Posts Tagged ‘World War II’


Godzilla

January 28th, 2012 | article by | No Comments »
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dir. Ishiro Honda
1954 / Toho Co. ltd / 96′
written by Shigeru Kayama, Ishiro Honda and Takeo Murata
director of photography Masao Tamai
music by
 Akira Ifukube
director of special effects Eiji Tsuburaya
starring
 Akira Takarada, Momoko Kochi, Akihiko Hirata, Takashi Shimura, Sachio Sakai, Katsumi Tezuka and Haruo Nakajima
Godzilla, along with Godzilla King of the Monsters!, is now available in a deluxe Blu-ray edition from the Criterion Collection

Unleashed upon an unsuspecting Japan to massive popular success in late fall of 1954, the original Godzilla was one of those rare perfect storms of cinema, a picture so tremendous in its impact that it ushered in not only a distinct new genre of Japanese film, but a bona fide pop culture revolution as well. It also touched a chord with a post-war Japan fresh from years of occupation, and finally allowed to openly discuss the full sum of its wartime experiences. Godzilla‘s considerable box office take all but ensured the long run of increasingly silly sequels that followed, and those familiar with those alone might be forgiven for expecting the same here, but the father of them all is an intelligent and at times downright cerebral affair, possessed of a raw power not seen in the genre since. Much more than just another monster movie, Godzilla is a spectacular public exorcism of the specters of World War II, and the tumultuous, emotional expression of a nation’s struggle to come to terms with its history as both a perpetrator and victim of incalculable wartime devastation.

The story, for those unfamiliar, begins with a series of dreadful shipping accidents off the coast of Japan, an investigation into which leads reporters and government officials to remote Odo Island, a sparsely populated speck of land near where the accidents occurred. There they find no answers beyond the superstitious ramblings of one of the island’s elders, who is convinced that the mythical Godzilla – a mysterious sea beast the Odo Islanders once sated with human sacrifice – is responsible for the maritime troubles. No one believes a word of it until something comes ashore one storm-torn evening, leveling several of the island’s residences and leaving a set of impossibly huge footprints in its wake.

A scientific expedition headed by noted zoologist Dr. Yamane (the great Takashi Shimura) is swiftly mounted to survey the destruction and investigate its cause. Once the scientists are on the island they make a series of surprising discoveries. The footprints left behind are intensely radioactive, and the area around them dangerously contaminated. What’s more, they’re littered with ancient sediments and the remnants of primitive life long thought extinct, leading Dr. Yamane and his team to the conclude that the impressions were made by something straight out of prehistory. It isn’t long before more conclusive evidence arrives in the form of a mountainous Jurassic-age monster, the Godzilla of legend, who has his sights set on Japan’s thriving metropolitan heart – Tokyo.

Co-written by director Ishiro Honda and Takeo Murata (Rodan) from an original story by Shigeru Kayama (which he also novelized), the basics of Godzilla‘s narrative development are pretty traditional, writ large, the origins for the monster having been freely adapted from elements of the classic King Kong (an island, a legend, talk of human sacrifice) and the contemporary The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms (about a prehistoric monster roused from its icy slumbers by an atomic test in the Arctic). Indeed, the idea of a dinosaur wreaking havoc on modern civilization was nothing new in 1954, having been seen previously in the silent The Lost World, Max Fleischer’s Superman short The Arctic Giant, as well as in Godzilla‘s most direct inspiration, the aforementioned Beast. The difference, as ever, is in the details.

Under the creative auspices of Honda, Kayama, Murata, producer Tomoyuki Tanaka, effects director Eiji Tsuburaya and even composer Akira Ifukube1, Godzilla‘s eponymous monster becomes one of the most singularly loaded metaphors in cinema history. Through references, both overt and subliminal, to such events as the irradiation of the fishing vessel Daigo Fukuryu Maru by the Castle Bravo H-bomb test, the fall of radioactive rain resulting from Soviet atomic tests, the firebombing of Tokyo and the A-bombing of Nagasaki, Godzilla becomes a fearsome and direct manifestation both of the horrors of World War II and the new and frightening realities of the Atomic Age. The monster’s steady, methodical destruction of modern Tokyo is a sequence unlike anything before it. Godzilla advances with the unrelenting force of an atomic blast, sending whole blocks crumbling into smoldering rubble and engulfing the city’s skyline in a curtain of nuclear flame. Dialogue clarifies whatever doubts may be lingering as to the rampage’s symbolic significance - “Godzilla’s no different from the H-bomb still hanging over Japan’s head…

In Godzilla’s wake millions lie dead or dying, both of physical injuries and radioactive contamination, while countless traumatized survivors wonder what terrors are yet to come. The imagery here – endless corridors filled with the wounded and an entire city reduced to wasteland – is potent, and evocative not only of the haunting aftermaths of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, but of the wartime razing of Tokyo as well. Even Godzilla himself is granted a history of victimization, with Dr. Yamane insinuating that, much like Japan’s A-bomb survivors, the creature is traumatized by its recent brush with American nuclear might. “Don’t shine searchlights on Godzilla!” he gravely begs of a military officer, fearful that they might remind of the blinding flash that tore him from his deep sea niche and send the monster into a deeper rage. Of course Godzilla is not just a victim, but an aggressor as well, and the vision of a dragon rising from the Pacific alludes strongly to the ugly flip side of Japan’s wartime misfortune – the fact that through their own militant nationalism, and the brutal campaign of conquest that resulted from it, they had brought that misfortune upon themselves.

To that end the central dramatic conflict of the film might be viewed as an allusion to the position of the Allied forces during the war. Godzilla, awakened by the H-bomb and impervious to all modern munitions, seems unstoppable, but a brilliant young scientist – Dr. Serizawa (a convincing young Akihiko Hirata) – may have found an answer. The problem? His discovery has such immense destructive potential that any use of it, however good the cause, could prove catastrophic. It’s a narrative development that dramatically echoes the creation and eventual use of the Atom bomb in the final days of World War II, and that implies a certain understanding by Honda and his crew of the position of the Allied forces at the time. With a marauding force like the Imperial Japanese at large, do you set aside your most powerful weapon for fear of the horrific consequences of its use, or do you use it in spite of them? What the Allies decided is history, and their decision is paralleled by that of Dr. Serizawa – the result is that Godzilla is stopped, though at a tremendous cost. Another elemental force, as horrifying as the H-bomb, has been let loose in the world, and the film concludes with a grave Dr. Yamane wondering what other Godzillas might be unleashed as a result.

In terms of drama Godzilla has certainly aged in the decades since it was made, and a forgettable love triangle between Toho’s brightest young stars (top-billed Akira Takarada, Momoko Kochi and Akihiko Hirata) will be of minimal interest to modern viewers, but the complex substance of the thing remains, its power undiminished over the near-60 years since it was fresh. Godzilla is perhaps the best of its kind ever made, the ultimate, indelible atomic monster experience and the birthplace of an unlikely pop-culture icon. It’s must-see material, folks, and that’s all there is too it.

1 Some of Ifukube’s cues for the film, both the elegiac pieces set to Godzilla’s aftermath and demise and the descending motif that accompanies the earlier ship disasters, are highly evocative (and in the latter case a direct adaptation) of his past work on Kaneto Shindo’s Children of Hiroshima (a somber, thoughtful film about the human toll of the Hiroshima bombing), an allusion that only further cements Godzilla‘s connection to World War II and the burgeoning Atomic Age.

disc details:
released January 24, 2012 by the Criterion Collection
disc:
dual layer BD-50
video: 1080p | AVC | 1.37:1
audio: LPCM 1.0 Japanese
subtitles: English
supplements: commentary track with David Kalat, interviews (star Akira Takarada, suit actor Haruo Nakajima, effects men Yoshio Irie and Eizo Kaimai, composer Akira Ifukube, critic Tadao Sato), composite test footage, The Unluckiest Dragon illustrated audio essay, theatrical trailer and Godzilla King of the Monsters! (also featuring a David Kalat commentary and theatrical trailer)
retail price:
$39.95
Available now from Amazon.com, and also available on 2-disc DVD

The Criterion Collection has certainly started the year off right, getting one of their most anticipated releases of 2012 onto store shelves right from the start. A few niggling video issues may keep their high definition presentation of Godzilla from being the end-all be-all of the format, but compared to what’s come before (an awful edition from Classic Media and a dull, over-processed alternative from Toho itself) it’s a revelation. Those simply wondering as to whether or not their Blu-ray is worth the price of admission need read no further – of course it is, so get out there and buy it you fools!

The thorn in Godzilla‘s side is just a case of Criterion cramming too much stuff (and there’s a lot!) onto one disc – this really should have been a 2-disc Blu-ray, a la the simultaneously released 2-disc Criterion dvd, and the video presentation suffers a bit for it in the form of artifacting. The AVC-encoded video for Godzilla, running a modest average bitrate of 23.5 Mbps, does well by the majority of the show, but moments of flatter contrast and more ambiguous detail (like the underwater finale) present with notable, if not exactly damning, grain artifacts.

Otherwise I’ve nothing to complain about with this 1080p presentation, which Criterion have sourced fresh from a fine-grain 35mm master positive (the original negative for Godzilla is long gone) with excellent results. Detail improves handily over past editions, finally appearing at a level in keeping with the show’s 35mm photography, and contrast is dead-on. The usual limitations associated with Godzilla are all here, including some flicker and an assortment of damage, but Criterion’s work to clean up the material will be obvious to anyone familiar with past iterations. There’s a lot of obtrusive, large-scale damage I’m used to seeing that just isn’t here, and Criterion have struck their usual attractive balance between cleanliness and source authenticity. It may not be pristine (given the state of surviving elements it was never going to be – the first three Godzilla films are all in rather dire condition, with King Kong vs. Godzilla evidently having no usable 35mm elements at all for some scenes), but for the first time ever the film looks as good as it rightly should. This gave me the most satisfying viewing of Godzilla I’ve had to date, enough so that my boundless devotion to the 2006 BFI dvd has finally been broken, and those with realistic expectations for the title should be thrilled.

Screenshots were taken as full 1920×1080 resolution .png in Totem Movie Player, then compressed to .jpg at a quality setting of 95% using the ImageMagick command line tool. See our complementary review of Godzilla King of the Monsters! for screenshots from that version of the film.

Strong as the image can be, my minor quibbles aside, the audio is tremendous. Criterion present Godzilla in its original Japanese courtesy of a robust uncompressed 24-bit LPCM 1.0 track that restores the film’s sound mix to its original luster. I usually complement the score with regards to these uncompressed jobs, and Ifukube’s work sounds better than ever here, but it’s Godzilla’s roar that really hooked me on this track. There’s a visceral depth to it that I had never caught onto before, in my many viewings of the film, and at times it can be downright chilling. Complementing the audio is a wonderfully translated new set of subtitles that are more complete than those on the BFI edition.

Supplements are stacked, beginning with the full 80 minute American edition of the film, newly transferred in 1080p from a fine-grain 35mm master positive and a 16mm dupe negative, which comes with its own commentary track and trailer (see our review of Godzilla King of the Monsters! for more details). Otherwise there’s a fine commentary with critic David Kalat, as well as a solid slate of interviews, most newly-produced, and a substantial piece on the Daigo Fukuryu Maru. The standout for me is a retrospective interview with late composer Akira Ifukube, recorded in 2000, that runs a whopping 50 minutes. Everything here appears to be rendered in HD (though a couple of pieces are upscaled from SD), and the menu is conveniently accessible disc-wide. Bill Sienkiewicz’s packaging design is earning no end of fan ire, and I can confirm that which has so many in an uproar - that is, in fact, one of the Millennium-series Godzilla designs illustrated on the interior pop-up (itself a bit of an oddity, but kudos for thinking outside the box). Having finally seen it in person I can’t say that I mind – the art has terrific impact, particularly the front cover image, and those for whom the offending bits are an honest distraction will find them easily enough avoided in the Blu-ray edition (you have to fully unfold the two-fold digipak-style interior to see the pop-up, and the disc can be accessed without doing so). A booklet featuring a nice essay by J. Hoberman rounds out the package.

There’s some lost potential here with regards the encode (spreading the content over two discs instead of just one would have readily solved that problem, which is much more pronounced in Godzilla King of the Monsters than it is here), but overall the Criterion Collection’s Godzilla is as strong as fans might have hoped. The film has never looked, sounded, or read better than it does here, and that alone makes this Blu-ray more than worth the price of admission. Recommended!

Continue to Godzilla King of the Monsters!



The Inglorious Bastards

July 25th, 2010 | article by | 2 Comments »
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a.k.a. Quel Maledetto Treno Blindato
film rating:
disc rating:
company: Films Concorde
year: 1978
runtime: 99′
director: Enzo G. Castellari
cast: Bo Svenson, Fred Williamson,
Peter Hooten, Michael Pergolani
disc company: Severin Films
release date: July 28, 2009
retail price: $34.95
disc info: Region Free / Dual Layer BD50
video: 1080p / color / 1.83:1
subtitles: English [incidental dialogue only]
audio: English [Dolby Digital 5.1 and 2.0]
Order this disc from Amazon.com
reviewed from a screener provided
by Severin Films LLC

A motley band of five Allied soldiers on their way to court martials and executions for a variety of offenses (from killing fellow officers to desertion to using military property to conduct a long distance relationship) are loosed into Nazi-occupied France circa 1944 after their convoy is ambushed.  With certain death facing them from either side the group decides to head for neutral Switzerland until the war is over.  But they get into things way over their heads when they accidentally kill a bunch of Allies on a top-secret mission to confiscate the experimental guidance system for a new V2 rocket…

I wasn’t overly infatuated with this Enzo G. Castellari (High Crime, The Last Shark) actioner when I first saw it [courtesy of Severin Films' 3 disc DVD release from last year], but I have to admit that it has grown on me since.  As far as pulp escapisms about cadres of no-good punks leaving their bullet-riddled marks on fascist occupational forces go, it actually works quite well.

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The Iron Man

January 18th, 2010 | article by | No Comments »
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a.k.a. Tie Han
company: Lee Ming Film Company
year: 1974
runtime: 86′
countries: Taiwan
director: Cheung Yat-Woo
cast: Jimmy Wang Yu, Lung Fei,
Cheung Lee-Man, Sit Hon,
Chow Chung-Lim, Han Chiang,
Yu Chung-Chiu, Tsai Hung
writer: Cheung Yat-Woo
action director: Leung Siu-Chung
cinematographer: Chen Yu-Pu
original music: Chow Leung
not on home video in the USA*

Plot: Chin (Wang Yu), whose family was killed and left hand cut off by brutal Japanese general Fang Woo (Lung Fei) during the occupation of China in World War II, travels to Japan to seek revenge.


The Iron Man was an odd film for action star and Wtf-Film favorite Jimmy Wang Yu, here looking to move beyond his popular one-armed personas (as seen in the Shaw Brothers One Armed Swordsman efforts and the independently produced One Armed Boxer) while retaining his popular underdog hero image.  The result was a compromise that offered Wang Yu’s character of surmountable disability while allowing him to remain bodily intact, more or less.  Whether or not The Iron Man was any sort of popular success is beyond me (Wang Yu would return to one-armed-dom with the inimitable Master of the Flying Guillotine just two years later), but that doesn’t much matter in retrospect.

What does matter is whether or not The Iron Man is worth watching, and the answer to that is a whole fistful of yes!

Things begin with a fine sepia toned flashback in which young Chin and his family are brutalized by a mean Japanese general after two family friends turn traitor and rat Chin’s father out as a member of the Chinese resistance.  General Fang Woo is none too pleased to find out about this, and takes to shooting, raping, and maiming his way through the family.  Once all is said and done only young Chin is left standing, a bloody stump in the place of his left hand.  The child survives and trains in the martial arts (a sequence that takes up all of two shots that play behind the opening credits, which amusingly list the star as Jimmy Wong Yu) then travels to Japan to give the baddies their just and appropriately violent deserves.


The basic plot for The Iron Man is a reversal of that of Knight Errant the year before, with Wang Yu taking over the place of the child wronged and out for revenge.  The one-handed element of the story acts as a springboard for Wang Yu’s noble revenge more than anything else, as he spends the rest of the film with a prosthetic replacement in a black glove.  It’s easy to forget he ever lost his hand at all (especially when the prosthesis unexpectedly moves!).  The plot point only arises again when the time inevitably comes for Wang Yu to reveal his identity to his nemesis Fang Woo.

Fang Woo himself is a cookie-cutter villain for those familiar with the Wang Yu universe – a back-stabbing and cruel Japanese man with a secret weapon (poison darts shot from a cigar holder in this case) and seemingly endless droves of minions at his disposal.  This is another in the long history of Chinese films in which a resentment of the Japanese is espoused and explicitly linked to the atrocities of World War II – it doesn’t take a huge stretch of the imagination to link the rape, murder, and dismemberment of the opening flashback to the horrors of Nanking.

What’s really interesting about The Iron Man, as far as post WWII Chinese-Japanese relations are concerned, is what it does with the concept.  Wang Yu’s tracking down of Fang Woo leads him to an unlikely romantic entanglement with a young Japanese woman (whom Fang Woo, naturally, demands to have as his own), an entanglement Wang Yu refuses to accept for much of the film (“I hate all Japanese!”).  But Wang Yu’s character grows as the film progresses, and comes to realize that not all of the Japanese were responsible for his personal ills.  The young woman with whom he involves himself could very well be seen as an embodiment of the peaceful Japanese society that emerged out of the ashes of the last world war, one far removed from the militant imperialism of the past generation.

This is far more thoughtfulness than I’m accustomed to in a low budget martial arts effort, but rest assured that The Iron Man knows that it’s an action picture first and foremost.  There’s no shortage of hand to hand combat here (none of the minions in these films seem allowed to own firearms), and its of a higher caliber than one generally expects from a lower rung Wang Yu effort.  Action director Leung Siu-Chung (The One-Armed Magic Nun) keeps the choreography smooth and professional even as those lovable old-school foley effects threaten to spoil the illusion.


While Cheung Yat-Woo (The Thunderbolt Fists) is credited as both writer and director, it’s obvious from the start that Wang Yu himself was in control of most aspects of the production.  As such, similarities between The Iron Man and Wang Yu’s other work are plentiful, including primary-colored expositional flashback bits just like those on display in the later Master of the Flying Guillotine.  Wang Yu took great care in his work, wisely realizing that he wasn’t just selling his films to the public, but himself as well.  Though he worked with any number of producers, writers, and directors in his prolific post-Shaw Brothers career he managed to maintain a consistent level of quality through it all.

A big part of that consistency lies with the actors Wang Yu worked with so frequently.  Lung Fei (Master of the Flying Guillotine, Savage Killers, Knight Errant) is on board, once again playing the villain.  Sit Hon (Master of the Flying Guillotine, Knight Errant) gets a bigger role than is the norm, playing a gambling-addicted brother who nearly ruins the life of Wang Yu’s love interest before taking a noble turn.  Tsai Hung (The One Armed Boxer, Knight Errant, Tsu Hong Wu) is present as well, here playing one of Wang Yu’s father’s traitorous friends.  Familiar faces are a big part of the appeal of these films for me, and reviewing a Wang Yu picture feels more like spending an afternoon with old friends than work.

Of course, a Wang Yu film wouldn’t be worthy of its namesake without the trademark ridiculousness the man is known for, and The Iron Man has plenty to spare.  The highlight has to be the battle between hero Chin and a gang of motorcyclists who appear out of nowhere to aid Fang Woo during the final confrontation.  Other notable moments include Chin’s knife-edge exposé of a cheating casino boss and the sneaky murder plot of Chin’s love interest’s blind sister.  There’s a raunchy edge to the proceedings as well.  It’s the first Wang Yu film I’ve seen that can list bare breasts (brief as their revelation may be) among its assets, though viewers will have to contend with some uncomfortable close-ups of Sit Hon’s sex-face to see them.

It’s a pity The Iron Man isn’t better known or more readily available, but that’s just the nature of the beast.  The Iron Man is out there, even if it takes a little work to track it down, and well worth the effort it may take to see it.  Highly recommended.

* Not that I can tell, at least.  This release of a film of the same title on Amazon.com seems to be for something else entirely, Young Hero of Shaolin II under the Iron Man title, though the Amazon details obviously originate with the Wang Yu film.  The only official home video release of the film anywhere that I’m aware of is from Hong Kong outfit Ocean Shores Video, which is long out of print but crops up on eBay from time to time.