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IMDbPro

Girara no gyakushû: Tôya-ko Samitto kikiippatsu

  • 2008
  • 1h 38min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
5,2/10
428
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Girara no gyakushû: Tôya-ko Samitto kikiippatsu (2008)
ComedySci-Fi

Añade un argumento en tu idiomaIn 2008, all the world leaders are together at a G8 Summit meeting in Japan. A meteorite crashes into the heart of Sapporo and releases the monster Guilala. The monster rampages through Sapp... Leer todoIn 2008, all the world leaders are together at a G8 Summit meeting in Japan. A meteorite crashes into the heart of Sapporo and releases the monster Guilala. The monster rampages through Sapporo, leaving death and destruction in his wake.In 2008, all the world leaders are together at a G8 Summit meeting in Japan. A meteorite crashes into the heart of Sapporo and releases the monster Guilala. The monster rampages through Sapporo, leaving death and destruction in his wake.

  • Dirección
    • Minoru Kawasaki
  • Guión
    • Masakazu Migita
  • Reparto principal
    • Natsuki Katô
    • Kazuki Katô
    • Hide Fukumoto
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    5,2/10
    428
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Minoru Kawasaki
    • Guión
      • Masakazu Migita
    • Reparto principal
      • Natsuki Katô
      • Kazuki Katô
      • Hide Fukumoto
    • 10Reseñas de usuarios
    • 26Reseñas de críticos
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • Imágenes37

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    + 31
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    Reparto principal44

    Editar
    Natsuki Katô
    • Sumire
    Kazuki Katô
    • Sanpei
    Hide Fukumoto
    • Former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe
    Akira Matsushita
    • Former Prime Minister Junzaburo Ohizumi
    Matabee Watabe
    Jon Heese
    • U.S. President Earth Burger
    Anatoli Krasnov
    • Russian President Beef Stroganuf Putchin
    • (as Anatoly Krasnov)
    Inge Murata
    • Bundeskanzlerin Angela Merkel
    Ingo
    • French President Escalugo Solkozi (Nicolas Sarkozy)
    Pietro Cristo
    • Maple Syrup Harris Prime Minister
    • (as Christo Pietro)
    Roberto Corassanti
    • Italian Prime Minister Pizzano Pietro
    Wayne Doster
    • British Prime Minister Meat Pie Brightman
    Ricaya Spooner
    • KGB
    Ziko Uchiyama
    • Northern Dictator
    • (as Zeeko Uchiyama)
    Takeshi Kitano
    Takeshi Kitano
    • Take Monster
    • (voz)
    • (as Beat Takeshi)
    Shôken Kunimoto
    Yakan Nabe
    Kon Arimura
    • Announcer
    • Dirección
      • Minoru Kawasaki
    • Guión
      • Masakazu Migita
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios10

    5,2428
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    Reseñas destacadas

    RResende

    smells like a teen spirit

    From time to time i like to immerse on films like this. Those are the moments in which one enters a film for pure relaxation. I guess it's the same kind of spirit such filmmakers as Kawasaki put into creating this.

    Some of these rides are actually very profitable, and i think it is a mistake to excuse every unconsidered element of a film just because it is a B-flick or because the budget was close to zero. Some great, intelligent work has been that over that.

    Here we have a film made out of two elements: the will to freely play with known faces of the political scene these days, and the will to produce special effects that deliberately looking false and old-fashioned. I think this crew must have had a lot of fun making this, and in certain moments i too enjoyed being there. But it is the kind of fun a group of adolescents has making fun of an unlikable teacher or painting obscene messages on a wall. I'm OK with that, but something better could be put into this. It was nice to be watching a Power Rangers kind of fight so many years later, but 'nice' is not good.

    You know what this is now. It's your choice to embrace it or not. I did it with some interest, but i won't do it again.

    The pace is slow, cinematic rhythm was not also in the mind of these folks.

    My opinion: 1/5

    http://www.7eyes.wordpress.com
    4ebiros2

    Comic take on Giant Monster movie

    The monster Guilala was originally a monster made by now defunct Shochiku studio in 1967. This movie is somewhat of a remake, but the story is a camp satire of G8 summit and head of the states of the world, a giant monster, Kim Jon il and Korean nuclear missile, and can you believe - a Japanese comedian named Beat Takeshi who appears as Takemajin.

    Monster Guilala lands near lake Toya in Hokkaido attached to Chinese space probe called Beta (which is the same design as the space ship Beta that appeared in the original 1967 movie). There was a G8 summit going on at lake Toya, and US president immediately after hearing the arrival of the monster vows to destroy the monster as an attempt to raise popular support. He recruits the efforts of other heads of the state to defeat the monster. Earth Defense Force (TDF) of Japan takes on the duty of actually carrying out the orders. The joke of TDF is is that it's comprised of only one tent and about a dozen men working around it. The commander is played by Susumu Kurobe who was a member of Earth Defense Force in the original Toho's Ultraman series back in 1966. Meanwhile in a near by village, there's a shrine that for some reason houses three objects. An ancient scroll depicting Guilala and another figure called Takemajin, a statue of Guilala,and the statue of Takemajin. Villagers gather at the shrine and chant "Nechikoma, Nechikoma" repeatedly, and Takemajin comes to life. Now its a showdown between Guilala and the Takemajin.

    The intent of people who made this movie is not clear. While I was watching this movie, I was thinking this is a story I would have come up with. It was that bad. But obviously being camp was the intention of the producers.Special effect is homage to that of '60s kaijyu movie. They must have done this to appeal to the original viewers of 1967 version of Guilala.

    Interesting and funny movie to come from Japan that parodies the original Guilala, politicians, and the Japanese culture.
    7Jeremy_Urquhart

    Silly and satirical at the same time

    It's not always easy to track down a Minoru Kawasaki film, but it is always worth the effort. This one is exactly what it sounds like it would be from the title: The Monster X Strikes Back: Attack the G8 Summit does indeed feature Monster X attacking the G8 Summit. I didn't even realize it was a sequel/parody of sorts to a much older giant monster movie I'd seen some time ago, but it was fun to learn that after the fact in any event.

    This isn't as good as Calamari Wrestler or Executive Koala (those two are so slept on it's absurd), but it's still quite good. It's got some pretty funny satirical stuff on top of being an intentionally goofy homage/parody of classic kaiju flicks. It's pretty funny, and I found it entertaining for the majority of its runtime.
    7stevenfallonnyc

    "X From outer Space" sequel is a decent comedy

    Today I had the good fortune to catch the new "Monster X" flick on the big screen here in NYC. Although there could have been some more monster action, it definitely was not a disappointment.

    The original "X From Outer Space" from 1967 starred newcomer Guilala, a monster who looked so ridiculous, that there was no way they could have made this sequel anything but a comedy. At least I think it's a sequel - while the title indicates Guilala does indeed "strike back" after being beaten 42 years ago in the first movie, there is a scene here with a kid (who looks like he walked out of a 60's Gamera movie) who names the creature "Guilala," as if he was never named or seen before.

    As for the movie being a comedy, believe it or not, it's actually a decent comedy. Eight world leaders meet in japan for a summit, and take turns offering (failing) suggestions on how to kill Guilala. But the jokes aren't random - there's actually a lot of clever writing here. This isn't a movie full of dumb jokes.

    There's also two reporters (including a hot girl) try to uncover the secret of Guilala through an odd jungle cult, who do a strange dance to worship a god named Take-Majin, who they later convince through their dancing and chanting to fight Guilala.

    My main gripe is that there really isn't much destruction by Guilala. Actually, his best scenes come right at the beginning of the film, just minutes in - he lands on Earth, destroys some buildings and walks off. We then see Guilala fend off the occasional attempt to kill him, and of course his fight with Take-Majin, but the destruction ends right at the start.

    The special effects are pure 1960's retro, from the buildings to the fire that Guilala spews out of his mouth, to the cheap-looking costume. This was all obviously done on purpose to pay homage to the charm of the original film.

    Funny monster, pretty girls everywhere, and clever writing make "Monster X" a good bet for giant monster fans. And before the film, we had a 17-minute original giant monster comedy called "Gehara - The Long Haired Giant Monster" and a great preview of the new "Kappa" (Gappa) film coming out, and it won't be a comedy.
    8MaxBorg89

    A deliberately ridiculous piece of B-movie trash, therefore unmissable

    Before Grindhouse was released and completely ignored by American audiences, Quentin Tarantino had talked of his plans to make a few more B-movie revisits with Robert Rodriguez and other directors, expanding the concept to all possible genres. It's sad that such a project will not materialize, because The Monster X Strikes Back: Attack the G8 Summit is definitely a movie QT would enjoy, and it director the kind of guy he would love to work with: an energetic, grown-up child who loves every single frame of the films he makes, no matter how much crap he has to take from the critics (which is why he's called "the Japanese Ed Wood"). Monster X, which was shown Out of Competition at the 2008 Venice Film Festival, is a quintessential B-movie: geeky, cheap and aware of its silliness. In plain English: a lot of fun.

    The film acts as a sort of low-budget Godzilla reboot, with the big reptile replaced by an alien of sorts named Girara. The seemingly invincible creature awakes suddenly from a very long sleep, and starts destroying everything in sight. Too bad this happens at the exact same time as a G8 summit in Kyoto: given the disastrous situation, the participating nations (USA, Germany, France, Italy, etc) do their best to stop the monster, only to fail each time. Perhaps the key to sorting out this mess is hidden in a freaky temple in the woods, where people worship a being with a strange fascination for his, uh, private area.

    The G8 subplot would indicate some sort of political intent behind the movie, but that's just a load of rubbish: any kind of satire requires subtlety, and when the French President tries to seduce a woman with the phrase "I'm the Eiffel Tower and I want to penetrate your Arch of Triumph!", you know that's the last thing you'll ever find in the blatantly trashy script (by the way, since when do Brits speak with an American accent?). The "plot" is just an excuse for two silly-looking freaks to beat the hell out of each other, in scenes that could have been shot by a toddler in anyone's back yard or in an average workshop. It's that shameless "bag of dirt" quality that makes Monster X a guilty pleasure like few others. It's a movie made by geeks for geeks, and by not aspiring to any higher artistic consideration it actually manages to bring back the eight-year old hidden inside all of us, much like Peter Jackson's aptly titled Bad Taste, while more "noble" attempts to achieve the same effect have a tendency to fall flat on their backs.

    So yes, it's incredibly, incontrovertibly silly, cheap, whatever you want to call it. But it's also one of the most enjoyable "bad" movies that one can find. Plus, it has the additional treat of Japanese auteur Takeshi Kitano voicing the "good" monster: how much more can one ask for?

    Más del estilo

    The X from outer space
    4,8
    The X from outer space
    Yamato Takeru
    6,3
    Yamato Takeru
    Takeshis'
    6,3
    Takeshis'
    Chi to hone
    7,0
    Chi to hone
    Gonin
    6,7
    Gonin
    Dolls - Marionetas
    7,5
    Dolls - Marionetas
    Outrage 3
    6,4
    Outrage 3
    Glory to the filmmaker!
    6,3
    Glory to the filmmaker!
    Boiling point (Punto de ebullición)
    6,7
    Boiling point (Punto de ebullición)
    Brother
    7,1
    Brother
    Sonatine
    7,5
    Sonatine
    Matango
    6,4
    Matango

    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que...?

    Editar
    • Pifias
      The U.S. President and the UK Minister both have a decidedly Canadian accent in this film.
    • Créditos adicionales
      During the closing credits, entertaining still shots from both the film itself and behind the scenes are shown on-screen.
    • Conexiones
      Follows The X from outer space (1967)

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    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 26 de julio de 2008 (Japón)
    • País de origen
      • Japón
    • Idioma
      • Japonés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • The Monster X Strikes Back: Attack the G8 Summit
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Tokio, Japón
    • Empresas productoras
      • DefStar Records
      • Eisei Gekijo
      • Famima I
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Duración
      1 hora 38 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Dolby Digital
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.85 : 1

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    Girara no gyakushû: Tôya-ko Samitto kikiippatsu (2008)
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    By what name was Girara no gyakushû: Tôya-ko Samitto kikiippatsu (2008) officially released in Canada in English?
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