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Godzilla vs. Gigan

Original title: Chikyû kôgeki meirei Gojira tai Gaigan
  • 1972
  • PG
  • 1h 29m
IMDb RATING
5.6/10
6.3K
YOUR RATING
Godzilla vs. Gigan (1972)
A manga artist becomes suspicious of his employers when a garbled message is discovered on tape. As he forms a team to investigate, Godzilla and Anguirus set out to help defeat the invaders.
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Alien InvasionAnimal AdventureDinosaur AdventureKaijuSuperheroActionFamilySci-Fi

After a manga artist and his friends uncover a plot by his employers at an amusement park to lure Ghidorah and Gigan to Earth, Godzilla and Anguirus set out to aid in defeating the invaders.After a manga artist and his friends uncover a plot by his employers at an amusement park to lure Ghidorah and Gigan to Earth, Godzilla and Anguirus set out to aid in defeating the invaders.After a manga artist and his friends uncover a plot by his employers at an amusement park to lure Ghidorah and Gigan to Earth, Godzilla and Anguirus set out to aid in defeating the invaders.

  • Directors
    • Jun Fukuda
    • Yoshimitsu Banno
    • Ishirô Honda
  • Writers
    • Takeshi Kimura
    • Shin'ichi Sekizawa
  • Stars
    • Hiroshi Ishikawa
    • Yuriko Hishimi
    • Minoru Takashima
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.6/10
    6.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Jun Fukuda
      • Yoshimitsu Banno
      • Ishirô Honda
    • Writers
      • Takeshi Kimura
      • Shin'ichi Sekizawa
    • Stars
      • Hiroshi Ishikawa
      • Yuriko Hishimi
      • Minoru Takashima
    • 84User reviews
    • 68Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:12
    Trailer

    Photos196

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    Top cast30

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    Hiroshi Ishikawa
    Hiroshi Ishikawa
    • Gengo Kotaka
    Yuriko Hishimi
    Yuriko Hishimi
    • Tomoko Tomoe
    Minoru Takashima
    Minoru Takashima
    • Shosaku Takasugi
    Tomoko Umeda
    Tomoko Umeda
    • Machiko Shima
    Toshiaki Nishizawa
    Toshiaki Nishizawa
    • Kubota, Head of Children's Land
    Zan Fujita
    Zan Fujita
    • Fumio Sudo
    Kunio Murai
    Kunio Murai
    • Takashi Shima
    Gen Shimizu
    Gen Shimizu
    • Commander of Defense Forces
    Zekô Nakamura
    • Priest
    Kuniko Ashihara
    Kuniko Ashihara
    • Fumio's Mother
    Akio Murata
    • Editor of Comics Magazine
    Nobutake Saitô
    • Henchman
    • (as Noritake Saito)
    Yasuhiko Saijô
    • Henchman
    Naoya Kusakawa
    • Policeman
    Wataru Ômae
    • Henchman
    Haruo Nakajima
    Haruo Nakajima
    • Gojira…
    Kenpachirô Satsuma
    Kenpachirô Satsuma
    • Gaigan
    • (as Kengo Nakayama)
    Kôetsu Ômiya
    • Angirasu…
    • Directors
      • Jun Fukuda
      • Yoshimitsu Banno
      • Ishirô Honda
    • Writers
      • Takeshi Kimura
      • Shin'ichi Sekizawa
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews84

    5.66.3K
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    Featured reviews

    6SnakesOnAnAfricanPlain

    War of the Monsters (1972)

    Godzilla and a giant alien chicken. Great stuff. It's back to the very basic for Godzilla after many were disappointed by the previous effort (I loved it). It kind of throws away everything Godzilla started as. Now we have a fairly kid friendly film, in which aliens design an amusement park in the hopes of controlling some of the monsters from monster island. Because giant monsters are the greatest way to attract families away from their mundane lives. A manga artist uncovers this bizarre plot and soon the aliens release their own monster, Gigan. Fun fights and frolics abound, even if these movies are getting rather crowded.
    DrLenera

    70s Godzilla-juvenile,cheap,sometimes shoddy,and FUN!

    After the interesting but none too successful experiments Godzilla's Revenge and Godzilla Vs Hedorah,Toho made this film,which sometimes feels like an attempt to make a 60s Monster Zero-type film on a fraction of the budget. Obviously,it's not a good film in the traditional sense,but all the 70s Godzilla films,despite their childishness,cheapness,shoddy effects work,samey plots,and 'wacky' ideas {in this one ,Godzilla and his mate Angilas TALK to each other in the non-Japanese version,whilst the Japanese version has speech bubbles instead!}etc,are fun to watch,and Godzilla Vs Gigan is no exception.

    The plot is the aliens-out-to-conquer-Earth-by-controlling-monsters one already used in Monster Zero and Destroy All Monsters and it would be used a few more times,but here it is reasonably successful,with some fairly intriguing ideas {though often badly done}and unusual human characters,although their constant in-and-out of the Godzilla Tower,the alien's base,becomes a bit tiresome. When the monsters show up,we have probably the longest battle in a Godzilla film,and one of the funniest,too,as Godzilla and Angilas engage in a tag team duel with the evil Ghidorah and Gigan. Sadly the movie is badly let down by excessive stock footage from previous films {Ghidorah the Three Headed Monster,Monster Zero,Son Of Godzilla,Destroy All Monster and probably a couple of others too!}. At least in Godzilla's Revenge the stock footage had a sort of context,here,it jars with the new footage. The worst bit for this is the lengthy destruction scene,where new,night time footage of a tattered,slow moving Ghidorah who can barely move, is intercut with older,daytime footage of Ghidorah,showing a fast-moving dragon in action.

    Somehow all this adds to the film's quirky charm,a sometimes good,occasionally awful,entry in the series. The soundtrack is one of the best,it's all Akira Ifikube stock music,much of it from Godzilla films,but it has many of the great Ifikube tracks and a wonderfully rousing title theme.
    7Leofwine_draca

    Great, great fun

    I'm a massive fan of kaiju movies so I come to these films predisposed to like them. I've seen most of the original GODZILLA series and am attempting to fill in a few blanks; one of those is GODZILLA VS. GIGAN, a late-entry instalment that pits Godzilla and his old foe Anguirus against new space-monster Gigan and an old enemy, King Ghidorah.

    GODZILLA VS. GIGAN is plenty of fun from beginning to end, and the formula for that success lies in having a human interest story that's just as entertaining as the monster stuff. This time around, a group of environmentalists and employees investigate the mysterious owners of a new Godzilla theme park, soon uncovering some dark secrets which inevitably throw Japan into peril.

    Godzilla is on good form in what is one of the grisliest of the series (who knew you'd end up seeing a Japanese blood spray in a children's film?). Anguirus is my favourite kaiju monster, purely because he isn't capable of much and it's kind of sweet to watch him getting beaten on so much, so seeing him here was a delight. Gigan proves a deadly foe - especially with that saw! - and King Ghidorah is, well, King Ghidorah. You can't go wrong with that combo, and inevitably GODZILLA VS. GIGAN turns out to be a colourful, action-packed romp.
    5NerdBat

    Awesome monsters, Slow movie

    The film does seem to drag quite a bit. It's not a bad movie, and Gigan is one of my favorite Godzilla monsters. He has a great design, and we even have him teaming up with Ghidorah, one of the monsters who (supposedly died in Destroy All Monsters but is somehow back) is one of the most popular and powerful Godzilla monsters. The creatures don't seem to appear though until almost halfway through the film, and even then, most of the destruction you see doesn't actually show that it's the monsters causing it. Some scenes do quite well, but not all of them. I also feel like they got kinda lazy with the designs for the alien invaders who control Gigan, it's like they just picked a roach out and said "oh yeah, there's a good alien". Toho could have done better than that I think. Overall the film concept is AMAZING but they didn't jump into it very well, a lot of crap goes on that is just unnecessary.
    7paul_m_haakonsen

    This movie was actually very surprising...

    Right, well I hadn't really expected all that much from "Chikyû kogeki meirei: Gojira tai Gaigan" (aka "Godzilla vs Gigan") given the fact that the movie was from 1972. But still, I sat down to watch it with my 9 year old son as we are having a run through all "Godzilla" movies.

    Turns out that the 1972 "Godzilla vs Gigan" was actually surprisingly nice. The storyline was adequate. After all, it is a "Godzilla" movie we are talking about here.

    But what made it work so nicely was the sheer amount of destruction throughout the course of the movie and the excessive amount of kaiju fighting - which exceeded the contents of many other "Godzilla" movies. And you actually got to see the kaijus bleeding in this 1972 movie. But the destruction of buildings and such was just phenomenal. Sure, it was toy buildings and miniature scales, but still, it worked out so nicely. Especially because they had put so much effort into the miniature scale models that it was just amazing.

    Man, I do love it when Godzilla gets frustrated and starts going into hyper-mode. That is just hilarious.

    Two things about this movie wasn't overly impressive. First and foremost, the appearance of Godzilla. He looked atrocious in this movie, and it was a bitter pill to swallow. And then the fact that they reused footage from another "Godzilla" movie for the King Ghidorah vs. Anguirus fight. That was just a horrible thing to do, and it was definitely a slap in the face with a dead, cold fish for us that have sat through the majority of the "Godzilla" movies.

    But all in all, the 1972 "Godzilla vs Gigan" was definitely a nice surprise and quite worth the effort of sitting through. I am rating it a solid six out of ten stars.

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    Sci-Fi

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Despite the film being made for young children as part of Toho's Champion Festival, it is the first in which Godzilla visibly bleeds. Prior to his passing, original special effect director Eiji Tsuburaya deliberately kept blood and gore to a minimum. However the 1970s saw an increase in violence depicted in children's media in Japan. Special effects director Teruyoshi Nakano and the rest of the effects crew were actually inspired to make the fights bloodier because they received fan requests from children who asked why didn't the monsters bleed, so the crew obliged to appease them.
    • Goofs
      Due to stock footage from earlier movies being used, the appearances of Godzilla, Ghidorah, and Anguirus keep changing.
    • Quotes

      Gojira: Hey Anguirus!

      Angirasu: What do you want?

      Gojira: Something funny going on, you better check!

      Angirasu: Okay.

      Gojira: Hurry up!

    • Crazy credits
      In the opening credits of the Japanese version, colorful lasers shoot from different directions, and pop up into strips within which each credit appears in white text. In the English versions, only the sound FX of the lasers are heard (standard text credits were used).
    • Alternate versions
      For the scenes of Godzilla and Angilas talking to each other, word balloons are used in the Japanese version, but Toho's international English version (used for Cinema Shares' edited US print titled "Godzilla on Monster Island"), uses actual English dialogue.
    • Connections
      Edited from Rodan (1956)
    • Soundtracks
      Gojira Mâchi
      ("Godzilla March")

      Music by Kunio Miyauchi

      Lyrics by Shin'ichi Sekizawa and Jun Fukuda

      Performed by Susumu Ishikawa & The Toho Kids' Chorus Group

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 1977 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Language
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • Godzilla on Monster Island
    • Production companies
      • Toho Eizo Co.
      • Toho
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $2,413,078
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 29m(89 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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