Sunday 13 February 2011

Gamera: Daikaijū Kuchu Kessen / Gamera: Guardian of the Universe (1995)

After many years of Gamera films aimed at children, not to mention an incredibly lazy stock-footage film made by the company who bought Gamera owners Daiei from bankruptcy, the franchise was in need of a reboot. And what a reboot it was, dispensing with the more childish elements of the series and creating a darker and more adult action story. Of course, the ridiculous Gamera-gore is present, but in this environment it seems more appropriate. As kaiju films go, this movie is remarkably well-paced, keeping up enough monstery action to offset the human drama. Gamera is pitted once again against his earliest foe, Gyaos, though with the updated back-story that he is a biological defence mechanism created by the lost civilisation of Atlantis. The Gyaos initially appear on a rain-soaked tropical island, and given that Jurassic Park came out just two years prior, the inspiration is plain to see. They even find time for the plucky female scientist to go rooting through an enormous pile of Gyaos guano. The Gyaos themselves suffer from the same problem as any flying monster, as they tend to look stiff and unnatural, but the final Super Gyaos looks much better, attacking from both sky and ground by using its wings to walk. And both Gamera and Gyaos look colossal, once again due to steller miniature work and clever use of forced perspective and low camera angles. It's not perfect, as the scene transitions look incredibly amateur, and the dubbing, while not the worst I've heard, can be a little bit hokey. But overall this is a very good film, and happily it's only the first in a trilogy of Heisei Gamera films, each of which is said to be better than the last, even though only two out of three feature Steven Seagal's daughter.


Imagine how much better Disney's Atlantis could have been...

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