Godzilla Vs. Biollante is the New Blu-ray Pick of the Week

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I am slowly becoming something of a Godzilla superfan. I’ve always loved that giant, nuclear, lizard monster but I’ve always enjoyed him more or less randomly. I’m still pretty random in my viewing if I’m being honest, but I’m now paying attention to the different versions and eras of the famed beast.

Godzilla vs Biollante is the second film in what is commonly called the Heisei Period of Godzilla films. That’s a sort of reboot of the series in the 1980s. The effects work was updated from the original films and there was a new reliance on Godzilla being a terribly destructive force (at least at first, I think he becomes more friendly in later films).

This one features Godzilla fighting a genetically modified plant (imbued with Godzilla’s own DNA and some psychic powers from a girl). It is a bit of a mess but a lot of fun.

The Criterion Collection also seems fascinated by Godzilla and they’ve done their usual awesome-looking job with this disc.

Also out this week that looks interesting:

Moana 2: I quite liked the original film. It had a good story, some great animation, and at least a couple of inescapable earworm songs from Lin Manuel Miranda. The sequel was a huge hit (making over a billion dollars at the box office) but for whatever reason I never got around to watching it. From what I can tell the story is basically the same (Moana has a big adventure on the sea, along for the ride is the demi-god Maui) but there is no Lin Manuel Miranda this time which is disappointing.

Wolfman (2025): Director Leigh Whannell previously helmed a really good adaptation of the old Invisible Man story so it seems like he’d be a great fit for a new wolfman adaptation. But the previews looked dumb and the reviews were bad. Still, I am a horror nerd and I love a good wolfman movie.

The Last of Us – The Complet First Season: A fantastic adaptation of a popular video game finds a man and a teenage girl trying to survive a world full of zombie-like creatures.

The Penguin – The Complete First Season: This series is a continuation of the film The Batman and follows Oswald Cobblepot (Colin Farrell) aka The Penguin as he tries to conquer Gotham.

Forbidden World 4K UHD: Shout Factory presents this Roger Corman-directed Alien rip-off that’s actually pretty good. You can read my Friday Night Horror Movie take on it here.

Deep Blue Sea 4K UHD: Arrow Video presents this silly-sounding film about some genetically mutated sharks that grew super intelligent and, you know, started killing people.

Thirst 4K UHD: Powerhouse Films brings us this 1970s horror film about a descendent of Elizabeth Bathory who is abducted by a blood cult.

Foreign Film February – Mothra Vs Godzilla (1964)

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When I was a kid, all those old Godzilla movies were on television regularly. I’m guessing they were Saturday night movies on one of the local UHF stations, but I don’t really remember. What I do remember is how much I loved them. My favorite was Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla. Not because I thought the film was superior to the others but because in that boyhood way of arguing who could beat who in a fight, I thought Mechagodzilla was best equipped to defeat regular Godzilla. T my young mind a robot Godzilla was the coolest. My friends would choose King Ghidorah, or Rodan, or one of the other monsters and we’d endlessly argue over who would win in a fight.

I more or less forgot about Godzilla once I became a teenager. I had no interest in the 1998 film starring Matthew Broderick or the 2014 film with Aaron Taylor Johnson. And then the Criterion Collection released the original Godzilla.

The original Godzilla was released in 1954. It was a huge success in Japan and in 1956 the rights were sold for an American release. The Americans dubbed it into English, cut most of the political allegory out of it, and did a bunch of inserts starring Raymond Burr. I’m sure it was that version I watched growing up. The Criterion release included the Japanese version of the film and that got a lot of press. I bought that disc and loved the film.

Later Criterion released an incredible boxed set featuring all of the so-called Showa Films. I bought that set (it sits proudly next to my Ingmar Bergman boxed set from Criterion making it look like Godzilla is touching Liv Ullmann’s face.)

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I’m slowly working my way through all the Godzilla films and I recently sat down with Mothra vs Godzilla. Like a lot of Godzilla films from this era, there is a lot of buildup before we even get to Godzilla much less his battle with another monster.

A beach is wrecked by a typhoon. Afterward, a giant blueish egg washes ashore. Some greedy businessmen purchase the egg from the fishermen who have rights to everything inside the cove. They immediately start building a theme park around the egg dreaming of the millions they will make off of it.

They are visited by a couple of twin fairies who say the egg was laid by Mothra a giant moth-shaped god that protects their island. They beg the businessmen to return the egg to Mothra, but instead, the men try to capture the fairies.

After I watched the film I learned there was a previous film entitled Mothra that deepens the legend behind the moth-god. The fairies befriend some kindly reporters before returning home.

Enter Godzilla. Once again he wreaks havoc upon the Japanese island. The reporters beg the fairies to help them destroy Godzilla. Mothra agrees only when Godzilla makes eyes for the giant egg.

Before you think that a moth, no matter how giant, could do anything against an enormous radioactive dinosaur, let me just tell you that Mothra’s wings are so powerful they essentially cause a hurricane whenever she flies. She’s also got some badass powder that hurts Godzilla in some way.

Godzilla ultimately defeats Mothra with his radioactive breath. But it is the egg that saves the day. When it hatches it releases some killer caterpillars with monster choppers and an ability to spray weblike stuff from their hind quarters.

Godzilla movies are inherently silly. And awesome. You can spend all sorts of time trying to point out their various themes and trying to suss out some deeper meaning. Or you can just enjoy a giant lizard fighting an enormous moth.

Escape From New York Is the New Blu-ray Pick of the Week

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I love a good genre movie. Whether it is a western, a horror flick, a film noir, a sci-fi film, or something else, genres give us a set of rules to follow. There is something comforting in knowing the basic elements of a film before it even begins. And yet, of course, the best genre films upend the rules and do something different.

John Carpenter is one of the greatest genre filmmakers ever. He remains one of the great masters. His best films – The Thing, Halloween, The Fog – I’ve seen dozens of times. They are endlessly entertaining.

Strangely, I’ve only seen Escape From New York once, and that was years ago. I remember loving it, but for reasons I now can’t fathom, I’ve never returned to it. I think with this new 4K UHD release from Shout Factory that will be rectified soon.

Also out this week that looks interesting:

Godzilla 4K UHD: Criterion has released this film a few times, once as a Blu-ray with their usual set of extras, then again as part of their big Godzilla boxed set (I own both of those) and now again in 4K (I won’t be purchasing this one).

White Christmas 4K UHD: My wife absolutely adores this musical starring Bing Crosby, Danny Kaye, and Rosemary Clooney. I could live without it.

The Crow: This remake of the cult classic has gotten terrible reviews from both fans and critics.

Trap 4K UHD: A pretty fun, if ultimately quite goofy little thriller from M. Night Shyamalan. You can read my review here.

I Love Lucy: The Complete Series: I’m sure I’ve seen many episodes of this classic sitcom, but I can’t remember any of them. It just wasn’t a series I paid much attention to when I was a kid (when they endlessly reran it, I’m not old enough to have seen it when it originally aired.)

The Wizard of Oz 4K UHD: An undeniable classic gets yet another repackaging. I can’t count the number of times this has been released in a variety of formats.

Orphan Black: Echoes. The original series was utterly original and interesting and fantastic until it wasn’t. My wife and I watched the first few seasons and then it started getting bogged down inside its own endless conspiracy theories and we tuned out. I’m interested in this sequel series if only because it stars Krysten Ritter whom I love.

The Friday Night Horror Movie: Shin Godzilla (2016)

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My daughter has started to get into Japanese culture, including Anime so I got her a subscription to the Crunchyroll streaming service. I noticed that Shin Godzilla was included in that service so I gave it go. I’d say I am a fan of the Godzilla movies, but I’m not hardcore about it. I’d been meaning to watch this one since it came out, and the reviews for the new one – Godzilla Minus One have been really good, so today seemed like a good day to watch a lizard monster attacking Japan. Godzilla Minus One isn’t a true sequel of Shin Godzilla but I still wanted to watch it before Godzilla Minus One.

Crunchyroll had two audio options. I could watch it in the original Japanese with English subtitles or I could watch an English dub. In general, I prefer to watch movies in their original language and so I chose that option. Unfortunately, the sync was off which meant I got the subtitles appearing on my screen about three seconds before the characters actually said them. This was especially true during the more frantic action sequences in which the dialogue is rapid-fire. It was very confusing so after about an hour I switched to the English dub. It was a very bad dub, but somehow I survived.

Made in 1954 the original Godzilla served as a metaphor for Japan’s post-war fears of another nuclear holocaust. Shin Godzilla is at least partially concerned with the ways in which bureaucracy stalls decisive government action in a time of crisis. Making it a metaphor for the Japanese government’s response to the Fukushima nuclear disaster.

Just off the coast of Japan, an eruption of some kind occurs in Tokyo Bay. The water begins to boil and an underground tunnel ruptures sending water flooding into traffic. The government meets to discuss the issue, they call in top scientists to figure out what is causing the eruption, but they do nothing.

Soon a tail emerges then a large lizard thing (with hilarious googly eyes. But not to worry, the scientists say, it probably can’t come on land. It’s legs are too small. Then it does come on land and mutates into something more Godzilla-like. More government discussion, but little action. They have to have meetings, you see, and decide what the laws say they can and cannot do during this crisis that no one in the history of the world is prepared for.

Some low-level agents form a secret board of folks willing to actually do something, and they (eventually) save the day. But not before Godzilla destroys most of the city with his super-awesome fire breath and lasers that shoot out of his scales and tail.

It is a curious mix of dudes in offices arguing over the correct procedures, other dudes in other offices actually trying to find a real solution, and some crazy Godzilla action.

Honestly, I was mostly bored during the office scenes. I got what it was trying to do within the first ten minutes or so and after that, it just felt redundant. But the Godzilla attacks stuff is pretty great.