About an hour in, Godzilla finally gets out of the water and
roars for the camera. He faces down a winged kaiju at an airport, what's suggested
to be an ancient predator of his kind. The military is down; the humans are
helpless. Flames swell and it's clear only Godzilla can stop this.
The movie immediately cuts to the hero's living room, where
his son watches a news channel showing Godzilla and the winged kaiju throwing
each other around for a few seconds. The kid yells, "Mommy, Mommy,
dinosaurs!"
The guy sitting behind me snorted. I laughed. The rest of
the room was awkwardly quiet, especially as the movie then depicted the
monsters going separate ways. We missed the fight, we missed what made them
split up, and we immediately go back to humans talking.
I don't feel this is much of a spoiler because it's a trick
the movie pulls at least five more times. It's as though they didn't have the
budget to make a giant monster movie and so went to every length to avoid it, giving
you glimpses of struggle from the corner of the screen, or multiple times, shrunken
visions on TV sets. During its climactic battle, the movie cannot wait to cut
away from the giants in favor of Navy men trying to get into the city, steal a
nuclear warhead, and then escape the city.
Godzilla gets tackled? Cut to the humans.
Godzilla slams a kaiju through a skyscraper? Cut to the
humans.
I was rooting for them to die so that we could stop checking
in on them.
And we cut to the wrong humans. Prominently featured in
trailers and commercials, Bryan Cranston and Ken Watanabe are shouldered out of
the way for Aaron Taylor-Johnson, an ordnance expert and Cranston's character's son. He is not just a
cipher, but an uncharismatic one who constantly requires excuses to keep around.
He's at one set-piece because of his dad, then another on his way to the
airport, and so-on. While the humans tend to suck in Godzilla movies, it's not
often you get two great actors who are already in it and then shunted.
So the movie becomes more frustrating than anything. Its new
kaiju are interesting, and up to something crazy, and pose different threats to
Godzilla. One is winged and nimble, where the other is more of a hulk. There's
an excitement to seeing a throwdown, and so the movie did the build-up well
enough, if it took far too long to get there. It's no Jurassic Park
in its build, but it's adequate. The problem becomes that it's nowhere near Jurassic Park's league when it finally lets us
see the creatures. The T-Rex is supposed to show up and dominate the scene, not
be interspersed with talking head sequences with mission command, reporters and
nurses, all of whom exist to tell you the thing you're not seeing is scary and
important. That's when the movie starts getting goofy.
For a movie that was billed as intense, it wobbles between drab
and cheesy. At one point Watanabe gives a nuke-happy admiral his father's watch
– it stopped the day he died in Hiroshima.
Get it? But shortly thereafter, Godzilla saves a school bus. I'm still not sure
if he did it on purpose; it was goofy enough that I laughed. The movie is occasionally
dumb, but not campy like the Godzilla franchise you expect.
We get multiple shots of casualties lying around like human
set design, and also multiple sight-gags. This movie absolutely loves people
being unaware something enormous is right next to them, including the hero's
wife not hearing an airplane crashing until it explodes behind her, and a
specialist team checking a waste dump and missing that a 500-foot monster was
eating there. It never reconciles its tone, right to the end, when it flashes a
headline that literally dropped my jaw.
I could complain about its ill-fitted soundtrack and the
number of Asians it enjoys killing, but why bother? After more than twenty
films, and one failed American film to study, it managed to be the Godzilla
movie that didn't know it was supposed to be about Godzilla. The great hope is
that we get that rumored Pacific Rim/Godzilla crossover, and thus get this beast
into Guillermo Del Toro's hands. Somebody else, please take a shot.
Funny. 21st century Godzilla story and how he fits into human relationship reality drama. Well, there will always be another Godzilla movie. I'm waiting for my birthday to go. ;-)
ReplyDeleteIf you're headed out, I wish you to enjoy it more than I did.
DeleteSeeing it this afternoon at the IMAX and will review Monday.
ReplyDeleteOuch. Thanks for the clear-eyed review - I was on the fence about seeing this.
ReplyDeleteIf you still desire to see it, it may handle better at home where you can pause and mess around.
DeleteIt's a solid monster movie in the spirit of Gojira with similarities to the early sequel. It's not a kaiju slap-fest. The fight is done well with smart cuts to give the impression from a limited human viewpoint, but we still get plenty of detailed views. Edwards's Godzilla is not great, but it's not bad.
ReplyDeleteThose that have seen Edwards's film, Monsters, will have fair expectations on pacing and photography style.
By "the early sequel," do you mean Godzilla Raids Again? Because it bears superficial similarities, being about Godzilla and another old monster getting lured into beating each other up.
DeleteI heard a terrible review on TV today, too. You didn't like it either, huh?
ReplyDeleteI just got back from the theater and seeing it. I went in with no expectations and managed to avoid seeing many reviews or even trailers for it, so I had a blast watching it.
ReplyDeleteIf you hadn't written this, I was going to ask if you'd seen it yet.
ReplyDeleteI just got back from vacation, and was thinking of seeing Godzilla this weekend. I still might -- I saw the Matthew Broderick one and didn't walk out (although I left less than enthused).