A desperate group of refugees attempts to recolonize Earth 20,000 years after Godzilla took over, but one young man wants revenge above all else.A desperate group of refugees attempts to recolonize Earth 20,000 years after Godzilla took over, but one young man wants revenge above all else.A desperate group of refugees attempts to recolonize Earth 20,000 years after Godzilla took over, but one young man wants revenge above all else.
- Haruo Sakaki
- (voice)
- Metphies
- (voice)
- Yuko Tani
- (voice)
- Adam Bindewald
- (voice)
- Eliott Leland
- (voice)
- Rilu-Elu Belu-be
- (voice)
- Unberto Mori
- (voice)
- Halu-Elu Dolu-do
- (voice)
- Endurph
- (voice)
- Jack O'Sullivan
- (voice)
- (as Shinya Takahashi)
- Marco Ghione
- (voice)
- Josh Emerson
- (voice)
- Female Reporter
- (voice)
Featured reviews
For more, please check out episode 3 of IT CAME FROM A MONSTER MOVIE for the full review wherever you listen to podcasts.
Directed by Hiroyuki Seshita (Ajin) and Kôbun Shizuno (The Journey), the film features the voices of Cristina Valenzuela (Resident Evil: Death Island), Mamoru Miyano (Death Note), Kenta Miyake (Fullmetal Alchemist) and Robbie Daymond (Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba - Swordsmith Village Arc).
Godzilla: Planet of Monsters exhibits inconsistent levels of animation quality. Godzilla's portrayal is impressive, and the science fiction elements are well executed. However, the depiction of Earth, characters, and futuristic technology falls short in some aspects. Nonetheless, the storyline had potential, effectively delivering the insurmountable circumstances. The film's numerous character deaths adds to the persistent sense of desperation. While the ending is somewhat predictable and the twist lacks the intended surprise, it successfully set the stage for a worthwhile sequel.
In summary, Godzilla: Planet of Monsters is an average animated film that caters to fans of the monster universe. I would score this a 6/10 and recommend giving it a watching it once.
The writing in this film is very bad, much like many Godzilla stories, but this one was bad for a different reason, exposition.... LOTS of exposition. Exposition is necessary for films but in this film, nearly ALL dialogue is explaining things. Many times 20 seconds into the explanation, I understood the idea/plan and found myself wanting them to shut up after 15 minutes of exposition, and move on. When planning attacks, I again understood the plan in 20 seconds in and waited several more agonizing minutes while waiting for the admittedly great action sequences. This film is filled to the brim with painful exposition related dialog that almost made me fast-forward through it.
All in all a cool first film with upcoming parts, most Godzilla fans will enjoy the effort here, while non-fans might not like it.
In this refreshing iteration, mankind lost the war for dominance over the Earth to the kaiju, chief among them Big G. With the help of two alien races, the survivors set off to the stars to colonize another planet, but it proved incompatible. Low on resources and options, they return to retake the Earth. However, it's been 20,000 years since they left and not only is there now an ecosystem of monsters but Godzilla, still alive after all this time, reigns supreme. Who will win, man or monster?
Right from the start, they show you of just how grim a situation humanity is in as hope and pride are barely holding on by a thread. In fact, it gets pretty dark at certain times. The humans are in such a sorry state that you sympathize with them but there are tiny hints that they as a species had it coming. There are also religious themes weaved into the story, including references to divine retribution. The cast is a mixed bag. The protagonist is Haruo, who is basically Ahab or Eren Jaeger from "Attack On Titan" (for anime fans reading this). He's passable I guess, though he tends to repeat himself from time to time, which gets old. Scientist Martin and commander Leland are a little more interesting as are two of the main aliens, but the rest are pretty bland and it's hard to say whether they'll get more development in the near future.
As for Godzilla, I love his design. He kind of resembles his 2014 look but with his body looking like a mix between muscle and tree bark and sporting new variations on his abilities. It's also the largest version yet and the animation emphasizes his immense size with slow, foreboding movements. He truly feels like a force of nature and he's got the power to boot; if he has you in his sights, you know you're screwed. New to the franchise are Servum, dragon-like beasties that are nice secondary threats to the humans. Most of the other kaiju are nothing more than cameos in the opening montage. Given the title "Monster Planet", having them show up more in the story would've provided more exploration of this ecosystem.
The overall story is good, though the first half is a touch slow. The reason is simply to establish this universe and provide exposition on the characters' plight and plan to reclaim Earth. This does provide decent suspense and once the monsters show up, it's mostly action. Speaking of which, the battles offer enough thrills to satisfy, pitting futuristic technology against beastly power and the animation allows for great visuals that you normally wouldn't get in live action. Expect a few good plot twists, one hell of a cliffhanger, and an after-credit scene.
Despite the aforementioned flaws, I'm still glad I saw this. The sequel expected to be released this May, this time featuring Mechagodzilla, which I look forward to. It's weird now seeing three separate Godzilla series happening at once, which is a first (Monsterverse, Shin, and Anime). Long live the King of the Monsters!
In this universe humans live together with another alien race, earth is completely devoid of human life while humans themself long ago abandoned their home star system as they poses space faring technology. This weird but never explained society is ruled by some barely described group that refuses to give up power, they are internally divided among factions never described, and there is a some barely mentioned alien church also struggling for power. On top of that there are resource and living space problems, but how serious we dont know, as well as light speed travel capabilities that seem to be breaking down, or maybe not as the movie dosnt bother to cover this field ether.
And yet nothing of this is part of the story, it feels like there is one movie missing setting up the world and the current political situation, its this very lack of setup that hurts the movie the most when complex internal politics get involved. As most of the time we dont know what going on the movie is forced to constantly explain the situation to us in minutes long exposition dump monologues. Characters will often stop what ever they are doing turn to each other and give an info dump for a minute or two filling us in on the lacking world building as well as explain to use what this futuristic technology is capable of and how it will be used in the next scene. While many of s-f movies set in far away future are guilty of this its rarely to this extent.
The action is passable, but the characterization is awful as there is barely any time left for characters whose role isnt explaining to us one thing or another. If you want to know more about those aliens, something that you would think would be quite a game changer for the series then you are out of luck, they play no real role in the movie.
And to top it all off there is no ending. While the movie is supposed to be fallowed with 2 more sequels, its hard to be satisfied with a fade to black in a middle of an action scene as if someone cut the power at your house. We leave the story almost in the same place we start, with not much resolved but with few of barely developed characters dead.
In the end it feels just like another low budget 24 episode s-f anime series only with half the content cut up and sold as a single movie. Its not one i would recommend for ether Godzilla fans or s-f fans.
Five Godzilla Movies You Need to Watch
Five Godzilla Movies You Need to Watch
Did you know
- TriviaThis is the first animated Godzilla film, but not the first animated adaptation of the franchise. The first was an American animated series produced by Hanna-Barbera in 1978. A series of four educational OVAs titled Get Going! Godzilland that featured Godzilla and several other monsters were released in 1994 and 1996. Another American animated series, this time based on the 1998 American Godzilla film, ran from 1998 to 2000.
- GoofsAll entries contain spoilers
- Quotes
Metphies: [to Godzilla Earth] When those fleeting lives destined to die, forget their humbleness and sing praised of their glory, such will shake the very heavens and split the earth, and they shall know the wrath of the divine. The inevitable incarnation of destruction. So, you show yourself at last. Since we last saw each other, it has been 20 years for us and 20,000 years for you. It's been awhile... Oh, King of Destruction.
- Crazy creditsAfter the final credits, a short scene explains the fate of Haruo and sets up the next installment in the series.
- Alternate versionsOriginally, the after-credits scene included a glimpse at MechaGodzilla. This was cut from Netflix's international release of the film.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Gojira o shinkasaseyo!: Nippon Anime sekai e no chousen (2017)
- SoundtracksWhite Out
(Anime Film "Godzilla: Kaijuu Wakusei" Theme Song)
Composer Masayuki Nakano (Boom Boom Satellites)
Arranger Masayuki Nakano (Boom Boom Satellites)
Performed by XAI
Lyrics by Sachiko Aoyama (Negoto)
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Godzilla: Planet of the Monsters
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $3,285,291
- Runtime
- 1h 29m(89 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1