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Another seaborne attack just by the [[Eastern Seaboard]] culminated in the eventual destruction of a fishing ship. The crew, however, survived, after witnessing their boat sinking, but it shot up from underneath and landed with a huge splash in the surface.
Another seaborne attack just by the [[Eastern Seaboard]] culminated in the eventual destruction of a fishing ship. The crew, however, survived, after witnessing their boat sinking, but it shot up from underneath and landed with a huge splash in the surface.


Niko "Nick" Tatapolous ([[Matthew Broderick]]), an [[Nuclear Regulatory Commission|NRC]] scientist, who happened to be in the [[Zone of alienation|Chernobyl Exclusion Zone]] ([[Ukraine]]) researching the effects of radiation on wildlife, was interrupted by the arrival of an agent of the [[U.S. State Department]]. He was sent to [[Panama]], escorted by the military, to observe the wreckage of the recovered Japanese fishing ship (which had three gigantic claw marks on one side) and a set of massive dinosaur-like footprints in the grassy soil. The Frenchman is also there, observing the scene and introduces himself as an insurance agent. Aboard a military aircraft, Tatapolous identifies skin samples he recovered as belonging to a creature "unknown to science".
Niko "Nick" Tatapolous ([[Matthew Broderick]]), an [[Nuclear Regulatory Commission|NRC]] scientist, who happened to be in the [[Zone of alienation|Chernobyl Exclusion Zone]] ([[Ukraine]]) researching the effects of radiation on wildlife, was interrupted by the arrival of an agent of the [[U.S. State Department]]. He was sent to [[Panama]], escorted by the military, to observe the wreckage of the recovered Japanese fishing ship (which had three gigantic claw marks on one side) and a set of massive dinosaur-like footprints in the grassy soil. The Frenchman is also there, observing the scene and introduces himself as an insurance agent. Aboard a military aircraft, Tatapolous identifies skin samples he recovered as belonging to a creature "unknown to science". Godzillla smell bad


Godzilla then heads to [[New York City]], dragging three [[trawler]]s under the sea on the way, then creating havoc in the [[Fulton Fish Market]], before rampaging through the city. [[Manhattan]] is evacuated and the military attempt to kill Godzilla, first luring him out with a huge pile of fish. Godzilla takes the bait, but then shrugs off [[small arms]] fire, and evades and destroys three pursuing [[AH-64 Apache]] [[attack helicopters]]. He escapes, but not before Nick realises that the monster reproduces [[asexually]], and is collecting food for his children. Nick is determined to find Godzilla's nest.
Godzilla then heads to [[New York City]], dragging three [[trawler]]s under the sea on the way, then creating havoc in the [[Fulton Fish Market]], before rampaging through the city. [[Manhattan]] is evacuated and the military attempt to kill Godzilla, first luring him out with a huge pile of fish. Godzilla takes the bait, but then shrugs off [[small arms]] fire, and evades and destroys three pursuing [[AH-64 Apache]] [[attack helicopters]]. He escapes, but not before Nick realises that the monster reproduces [[asexually]], and is collecting food for his children. Nick is determined to find Godzilla's nest.

Revision as of 19:07, 28 November 2007

Godzilla
Theatrical Poster
Directed byRoland Emmerich
Written byScreenplay:
Dean Devlin
Roland Emmerich
Story:
Ted Elliot
Terry Rossio
Dean Devlin
Roland Emmerich
Based on the Character "Godzilla" Owned and Created by:
Toho Co., Ltd.
Produced byDean Devlin
StarringMatthew Broderick
Jean Reno
Maria Pitillo
Hank Azaria
Michael Lerner
Kevin Dunn
Harry Shearer
Vicki Lewis
Doug Savant
CinematographyUeli Steiger
Edited byPeter Amundson
David Siegel
Music byDavid Arnold
Distributed byTriStar Pictures
Release dates
May 19, 1998 (USA)
Running time
139 min.
LanguageEnglish
Budget$130,000,000 (estimated)
Box office$379,014,294 (Worldwide)

Godzilla is an American science fiction film directed by Roland Emmerich and starred Matthew Broderick, Jean Reno, Maria Pitillo, Hank Azaria, Michael Lerner and Kevin Dunn. It is the American movie remake of the popular Japanese Godzilla series.

Tagline:

  • Size does matter.

Plot

The film's opening credits play over a montage of French nuclear tests in the Pacific Ocean, observed by many iguanas. Then, in present days, a Japanese fishing ship is attacked by an unseen monster; only one survived (an old man). Traumatized, he is later questioned in a hospital by a mysterious Frenchman (Jean Reno) as to what he saw. But the man didn't answer until the Frenchman asks in English with a lit lighter moving left and right and repeatedly says only one word: Gojira (the name was later mistranslated as Godzilla by the U.S. media).

Another seaborne attack just by the Eastern Seaboard culminated in the eventual destruction of a fishing ship. The crew, however, survived, after witnessing their boat sinking, but it shot up from underneath and landed with a huge splash in the surface.

Niko "Nick" Tatapolous (Matthew Broderick), an NRC scientist, who happened to be in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone (Ukraine) researching the effects of radiation on wildlife, was interrupted by the arrival of an agent of the U.S. State Department. He was sent to Panama, escorted by the military, to observe the wreckage of the recovered Japanese fishing ship (which had three gigantic claw marks on one side) and a set of massive dinosaur-like footprints in the grassy soil. The Frenchman is also there, observing the scene and introduces himself as an insurance agent. Aboard a military aircraft, Tatapolous identifies skin samples he recovered as belonging to a creature "unknown to science". Godzillla smell bad

Godzilla then heads to New York City, dragging three trawlers under the sea on the way, then creating havoc in the Fulton Fish Market, before rampaging through the city. Manhattan is evacuated and the military attempt to kill Godzilla, first luring him out with a huge pile of fish. Godzilla takes the bait, but then shrugs off small arms fire, and evades and destroys three pursuing AH-64 Apache attack helicopters. He escapes, but not before Nick realises that the monster reproduces asexually, and is collecting food for his children. Nick is determined to find Godzilla's nest.

However, when a videotape from Panama is stolen by Nick's ex-girlfriend, Audrey Timmonds (Maria Pitillo), a would-be TV journalist for news channel "WIDF", he is thrown off the team. He is then kidnapped by the Frenchman who introduces himself as Philippe Roaché, an agent of the DGSE, the French Secret Service. He and his team have been keeping close watch on events, and are now ready to help clear up the mess they feel responsible for, but cannot acknowledge.

The military lure Godzilla out again, and after a fierce battle in the waters of the Hudson River with three U.S. Navy nuclear submarines, Godzilla is torpedoed and seems to be dead. Meanwhile Nick and a crack French team, led by Roaché, surreptitiously followed by Audrey and cameraman Victor "Animal" Palotti (Hank Azaria), track Godzilla through the subway tunnels to Madison Square Garden, finding hundreds of eggs. They start to lay explosives, but the eggs start to hatch. The Baby Godzillas begin to look for food, and since the team stink like fish, they become inevitable targets. After failing to contain the baby monsters and losing several members of the team, the remaining four of them take refuge in a TV broadcast booth. From there, Nick, Audrey, and Animal alert the authorities, who order an immediate strike by a trio of F/A-18 Hornets. The four escape just before the building is destroyed, only for an extremely enraged Godzilla (who managed to survive the battle in the East River) to emerge from the wreckage. The four make a getaway in a taxicab, and lure Godzilla to the Brooklyn Bridge where he becomes entangled in the steel suspension cables, and is an easy target for the fighters. As the three F-18s close in, they each fire a pair of missiles that slam into Godzilla's side. As the jets pass him, Godzilla uselessly tries to attack by snapping at them with his jaws, but fails, and the F-18s circle around and fire another wave of missiles that also slam into the monster's side. After many screams of pain, he finally falls to the ground. As Godzilla is left to die, he looks at Nick during his final moments as his heart slowly stops beating. At the end of the film Nick and Audrey reconcile while Roaché disappears into the night after stealing their videotape footage of the incident. He promises to return the tape after "certain information" has been removed. All seems well until we see in smoking ruins of the Garden, a single egg has survived and hatches.

Music

The film's soundtrack featured songs by such artists as Puff Daddy and Jimmy Page ("Come with Me"), Jamiroquai ("Deeper Underground"), Rage Against the Machine ("No Shelter"), Foo Fighters ("A320"), Ben Folds Five ("Air"), and Green Day ("Brain Stew (Remix)" ). The David Bowie song "Heroes", covered by The Wallflowers, can be clearly heard in the background during a restaurant scene early in the movie. L'Arc-en-Ciel composed the theme song entitled "Shinsoku Lose Control" for the official Japanese release of the movie. David Arnold's orchestral score provided the music for the rest of the movie, and roughly four minutes of it is included on the album. A score-only release was cancelled due to the film's box office performance, and Arnold's complete score remained unreleased until 2007, when La-La Land Records released a limited edition (3,000 units) of the complete score on two discs.

Sequels and spin-offs

The film spawned an animated series which continued the storyline of the movie. In this series, Nick Tatapolous accidentally discovers the egg that survived the destruction of the nest. The creature hatches and imprints on Nick as its parent. Subsequently, Nick and a group of friends form an elite research team, investigating strange occurrences and defending human kind from numerous other monsters. The series was more well received than the film.

A sequel to the film was planned, and would have involved Godzilla battling a mutant insect creature. However these plans for a sequel were ultimately scrapped.

Early in the film Godzilla, Mothra and King Ghidorah: Giant Monsters All-Out Attack, Admiral Taizo Tachibana is giving a lecture to several Japanese military personnel and briefly mentions a monster attack on New York City (referring to the events in this film), two soldiers also question whether the creature was indeed Godzilla while one states that Americans claimed it was but the fact that it was the true Godzilla was highly doubtful. This movie's title creature would make an appearance in Godzilla: Final Wars (2004), where it is officially named "Zilla". It attacks Sydney, Australia and then briefly fights the Toho Godzilla, only to be killed by the real King of the Monsters.

Marketing campaign

File:Zilla.jpg
Godzilla, caught in the suspension cables of the Brooklyn Bridge.

The marketing campaign for Godzilla was multi-pronged in its execution:

  • Crushed cars were dotted around London as a part of a guerrilla advertising campaign.
  • In the month or so before its release, ads on street corners made references to Godzilla's size in comparison to whatever medium of advertising the advertisement was on.
    • Examples: "His foot is bigger than this bus.", "His eye is bigger than this billboard.", etc.
  • Bits and pieces of different body parts of Godzilla were shown on TV commercials and posters, but never the entire body; this was to add a bit of mystery as to the design of the creature, ideally prompting people to see the film because that was the only way to see the whole creature.
  • Taco Bell had tie-ins such as cups and toys that promoted the film. The Taco Bell chihuahua was also at the height of its popularity in Taco Bell's television commercials. During the summer of 1998, several commercials pairing Godzilla with the Taco Bell mascot were produced and aired, including several with the chihuahua trying to catch Godzilla in a tiny box, whistling and calling, "Here, lizard, lizard, lizard." When Godzilla appears, the chihuahua says, "Uh-oh. I think I need a bigger box." (referring to Jaws, as well as the film's line "I think we're gonna need a bigger boat")
  • The film's first teaser trailer began appearing in theaters a full year before the movie was released. The trailer featured a shot of Godzilla's foot coming through the roof of a museum and crushing a T. rex skeleton as a tour guide gives a lecture saying that the T. rex was one of the largest predators the world has ever seen.

Box office

File:Baby godzilla hatching.jpg
Godzilla's only surviving child, which appears briefly at the end of this film; and would later star in Godzilla: The Series.

Although the film received predominantly negative reviews[1], Godzilla grossed $136,314,294 domestically and $379,014,294 worldwide, bringing back its $130 million budget.

Trivia

File:Godzilla1998DVD.jpg
The standard DVD cover for the film
  • Sega Pinball released a pinball machine based on this movie.[2]
  • The opening sequence of the movie featuring the atomic bomb explosion is footage from the Baker Test (1946). It looks so dramatic because the explosion took place under water
  • The mayor of New York City is named Ebert, and his top adviser is named Gene, a reference to the famous film critiquing duo from TV's Siskel & Ebert. It was a half-baked attempt at expressing displeasure at the negative reviews Siskel and Ebert had given the producers' previous films, although Ebert was flattered at the parody...then gave Godzilla a bad review anyway.
  • The soundtrack track was anchored a song by Puff Daddy entitled Come With Me. The song had nothing to do with Godzilla.
  • Hank Azaria, Harry Shearer and Nancy Cartwright had all worked on "The Simpsons" and supply their roles to the film. In some scenes with Hank in his role as Victor, the accent sounds similar to Apu Nahasapeemapetilon, and for Harry's character, Charles Caiman, his voice sounds similar to Kent Brockman (also a news anchor).
  • When the F/A-18s attack Madison Square Garden, the pilot states "Selecting LGB", but the weapon display indicates an AGM-84C Harpoon anti-ship missile. The missile shown on-screen is also consistent with a Harpoon, rather than a laser-guided bomb.

Cameos and allusions to other films

References