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King Kong vs. Godzilla

Título original: Kingu Kongu tai Gojira
  • 1962
  • 1 h 37 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,2/10
2,6 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
King Kong vs. Godzilla (1962)
Emerging from the iceberg where he was buried in the last adventure, Godzilla heads for Tokyo, while a drug company discovers Kong on a remote South Pacific island, where he battles a giant octopus. Soon these two terrible titans are on a collision course, as the authorities realize that the only way to defeat them is to pit them against each other in a spectacular final showdown on top of Mount Fuji.
Reproduzir trailer2:32
1 vídeo
99+ fotos
AçãoAventuraAventura de dinossauroAventura urbanaComédiaComédia peculiarDesastreFantasiaFantasia sobrenaturalFicção científica

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaThe advertising director of a pharmaceutical company seeks to boost the ratings of their sponsored TV program by capturing the legendary monster King Kong just as Godzilla re-emerges.The advertising director of a pharmaceutical company seeks to boost the ratings of their sponsored TV program by capturing the legendary monster King Kong just as Godzilla re-emerges.The advertising director of a pharmaceutical company seeks to boost the ratings of their sponsored TV program by capturing the legendary monster King Kong just as Godzilla re-emerges.

  • Direção
    • Ishirô Honda
  • Roteiristas
    • Willis H. O'Brien
    • Shin'ichi Sekizawa
  • Artistas
    • Tadao Takashima
    • Yû Fujiki
    • Kenji Sahara
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,2/10
    2,6 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Ishirô Honda
    • Roteiristas
      • Willis H. O'Brien
      • Shin'ichi Sekizawa
    • Artistas
      • Tadao Takashima
      • Yû Fujiki
      • Kenji Sahara
    • 13Avaliações de usuários
    • 16Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Vídeos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:32
    Trailer

    Fotos200

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    Elenco principal58

    Editar
    Tadao Takashima
    Tadao Takashima
    • Osamu Sakurai
    Yû Fujiki
    • Kinsaburo Furue
    Kenji Sahara
    Kenji Sahara
    • Kazuo Fujita
    Ichirô Arishima
    Ichirô Arishima
    • Tako
    Mie Hama
    Mie Hama
    • Fumiko Sakurai
    Akiko Wakabayashi
    Akiko Wakabayashi
    • Tamiye
    Akihiko Hirata
    Akihiko Hirata
    • Dr. Shigesawa
    Senkichi Ômura
    • Interpreter Konno
    Someshô Matsumoto
    Someshô Matsumoto
    • Dr. Onuki
    Jun Tazaki
    Jun Tazaki
    • Commanding General of the JSDF Eastern Army
    Sachio Sakai
    • Obayashi
    Haruya Katô
    • Pacific Pharmaceuticals advertising department employee
    Nadao Kirino
    • Eastern Army Second Chief of Staff
    Yoshio Kosugi
    • Chief of Faro Island
    Haruo Hirano
    • Chikiro
    Akemi Negishi
    Akemi Negishi
    • Chikiro's mother
    Ikio Sawamura
    Ikio Sawamura
    • Praying Faro Islander
    Yasuhisa Tsutsumi
    • Eastern Army First Chief of Staff
    • Direção
      • Ishirô Honda
    • Roteiristas
      • Willis H. O'Brien
      • Shin'ichi Sekizawa
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários13

    6,22.6K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    5daniewhite-1

    Clunker film vs Good ideas

    The original Japanese Toho cut of 'King Kong Vs Godzilla' has a much more developed sense of comedy imbued throughout its runtime: the entire film is satirical and scatty; it just isn't really any better than the heavily altered American/International cut that features truly dreadful added United Nations scenes alongside necessarily dubbed and re-edited scenes.

    I find this version needs significant further attention from an editor to improve its pacing and the construction of action scenes: the American film does slightly improve in this area despite it causing terrible damage to the satirical comedy of the original.

    In the comedic premise of the story 'King Kong Vs Godzilla' has its best strength. There is a great degree of poking fun at television and corporate cultures and some of this is well put across.

    The action part of the film is less ably done and the narrative pace is off by a considerable degree.

    The same failings of really poor and unconvincing monsters that afflict the American version are naturally in this film also.

    They look, sound, and move badly, individually, and even moreso, in tandem together.

    The film score is better in this version as is the overall sound design.

    I rate a 5/10 for a version that has more brains but less pruning than the more often seen English language cut.
    5davidmvining

    Monster mashup

    Now, the monster mashups begin. Godzilla's first squaring off with another creature is the result of a script that originally pitted King Kong against Frankenstein's monster that Toho got their hands on and retooled for their marquee monster that they were discovering they could bring back repeatedly without turning off their Japanese and American audiences. They also brought back the original filmmaker behind Godzilla, Ishiro Honda, though without his original writing partner, choosing instead to use Shinichi Sekizawa, one of two writers who had become Honda's regular partner. The result is what one might expect from this period of Toho monster movies: thin, a bit (though not incredibly) silly, and with an effort to make another kind of movie in there somewhere.

    The head of Pacific Pharmaceuticals, Mr. Tako (Ichiro Arishima), has decided that his media and advertising contract is not performing to standards, so he demands that the television studio create a sensation to up their ratings which should lead to more sales of the company's drugs. Here is the heart of the film, the satiric look at the Japanese television industry and its quest for ratings no matter what, and it's probably where the film works best. It's unfortunate that Sekizawa wasn't a good enough writer to bring it into the whole of the film, picking it up and dropping it from time to time as other types of film dominate for large sections of the film, but Mr. Tako doing everything he can to push the reporters into making things sensational across the action of the film provides some solid chuckles here and there.

    Sakurai (Tadao Takashima) and Furue (Yu Fujiki) end up being sent to Faro Island (also the name of the place Ingmar Bergman called home for decades, but it has to just be a coincidence, right?) to investigate a mysterious spirit that the locals live in fear of. Yes, it's King Kong. They witness him battling a giant octopus and then getting so drunk that he falls asleep in a ceremony the locals provide him, giving them the perfect opportunity to get the Japanese boating crew to tie him up and lash him to a giant raft. Where the original King Kong outright ignored how to move a giant ape from one side of the world to the other, King Kong vs. Godzilla embraces it, and the sight is always inherently silly. Granted, the raft sight isn't hilarious (though the combination of man-in-suit and water just doesn't mesh all that well), there's a moment late where they transport him by giant balloon that is just...kind of hilarious.

    Meanwhile, at the same time, Godzilla has decided to awaken for no reason at all, heating up the ice prison that he was trapped in at the end of Godzilla Raids Again, and he heads straight for Japan. This (so far) short series has developed a little tic of bringing back scientific characters from the previous entry to explain the science or behavior of Godzilla in the new one. Takashi Shimuri had a cameo in Godzilla Raids Again after his near-star role in Godzilla, and this time it's Dr. Shigezawa (Akihiko Hirata), who was also in Godzilla, to appear in a couple of scenes and explain Godzilla's behavior. I mean, for this weird little series in the 60s, the commitment canon is surprising.

    Anyway, the two monsters have a fight, but King Kong is bested by Godzilla, leading to a retreat, some business with a girl being kidnapped by the giant ape, drugging it based on the stuff it got drunk off of on Faro Island, and then transporting him to face Godzilla again when the scientists decide that despite Kong losing his first battle maybe a day before, Kong is definitely strong enough now. It'll help if he gets miraculously struck by lightning to make him much more stronger at a down moment, too.

    So, it's silly. There is some more character stuff around Sakurai's sister and Furue's fiancée (I might have mixed those up, but it just doesn't matter in the least), Fumiko (Mie Hama), but she's forgotten for long sections in favor of bits of satirical comedy around Mr. Tako and monster mash action. Focusing more purely on the satirical elements would have been a net-positive, I think.

    Eiji Tsuburaya's special effects are, once again, the star of the show, but I have to say that he repeated the decision to play monster action quickly here like he did (supposedly accidentally) in Godzilla Raids Again. Moving these guys quickly makes them feel smaller, not bigger, and it makes the action itself inherently sillier. So, the suits are mostly pretty good (Godzilla is pretty good, Kong looks...not great, to be honest), and there's this wonderful continued embrace of miniature destruction. However, I just wish Tsuburaya had gone back to how to film kaiju from his first effort rather than his second.

    So, it's fine. It's an excuse to pit Godzilla against another monster. The character stuff works slightly better this time than most because it has that satirical edge, even if it doesn't really go very far. So, it's decent, on the brighter side of this kind of film in this era. It entertains slightly. It's just, you know, not good.
    6mind-boggled

    Review of the Japanese cut

    Considering the time, it's okay for what it is. The cast is too big, it would have benefited from focusing more on the two leads instead; and the romance subplot makes the film unnecessarily convoluted, and bogs down the pacing. It also takes too long to focuses on Godzilla and Kong, the split second shots of them get annoying. Probably one of the better Godzilla films, although none of them are actually good movies.

    6/10 considering the era it was made in and that the film is intentionally light-hearted and comedic. Reasonable entertaining overall, but it does drag a little before it finally gets to the showdown right before the film warps up.
    6chand-suhas

    Electricity gives Kong his powers. Like Popeye's spinach.

    A pharmaceutical company head is not happy with the television ratings and wants to boost it with the help of a giant monster at Faro Island which is none other than King Kong. Meanwhile, an American submarine named Seahawk crashes into an iceberg freeing Godzilla. As Godzilla moves towards Japan, even King Kong is being brought to Japan. Circumstances make way for an unplanned wrestling match between King Kong and Godzilla. Who emerges as the winner and what new lesson Japanese learn out of this battle, forms rest of the story.

    For all the hype, it's fascinating to see the makers pull this off back in 1962. The human characters especially the the pharmaceutical company head was cartoonish and over the top. It is when the monsters are introduced that film gets interesting and the gigantic octopus scene with Kong stood out. King Kong capturing a girl is again repeated here for a brief period, before setting him on the path of Godzilla. However the electricity powering Kong was not something I could get onboard with and it happens twice. Barring that, the film is all about the wrestling match and the humans picking their sides without betting. All in all, it delivers on the fun and is a decent watch.
    6RareMD

    good for its time!

    The script is good and you can see a lot of events in the movie. After watching the film, I learned that Ishiro Honda is a amazing director. What I didn't like was working with this graphics and effect maybe it was good in a short time, but I've seen it now nor can I say that there are no badly done scenes in the film. In short, the film is better than I expected and good for its time!

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    Enredo

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    • Curiosidades
      To promote the film, Toho released "interviews" with King Kong and Godzilla in which the monsters acted like sumo wrestlers preparing for their bout against each other.

      In this promotion Godzilla was quoted as saying: "seven years has passed since I rose from the bottom of the southern seas and raved about in Japan, leaving destruction behind wherever I crawled. It is most gratifying for me to have the privilege of seeing you again after breaking through an iceberg in the arctic ocean where I was buried. At the thought of my engagement with King Kong from America I feel my blood boil and flesh dance. I am now applying myself to vigorous training day and night to capture the world monster-championship from King Kong."

      In response King Kong said "I may be the stranger to the younger people here, but have quite a number of fighting adventures to my credit. I will fight to the last ditch in the forthcoming encounter with Mr. Godzilla, for my title is at stake... Hearing that the world-renowned special effects director Eiji Tsuburaya is to act as referee I am going to return to the screen in high spirits."
    • Citações

      Tako: Full page ads of a smiling King Kong holding our drugs.

      Osamu Sakurai: Will he smile?

      Tako: He will. The catchphrase will be "I'll pulverize Godzilla because I use Pacific drugs.

    • Versões alternativas
      A version created for the Champion festival re-edited and shorten the film's run-time, supervised by Honda
    • Conexões
      Edited into King Kong Contra Godzilla (1963)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      The Giant Demon God - Main Title
      Composed by Akira Ifukube

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    Perguntas frequentes15

    • How long is King Kong vs. Godzilla?Fornecido pela Alexa
    • Is this the original Japanese Version and where can it be found?
    • In the film's Criterion release, why does the video quality appear to drop in certain scenes?
    • How do I know the version of the subtitle translations of the film are accurate?

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 11 de agosto de 1962 (Japão)
    • Países de origem
      • Japão
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Central de atendimento oficial
      • Japanese Movie Database
    • Idiomas
      • Japonês
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • King Kong vs. Godzilla Japanese-Release Version
    • Empresa de produção
      • Toho
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 37 min(97 min)
    • Mixagem de som
      • 4-Track Stereo
    • Proporção
      • 2.35 : 1

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