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Gojira Mosura Kingu Gidora Daikaijû sôkôgeki

  • 2001
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 45min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,0/10
7870
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Gojira Mosura Kingu Gidora Daikaijû sôkôgeki (2001)
A reporter, notorious for working on pseudo-documentaries, must uncover the legend of the three guardian monsters who must rise to defend Japan from the vengeful spirits within Godzilla.
Riproduci trailer0:28
1 video
52 foto
GiapponeseAvventura con dinosauriAvventura urbanaAzione epicaDark fantasyDisastroEpicoFantascienza epicaFantasia epicaFantasy e soprannaturale

Un reporter, noto per aver lavorato su pseudo-documentari, deve scoprire la leggenda dei tre mostri guardiani che devono insorgere per difendere il Giappone dagli spiriti vendicativi di Godz... Leggi tuttoUn reporter, noto per aver lavorato su pseudo-documentari, deve scoprire la leggenda dei tre mostri guardiani che devono insorgere per difendere il Giappone dagli spiriti vendicativi di Godzilla.Un reporter, noto per aver lavorato su pseudo-documentari, deve scoprire la leggenda dei tre mostri guardiani che devono insorgere per difendere il Giappone dagli spiriti vendicativi di Godzilla.

  • Regia
    • Shûsuke Kaneko
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Keiichi Hasegawa
    • Shûsuke Kaneko
    • Masahiro Yokotani
  • Star
    • Chiharu Niiyama
    • Ryûdô Uzaki
    • Masahiro Kobayashi
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,0/10
    7870
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Shûsuke Kaneko
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Keiichi Hasegawa
      • Shûsuke Kaneko
      • Masahiro Yokotani
    • Star
      • Chiharu Niiyama
      • Ryûdô Uzaki
      • Masahiro Kobayashi
    • 97Recensioni degli utenti
    • 66Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 1 candidatura in totale

    Video1

    Official Teaser Trailer
    Trailer 0:28
    Official Teaser Trailer

    Foto52

    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    + 47
    Visualizza poster

    Cast principale45

    Modifica
    Chiharu Niiyama
    • Yuri Tachibana (BS Digital Q reporter)
    Ryûdô Uzaki
    • SDF Adm. Taizô Tachibana
    Masahiro Kobayashi
    • Teruaki Takeda (science writer)
    Shirô Sano
    Shirô Sano
    • Haruki Kadokura (Yuri's boss)
    Takashi Nishina
    • AD Aki Maruo
    Kaho Minami
    Kaho Minami
    • SDF Intelligence Capt. Kumi Emori
    Shin'ya Ôwada
    • SDF Lt. Gen. Katsumasa Mikumo
    Kunio Murai
    Kunio Murai
    • SDF HQ Secretary Masato Hinogaki
    Hiroyuki Watanabe
    Hiroyuki Watanabe
    • Yutaka Hirose
    Shingo Katsurayama
    • SDF Intelligence Maj. Tokihiko Kobayakawa
    Toshikazu Fukawa
    • Adjutant Miyashita
    Masahiko Tsugawa
    Masahiko Tsugawa
    • Chief Cabinet Secretary
    Hideyo Amamoto
    Hideyo Amamoto
    • Prof. Hirotoshi Isayama the Prophet
    Nobuaki Kakuda
    • Commanding Sector officer
    • (as Nobuo Kakuda)
    Takafumi Matsuo
    • Mototsu Station police officer
    Kazuko Katô
    • Schoolleacher
    Katsuo Nakamura
    Katsuo Nakamura
    • Yaizu harbor fisherman
    Kôichi Ueda
    • Village headman
    • Regia
      • Shûsuke Kaneko
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Keiichi Hasegawa
      • Shûsuke Kaneko
      • Masahiro Yokotani
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti97

    7,07.8K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    8harybobjoebob

    You need to see this

    Even if you haven't seen any other Godzilla movie, this is worth a watch. The human and the monster scenes are both great, and I love this movies spiritual themes. The music is some of my favorite in the series, Godzilla looks EPIC with his white eyes. Mothra, king ghidorah, and baragon are all great, especially mothra, she's my favorite. The only problem is I wish we could have gotten anguirus in this instead of baragon but that really just a nit pick, Rodan would have been cool to. But this is one of the best in the series and I would recommend it to anyone
    8SnakesOnAnAfricanPlain

    Godzilla, Mothra and King Ghidorah: Giant Monsters All-Out Attack (2001)

    Godzilla is a horrible little bastard in this movie. He is truly badass. For once, he has no redemption, to the point that previous alien controlled villains are now guardians of the earth. This film grabs the human element by taking a father and daughter as an army captain and a TV reporter. The effects here are just fantastic. All the puppets, suits, CGI looks great, and we get more Godzilla/Human interaction than ever. I loved the shot where Godzilla arrives and throws a boat into the air, only for it to fall straight down onto the camera again. We get some exceptional long takes of cityscapes. It's fascinating to see so many monsters beat each other in what looks like a real city. These Godzilla movies also have the confidence to just let it play out rather than making me sick with constant edits. With a subtitle of Giant Monsters All Out Attack, you know this is gonna be good. Just a shame that Mothra and Ghidorah were slightly out of character.
    9Aaron1375

    On second thought this one is very good.

    The first time I saw this movie was on the sci-fi channel and the movie had pieces cut from it and it was badly dubbed. I bought the DVD and watched it and it was a lot better than the sci-fi experience. First off the music is great when you listen to it in stereo, secondly the effects are really good for a Godzilla movie. My major complaint it seems was simply Godzilla's appearance in the movie. It is a major jolt when one is used to the Godzilla of the previous two movies, but on seeing it again it looks rather good, and very evil (still a bit two dumpy, but I got over this time). In this movie, Godzilla is on a rampage...a rampage where he isn't just stumbling through the city causing damage because of his size, but rather causing damage because he wants to kill the people of Japan and make them suffer. Many of his most deplorable acts were cut from the sci-fi version, but on DVD you get to see him cause lots of pain on purpose. Who can stop the rampaging Godzilla...well we have Mothra, Baragon, and King Gidorah, but quite frankly these monsters just can not stand up to the power of this evil super Godzilla. So the military also pitches in with their full arsenal. Very interesting characters abound in a reporter and her military dad and various other interesting people. All of them with one goal: To stop the onslaught of Godzilla.
    8mstomaso

    character development, mysticism, philosophy, politics - in a Godzilla film

    Dear Godzilla,

    Only two aspects of Daikaijû sôkôgeki bothered me. First, you were asked, again, to play a 'bad guy'. Second, your make-up was so awful that it was at times, impossible to see that it was actually you in this film. Even this however, could not prevent me from noticing that this script was a great big leap ahead of most of the rubbish you've recently chosen for your roles. All of your true fans know that your Tokyo destructive rampages are inspired by a single desire - to locate and destroy once and for all the Toho Productions studio, and that once you've destroyed it, your final purpose will be fulfilled. Yet, in this film, you had to pretend that you symbolize the collective guilt of the Japanses people. While this is certainly an interesting and philosophical not to mention political spin and it certainly made your unpleasant behavior tolerable for some people, I am wondering if you will ever get a great role showing your true colors - as a protector of all living things (Japanese and otherwise) - again.

    Your acting, and your supporting cast, even the very small hairless apes, were positively stellar in this film, and the production values were good enough to inspire me to plead with you to spare Toho from the revenge you certainly deserve for their occasional attempts to ruin your career, your public image, and your family life. Despite your bad facial makeup, you, Mosura and Kingu Gidorâ were all shot beautifully with some of the best split screen and blue screen work I have ever seen. Although it bothered me that Gidorâ was cast in the role of saving japan, and that he even joined that overgrown spray-painted house fly Mothra in this effort, I am certainly glad that, despite the Americanized title - something like "Giant Monsters All Out Attack" - was not really what this film was about. I'm glad the director allowed the characters some time to develop and to construct an interesting set of subplots between scenes of mass devastation.

    I don't blame you for avoiding Hollywood, especially after that film they claimed to be about you which they they hired one of your stunt doubles to do a few years ago. And this film gives reason to think there is hope for the Toho production company after all. But, the offer still stands. Retirement in Hollywood could really be a good time for you, and again, I can think of at least a few states with habits of electing famous middle-aged and older thespians of grand stature and size to public office. Besides, if you got cast in a bad role here in the USA, just imagine the popularity with which your first rampage through southern California would be received! So the prospects are unlimited here. Give it some thought!
    7SimonJack

    The Japanese have the Godzilla know-how

    Japanese filmmakers know how to make Godzilla films. Nearly 50 years after giving us the original "Godzilla," Japan films present "Godzilla, Mothra and King Ghidorah: Giant Monsters All-Out Attack." The technical, special effects, CGI, and all aspects are superb. This film launched a renewal in Godzilla lore on film. It completely outdoes the lame 1998 American "Godzilla" by TriStar.

    As with the original black and white, Godzilla looks the part of the monster it is - a unique hybrid not a dinosaur-age imitation or look-alike. The other monsters in this one, especially Mothra and the Red Monster look more cartoonish. The battle scenes, rampage and destruction around Tokyo again has a real feel to it.

    This plot has an interesting twist. The original Godzilla was conceived as an aberration that resulted from nuclear bomb testing in the Pacific Ocean. But, in this film, a question surfaces more than once, after a reference to Godzilla having been in New York (the 1998 American film). "Why Tokyo again?" a couple of Japanese officials ask rhetorically. And the female lead, Yuri Tachibana (played by Chiharu Niiyama) says that it may be because Japan has to acknowledge its inhumane actions in the Pacific war. That's how the reference is stated regarding World War II and Japan's inhumane aspects in its conduct of the war.

    Even though it doesn't specify any of the bad deeds, this is an acknowledgement that the Japanese did some heinous things during the war. That's interesting coming in a film 55 years after the end of WW II.

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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      Suit actors Mizuho Yoshida (Godzilla) and Rie Ôta (Baragon) would frequently "roar" when inside their suits during filming. Rie Ôta also happens to be the first female suit actor in the Godzilla series.
    • Blooper
      The unnatural way King Ghidorah's two outer heads attach to his body, and the way they move, clearly reveal there's an actor inside his suit, and that these two heads are actually arm puppets. In other films, the heads were moved by strings, producing a much less fake-looking effect.
    • Citazioni

      SDF Adm. Taizô Tachibana: At the end of the last century, a similar monster to Godzilla attacked the United States. The existence of abnormal organisms have since been reported around the world.

      Soldier one: That was Godzilla after all, right?

      Soldier two: The Americans reported it as that. Our academics don't agree.

    • Versioni alternative
      During the November premier, in addition to the unfinished special effects shots, the score was incomplete. It has been remixed since then.
    • Connessioni
      Featured in Cinemassacre's Monster Madness: Godzilla 1998 (2008)
    • Colonne sonore
      Godzilla Theme
      Track from "Godzilla Vs. King Ghidorah" - 1991

      Ending Credits Theme 1

      Composed by Akira Ifukube

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 15 dicembre 2001 (Giappone)
    • Paese di origine
      • Giappone
    • Lingua
      • Giapponese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Godzilla, Mothra and King Ghidorah: Giant Monsters All-Out Attack
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Studio 1, Toho Studios, Tokyo, Giappone(Studio)
    • Azienda produttrice
      • Toho
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

    Modifica
    • Budget
      • 9.400.000 USD (previsto)
    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 18.623.382 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 1h 45min(105 min)
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • Dolby Digital
    • Proporzioni
      • 2.35 : 1

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