Godzilla (1998) Poster

(I) (1998)

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7/10
Flawed but not bad guilty pleasure movie
85122223 January 2017
Greetings from Lithuania.

"Godzilla" (1998) is definitely not a bad guilty pleasure movie. It has pretty good special effects, nice pacing and some good action sequences involving Godzilla himself. Well its not entirely a Godzilla everyone knows, its more of a dinosaur but still its a good looking creature, especially when it interacts with environment (city buildings in this case). The downsides of this movie were pretty lame script at the moments, zero chemistry between Matthew Broderick and Maria Pitillo (and her poor performance as well) and just the look of this movie - literally almost all movie time action takes place at night, sure because its much more easier (and cheaper) to make all the big special effects sequences in a bloody dark, but not so much fun to watch it.

Overall, "Godzilla" is a guilty pleasure. As a pure fun flick it does its job, nothing else and nothing more. A pure guilty pleasure.
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7/10
Not Great, But Not As Bad As It's Been Described
tabuno21 March 2020
Matthew Broderik and Jean Reno star in what in the industry is considered a "bomb." It cost a lot but didn't make much money. However, it would be unfair to consider this movie a bad movie. Instead one can view this English version of the relatively more cheesy 1950s Japanese "Godzilla" movies with Jurassic Park overtones as entertaining, blockbuster-like. It attempts along with Broderik's own wonderful personality to insert a fairly large dose of comic humor throughout the movie. Yet the balance between comedy, drama, and horror is more uneven than the best of these monster movies. There a bit more gore than the typical Jurassic Park movies, but not necessarily over the top considering how gory movies have become. There are also lapses in rational or logical chase scenes were Godzilla seems to speed away from helicopters but can't catch up to a speeding taxicab. The attempt to create a somewhat sympathetic monster is also intriguing though it wasn't completely successful in pulling it off. Overall, this is a feel-good action monster movie that could have been better, but it wasn't nearly as awful as the dollar numbers indicate.
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9/10
Drastically underrated
BrandtSponseller8 March 2005
After bizarre attacks on a Japanese freighter, first the French then the U.S. learn of the existence of an apparent modern "dinosaur". When it's suspected that radiation from nuclear weapons testing in French Polynesia may have instead produced the monster, biological radiation specialist Dr. Nick Tatopoulos (Matthew Broderick) is called to the scene. While investigating the monster's path of destruction, a new sighting arrives--just off the coast of New York City!

It's no secret that Godzilla has been much maligned. Even Fangoria editor Tony Timpone stated in an editorial that he thought it sucked, and he's usually willing to give movies the benefit of the doubt. The reasons why director Roland Emmerich's version of Godzilla is hated are as varied as people stating opinions. But I tend to think that there is also a strong bandwagon effect with this film that will be tempered by time. There are already signs of a number of people giving it a second look and lessening the severity of their criticism.

The chief complaint seems to come from a very vocal but relatively small crowd of fanboy purists--they dislike that Godzilla is different here. In the Japanese films, made by the Toho production company, Godzilla is a guy in a rubber suit who stomps on models of buildings and such. He tends to lumber, as irrelevant military attacks on him provide pretty fireworks. Most Godzilla films feature him fighting some other monster, "professional wrestling" style, and Godzilla arbitrarily falls down and gets back up as he is attacked and attacks with various "death rays" from his mouth, eyes, etc. Now that might sound like I don't like the typical Godzilla film, but that's not true. I like them quite a bit, but a big part of the reason why is that most of them are very cheesy. I'm a fan of bizarre cheese/camp, and you get tons of that in Godzilla films.

But I'm not a purist. To me, there's no good reason why Emmerich's Godzilla needs to be similar to the Toho incarnations, which in fact are often quite different from and inconsistent with each other, too. At this point, I see Godzilla more as a recurring character type--think of the various instantiations of Dracula or Frankenstein throughout the 20th Century. The Toho films can't really be seen as chapters in a single, long story. But whether their arguments are wrong or not, the fanboy purists are at least noisy and prolific, and too many people are followers.

If Emmerich would have given us a guy in a rubber suit, acting just like the Toho Godzillas (not "Godzilla"), with the typical gobbledy-gook of a Toho script, this film would have bombed even worse (if we can call a 100 million dollar film that made a profit a "bomb") and the fanboys would have still found something to complain about. Even though I love the Toho Godzilla films, too, we can't deny that they do not tend to be bestsellers on video in the U.S., despite the fact that they're readily available for purchase.

So what Emmerich gives us instead is an epic, expensive-looking film that spans a number of genres, features more coherent dialogue and subplots than a typical Toho Godzilla film, and showcases a redesigned, mostly cgi cast of monsters, where Godzilla looks and behaves much more like a "real" giant, mutant lizard. For those of us who are not purists, who do not care if our opinions match the majority, and who evaluate films on all or their technical and artistic levels, it's difficult to deny that Godzilla has many merits.

For example, the cinematography in this film is gorgeous. The sound design is superb and the soundtrack (score and songs) works well with the film. All of the action sequences, and they comprise a large percentage of the film, are expertly staged--Emmerich doesn't resort to darkness, blur-cams and overly quick cuts like many other directors. It's always easy to follow the narrative during action scenes, it's always easy to see what's going on, and it's always coherent. That goes for the non-action scenes, too--the entire film is ingeniously designed in terms of the progression from one sequence to another. Also, the cgi is amazing--it's often difficult to tell where it stops and mechanicals/models begin.

But the story is great, too. Broderick's Tatopoulos is an attractive anti-hero, a nerdish scientist who solve dilemmas with his professional knowledge. The other hero is Jean Reno as Philippe Roache, a humorously enigmatic French "insurance agent". The obligatory romantic subplot, involving Tatopoulos and Audrey Timmonds (Maria Pitillo) surprisingly avoids clichés, and Timmonds provides a launching pad for an all-too-honest satire of the media.

Satire is high up on Emmerich's agenda. Godzilla not only satirizes the media, but the military, New York/New Yorkers, film critics, and even monster movies. While the film is simultaneously giving us a lot of genres--sci-fi, horror, adventure, war film, drama, etc. the most unexpected motif is the almost cartoonish, spoof-like humor. Godzilla is more frequently laugh-out-loud funny that anyone expected it to be. It's not just one-liners and overt jokes, although those are certainly present, but the amped up intentional absurdity of situations such as the final taxi cab "chase".

Even if you think that Godzilla has some internal problems as an artwork (and I agree that there is a slight clunkiness in parts of the narrative flow--it caused me to subtract a point), there's no way it deserves the trashing it's received so far. This is at least a well-made film on a technical level, and if you have any taste for slightly campy sci-fi/monster flicks, you should find much to enjoy here.
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7/10
Not great but better than I remembered
pmtelefon24 May 2020
"Godzilla" is a great example of a big budget summer movie that doesn't really work. It plays by the big summer movie rules but it misses the mark. The first half of "Godzilla" is very good. But after an hour or so, the story takes a wrong turn. It actually becomes pretty silly for a while. I don't want to say that "Godzilla" wore out its welcome but it is too long by at least twenty minutes. That said, I still enjoyed watching "Godzilla" tonight.
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6/10
Better than I remembered
utgard1430 August 2016
Like many people, I wasn't fond of this when it was first released. Revisiting it now nearly twenty years later I can say my opinion has changed quite a bit. It's still not a great Godzilla movie, at least not how I quantify that, but it is an enjoyable "big monster movie" on its own merits. The special effects are great, the action is pretty well staged, and the music is surprisingly nice. The only real problems for me are that the cast is a little too goofy at times (I think they were going for some kind of Jurassic Park humorous/serious blend) and the movie does run a little long. Overall, though, I think it's an entertaining movie that deserves a second look.
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I thought this was fun. I don't know why people whine about it so much.
LLAAA483728 May 2008
Well, being a longtime fan of the GODZILLA/GOJIRA films as a youngster, I remember seeing this with great anticipation. I, unlike a lot of people, was not at all disappointed. This film was exactly what I was hoping it would be at the time. Sure, it certainly wasn't as charming or as funny as the films I loved as a kid, but it was a lot of fun. I loved the action scenes, the look of the monster was crazy to me, and the plot was simple enough for a first time viewer to get right into. Seeing it again 10 years later, I had the same reaction. My opinion of this film hasn't changed one bit. I guess everybody's complaints stem from how this has no charm or any kind of attempt at being cute or original. I guess that's understandable, but I still don't see what everybody's problem is. This was supposed to be a fun, exciting, and action packed thrill ride. That's all it is, no more, no less. I personally think that it succeeds at what it achieved to be perfectly. Matthew Broderick may not exactly be an action hero, but his character sure was quirky and funny. Jean Reno was as good as usual.
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10/10
One of the first "scary" movies I saw; a cherished childhood memory, actually
Dragoneyed36329 April 2008
I really do, genuinely enjoy Godzilla. I have watched it on numerous occasions for a long time now and I always think it is an incredibly fun and entertaining movie. The first time I watched it though was when I was around four years young. It was one of the first, as I called it then, scary movies I watched.

I actually will never find the strength to call this film horrible, even though my opinions on it have of course lowered a lot over time, because I watched it when I was so little, and I thought it was the best movie ever. This film is still really enjoyable, because it's value doesn't decrease as much as the person who watches it entertainment does, but it still sickens me to know it has such a low rating and many look down on it, while really it should receive more appreciation.

I might have lowered my opinions on this film, but it is still a pleasing film that does not deserve the rating it has. I didn't see much of anything wrong with it, even now, and I just thought it was suspenseful and exciting, somewhat more suspenseful than a lot of other movies that have been made, with a lot of fun performances and excellent CGI. Godzilla, yet classified as a horror\suspense, was actually a touching film and was sad in some parts, as well. I will never understand how someone could hate a film that's just meant to be all around fun and enjoyment. It is still my favorite out of the original and newest remake.

Two thumbs up for Godzilla.
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8/10
Godzilla
MAYESY-4429 May 2020
Really good film with some great characters. Picture is really good for a 98 film and the film on a whole was really well done.
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10/10
I thought it was great...
LebowskiT10006 September 1999
As opposed to most people, I thought this movie was excellent. You can't watch the movie and expect Shakespeare...it's Godzilla. You have to appreciate the work that went into making this creature look so lifelike. This movie had spectacular special effects and a pretty decent story line. I thought this movie was great. I didn't find the acting to be all that bad. I would recommend watching this movie before you come to any conclusions.
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6/10
Deeply flawed, but kind of a guilty pleasure
TheLittleSongbird10 January 2011
This movie is far from amazing, but it doesn't entirely deserve the maligning it gets. Is the pace plodding sometimes? Yes it is, especially in the middle act. Is the script weak? Yes it is rather. Is the direction unfocused? I think so, but it is Roland Emmerich, a director I never found particularly good anyway, that said I actually think it is one of his better directing jobs here. Is the acting bad? Sort of and sort of not. Matthew Broderick is very bland, and his character is poor, same with the female lead whose acting style doesn't belong but Harry Shearer is fun and Jean Reno is surprisingly dignified.

I did love the idea of Godzilla though. There may be the odd hole here and there, but thanks to a quite riveting final half hour especially it remains interesting. The scenery is splendid, the editing is good enough, some sequences are entertaining and Godzilla while different is very well designed. The score is also memorable. And while there are flaws to Godzilla, I couldn't help being entertained. This film isn't Emmerich's best, but contrary to what others might say I don't think it is his worst either. Overall, it has a lot of problems, but I kind of liked it. 6/10 Bethany Cox
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6/10
America's First Take On Godzilla
iquine5 June 2020
(Flash Review)

Starting off relatively well, this turns into Jurassic Park as it felt like a dinosaur chase movie rather than focused on the mythical Godzilla. This new Godzilla also doesn't hold true to many of the original's traits such as what it eats and how it can be killed. Now on American soil of course Godzilla ravages Manhattan while the military try to take him down as they create a ton of (needless) damage. The media desperately looking for the inside scoop also create their own damage by stirring mass hysteria. One special scientist learns Godzilla is pregnant and warns that it's nest of eggs must be found to avoid hatching more of these beasts. As expected, this is full of explosions, destruction, roars, human ineptitude, light romance and heroics. Your typical Hollywood CGI fluff action monster movie with some notable plot holes.
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7/10
my notes
FeastMode24 June 2019
Some corny parts and bad acting but still pretty zalama overall. lots of great action throughout and Godzilla is a beast (about 3 viewings)
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8/10
This updated "Re-Think" doesn't follow the legendary Toho movies but this one isn't bad as some would like you to think.
hu67522 March 2007
After the french nuclear testing, a lizard that mutated into a giant, fire-breathing creature. This huge monster is headed to New York City as for it's birthing place for its huge brood. An wimpy biologist Niko Tatapoulas (Matthew Broderick) is hired to tracked down the beast and has a connection with the creature. When a mystery man (Jean Reno) and his team are only ones know how to deal with the monster with the help of Tatopoulos. But an noisy ex-girlfriend of Tatopoulos (Maria Pitillo) and a cameraman (Hank Azaria) are along unexpectedly for the ride.

Directed by Ronald Emmerich (The Day after Tomorrow, Independence Day, Stargate) made an extremely silly entertaining film that is loosely based on the 1956 Japanese picture. Although Emmerich's style of the film is similar to the original version of King Kong, Jurassic Park and even Q:The Winged Serpent. The story isn't first-rate and most of the characters are shallow. This was an box office disappointment in the summer of 1998. The movie goes on too long but it's fun, nonetheless. Screenplay by the director and Dead Devlin (Universal Soldier). From a story by Ted Elliott (The Mask of Zorro, Pirates of the Caribbean:The Curse of the Black Pearl, Small Soldiers), Terry Rossio (Aladdin, The Puppet Masters, Shrek), Delvin and director:Emmerich. Super 35. (*** 1/2 out of *****).
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8/10
One of the most underrated movies ever!
kerianfunnyman21312 June 2022
I dont get it guys, just because its different doesnt mean its bad, unless it actually is bad, but it isnt at all!

Sure Godzilla didnt have a ton of screentime, and he is very weaker than the previously was, but that make sense since its about the characters planning to stop him, its a movie where he is the enemy, not the one you're cheering on, speaking of which, the characters are great! I like Nick, Audrey, Philippe, everyone! I love the music in this movie too, i freaking love deeper underground! The Story is great, and so are the characters, music is amazing, horror, action, and sometimes comedy aspects are great!

Overrall, an awesome movie in my book, even a great godzilla one!
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10/10
I like this don't care what other thinks
dkgupta49320 May 2021
I like this movie, don't know why other not like movie. It's refresh my childhood when I watch this on HBO in English.
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8/10
Not Bad!
g-bodyl8 June 2008
Godzilla is a better film than I had expected. I brought this film for a cheap price because I wanted to see if this film was entertaining. It was for the most part. This film revolves around a giant monster the size of a dinosaur destroying New York City and having many babies. I think that the plot was pretty good. Some things don't make sense, but this film is just meant for fun. The acting is a little shabby and weak. Matthew Broderick and Jean Reno are fine. Maria Pitillo does need some acting lessons. The soundtrack is great especially the end credits music. The technical stuff for Godzilla was great. The special effects are decent. This film can be scary to little kids. I rate this film a 8/10.
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7/10
Godzilla in New York
jamesrupert201428 January 2018
Many Godzilla purists rejected this CGI-based reinterpretation of the story (#23 in the series) but it is not a bad kaiju outing in its own right. The Toho release (Godzilla vs. Destoroyah, 1995) preceding Emmerich's version continued the trend toward improbable monsters, new-age subplots, and self-righteous greenery and I found the US version to be a refreshing return to the original concept: humanity vs. a single, destructive monster born of radiation. Typical of Emmerich's unsubtle style, everything is very big (Godzilla) or very numerous (e.g. helicopters) and the human drama of the 1954 original, which treats the monster's destructive rampage more as a tragedy than an adventure, is replaced by light-weight shtick, primarily revolving around the Roger Ebert-lookalike mayor (apparently an Emmerich in-joke). Godzilla itself is (IMO) quite well done with a very different look from the original (reflecting 'iguana' rather than 'dinosaur' origins) and the production has fun with the sheer scale of the monster. The opening credit scenes, which establish Godzilla's genesis, are extremely good and the film builds well from there to the arrival of the monster on the shores of Manhattan Island. The cast is fine: Mathew Broderick's playing the scientist who seems to always guess correctly and Maria Pitillo and Hank Azaria as intrepid reporters (both tropes familiar to anyone who has watched the Japanese films). Jean Reno is great as the French secret-service agent trying to ensure that the role France's nuclear tests in creating the current disaster remains unknown and he (and his team) have best lines in the film, riffing on both Gallic unflappability and the challenges of running a clandestine operation in America. Within the context of the film, a general plausibility is maintained (other than reconciling Godzilla's size and its ability to fit in the New York subway system) until the 'third act', an overdone and ridiculous chase scene that is by far the weakest part of the film. Future Japanese entries in the Godzilla franchise make the occasional amusing dig at Emmerich's fish-eating version of the iconic kaiju, but overall, I thought that the film (the 23 outing for the big guy) was was a worthy effort at 'Americanising' Toho's famous monster and liked the film more than most viewers (based on IMDB) and certainly more than most Godzilla-philes.
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9/10
Godzilla, 1998
TCurtis91922 August 2017
I love this film, it's really fun and inventive! Great way to spend a couple of hours.

I am pretty unhappy with the amount of hate the film gets; it's good! Too much CGI for my tastes generally but because I can remember being a little kid in the cinema watching it I've got a soft spot for it.

Performances are good, casting is good, plot is good, music is good, it's all fine! Watch this film! And enjoy it!
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10/10
I've had enough
Agony2 December 1998
Alright, I've had enough. Godzilla was a GREAT movie, and I'm just sick and tired of all the critics and others who view the movie as a complete disaster due to its lack of a story and other problems.

Personally, I don't care. The movie, from day one was meant to be just a big effects laden action movie. It's just for fun. I understood the story. The movie should just be viewed as a fun, blow everything up in your way movie. Don't be so hard. Sit back and enjoy.
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8/10
King of the monster movies!
Wuchakk6 October 2013
I don't get the flack Roland Emmerich's "Godzilla" (1998) receives. The criticisms come in two forms or a combination: (1.) Godzilla purists complain that the monster is different than the one in the classic Godzilla movies, and (2.) others complain that the film is what it is -- a story about a 200-foot tall dino-lizard attacking New York City.

As far as the first point goes, so it deviates from the Japanese Godzilla, so what? The hailed 1982 version of "Conan the Barbarian" deviated a lot from (creator) Robert E. Howard's version but that didn't stop people from loving it. Or how about "Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan" (1984), how faithful was that to Burrough's book? "Godzilla 1998" is an American re-interpretation, what's the big deal? Besides, the behemoth as depicted in the 1954 original "Godzilla" was actually cute. The last time I saw that film it was impossible for me to take Godzilla's attack seriously -- he was too cute! In other words, the filmmakers HAD to change the monster's look to make him more threatening-looking. As for the second point, this is a film about a giant lizard attacking a city, why would anyone expect "Gandhi"?

My title blurb calls this the "king of the monster movies", and so it is! However, the tone is more akin to Indiana Jones than the ultra-serious vibe of, say, "Aliens" or "War of the Worlds". Remember the scene in "Jurassic Park" where the T-Rex chases the vehicle? "Godzilla" has a similar scene except that the monster is 200-feet high rather than 20-feet. Remember the great velociraptor scenes? "Godzilla" has similar scenes except that there are a couple hundred creatures rather than just a few. In short, "Godzilla" is like "Jurassic Park" on total overdrive. This may make it less realistic, but it's arguably more entertaining. In my opinion it is: although the dinosaurs in "Jurassic Park" are great, the story isn't that compelling and the characters are weak. "Godzilla" by contrast has more drive and a better cast.

Speaking of the cast, Matthew Broderick plays the likable protagonist, Maria Pitillo his wannabe-reporter girlfiend, Hank Azaria a photographer, Jean Reno a French military officer intent on destroying the monster, Kevin Dunn the American colonel in charge of the New York operations, Michael Lerner the mayor of New York and Lorry Goldman his aide. The latter two amusingly spoof Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel evidently because these critics trashed Emmerich's previous two films (and I agree that "Independence Day" was lame).

Speaking of Roger Ebert, he of course gave "Godzilla" a very low rating (1.5 Stars) and criticized it like so: "Going to see "Godzilla" at the Palais of the Cannes Film Festival is like attending a satanic ritual in St. Peter's Basilica. It's a rebuke to the faith that the building represents." But isn't this the same same guy who gave 2005's "King Kong" a perfect rating? What's strange with this is, as cartoony and unrealistic as "Godzilla" is, "King Kong" is at least three times worse in this regard; in fact, it's like a live-action Road Runner cartoon (Remember that moronic brontosaurus stampede sequence? Or how about the scene where one guy shoots the big bugs off another guy with a machine gun? You can't get any more stoo-pid). And yet Ebert praises "King Kong", but "Godzilla" is supposedly a terrible film. Not only is this absurd, since "Godzilla" is the better film, but it reveals a double standard. Maybe Ebert is good buddies with Peter Jackson, who knows?

Broderick and Reno shine here and the rest of the cast are effective. The weak point is the women. Maria Pitillo is a quality female protagonist, very cute, but the filmmakers don't do enough with her. Vicki Lewis plays a scientist but her role is very minor. And Arabella Field's role is even smaller (although that's not necessarily a bad thing since her character is so annoying). Needless to say, weak job on this front.

The film also has an entertaining soundtrack, including some "Kashmir."

FINAL SAY: "Godzilla" is just a great turn-off-your-brain-and-have-a-blast flick. It has the fun air of Indiana Jones and The Mummy films. It takes the concept of a giant monster attacking a city and goes totally over-the-top, but not to the ridiculous extent of Jackson's "King Kong" cartoon. Lastly, if you think the only menace to the city is the 200-foot tall creature, you're wrong!

The film runs 139 minutes.

GRADE: A-
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7/10
I like it as a Giant Monster Movie Not as a Godzilla Movie.
I found this version to be pretty fun if you looking at it as a giant monster movie. The story is definitely flawed because it's easily predictable and isn't the best written. There's a lot of illogical things that happen in it and is a complete mess throughout. The movie have a couple of side plot that goes nowhere interesting like Audrey news plotline, the French secret service, and that romance between Nick and Audrey. That romance plot have zero development to it and is rather predictable on the direction it goes. But the strongest part is the giant monster scenes. The movie itself is really enjoyable with the amount of action scenes with Godzilla and the destruction of the city. It contains great special effects and set designed of the destroyed part of the city. Even the movie is suspenseful during the Madison Garden Scene and climax.

The characters themselves are pretty generic and one-dimensional throughout. Most of them have one trait to them and lack any development towards them. The acting is poorly done on the performance of the actors.

As for Godzilla himself, he's pretty interesting on how the movie presented him. While he is nothing like the real Godzilla, I do like his design since he looks pretty cool looking and they do their best on making him feels like a different monster. Also some of the CGI doesn't look bad, but some of it does look bad.

Overall I have fun watching this movie.
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7/10
Good Godzilla.
BA_Harrison29 August 2011
Monster movie purists gave Roland Emmerich's Godzilla a bit of a mauling when it was first released. The reasons for their discontent were multitudinous: it was an Americanised version of a Japanese creation; the new creature design barely resembled the original; the creature changed size throughout the film; there was an over-reliance on CGI; the acting was poor (particularly from Maria Pitiful... sorry, I mean Maria Pitillo); the film turned into Jurassic Park halfway through.

Admittedly, many of these complaints held some degree of water, but what many people neglected to mention was that, despite all of these things, the film was also hugely entertaining—chock full of top notch special effects and spectacular action sequences. Even though, at a whopping 133 minutes, the film is unnecessarily long, I don't think I could ever tire of a huge, mutated lizard stomping Manhattan and have no hesitation in recommending this film to anyone who enjoys big-budget creature features. Sure, it may be dumb, but it's also a lot of fun.
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10/10
Very Good
robertofuiano25 January 2008
The reference to a possible rebellion of nature is certainly right. The danger of a revenge of animals against man is around the corner! The nature against technology. This is one of the best movies about Godzilla! Good, really Good. It has an origin mostly comic but has good special effects. It was inevitable to see negative comments here, is the norm. Cmq a good movie, the environments are good actors suited to the type of film. He certainly part ironic, comic, the environments are very well linked to those of fantascientific and the result can be considered as satisfactory. It is a shame that here there are elements that bring more than 7 film ridiculous as the army of darkness and films such as van helsing a miserable 5. Shame! I disagree with the standards is happening here, I am not convinced. In some cases there are good reviews, in other see that there are some 'too many prejudices against certain films! The reference to a possible rebellion of nature is certainly right. The danger of a revenge of animals against man is around the corner!
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5/10
America butchers Godzilla once again
gizmomogwai23 September 2012
The 1954 Japanese classic film Godzilla is very good as a horror film and a fun movie, which was thankfully recently given Criterion treatment. Alas, in the West the film has not always been available in its true form. In 1956 it was butchered thoroughly, massively edited and manipulated into Godzilla, King of the Monsters!, a goofy movie in badly dubbed English. If that weren't enough, in 1998 the Americans decided to butcher Godzilla again, with a movie about as bad- Godzilla, by the makers of the smash hit Independence Day (1996).

Because of my love of Independence Day as a youth, when I saw Godzilla '98 in theatres I assumed I had to like it, and tried to convince myself it was a good movie, much as with Batman and Robin the year before. Time has made me realize how much of that was self-deception, however. Godzilla '98 is loud and often stupid, and the action scenes never really blew me away. Most of the damage to New York City in the film is done not by Godzilla but by the army trying to kill the creature. The moments of comic relief all fall flat (we were supposed to be rolling over laughing every time someone called Broderick "the worm guy"). The movie repeatedly pulls the same tricks, with people thinking they're clear of danger before Godzilla pops up suddenly again. The dialogue is often painful, as adult characters interact as if they were children ("You were supposed to be my friend, I trusted you.")

Some parts defy logic. Why can't the military ever actually shoot Godzilla? Are we really supposed to believe Godzilla can pick up a car in his mouth and crunch on it but the car and people inside it are still functioning? The Nostalgia Critic also did a good job illustrating how the "Babyzilla" scenes imitate the raptor scenes in Jurassic Park (1993).

Admittedly, I still love this movie's soundtrack. "Macy Day Parade" by Michael Penn and "Untitled" by Silverchair are beautiful songs, though unfortunately they don't seem to be in the film itself, which favours "Come With Me" by Puff Daddy which is only sort of okay because it sounds like "Kashmir." The special effects are mostly good, although we don't actually get a good look at Godzilla besides his feet. The movie also had an attractive ad campaign. One commercial showed Godzilla stepping on and destroying a tyrannosaur fossil, and that unfortunately isn't in the movie either. Ultimately, Godzilla '98 has none of the charm of the Japanese original, and is more of a cliché Hollywood disaster movie.
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2/10
This is not Godzilla
ebiros212 October 2005
This movie could have been good. It could have had a real Godzilla in it with the budget and realism seen only in a good Hollywood movie. But no, for some reason the producers decided to blow up an iguana to Godzilla size and call it Godzilla. Why they did this is just beyond anybody's comprehension. But I guess same thing did happen to Catwoman, and few other icons that made a translation from other medium to the big screen. But this was especially bad because it was a big screen to big screen translation.

Godzilla is supposed to be invincible. Not die with mere missile fires from F-16. Such weakling does not deserve to be called Godzilla even if it looked like Godzilla (which in this case didn't).

Casting was (uh) bad. Story was confusing with so many characters crossing paths but didn't contribute in making the plot better. This includes the baby monster iguanas too.

I'd like to see the real Hollywood Godzilla. Done like the "Last Samurai" which would make the original pale. Anyone up for the challenge ?
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