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Ebirah contre Godzilla

Titre original : Gojira · Ebira · Mosura Nankai no daikettô
  • 1966
  • PG
  • 1h 27min
NOTE IMDb
5,5/10
7 k
MA NOTE
Ebirah contre Godzilla (1966)
A teen searching for his brother stows away on a criminal's boat that shipwrecks on Letchi island, where terrorists have enslaved the Infant Island natives. Discovering Godzilla asleep, they decide to awaken him to liberate the natives.
Lire trailer2:13
1 Video
99+ photos
Aventure avec des dinosauresAventure maritimeKaijuSurnaturelAventureFantaisieScience-fiction

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueFour men searching for one's brother are shipwrecked on Letchi Island, where they encounter Godzilla, a monstrous lobster, and terrorists who have enslaved the natives of Infant Island.Four men searching for one's brother are shipwrecked on Letchi Island, where they encounter Godzilla, a monstrous lobster, and terrorists who have enslaved the natives of Infant Island.Four men searching for one's brother are shipwrecked on Letchi Island, where they encounter Godzilla, a monstrous lobster, and terrorists who have enslaved the natives of Infant Island.

  • Réalisation
    • Jun Fukuda
  • Scénario
    • Shin'ichi Sekizawa
  • Casting principal
    • Akira Takarada
    • Kumi Mizuno
    • Chôtarô Tôgin
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    5,5/10
    7 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Jun Fukuda
    • Scénario
      • Shin'ichi Sekizawa
    • Casting principal
      • Akira Takarada
      • Kumi Mizuno
      • Chôtarô Tôgin
    • 94avis d'utilisateurs
    • 62avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Vidéos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:13
    Trailer

    Photos165

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    + 159
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    Rôles principaux31

    Modifier
    Akira Takarada
    Akira Takarada
    • Yoshimura
    Kumi Mizuno
    Kumi Mizuno
    • Daiyo
    Chôtarô Tôgin
    Chôtarô Tôgin
    • Ichino
    Hideo Sunazuka
    • Nita
    Tôru Ibuki
    • Yata Kane
    Akihiko Hirata
    Akihiko Hirata
    • Captain Yamoto
    Jun Tazaki
    Jun Tazaki
    • Red Bamboo Commander
    Tôru Watanabe
    Tôru Watanabe
    • Ryôta Kane
    Ikio Sawamura
    Ikio Sawamura
    • Elderly Slave
    Pair Bambi
    Pair Bambi
    • Mothra's Little Beauties
    Hideyo Amamoto
    Hideyo Amamoto
    • Red Bamboo Naval Officer
    Hisaya Itô
    Hisaya Itô
    • Red Bamboo Scientist #1
    Tadashi Okabe
    • Red Bamboo Scientist #2
    Kazuo Suzuki
    Kazuo Suzuki
    • Escaped Slave
    Shôichi Hirose
    Shôichi Hirose
    • Escaped Slave
    Noriko Honma
    Noriko Honma
    • Spiritualist
    Chieko Nakakita
    Chieko Nakakita
    • Mrs. Kane
    Seiji Ikeda
    • Farmer
    • Réalisation
      • Jun Fukuda
    • Scénario
      • Shin'ichi Sekizawa
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs94

    5,56.9K
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    Avis à la une

    6omega0s

    Godzila gets crabs

    This is actualy a fun film if you're a kid, and i loved godzilla when i was i think back to the days of watching those chessy B movies(i havnt realy progresed that far in 10 years) and this was one of my favriotes and now somthing that angers me is it having a 4 point rating i mean kids love this and its fun and next time you get a chance pop one of these in have a good laugh and look back at you're childhood you'll have more fun then you would think.Now that thats gone ill fill you with my memories of this film the specel effects are alright and about what you would expect. Plot? we dont need no stinking plot!!! so botom line if you're a kid you'll love it and if you're with friends and older and in serch of a laugh you'll love it for its chessyness.
    7ebiros2

    Change of guard brings change of style to Godzilla

    This is the second Godzilla movie to this point that wasn't directed by Ishiro Honda (first being Godzilla Raids Again), and was directed by Jun Fukuda. Fukuda chose Masaru Sato to compose the music instead of Akira Ifukube, and overall contributes to the lighter touch. Shinichi Sekizawa's screenplay continues on the trend of humanizing the monsters, and Ebira's pose before the battle is a caricature of the then popular professional wrestler Toyonobori, and Godzilla rubbing his index finger on his nose is a caricature of Yuzo Kayama's character in Wakadaisho series which usually played at same time as the Godzilla movies as a double feature. The cinematography is noticeably brighter and the characters are also bit more easy going than Honda's version of Godzilla movies.

    Ryota (Tetsu Watanabe) who lost his brother in the South Pacific in a fishing boat accident believes in the prediction made by a spiritual medium in Mt. Osore that his brother is still alive. He comes out to Tokyo to look for a way to get to his brother. There he meets few college students and later a thief named Yoshimura (Akira Takarada) in a sailboat they've snuck into. While everyone's asleep, Ryota sets sail to the south pacific to search for his brother. In a stormy sea the sailboat runs aground on an island occupied by a gang who calls themselves the "Red Bamboo". Red Bamboo is kidnapping the residents of Infant Island (Mothra Island) as slave labor to further their cause. Dayo (Kumi Mizuno) a girl from Infant Island escapes into the jungle and meets Ryota and Yoshimura's crew. There they hide in a cave to escape Red Bamboo's pursuit. Unbeknownst to them, that cave contained a hibernating Godzilla. Yoshimura comes up with a novel plan to wake Godzilla and turn it against the Red Bamboo.

    In this movie, the fairies that talks to Mothra also changed from The Peanuts (Emi and Yumi Ito) to another twins Pair Bambi (Yuko and Yoko Okada - born 4/19/1944 Nagoya Japan). They were already 15 year veteran in the show business when they stared in this movie. Originally, Noriko Takahashi was to play the part of Dayo, but fell ill to appendicitis so was changed to Kumi Mizuno at the last minute. Mizuno who was 29 at the time played the role written for a 19 year old girl. Takahashi 6 month earlier played a similar role in Tsuburaya Production's Ultra Q series as a native girl who lost her brother to a giant octopus.

    In the mid to late sixties, Godzilla movie started to slide to a lighter stories. This movie took the formula one step further from the previous Godzilla move the "Monster Zero", and continues the humanization of Godzilla and the monsters. Jun Fukuda's directing isn't up to par with Honda's and the props look cheezy by comparison which took away from the story, but most likely the movie was intended for kids and this was part of their production plan. The good in this movie was Akira Takarada and Kumi Mizuno that brought character to acting. Overall the movie succeeded because these two characters kept the focus. Good entertainment from the '60s Toho studio.
    6framptonhollis

    Guilty Pleasure

    Yes. I'll admit it . This is a bad movie. A bad movie that I've watched over and over and over and over again! It is weird how much I like this movie. You could say I like it ironically, but not really, because I believe it has a type of charm that I find intentional. The monster fights are fun, and I like the plot. I totally understand people that hate this entry in the series, but I find it to be one of the most fun Godzilla movies out there!

    On my Top 10 Godzilla Films list, it is actually included. Here's the list: 1.Gojira 2.Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla 3.Godzilla vs. King Ghidorah 4.Godzilla: Final Wars 5.Mothra vs. Godzilla 6.Godzilla vs. Destroyah 7.Godzilla vs. Spacegodzilla 8.Godzilla, Mothra, and King Ghidorah: Giant Monsters All Out Attack 9.Ghidorah: The Three-Headed Monster 10.(this film.)
    6winner55

    fluff, with not much monster bite

    This was obviously made because Toho wanted to discover new plot elements for their kaiju film formula, which was falling into something of a predictable rut (humans fight humans, humans fight monster, monster fights monster, sayonara). But simply limiting the amount of time the monsters appear on screen offers no improvement.

    "Sea Monster" is one of the weaker entries in the original Godzilla series. Much of the film is directed as light comedy, a mild satire on the James Bond films. Actually, the comedy works pretty well; it's never knee-slapping laugh-out-loud, but it finds and sustains a level of humor most viewers should find fairly easy to live with.

    The monsters here are almost tossed in for deus-ex-machina plot devices, saving the day at the last moment. To be sure, it's amusing to see Godzilla sit around pondering what to do with the woman he's just saved from bad guys, but there really isn't much for him to do here. He zaps a giant vulture, pulls the claws off a lobster and smashes a nuclear power plant - and that's about it. For a minute towards the end, it almost looks like things will get complicated by a battle between Godzilla and Mothra, but this doesn't really amount to much either.

    For Godzilla completists, it's a relatively harmless sub-par entry - it certainly doesn't scrape the same bottoms as "Godzilla's Revenge" or "vs. Megalon". But if you are not yet a Big G. fan, this should not be your introduction to the series.

    Entertaining fluff, nothing more.
    6Wyrmis

    Big G was the weakest part of this movie

    Almost all Kaiju flicks involve two story lines, the story of the little guys and the story of the monsters. This is one of them where the story of the little guys is what really matters. A distinctly B movie, half-espionage and half-island-action, about a guy's search for his brother and getting caught up with a gang of various other guys and a beautiful native to stave off an organization's evil deeds in the South pacific. Pretty scenery. Pretty natives. Some fair jokes and some good 1960's style cheese action. Even Ebirah, a jumbo jumbo shrimp who guards the island, more or less, works well enough as a background piece. It is when the big piece of seafood tries to take center stage that things start slowing down.

    By the time Godzilla shows up, the movie suffers from the monsters. Not only does the original Japanese soundtrack have a habit of playing just about the most inappropriate music for all of his scenes (look, jets are coming, let's play surf rock...he's smashing a base, let's play slow horror mood music); but there is the distinct problem the director has in getting the transition from Godzilla as a monster to a potential hero down right. Too often, Godzilla's actions make no sense. He seems to like people in one scene. In the next, he is randomly destroying things again.

    The movies final problem is the Kaiju fights sort of repeat themselves. Whether it be the two monsters throwing rocks back and forth more than once, or the exact same "flip" later on, it does seem a little out of place.

    Five Godzilla Movies You Need to Watch

    Five Godzilla Movies You Need to Watch

    Celebrate Shin Godzilla returning to theaters with a look at some of our favorite Godzilla movies.
    See the list
    Production art
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    Centres d’intérêt connexes

    Sam Neill in Jurassic Park (1993)
    Aventure avec des dinosaures
    Suraj Sharma in L'odyssée de Pi (2012)
    Aventure maritime
    Haruo Nakajima in Godzilla (1954)
    Kaiju
    Dan Aykroyd, Bill Murray, Harold Ramis, and Ernie Hudson in S.O.S. fantômes (1984)
    Surnaturel
    Still frame
    Aventure
    Elijah Wood in Le Seigneur des anneaux : La Communauté de l'anneau (2001)
    Fantaisie
    James Earl Jones and David Prowse in L'Empire contre-attaque (1980)
    Science-fiction

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      This film was originally written to star King Kong, as Rankin/Bass Productions had provided Toho with the license to the character in order to produce a tie-in film for Toei's animated TV series King Kong (1966), which they co-produced. However, Rankin/Bass rejected the original treatment, as they wanted director Ishirô Honda to helm the film. Toho insisted on Jun Fukuda and after Rankin/Bass backed out, Toho decided to replace King Kong with Godzilla. Toho and Rankin/Bass would then go on to co-produce La Revanche de King Kong (1967), a film that was more in line with what Rankin/Bass wanted.
    • Gaffes
      At the end of the film, as Mothra flies back to Infant Island, the large net she is carrying with her feet with the humans inside it is missing.
    • Citations

      Daiyo: Mothra... Awaken, hear us.

    • Crédits fous
      For the Columbia/Tri-Star U.S. DVD release of the film, which uses the original uncut Japanese version of it, its English-language credits list the noted composer Masaru Satô as "Mararu Sato."
    • Versions alternatives
      The Mystery Science Theater 3000 version of the film featured a Film Ventures-lensed print of it that used a different title sequence made up of clips from the next film in the Godzilla series, La Planète des monstres (1967).
    • Connexions
      Edited into La Revanche de Godzilla (1969)
    • Bandes originales
      Samashite Mosura
      (Mothra Awake)

      Written and Arranged by Masaru Satô

      Performed by Pair Bambi

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    FAQ15

    • How long is Ebirah, Horror of the Deep?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 17 décembre 1966 (Japon)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Japon
    • Langue
      • Japonais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Godzilla, Ebirah et Mothra : Duel dans les mers du sud
    • Société de production
      • Toho
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 1 200 000 $US (estimé)
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 27min(87 min)
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.35 : 1

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