Watched: 03/02/2024
Format: Amazon
Viewing: Second
Director: Masaaki Tezuka & IshirĂ´ Honda
Selection: Me-ish
This is the one about the very lazy scientists who create a wormhole on earth and don't monitor said wormhole and it lets in a bug, and that bug almost destroys the planet.
So, yeah - this movie is part of the Millennium series which kicked off with Godzilla 2000, and which I'm unclear if there's even supposed to be any continuity. But Godzilla is a problem, so science decides the thing to do is create a gun that can shoot a black hole at him, which... look... that just seems like you're creating way more problems than you're solving.
On a test run, the scientists are successful, but the black hole leaves a @#$%ing wormhole and no one seems all that worried about it and I guess they go home? Because that night a giant bug flies out and leaves an egg a very, very dumb kid picks up. But he's been sworn by our supposed hero not to tell anyone about the experiment, so, logically, he tells no one about the egg.
Which he then dumps down a Tokyo sewer when the egg gets slimy. But the egg is hatching thousands of tiny bugs that will grow into horse-sized dragonflies that kill people. So, amazing job all around.
It's not really a wonder that some Godzilla movies harp on how the Japanese government tends to shoot itself in the foot and hurt the citizenry by constantly trying to hide information.
Anyway - Black Hole Gun doesn't quite do its job on its first live fire, and Godzilla is swarmed by giant dragonflies who siphon off some of his *power* and take it to their resting queen in a submerged city. The queen then fights Godzilla, and if you signed up for a pretty good kaiju fight, I have great news for you.
I may slowly be developing a thing for women in well designed helmets thanks to these movies, but there you are. Our hero helps direct the Black Hole Gun at Godzilla and the movie ends with us knowing they only think they got rid of him. By the time the credits finish, we think they did not as the dumb kid from the movie's first half is seen staring out a window in what we can only hope is Godzilla about to crush him.
This movie is weirdly gross. Doug described it as "gristley", which seems right. There's a lot of stabbing of Godzilla by a stinger, and lots of ooze and slime and bug parts. Which is interesting as the movie is rated 7+. Kids were tougher in 2000. There's also two straight up horror movie deaths as the dragonflies take out some unsuspecting people. But the design on the dragonflies and the eventual Megaguirus is really solid and shows what Toho was pulling off really well in this era.
Some fun casting: Yuriko Hoshi who was in a couple of Showa-era films returns as a veteran scientist with some major mom hair. And Misato Tanaka is pretty solid as our helmeted lead.
This is nowhere near my favorite Godzilla movie, but it has some good bits. Godzilla has the edgier, pokier design, and I love the pink in his dorsal fins, which is why I'm pumped about Pink G in the coming film.