IMDb RATING
3.7/10
2.1K
YOUR RATING
Space aliens arrive on Earth with their giant shark and intend to take over the planet, but first they must destroy Gamera.Space aliens arrive on Earth with their giant shark and intend to take over the planet, but first they must destroy Gamera.Space aliens arrive on Earth with their giant shark and intend to take over the planet, but first they must destroy Gamera.
Keiichi Noda
- Jigura (Japanese version)
- (voice)
- (as Kei'ichi Noda)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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Featured reviews
This is a below average addition to the monster genre that's still worth watching once
Gamera vs. Zigra (1971) is a movie that I recently watched on Tubi. The storyline follows an alien race known as Zigra who have evaluated the Earths surface and feel it's perfect for them to take over. They plan to live under water and use the humans as food. When Gamera comes to the rescue the Zigra unleash their giant shark to stop him and complete their mission.
This movie is directed by Noriaki Yuasa (Gamera: The Giant Monster) and stars Kôji Fujiyama (Bullet Train), Mikiko Tsubouchi (Zatoichi Challenged), Yoshio Yoshida (Zatoichi on the Road) and Reiko Kasahara (Shogun Assassin).
Gamera always looks like a plastic toy in these movies. The sound effects for the monsters are cool and the monster battles are a lot of fun. The kids and soundtrack are a bit cheesy and these tales always seem to work in a point about being good to nature. There were some flame sequences in here that were solid. The final monster battle was more entertaining than good.
Overall, this is a below average addition to the monster genre that's still worth watching once. I would score this a 3.5/10.
This movie is directed by Noriaki Yuasa (Gamera: The Giant Monster) and stars Kôji Fujiyama (Bullet Train), Mikiko Tsubouchi (Zatoichi Challenged), Yoshio Yoshida (Zatoichi on the Road) and Reiko Kasahara (Shogun Assassin).
Gamera always looks like a plastic toy in these movies. The sound effects for the monsters are cool and the monster battles are a lot of fun. The kids and soundtrack are a bit cheesy and these tales always seem to work in a point about being good to nature. There were some flame sequences in here that were solid. The final monster battle was more entertaining than good.
Overall, this is a below average addition to the monster genre that's still worth watching once. I would score this a 3.5/10.
Fun ending of original Gamera series
After Gamera vs. Jiger this one is a definite upgrade to the level of previous Gamera movies. A real charmer, Gamera vs. Zigra features an alien who controls humans with hypnosis to get what it really wants. The plot runs into two children, the girl, Helen, who, with her older sister Maggie, appears to be bi-racial, and Kennie, who have a psychic link to Gamera. Avoid the non-Japanese print, this one is beautifully shot in wide-screen that is completely lost in the t.v. cut version. Also, the acting is much more restrained than the horrible dubbing would have you believe. It's sort of the ultimate expression of the Gamera idea. Gamera: it can never be said that he fails to get the job done when he racks up another impressive victory over a monster, here Zigra, who is creepy on the space ship (including cobwebs) but out of the ship (and full size) is more attractive than Gamera's other adversaries.
Slow and boring
The space aliens are back but it's not as camp and silly as Gamera vs. Guiron (1969). Sadly this film is quite slow and boring although not the worst of the franchise but probably the second worst. The biggest problem was that they forgot to smash the city, maybe the models cost too much to smash them. The new kaiju is pretty cool, maybe my second favourite after Guiron. The human story is fairly routine. There is one really funny moment though where Gamera plays Zigra's spine plates like a xylophone. Worth watching for completionists only. And the xylophone think, that was memorable and funny.
Zzzzzzigra.
An unconvincing model moon base is blasted by a spaceship (which looks like the crown of The Statue of Liberty has collided with a giant liquorice allsort); the spaceship proceeds to Earth and lands in the sea. On board the craft: a hot Japanese woman (Eiko Yanami) under the control of Zigra, an alien goblin shark/swordfish who causes massive earthquakes (that occur off-screen to stay within budget) in order to force the human race to surrender its oceans. Gamera isn't about to let that happen and steps in to sort out the uppity fish, but when the titanic turtle destroys the spaceship, Zigra grows to massive proportions...
If it wasn't for the presence of yummy Eiko Yanami, who cavorts in a sexy space outfit, a bikini, and a mini-skirt, I would have dozed off during this one: it's easily the worst of the Gamera films thus far, with a hum-drum seen-it-all-before plot, annoying kids, and very little in the way of monster action. Much of the film acts as an advertisement for Kamogawa Sea World, and we're treated to performing killer whales and seals. Meanwhile, Gamera spends a lot of the time face down in the sea, having been zapped by Zigra, and is only revived by a lightning bolt for the finalé, in which he teaches Zigra a lesson by playing his dorsal spines like a xylophone before barbecuing him.
2.5/10, generously rounded up to 3 for the salient environmental message: keep the oceans clean!
If it wasn't for the presence of yummy Eiko Yanami, who cavorts in a sexy space outfit, a bikini, and a mini-skirt, I would have dozed off during this one: it's easily the worst of the Gamera films thus far, with a hum-drum seen-it-all-before plot, annoying kids, and very little in the way of monster action. Much of the film acts as an advertisement for Kamogawa Sea World, and we're treated to performing killer whales and seals. Meanwhile, Gamera spends a lot of the time face down in the sea, having been zapped by Zigra, and is only revived by a lightning bolt for the finalé, in which he teaches Zigra a lesson by playing his dorsal spines like a xylophone before barbecuing him.
2.5/10, generously rounded up to 3 for the salient environmental message: keep the oceans clean!
Always good for a laugh
Campy and low-budget, all the things that make the old Gamera movies great. This movie follows a creature named Zigra, who first destroys a moon base then threatens Tokyo. Gamera arrives late and generally just mucks things up. He does somehow save the day, in one of the cheesiest fight sequences ever made. If you like stupid old movies, this one's for you.
"Gamera is really neat, Gamera is full of meat, We believe in Gamera!"
"Gamera is really neat, Gamera is full of meat, We believe in Gamera!"
Did you know
- Trivia"Gamera vs. Zigra" was the only classic Gamera film not released in the U.S. until the advent of home video. All the previous films had been picked up for theatrical distribution or for television. "Gamera vs. Zigra" first appeared in the U.S. in 1987 via videotape, long after its Japanese release.
- GoofsAlthough Gamera is a monster, how is it possible for him to use his flame jets and his fire breath under water?
- Quotes
Kenny: Ah, Gamera!
Helen: I don't like monsters.
Kenny: Gamera is the friend of all children!
Helen: Is he really?
- ConnectionsEdited into Gamera: Super Monster (1980)
- How long is Gamera vs. Zigra?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Gamera contra Zigra, la amenaza de los océanos
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 27m(87 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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