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Gappa, le descendant de Godzilla

Titre original : Daikyojû Gappa
  • 1967
  • 12
  • 1h 30min
NOTE IMDb
4,4/10
1,8 k
MA NOTE
Gappa, le descendant de Godzilla (1967)
Home Video Trailer from Tokyo Shock
Lire trailer3:15
1 Video
99+ photos
ActionAventureComédieDrameFamilleFantaisieHorreurScience-fictionThrillerKaiju

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueMagazine reporters Hiroyuki Kurosaki and his colleagues brought back to Japan a monster child who had just hatched from an egg issued on the isolated island of Obelisk in the South Sea.Magazine reporters Hiroyuki Kurosaki and his colleagues brought back to Japan a monster child who had just hatched from an egg issued on the isolated island of Obelisk in the South Sea.Magazine reporters Hiroyuki Kurosaki and his colleagues brought back to Japan a monster child who had just hatched from an egg issued on the isolated island of Obelisk in the South Sea.

  • Réalisation
    • Hiroshi Noguchi
  • Scénario
    • Iwao Yamazaki
    • Ryûzô Nakanishi
    • William Ross
  • Casting principal
    • Tamio Kawachi
    • Yôko Yamamoto
    • Yûji Odaka
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    4,4/10
    1,8 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Hiroshi Noguchi
    • Scénario
      • Iwao Yamazaki
      • Ryûzô Nakanishi
      • William Ross
    • Casting principal
      • Tamio Kawachi
      • Yôko Yamamoto
      • Yûji Odaka
    • 59avis d'utilisateurs
    • 37avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Vidéos1

    Gappa the Triphibian Monsters
    Trailer 3:15
    Gappa the Triphibian Monsters

    Photos108

    Voir l'affiche
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    Rôles principaux35

    Modifier
    Tamio Kawachi
    Tamio Kawachi
    • Hiroshi Kurosaki
    Yôko Yamamoto
    • Itoko Koyanagi
    Yûji Odaka
    • Prof. Daize Tonooka
    • (as Yuji Kodaka)
    Kôji Wada
    Kôji Wada
    • Mashida
    Tatsuya Fuji
    Tatsuya Fuji
    • George Inoue
    Keisuke Inoue
    • President Funazu
    Zenji Yamada
    • Captain of the Kamome-maru
    Bumon Koto
    • Chieftain
    Kôtarô Sugie
    • Reporter #1
    Saburô Hiromatsu
    • Hosoda
    Binnosuke Nagao
    • Cmdr. Riku
    Masaru Kamiyama
    • Professor
    Kokan Katsura
    • Saburo Hayashi
    Shirô Oshimi
    • Oyama
    Yôko Ôyagi
    • Aihara
    • (as Yoko Oyagi)
    Sanpei Mine
    • Islander 1
    Takashi Koshiba
    • Reporter 2
    Kensuke Tamai
    • Islander 2
    • Réalisation
      • Hiroshi Noguchi
    • Scénario
      • Iwao Yamazaki
      • Ryûzô Nakanishi
      • William Ross
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs59

    4,41.8K
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    Avis à la une

    7scifiguy-2

    Good production, intended as satire.

    If the plot seems a bit derivative, it was meant to. This was Nikkatsu studios first and only monster flick. It was produced strictly to cash-in at the height of the genre. The writers knew it had all been done before, so they took those cliches, and satirized them. Like the greedy entrepreneur, responsible for drawing the monster's parents to look for their baby. I like the extra touches, like the mother carrying an octopus in her mouth, (while stomping buildings) to feed her young. The effect scenes were shot at Eiji Tsuburaya's newly formed independent studio, which was producing the first UltraMan series at the time. Surprisingly, this film holds up very well, passing the test of time. Besides, these monsters show up only in one film. How many kaiju can you say that about ? This is also one of the few Japanese movies commercially available on video, widescreen and subtitled. Two appendages up !!!
    5MovieWiz66

    Special Effects

    Just wanted to comment on some of the other statements made by people on this board. First,yes the special effects do not look like todays..but I for one like the pre-CGI effects. The special effects people had to be much more inventive and creative in the pre CGI days. This movie doesn't have the great effects of some of the old monster movies such as the Ray Harryhausen(which are better than any CGI in my opinion)features and the Godzilla films,but it still makes pretty good use of miniature sets. Great movie for young kids or us older people who still remember what it was like watching these films as a child. I love watching these movies for nostalgic purposes as well. Sure it can be cheesy to some..but if you watch these films in the context that they were meant to be viewed..they can be very entertaining and enjoyable.
    7wierzbowskisteedman

    Satire, you say?

    Move over Dr Strangelove; "Monster from a Prehistoric Planet" is the new satire in town. Okay, maybe my sarcasm is unjustified, Japanese satire is either too high brow for me or gets completely lost in translation. And its perfectly easy to loose anything in the atrocious dubbing kaiju films get plastered with.

    If I'm kind I have to call it a parody of King Kong; as the film deals with an expedition force, who are trying to find exotic animals for a new theme park, stumbling across a mysterious island where the indigenous tribe (who look strangely similar to Japanese with coal on their faces) worship a god called Gappa. The expedition take a baby Gappa back to Japan, with the parents in hot pursuit. Cue the miniatures.

    With the hideously handled love side story and the hilariously sentimental finale, I can only assume that this film was intended as tongue in cheek fare, and the satire label certainly confirms this. This aside however, the film is terrific by the standards of the time, with incredible amounts of destruction and very little time to breathe in between. Whether I'm missing the supposed hard-hitting social satire I don't really care; "Monster from a Prehistoric Planet" is a wonderfully extravagant example of monster films done properly, with a plot that doesn't dither amount and action that moves back to Japan pretty swiftly and doesn't let up from then on. The clichés are all over the place but this is hardly an issue, intentional or otherwise. Certainly, a kaiju film trying its hand at satire would be expected to be about as subtle as a ton of bricks, and with this in mind the film could have turned out a hell of a lot worse.

    (To the elite, "Monster from a Prehistoric Planet" has a special appeal. The Gappas are the very same monsters that menaced Kryten and Rimmer on wax world in series 4 of Red Dwarf; and as Kryten observed, you've probably seen more convincing dinosaurs in a packet of "wheatie flakes")
    5ebiros2

    Nikkatsu Studio's attempt at a "Kaijyu" movie

    Nikkatsu Studio was one of the six largest movie studio in Japan at the time this movie was made, but due to the proliferation of TV sets, Japanese movie industry was in a steady economic decline. Kaijyu or giant monster movies were about the only franchise that were still making good money, and Nikkatsu made an attempt to jump in to this genre with this movie.

    A Japanese expedition to the south pacific island unwittingly stumble onto a newly hatched baby triphibian reptile which the natives call "Gappa", and brings it back to Japan. A greedy publishing magnate, and an amusement park promoter notices a good thing when he sees one and decides to display the baby at his park. This didn't sit well with the parents of the baby reptile, and they show up in Japan to claim their kid. Rest is stereotypical giant monster mayhem.

    This movie as far as I know is the only movie that features a complete family of giant monsters or "Kaijyu" ever to be shown together. It's also a first Triphibian monster that can walk, breathe underwater, and fly. The story is bit derivative where I can see little pieces off of Gorgo, Mothra, Godzilla, King Kong etc. and not very original, but the special effects in this movie is surprisingly good for a studio's first attempt. Gappa is not just an mindless monster, but actually seems to have intelligence behind their actions. This lowers the tension of the monster's character as an engine of destruction, and the movie carries on with bit of a bore, but the overall production is good, and ranks as an average giant monster movie. You get to see a very young Yoko Yamamoto playing the star in this movie. She's still acting after nearly 50 years since this movie was made, and amazingly, still beautiful in her roles.
    5masercot

    Not Nearly as Bad as it Could Have Been

    My youngest picked this one out...after a couple of weeks of sitting through subtitled movies that he couldn't read through fast enough...

    He said, "Dad, I want a monster movie that will make me laugh" and laugh my seven year old did. It was a cute movie with a cute trio of monsters. Couple that with a high-powered business man who flies off the handle for absolutely no reason and you've got Japanese monster GOLD, baby! Look for the same special effects as in the early Godzilla movies and the same dead subplots...but, the quality of this picture makes it fun to watch and make fun of...for example, they are inside a cave...where does the light come from? The "night" shots obviously shot in broad noon with a filter. Hilarious!

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The main and end title music heard in the overseas releases of this film (for example, Monster from a Prehistoric Planet in the U.S.) were from an earlier film also scored by Seitaro Omori, the Nikkatsu teen drama/comedy film Youth Song (1959).
    • Gaffes
      At 54:00 when airplanes attack the Gappas, for a brief moment during a view from an airplane target one can see where the fake sky backdrop ends and the movie studio beyond it.
    • Citations

      President Funazu: Like it? I call it Playmate Land.

    • Versions alternatives
      In all English-dubbed versions of the film, the rock and roll theme song titled "Great Giant Beast Gappa" (heard in both the opening credits and the ending of the original Japanese version of it) is replaced by standard orchestral music. Also, the Japanese version features a song titled "Keep Trying, Baby Gappa!" (heard in the scene at the end of the film where the male and female Gappas are reunited with their baby). In all English-dubbed versions, the song's vocals are cut and thus, it becomes an instrumental song.
    • Connexions
      Edited into Red Dwarf: Meltdown (1991)
    • Bandes originales
      Daikyojû Gappa
      ("Great Giant Beast Gappa")

      Opening and Ending Theme (Japanese version only)

      Music by Masao Yoneyama

      Arrangement by Iwao Shigematsu

      Lyrics by Hikari Ichijô

      Performed by Katsuhiko Miki

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    FAQ14

    • How long is Gappa the Triphibian Monster?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 26 juillet 1973 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Japon
    • Langue
      • Japonais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Gappa the Triphibian Monster
    • Sociétés de production
      • Manson Corporation
      • Nikkatsu
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 30min(90 min)
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.35 : 1

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