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Godzilla contre Hedora

Titre original : Gojira tai Hedora
  • 1971
  • PG
  • 1h 25min
NOTE IMDb
6,1/10
7,3 k
MA NOTE
Godzilla contre Hedora (1971)
FamilleScience-fictionThrillerAnimationAventure avec des dinosauresCatastropheKaijuSuper héros

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA toxic, ever-evolving alien life-form from the Dark Gaseous Nebula arrives to consume rampant pollution, and neither humanity nor Godzilla may be able to stop it.A toxic, ever-evolving alien life-form from the Dark Gaseous Nebula arrives to consume rampant pollution, and neither humanity nor Godzilla may be able to stop it.A toxic, ever-evolving alien life-form from the Dark Gaseous Nebula arrives to consume rampant pollution, and neither humanity nor Godzilla may be able to stop it.

  • Réalisation
    • Yoshimitsu Banno
    • Ishirô Honda
  • Scénario
    • Yoshimitsu Banno
    • Takeshi Kimura
  • Casting principal
    • Akira Yamanouchi
    • Toshie Kimura
    • Hiroyuki Kawase
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,1/10
    7,3 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Yoshimitsu Banno
      • Ishirô Honda
    • Scénario
      • Yoshimitsu Banno
      • Takeshi Kimura
    • Casting principal
      • Akira Yamanouchi
      • Toshie Kimura
      • Hiroyuki Kawase
    • 130avis d'utilisateurs
    • 72avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos166

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    Rôles principaux26

    Modifier
    Akira Yamanouchi
    Akira Yamanouchi
    • Dr. Toru Yano
    • (as Akira Yamauchi)
    Toshie Kimura
    Toshie Kimura
    • Toshie Yano
    Hiroyuki Kawase
    Hiroyuki Kawase
    • Ken Yano
    Toshio Shiba
    Toshio Shiba
    • Yukio Keuchi
    Keiko Mari
    Keiko Mari
    • Miki Fujiyama
    Yoshio Yoshida
    Yoshio Yoshida
    • Gohei - a fisherman
    Haruo Suzuki
    • JSDF Officer
    Yoshio Katsube
    • JSDF Engineer
    Susumu Okabe
    • Announcer A
    Kentaro Watanabe
    • Announcer B
    Wataru Ômae
    • Police Officer
    Tadashi Okabe
    • Scientist
    Shigeo Katô
    • Screaming Construction Worker
    Takuya Yuki
    • Correspondent
    Eisaburo Komatsu
    • Non Commissioned Officer
    Yukihiko Gondô
    • Helicopter Pilot
    Haruo Nakazawa
    • Youth
    Akio Kusama
    • Person on TV screen
    • Réalisation
      • Yoshimitsu Banno
      • Ishirô Honda
    • Scénario
      • Yoshimitsu Banno
      • Takeshi Kimura
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs130

    6,17.2K
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    Avis à la une

    5beetle-259-554148

    The most "eh" Godzilla movie of them all!!

    Okay, so.... Godzilla vs Hedorah! It's been said that this is a Godzilla movie you either love or hate, so it's either a 10 or a 0. For me personally, this movie is a 5; right smack dab in the middle! It's not a shining gem or a smouldering turd, it's just kinda "eh" *gesture where you shake your hand with all the fingers flat out*

    So, the premise; rampant water and air pollution has spawned Hedorah, a sentient monster made of pollution that is like a mix of the Blob and a garbage dump! Hedorah is able to melt people to bones! The only hope for humanity, as always, is GODZILLAAAAA~!!!!

    Hedorah is a notable monster as he is the last monster of the Showa era that is acting on his own will, he isn't obeying anyone or under mind control, unlike Ghidorah, Gigan, Megalon, Mechagodzilla, and Titanosaurus of the succeeding Showa films.

    This movie is different; there's bizarre animation, trippy montages, and drug innuendos a-plenty!!! Now, the animation shown isn't anime, it's just some bizarre animation straight out of Uncanny Valley. Hedorah is shown sucking on a smokestack from a factory and exhaling the smoke before showing his bloodshot eyes, a blatant reference to taking a bong hit.

    As someone who has taken a few bong hits before, I found this to be a clever little thing. The drug innuendos can be excused because this movie was made in 1971; weed culture was still in it's very huge first run!

    There are two or three POV shots from Hedorah's perspective.

    Also, no review of Godzilla vs Hedorah would be complete without mentioning the bizarre scene where Godzilla FLIES. This was a total WTF moment.

    All in all, if you watch this movie with a sober mind like I did, you'll either hate it or it'll just be "eh". If you watch it after smoking some weed or ingesting an edible, it'll be the best damn Godzilla movie you've ever seen!
    8Horror Fan

    This is a psychedelic Godzilla movie!

    This film has a really post modern feel to it. It begins with a song in Japanese called Save the Earth that (like The Lost Continent song) you won't stop singing (Kaishan! Kaishan! Kaishan!). The opening credits mix in shots of a girl singing the song with shots of a sludge clogged Tokyo harbor. Things get stranger from here. It opens with an annoying kid and his dad going swimming. The kid's father's face is disfigured and the kid gets his hand burned off by a smog monster named Hedorah who spits acid balls and inhales the fumes off smokestalks. Things get even stranger from there. Theres a Save the Earth concert or something with this girl in spandex with stuff painting on singing, this lava lamp like thing on the wall (definitely hippies) and this teenager who gets drunk and starts halucinating and sees everyone with fish masks on (when I saw this the first time when I was six, couldn't get why everyone started wearing fish masks and why the teen seemed so disturbed about it) until Hedorah suddenly attacks after sucking up fumes. Well Godzilla comes and saves everybody and they start fighting really bizarrely (similar to the Saturday night wrestling scenes from King Kong vs. Godzilla. They wrestle and wrestle some more. Though released in 1971, this is very sixties. Director Yoshimitsu Banno blends mind twisting images, real scenes of Tokyo bay covered with sludge, the scenes with the hippies, disturbing scenes with dying babies on mutiple screens, gory scenes of Hedorah's victems being reduced to skeletons, scenes with the kid and his scientist father trying to figure out how to stop the monster, and scenes with a newscaster. This is very poetic, bizarre, beautiful, and sometimes extremely disturbing and has about the strongest anti pollution messages I've ever seen (Japan was polluted the most back then). This is one colorful film. P.S. I don't know how this film got a G rating with all the disturbing images in it.
    Mitora-san

    Faaaaaaaaaaaaaar out!!!

    "Godzilla vs. Hedorah" is probably my favorite Godzilla from the 1970s (the others being the one with Gigan in them, he RULES TOO!). There sure is alot going on in this crazy movie.

    There are:

    ACID TRIPS! Strange anime sequences! Really upbeat soundtrack and theme song (KAAAAAAAAISEN!)! Kids in hot pants! Ecology made fun! Haiku! Nightclubs! Hippies galore! Godzilla flying! Hedorah, the strange looking beast of Smog!

    This film has everything a B-movie enthuaist wants!

    Even though a lot of people hated Hedorah, but I don't. He is one of the most interesting looking and powerful foes in Godzilla's old days. He pretty much hacks up on Godzilla a lot, changes shape at will, plus, it FARTS out acid!

    Anyways, watch "Godzilla vs. Hedorah"! You'll have a B-movie blast!
    BrunoMatteisNumberOneFan

    Craziest movie ever!

    Something spooky is happening on the Japanese coast; pollution is killing the fish in the ocean, but it also gives life to a monstrous mutated fish-monster. A professor and his genius kid watch it's destructions on TV, and the kid remarks: "- Oh, that was a tadpole-monster." Japan and the entire world is soon threatened by the unearthly Creature, who's named Hedorah by the Professors kid.

    At the same time a funky teenage assistant of the professor gets drunk at an absurdly psychadellic disco and has visions of all the party-people being mutated fish. Hedorah inhales polluted smoke from factory- chimneys and seem to get high, the kid is psychic and has visions of Godzilla coming to save the world, and the Professor is attacked by the Hedorah underwater and his face gets malformed. Godzilla and the "Smog Monster" (as it is sometimes referred to as) start fighting only 25 minutes into the movie. The Hedorah mutates from ocean- dweller, to reptile to flying creature, and experts conclude that "He" is probably from a distant Nebula in outer space. Scenes of havoc and the Professor's family is intercut with cartoon- style sequences with strong enviromental messages.

    One scene has the Hedorah flying over a group of people working out, and they turn blue-faced and ultimately into gushy skeletons. A man at a construction site screams out (extremely) loud, and then falls to his death. Hedorah has the ability to corrode metal, and people on TV quarrel intensely on the fate of the planet. The Professors assistant knows the end is near, and has a hippie-styled party on top of a mountain; "- Let's have fun as we die!!" The party is interrupted by the space/pollution freak, and most of the kids are melted by its poisonous vomit/droppings when they try to set it on fire.

    The Professor's kid has found the solution to defeat the grotesque beast: "- Dry it - it's only sludge!", and with the aid of the friendly Godzilla it finally works. Some scenes, as well as the sounds the Hedorah makes are beyond description; like the scene were it's covering Godzilla with its tons of toxic puke, and at the same time "laughing" diabolically. There are weird crosscutting throughout, the kid yells "Papa" alot and the groovy rock score helps to its remarkably insane mood. The PG- rating should be reconsidered. This one is too dark and demented in so many ways, I don't think a ten year- old should watch it. It's mad nightmarish, art-cinematic style could cause damage.

    A TV- reporter calls the Hedorah "a freak organizm" - much like this movie itself.
    7TCurtis9192

    Godzilla vs Hedorah (1971)

    This is a surreal experience and the strangest Godzilla film I've seen... I laughed so hard at this film out of pure enjoyment rather than mockery.

    It serves as a warning to children (and, of course, everyone who watches it) of the dangers of long-term pollution. There are amazing scenes highlighting environmental problems that are served in a variety of creative ways.

    Godzilla is hilarious in this film.

    Do not make the same mistake I did and watch the film with the brightness on half, I actually watched it the first time thinking you weren't supposed to see anything in the night time scenes... turned the brightness up and realised!

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Director Yoshimitsu Banno has mentioned that Hedorah's eyes in the film were deliberately made to resemble female genitalia, with Banno joking that the vaginally inspired look made it more unsettling. During Godzilla's battle with Hedorah, strange white orbs are ripped out of Hedorah's dried-out body. According to Banno, they are meant to be Hedorah's eyes, which he considered the most important part of a person's body. The film has a running theme of eyes being injured with several of its characters. However, the reason they do not resemble Hedorah's actual eyes is due to rushed production and a smaller budget. Banno mentioned that not only had Toho given him less than half of the budget of the prior Godzilla films, but he was also only given 35 days to shoot the entire film (both the drama scenes and the special effects scenes). Making matters even more challenging for Banno was the fact that he had to make do with a single film crew.
    • Gaffes
      When Hedorah throws some sludge at Godzilla during the Mt. Fuji scene, it hits Godzilla's right eye - but after Hedorah gets done laughing, Godzilla's left eye is the one that is damaged.
    • Citations

      Yukio Keuchi: There's no place else to go and pretty soon we'll all be dead, so forget it! Enjoy yourself! Let's sing and dance while we can! Come on, blow your mind!

    • Crédits fous
      In the AIP version of this film, its entire cast is mysteriously uncredited.
    • Versions alternatives
      There are two distinct versions of the American International Pictures version of this film, which is titled "Godzilla vs. the Smog Monster." The first version, presumably the original 35mm theatrical version, features an English language cartoon sequence (reworked from a similar Japanese language one in the Japanese version). A similar insert replaces a shot of a newsreader with an English language map of Fuji City. In addition, AIP removed all of the Japanese text from the scenes of various "science lessons" given by Dr. Yano. This is the version that was released on VHS and LaserDisc by Orion Home Video in 1989. The second version, however, has none of these unique shots. The Hedorah cartoon and newsreader scene are unchanged from the Japanese version and Dr. Yano's science lessons feature onscreen Japanese text. This version seems to have been the standard 16mm release for television distribution and can be seen mostly in unlicensed home video releases of the film, such as the 1990 Simitar VHS release from the U.S. and the Digital Disc DVD release from Canada.
    • Connexions
      Edited into Objectif Terre, mission Apocalypse (1972)
    • Bandes originales
      Kaese! Taiyô wo
      ("Return! The Sun")

      Main Title Theme

      Music by Riichirô Manabe

      Lyrics by Yoshimitsu Banno

      Sung by Keiko Mari, the Honey Knights and the Moon Drops

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    FAQ

    • How long is Godzilla vs. Hedorah?Alimenté par Alexa
    • Hedorah is actually from space, right?
    • Are Hedorah's eyes modeled after female genitalia?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 24 juillet 1971 (Japon)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Japon
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Japonais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Godzilla contra monstruos del smog
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Mt. Fuji, Japon
    • Société de production
      • Toho
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 250 000 $US (estimé)
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 25 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.35 : 1

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