Toho's Gojira Rises from the Depths
By Beth Kelly
Godzilla is known the world over as the greatest movie monster of all time. A larger-than-life persona, children and adults everywhere instantly recognize the “King of the Monsters” for his fearsome visage and noxious atomic breath. Having been featured in nearly 30 films, videogames, and even a Blue Oyster Cult song, Godzilla has remained a staple of pop culture since his debut in 1954. Over his 60-year career, Godzilla has undergone many different incarnations, playing the roles of villain and destroyer, hero and savior. But beyond the simplicity of a monster stomping through a city or fighting many adversaries lies a stern warning of the dangers of unbridled scientific power.
Godzilla’s legacy as an allegory for the destructive power of nuclear warfare began in the original 1954 Japanese film Gojira by Toho Studios. Directed by Ishiro Honda, the film presents Godzilla as an ancient sea monster hideously transformed into a hulking behemoth by atomic weapons being tested in the Pacific. Later, Godzilla rampages through Tokyo, turning the Japanese capital to rubble with ease. While the destructive nature of the monster’s path closely parallels the destruction wreaked on Hiroshima and Nagasaki by atomic strikes, the difficulty Japanese authorities have in containing Godzilla further extends the metaphor.
Honda, along with screenwriters Takeo Murata and Shigeru Kayama, seem
to suggest that nuclear power, like Godzilla, is unnatural. Were Godzilla a
mere monster, a simple bullet or missile would be enough to stop him. But because
he symbolizes the invisible and mysterious power of radiation, conventional
weapons are useless, much as conventional armaments are
no defense against countries with nuclear arsenals. Man has opened a Pandora’s
Box in developing nuclear weapons, and the bombs built by the Earth’s leading
nations are in fact monsters themselves.
Godzilla’s
1954 bow met with widespread commercial success in Japan, released at a time
when political and social opinion in Japan was strongly against nuclear power.
This is particularly true when one considers how vehemently the Japanese government
opposed nuclear tests in the Pacific. Japanese audiences identified with the
destruction Godzilla brought, easily correlating it with what the country had
endured during World War II, where many of its cities were firebombed by Allied
forces. For further topicality, the opening scene, in which Godzilla strikes
unseen from the ocean’s depths, taking the lives of Japanese sailors in a
blinding flash, was inspired directly by the Lucky Dragon incident that also occurred in 1954.
Unsurprisingly,
the re-edited American version, 1956’s Godzilla, King of the
Monsters!, heavily downplayed the
anti-nuclear theme of the Japanese original. (Of course, this was due in part
to how strongly the United States relied on its atomic arsenal to ensure its
place as a superpower in the world.) It was a prescient decision, since the
film would have likely been less of a box office draw had it weighed heavily on
the consciences of its American viewers.
In
subsequent years, the Monster King would return in dozens of sequels for Toho. Throughout
their ’60s and ’70s Showa-series heyday, these follow-ups ultimately traded in Honda’s
anti-nuke warning in favor of the more juvenile pleasures of watching Godzilla square
off against other giant monsters, including the villainous King Ghidorah and the alien Gigan.
The Heisei (1984-1995) and
Millennium (2000-2004) installments, though markedly more serious in tone, were
still a far cry from the bleak depiction of Godzilla as human folly made
flesh-and-Geiger-clicking-bone. While many of these monster mashes were lost to
the late-night-movie garbage heap for years, all have since been made available
via one home video format or another, with most easily available for streaming
(see this website for more information).
Similar
to the response following 1998’s major flop Godzilla, albeit for completely
different reasons, the worldwide success of 2014’s Godzilla from Legendary
Pictures has prompted the news that Toho will be reviving their biggest import with
a new film in 2016. As the release corresponds
with the 70-year anniversary of the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, events marked indelibly on
the psyche of the Japanese people, many fans hope that Toho will return to its
original vision of Godzilla as an allegory for the dangers of nuclear weapons. (The
new film may also give a nod to the 2011 Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant
disaster, and to the resulting environmental consequences still unfolding.)
More
than just a movie monster, Godzilla is a vivid warning of the dangers that come
with a world increasingly dominated by science and technology, as well as the
moral decisions that must be faced by our leaders. Even in the most
well-intentioned hands, those same scientific principles that have so advanced
our civilization can also be used to bring about its destruction. Here, at the
top of the food chain, we tend to forget that. Godzilla, in all his radioactive
reptilian glory, reminds us that power and prudence must find a balance to ensure
the safety of everyone.
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