neptune Media’s long-OOP widescreen VHS (sourced from the same UCLA print), which is still readily available on Amazon.com and elsewhere.  Flat transfers from 16mm television prints are available everywhere, but are to be avoided.  No English language dub track is included with this release (I don’t recall a full-length track beyond Sandy Frank’s grossly inaccurate hack-job being available anyway).

Shout! Factory has made a healthy assortment of supplemental content available.  First up is an informative feature commentary track by August Ragone, which offers up extensive behind-the-scenes production details, biographical information on the cast and crew (including an obscure cast member credited only as ‘Brown’), and even some opinion on the film itself.  Next up is a retrospective documentary listed as A Look Back at Gamera.  The piece was originally produced for Daiei’s stacked laserdisc releases of the Gamera series and was later re-used for the 2002 Daiei / Toshiba DVD releases.  Featuring interviews with director Noriaki Yuasa and writer Nisan Takahashi, among others, the 23 minute retrospective offers up first-person accounts of the series’ production and a tantalizing but brief ‘what-if’ video reconstruction of the proposed but un-produced sequel Gamera vs. Garasharp. The retrospective is made available here with English subtitles for the first time, and is presented in flat and interlaced 4:3.  Still image galleries (featuring the international sales brochure, American pressbook and more) and the original Japanese theatrical trailer (which looks to be sourced from a newer HD master as well) round out the supplemental package.

The Gamera series has been denied its due respect in the US home video marketplace for far too long and Shout! Factory has done much to right that here, exclusion of Gammera the Invincible be damned.  This is the original Gamera as creators Masaichi Nagata, Nisan Takahashi and Noriaki Yuasa originally intended it, and I’ve no complaints.  As far as Wtf-Film is concerned, Gamera, the Giant Monster is a must-buy.

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