Japón, desolado tras el fin de la Segunda Guerra Mundial, entra en crisis tras la aparición de un monstruo creado por la bomba atómica.Japón, desolado tras el fin de la Segunda Guerra Mundial, entra en crisis tras la aparición de un monstruo creado por la bomba atómica.Japón, desolado tras el fin de la Segunda Guerra Mundial, entra en crisis tras la aparición de un monstruo creado por la bomba atómica.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Ganó 1 premio Óscar
- 43 premios y 62 nominaciones en total
Ryûnosuke Kamiki
- Kôichi Shikishima
- (as Ryunosuke Kamiki)
Sakura Andô
- Sumiko Ôta
- (as Sakura Ando)
Yuki Yamada
- Shirô Mizushima
- (as Yûki Yamada)
Reseñas destacadas
I love monster movies. I enjoy big, dumb, fun action movies. So it shouldn't be difficult for me to like Godzilla-related movies. Let's look at what Hollywood has put out (with my rating):
Godzilla (2014) - 7 stars.
Kong: Skull Island - 5 stars.
Godzilla: King of the Monsters - 3 stars.
Godzilla vs. Kong - 4 stars.
Aside from the 2014 version, all of my reviews mention decent action surrounded by a terrible movie. But I can't remember a single action scene from them. Comparatively, the action scenes in Godzilla Minus One are INCREDIBLE. They are fully memorable and had my jaw dropped as far as it would go.
BUT... this movie is 90% drama, only 10% Godzilla scenes. So you will fail unless you have a great story with fully developed characters and arcs, with full investment in those characters, with deep themes of trauma and remorse, and with emotionally powerful setups and payoffs.
Who in the world would have expected that to be the case.
This movie isn't just BEASTLY, it's sooooo good. Nearly every filmmaking aspect is well-done.
Hollywood, please learn from this. I'm begging you.
(1 viewing, 1/18/2024)
Godzilla (2014) - 7 stars.
Kong: Skull Island - 5 stars.
Godzilla: King of the Monsters - 3 stars.
Godzilla vs. Kong - 4 stars.
Aside from the 2014 version, all of my reviews mention decent action surrounded by a terrible movie. But I can't remember a single action scene from them. Comparatively, the action scenes in Godzilla Minus One are INCREDIBLE. They are fully memorable and had my jaw dropped as far as it would go.
BUT... this movie is 90% drama, only 10% Godzilla scenes. So you will fail unless you have a great story with fully developed characters and arcs, with full investment in those characters, with deep themes of trauma and remorse, and with emotionally powerful setups and payoffs.
Who in the world would have expected that to be the case.
This movie isn't just BEASTLY, it's sooooo good. Nearly every filmmaking aspect is well-done.
Hollywood, please learn from this. I'm begging you.
(1 viewing, 1/18/2024)
Alright. I knew nothing about this movie before I went into it. I'm a Godzilla fan but haven't really enjoyed the Western version of Godzilla movies beyond watching them as eye candy/cheap-thrill/forget-as-you-leave-cinema/switch-off-brain type movies.
Very rarely do we see GOOD movies that actually have a good plot and a storyline that sticks to quality script writing, screenplay and keeps you engaged for all the right reasons Vs Throwing a bunch of explosions, music and constant "something happening" to make up for lack of quality filmmaking.
Godzilla minus one... Is just a good movie. Japanese cinema slows things down and focuses on the quality of what's happening in the moment, in every moment. I was drawn to every part of the film and the story was about the humans with Godzilla in it, not about Godzilla.
I don't even know what to say. I don't want to say much. Don't go into it thinking "this is Godzilla a highly rated film".
Just go in, sit down and enjoy the ride.
I often watch low budget movies because the focus is on the story and not having a lot of pointless fillers to flesh out the movie.
This film does exactly that in a way that stays with you and leaves you thinking about the movie for days after you've watched it.
Highly recommended :)
Very rarely do we see GOOD movies that actually have a good plot and a storyline that sticks to quality script writing, screenplay and keeps you engaged for all the right reasons Vs Throwing a bunch of explosions, music and constant "something happening" to make up for lack of quality filmmaking.
Godzilla minus one... Is just a good movie. Japanese cinema slows things down and focuses on the quality of what's happening in the moment, in every moment. I was drawn to every part of the film and the story was about the humans with Godzilla in it, not about Godzilla.
I don't even know what to say. I don't want to say much. Don't go into it thinking "this is Godzilla a highly rated film".
Just go in, sit down and enjoy the ride.
I often watch low budget movies because the focus is on the story and not having a lot of pointless fillers to flesh out the movie.
This film does exactly that in a way that stays with you and leaves you thinking about the movie for days after you've watched it.
Highly recommended :)
From the opening to the ending, I was enthralled by the whole movie. It kept everything that I loved about Godzilla, and was able to make an extremely interesting backstory with the human characters. There was a lot of things that was addressed in this movie that I had never seen before.there was so many things that people will pick apart, but that's upon reflection. I had no criticisms or a reason to dislike this movie the whole time I watched it. So, in that respect, I will give it a perfect score. And I don't go slinging those out just every review. As a Godzilla fan, this was perfection to me.
Without spoiling anything, this movie hit different from any other. It felt much more serious and quite a bit darker at times. The movie was amazing, the effects were great. I never thought I'd see a Godzilla movie where people were crying in the theater. It was quite the experience. Godzilla was truly an unstoppable force in this movie, whenever Godzilla would show up it was hard to feel anything but futility. Even in the rare event that Godzilla was injured he was only slowed down. This version of Godzilla might be more evil than Shin Godzilla though his motives are hard to understand where shin Godzilla it became apparent.
Set at the end of World War 2 and Japan is defeated and in ruins. Our protagonist is Koichi, a pilot who returns to his devastated hometown in Tokyo. He is unwelcome and guilt ridden for sneaking out of a kamikaze raid in the pacific. Japan is at its lowest point and then Godzilla arrives.
This is a brilliant setup for this period story that sees a country without the military might, technology and morale to face this new enemy. The film also leans into the drama and emotion that made the first film so iconic and sets it apart from the family fun films of the 70s and 80s as well as the recent American blockbuster treatments. My Japanese is not good enough to understand all of the film so there will be lots that I didn't get. However it manages to be a strong, emotional story with a scary and ferocious Godzilla. In my mind it is far superior to Shin Godzilla which I found dull and goofy. This is the best Godzilla film in many years and perhaps the best since the 1954 original.
This is a brilliant setup for this period story that sees a country without the military might, technology and morale to face this new enemy. The film also leans into the drama and emotion that made the first film so iconic and sets it apart from the family fun films of the 70s and 80s as well as the recent American blockbuster treatments. My Japanese is not good enough to understand all of the film so there will be lots that I didn't get. However it manages to be a strong, emotional story with a scary and ferocious Godzilla. In my mind it is far superior to Shin Godzilla which I found dull and goofy. This is the best Godzilla film in many years and perhaps the best since the 1954 original.
Five Godzilla Movies You Need to Watch
Five Godzilla Movies You Need to Watch
Celebrate Shin Godzilla returning to theaters with a look at some of our favorite Godzilla movies.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesInstead of creating a new roar, the crew simply played the original Godzilla roar over loud speakers and recorded the audio.
- PifiasShikishima lands his plane while still having a live bomb attached to his airplane. The normal procedure is to dump all live ordinance in the ocean before landing to avoid accidental detonations. Normally kamikaze aircraft had their ordnance firmly attached to their aircraft. Many did not have the equipment to jettison the bombs, as they were designed as kamikaze weapons.
- Citas
Noriko Oishi: Is your war finally over?
- Créditos adicionalesAt the end of the end-credits, there are sounds of Godzilla's stomping and rubble crumbling down, ending with a Godzilla's roar.
- Versiones alternativasA black-and-white version of this film, titled "Godzilla Minus One/Minus Color", was released in the United States on 26 January 2024.
- ConexionesFeatured in Cobra Cast IRL: CobraCast 199 (11/3/23) (2023)
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitios oficiales
- Idioma
- Títulos en diferentes países
- Godzilla: Minus One
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Empresas productoras
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- 15.000.000 US$ (estimación)
- Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
- 57.144.669 US$
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- 11.419.975 US$
- 3 dic 2023
- Recaudación en todo el mundo
- 113.676.322 US$
- Duración
- 2h 4min(124 min)
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.39 : 1
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