Strange events are taking place in Okinawa. An Azumi priestess has a terrifying vision of a city being destroyed by a giant monster. An excavation led by Masahiko's brother Keisuke accidentally uncovers a chamber filled with ancient artifacts and a mural bearing an ominous prophecy. Keisuke is joined by archaeologist Saeko Kaneshiro, who translates the prophecy and takes one of the artefacts, bearing the likeness of the legendary monster King Caesar. Godzilla (or so it seems) emerges from Mount Fuji and begins a destructive rampage challenger is revealed to be the true Godzilla, while the other turns out to be Mechagodzilla, a massive robot armed with advanced weaponry advanced technology and composition of unearthly metals. Masahiko, Miyajima and his daughter Ikuko discovers that apelike aliens of the Third Planet from the Black Hole who plan to use MechaGodzilla to conquer Earth. Their leader, Kuronuma the two monsters King Caesar and Godzilla must join forces to defeat MechaGodzilla Edit Translation
- English
- magyar / magyar nyelv
- dansk
- Norsk
- Native Title: ゴジラ対メカゴジラ
- Also Known As: Godzilla vs. Cosmic Monster , Godzilla vs. Bionic Monster
- Screenwriter & Director: Fukuda Jun
- Genres: Action, Tokusatsu, Sci-Fi
Cast & Credits
- Kishida ShinInterpol Agent NanbaraSupport Role
- Hirata AkihikoProfessor Hideto MiyajimaSupport Role
- Koizumi HiroshiProfessor WaguraSupport Role
- Imafuku MasaoKunigami TenganSupport Role
- Mutsumi GoroKuronumaSupport Role
- Aoyama KazuyaShimizu MasahikoSupport Role
Reviews
Big G has his hands full with Mechagodzilla, luckily King Caesar/Shisa and some plucky humans are around to help. Returning for another Godzilla adventure is Hirata Akihiko as Professor Hideto Miyajima. This veteran actor is always a welcome presence. The humans were fairly interesting in this movie as they dealt with the aliens in various dangerous, if convoluted scenarios.
Though made during the classic 1970's rubber suit era, the makers of this film backed off the camp and upped the danger for Godzilla, complete with spurting blood. I have to remind myself that these movies were often made to be kid friendly though they did tone down the humorous fight scenes in this one. The laser effects were good for this time-frame and for what looked like a movie that was shot on a very limited budget. No miniature armies appeared, only buildings and mountainsides were destroyed. This was strictly monster on monster fighting.
Many Godzilla movies have a moral behind them. In this one, King Caesar/Shisa seems to be a call back to older Japanese traditions where the priestess must sing a hymn to awaken him. He is the god-like creature who protects the island and appears when called upon. Mechagodzilla shows modern technology encroaching on society. And somewhere in between is Godzilla, an ancient creature enhanced by modern nuclear radiation. Or maybe I'm reading too much into it and King Caesar is just a giant dog eared monster, Godzilla is a giant, destructive lizard and Mechagodzilla is just a large tin can created by some aliens spoiling for a fight!
Mechagodzilla's suit and weaponry were innovative though the real Godzillas's suit was underwhelming for me in this one. This is one of the rare times I enjoyed the humans' story as much as the monster fights. That's not to say their story was riveting, perhaps it's more of a reflection of my apathy toward the monster fights. I found King Caesar/Shisa to be lacking in particular. Mechagodzilla's weaponry and fights with Big G and all the spies both alien and human running around kept the film interesting and the action moving forward. Not a bad way to spend 90 minutes if you are a fan of the classic era.