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La guerra de los gargantúas

Título original: Furankenshutain no kaijû: Sanda tai Gaira
  • 1966
  • G
  • 1h 28min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.2/10
3.9 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
La guerra de los gargantúas (1966)
An experimental lab animal called a gargantua escapes from his captors and is suspected to be the creature that is killing people all over the countryside. But when the gargantua from the lab appears at the same time as the evil gargantua, the two begin to battle across Japan.
Reproducir trailer2:19
1 video
76 fotos
AcciónCiencia FicciónHorror sobrenaturalHorror y monstruosKaijuTerror

El único superviviente de un barco pesquero relata avistamientos de gigantes peludos. Un científico investiga, revelando criaturas mutantes , crecidas de un monstruo anterior. Casi indestruc... Leer todoEl único superviviente de un barco pesquero relata avistamientos de gigantes peludos. Un científico investiga, revelando criaturas mutantes , crecidas de un monstruo anterior. Casi indestructibles, luchan en Tokyo hasta que solo queda una.El único superviviente de un barco pesquero relata avistamientos de gigantes peludos. Un científico investiga, revelando criaturas mutantes , crecidas de un monstruo anterior. Casi indestructibles, luchan en Tokyo hasta que solo queda una.

  • Dirección
    • Ishirô Honda
  • Guionistas
    • Reuben Bercovitch
    • Ishirô Honda
    • Takeshi Kimura
  • Elenco
    • Russ Tamblyn
    • Kumi Mizuno
    • Kenji Sahara
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    6.2/10
    3.9 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Ishirô Honda
    • Guionistas
      • Reuben Bercovitch
      • Ishirô Honda
      • Takeshi Kimura
    • Elenco
      • Russ Tamblyn
      • Kumi Mizuno
      • Kenji Sahara
    • 88Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 50Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:19
    Official Trailer

    Fotos76

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    Elenco principal36

    Editar
    Russ Tamblyn
    Russ Tamblyn
    • Dr. Paul Stewart
    • (as Rasu Tanburin)
    Kumi Mizuno
    Kumi Mizuno
    • Akemi Togawa
    Kenji Sahara
    Kenji Sahara
    • Dr. Yuzo Majida
    Nobuo Nakamura
    Nobuo Nakamura
    • Dr. Kita
    • (as Nobuo Makamura)
    Jun Tazaki
    Jun Tazaki
    • General
    Hisaya Itô
    Hisaya Itô
    • Police Chief
    • (as Hisaya Ito)
    Yoshifumi Tajima
    Yoshifumi Tajima
    • Police Officer
    • (as Yoshibumi Tajima)
    Ren Yamamoto
    • Sailor
    Kipp Hamilton
    Kipp Hamilton
    • Singer
    Kôzô Nomura
    • General's Aide
    Nadao Kirino
    • Soldier
    Shôichi Hirose
    Shôichi Hirose
    • Soldier
    Tadashi Okabe
    • Defiant Reporter
    Hideo Shibuya
    • Skeptical Reporter
    Yoshio Katsube
    • Reporter
    Yutaka Oka
    • Reporter
    Ikio Sawamura
    Ikio Sawamura
    • Fisherman #1
    Seishirô Kuno
    • Fisherman #2
    • Dirección
      • Ishirô Honda
    • Guionistas
      • Reuben Bercovitch
      • Ishirô Honda
      • Takeshi Kimura
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios88

    6.23.8K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    mwillia3-1

    Excellent Japanese monster fare!

    I saw this movie when it was in theaters in Queens, New York around 1968 and the promotional ad stated that the first 100 movie goers will receive a free pet monster. Well, my monster loving friends & myself were all over that. Turned out that the pet monster was a silly little rubbery goofy animal. Everyone loved them nonetheless! We all enjoyed the movie & it was billed as a second feature along with D.A.M. Destroy All Monsters! What a blast! War of the Gargantuas was definitely the better of the two flicks and every time I went to the beach after that kept hearing that eerie music and waited for the green gargantuan to rear his big ugly head out of the ocean. The ultimate battle between good (brown gargantuan) and evil (green gargantuan) as can best be done in Japanese monster fashion. Russ Tamblyn was popular at the time after appearing in West Side Story and Tom Thumb. I would say this was his best movie. I recommend it to any monster movie buff. MikeW
    Sargebri

    One of Toho's Better Non-Godzilla Kaijus

    This is certainly one of the better non-Godzilla kaijus. It has plenty of action and in some ways it has a love story within it. The character Akemi has a deep motherly affection for Sanda (the Brown Gargantua) and is willing to do anything to protect it from the wrath of the army who see him as nothing but a menace. In the meantime, Gaira (the Green Gargantua) is the true evil. He sees man as nothing but food and this brings him into conflict with his brother who is gentle in nature but results to violence as a last resort.
    6cburgner

    Actors running amuck in monster suits, again

    We'll give credit to TOHO productions, it is different from the Godzilla films, which I adore. It seems they just used different monsters while using the same scaled army vehicles and scenery. Having viewed Frankenstein Conquers the World, this "Sequel" doesn't quite add up to it's previous storyline which was a little vague, blame it on poor editing? Had they expanded on why and where these 2 monsters originated from, it would make more sense, while still leaving out human dialogue. I saw this film as a child, it scared me into believing there really were creatures walking around stomping on people! When you hear the lady singing on the cruise ship, and that poorly written song sticks in your head, believe me, you'll wish she had been eaten first. The movie is a classic, worth a look see.
    sampleman411-1

    Clash of the Titanic Brothers

    A fond and nostalgic personal memory, "War of the Gargantuas" was a welcome treat in my family's living room (they had more console television sets back then; am I getting old or what?), and is one of my favorite Japanese monster movies. When they aired it, which was often, I'd get a chance to watch it five times during that week, at 8:00pm on a KTLA (Los Angeles area Channel 5) Movie of the (whole) Week (I was just a kid then, and before anybody was able to rent videos at Blockbuster).

    Barebones Summary (without spoiling it for the inexperienced viewer):

    A beautiful young female scientist, Akemi (pronounced ‘ uh-kay-mee '), does research on a docile, missing-link-like monster child -eventually called `The Brown One.' (There is a cute scene in which Akemi feeds it a chocolate bar, soon after it has played with children's toys). One day the small and hairy young creature escapes the laboratory and grows up alone in the forest. Some years later Akemi meets an American scientist, Paul Stewart, and you just know these two lovebirds are going to fall in love.

    Meanwhile at Tokyo International, a huge green monster pops out of the ocean and proves everybody wrong when they say Airport food is lousy. The ugly sea titan sticks its hand in an office window, pulls out an even uglier cleaning lady and shoves it in his mouth. As it munches away and spits out the wrapping (clothes), the clouds overhead start to clear (Ouch, it hates the light!), so it peels-off down the runway and dive-bombs into the ocean.

    Elsewhere that evening, aboard a luxury yacht, an American singer belts out a corny love ballad to her formal audience-`The words get stuck in my throat…' (And you just know someone--or something--will soon put a stop to her awful singing).

    Before you know it, the behemoth brothers meet several times to resume their sibling rivalries by knocking the wind out of each other, smashing military vehicles of all shapes and sizes, and knocking over downtown buildings.

    I believe WOTG offers considerably more than your usual Toho Studios/Japanese Monster Movie, and could do with a modern spin (provided the original plot is not much altered as to seem another film entirely). It certainly has its comedic moments, as already mentioned. There are infinite possibilities in remaking it. The Japanese are great at creating model tanks and realistic building models… all that stuff. And the title creatures are scary looking… ‘Green' looks like a gargoyle without horns, and ‘Brown' looks like a somewhat frightening, foreign version of Frankenstein's montster
    Eric-62-2

    Another Classic 60s Kaiju Flick

    "War Of The Gargantuas" comes from my favorite era of Toho's kaiju flicks, the 1960s, when the emphasis was relatively straightforward action and fun, and thankfully no annoying little kids making friends with the monsters. And this time, we have a monster in the Green Gargantua (Gaira) who is really frightening and who eats people to boot (not even Godzilla ever went that far). It left me unnerved the first time I saw it as a kid.

    Like most kaiju films, the original Japanese version is much better than the later dubbed American version. Russ Tamblyn (generally okay but clearly bored and resentful of his sudden fall from the heights of "West Side Story" and "The Haunting") might have gotten his own voice back in the U.S version (the Japanese actor who dubs him in the original doesn't sound anything like him at all and in Toho's European market English dub they used another actor), but everything else about it is decidedly inferior. The dubbing is awful, and sections of Akira Ifukube's score are replaced with an endless, monotonous theme for the military that I think was first used in "Earth Versus The Flying Saucers." Cropped and faded, as existing American video prints are now, the film really looks cheap and silly and the flaws are magnified. The original Japanese version in widescreen format, has beautiful color and sound that immediately conjure the image of a stylish late 60s action flick with reasonably good FX for the time, and the results far more entertaining in the end. Also in the Japanese version, we learn that this movie is actually a sequel to "Frankenstein Conquers The World" since the monsters are referred to as "Frankensteins" rather than "Gargantuas" as they are in the dubbed version.

    As for the infamous nightclub scene featuring ex-Fox starlet Kipp Hamilton's infamously bad song before she gets attacked (but contrary to what others say here, not eaten), even that somehow comes off better in the Japanese version. When you stop to think of it, the Japanese audiences had it better since they couldn't understand a word of those inane lyrics when they were watching! But what the heck, how many other bad songs did we suffer through in all those James Bond film knockoffs in the late 60s? ("Your Zowie Face" in "In Like Flint" anyone?) I prefer to write that off to the goofy spirit of the times. And "War Of The Gargantuas" is in the best tradition of the goofy spirit of fun 60s kaiju that remains a guilty pleasure to savor again and again in my book.

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    Argumento

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    • Trivia
      Russ Tamblyn's performance in The War of the Gargantuas (1966) felt distant because his dialogue was re-dubbed under unusual circumstances. It has been previously claimed that the original audio track was lost, but that might not be the full case. At a 2004 screening, Tamblyn explained that, after filming, producer Henry G. Saperstein had all mentions of "Frankenstein" removed from the UPA version, requiring him to re-dub his lines. He resisted, insisting on rewriting them, leading to clashes with recording director Riley Jackson. Despite claims of Tamblyn improvising much of the dialogue and relying on memory/reading lip movements to re-dub it, according to Jackson, Tamblyn was actually tricked into a cold reading, which was secretly recorded and used in the final cut.
    • Errores
      In the scene where a helicopter is used to lure the green gargantuan into the laser attack, the wire used to suspend the model helicopter can clearly be seen.
    • Citas

      Akemi Togawa: They don't seem to be afraid of Gaira.

      Dr. Paul Stewart: Ah, they're young; young people don't have too much fear... It's strange, you know. Whenever there's a strong evil force around, youth seems to blossom. Like when the Nazi's captured Paris. All of the night clubs and theaters were filled with young people.

      Akemi Togawa: Aren't we guilty of doing the same thing?

      Dr. Paul Stewart: I don't feel guilt; I don't think they do either...

    • Versiones alternativas
      Co-producer Henry Saperstein commissioned an English-dubbed US version using Glen Glenn Sound, a Los Angeles-based company. This version removes references to the preceding film, Frankenstein Conquers the World, with the creatures being referred to as "Gargantuas" instead of "Frankensteins." However, this version also includes additional footage not featured in the original Japanese version, including the scene where Dr. Stewart references a severed hand, supposedly Frankenstein's from the previous film.
    • Conexiones
      Edited into Chikyû kôgeki meirei Gojira tai Gaigan (1972)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Feel In My Heart (The Words Get Stuck In My Throat)
      Written by H.B. Barnum

      Performed by Kipp Hamilton

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    Preguntas Frecuentes

    • How long is The War of the Gargantuas?Con tecnología de Alexa
    • Why do the two gargantuas begin to fight each other?
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    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 12 de diciembre de 1968 (México)
    • País de origen
      • Japón
    • Idioma
      • Japonés
    • También se conoce como
      • The War of the Gargantuas
    • Productoras
      • Benedict Pictures Corp.
      • Henry G. Saperstein Enterprises Inc.
      • Toho
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 28 minutos
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 2.35 : 1

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