Shin Ultraman (2022) Poster

(2022)

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7/10
An entertaining retro throwback to Ultraman that's too deadpan for its own good
ObsessiveCinemaDisorder25 October 2022
Shin Ultraman, the second entry in the Shin tokusatsu series, is an entertaining retro throwback to old practical effects kaiju films. Its special effects, shrewdly combining retro scale-model special effects and CGI, has real weight and it brilliantly creates a look of its own. However, Shinji Higuchi's direction is too matter-of-fact for its own good, rendering the film cold when there's no battles happening.

In a reimagining of the Ultraman story, giant unidentified lifeforms known as "S-Class species" begin to emerge on Earth. The Japanese government established the SSSP, the S-Class Species Suppression Protocol, to eliminate all threats.

A mysterious alien entity, dubbed Ultraman, appears to save humanity from the giant monsters.

Shinji Higuchi's last film Shin Godzilla, a satire about government bureaucracy disguised beneath a kaiju movie, was a head scratcher that played better in premise than in execution. The central gag of government staff workers endlessly running into offices drowning in the bureaucratic process, ran dry after twenty minutes.

For Shin Ultraman, writer-director Shinji Higuchi tones down that satirical voice. There's no satirical target here and thus there's less sprinting into offices but the human characters remain cardboard cut-out caricatures.

When there's no monster fight happening, the scenes are just the SSSP staff explaining what needs to be done in the most straight-faced manner with zero subtext, as if they were reading a Wikipedia summary out loud. There's no sense of who these characters are beyond their job description.

Hidetoshi Nikijima, the star of the Oscar-nominated Drive My Car, sadly has no character to play or given any life to breathe into the narrative as the head of the SSSP. With its star-studded Japanese cast, it is just a kaiju-sized opportunity wasted.

It's an odd narrative style that Shin Higuchi has chosen. The film is either complete showing or complete telling. There's no hiding exposition under natural-sounding conversational dialogue.

I fundamentally don't understand why the film is so deliberately distant and allergic to human emotions. Imagine if an alien remade Ultraman and only focused on the battles and just wanted to rush through the talky scenes. Shinji Higuchi is not an alien, but just choosing to be one for some reason.

What won me over about Shin Ultraman was the special effects, an intriguing combination of old school and modern CGI. Together with the film's retro look, it achieves a unique look of its own, especially in its kaiju battle sequences.

I have fond childhood memories of watching Ultraman and Japanese kaiju TV shows. The visual of two costumed actors fighting in a miniaturized city always looked convincing. When computer effects took over in mainstream films in the 2000s, miniatures got left behind. The weight of things was gone. I wondered why so few filmmakers hadn't combined miniatures with CGI.

In Shin Ultraman, that combination of old and new special effects is used to great effect. It retained the weight of things. Many times, my eyes couldn't distinguish whether it was a scale model or CG-it always seems in-between the two. My eyes just believed it and it viscerally transported me back to seeing Ultraman on TV when I was ten, which was amazing.

Sure, Ultraman's beam looks fake in that retro way. However, when Ultraman and the kaiju wrestle and crash into the miniature buildings, there's real weight. When Ultraman flies, it looks like a real man being pulled up into the air. When things explode, it looks like a real bomb went off.

Hopefully, movie audiences who are used to seeing Hollywood CGI blockbusters can keep an open mind and not dismiss this artistry as "retro for retro's sake". I'm glad there are filmmakers keeping miniatures alive.

Overall, I feel half and half about Shin Ultraman. It's really fun in a kitschy retro kind of way. But by the third act, I was yearning for more subtext and something deeper from the script other than what the characters plan to do next. That depth never came and it left me cold when the credits rolled.

I wouldn't sit through Shin Ultraman again in its entirety, but I'd happily watch the fights again or any special features behind the filming of the miniatures.
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7/10
Decently Entertaining But Lacking In Pretty Much Everything
KenLinx25 October 2022
The CGI is passable, the acting is passable, the fight scenes are decently choreographed, and the filmmaking is exquisite. However, almost everything about this film has a caveat.

As someone who'd watched all the original Showa series, the sound effect/art homage decisions were extremely welcome. Unfortunately, as with the rest of the film, nothing is ever perfect. Instead of giving the fans a completely faithful Ultraman with all the shticks we've learned to love like the color timer, the grunts, the human-like exhaustion-staggering, they decided to cut all of that in favor of a "shin" (new) design claimed to be based on the original concept art of the late designer for the original Ultraman. This new design, unluckily, isn't memorable or aesthetically pleasing in the slightest. I simply don't understand how they can have such immaculate attention to detail on the references of the original sound effects, poses, special moves, and art splashes, yet completely undercut what matters most in the visual design.

The story is surprisingly unpredictable. Although it utilizes many tropes, every time I thought the film was about to have its penultimate final fight, the fight ends abruptly and suddenly there came a bigger threat. This is what I appreciated about the story. And yet, again, the shortcomings are impossible to ignore.

The characters are incredibly bland and one-note. Neither the characters or their relationships were built up properly. The film doesn't even attempt to give a reason as to why the SSSP team would have an attachment to Ultraman's extremely unlikable human host, and yet they do anyway. The film does however like to shovel blatant exposition down the viewers' throats to move the story forward.

Of all its faults, the cinematography was pretty great. There weren't spastic unnecessary cuts in the fights. Even in the most boring of scenes, there was always something to appreciate about the unique angles the scene is shot at.
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6/10
A bit of fun, but also a bit disappointing.
Jeremy_Urquhart16 July 2023
I was very excited for Shin Ultraman, and jumped at the chance to see it as part of a film festival. I'd given up on expecting it to get a cinema release in Australia, so this seemed like the only chance to see it on the big screen. It was at a cinema that always shows movies in their original language (even when they screen old Studio Ghibli and Miyazaki movies), so it was disappointing that they had a dubbed version. I've heard worse dubs - mostly from older movies, usually in the martial arts genres - but even if it wasn't a terrible dub, it still ruined most of the humor. You can understand certain lines and moments as comedic, but without them being in their original language, it's not genuinely funny; more just, "Oh, I assume that's funny."

Dub aside, I still think I would've been slightly disappointed with this even if I'd watched it the way it was intended. It's oddly paced, and features action that progressively gets less exciting as the film goes on. There are certain fun sequences that balance being silly and cool well, but I felt the action generally ran out of steam after about the first hour or so. And then it kept feeling like it was building to a climax, only for the scene not to be the climax, and then on and on until it eventually ended.

The character stuff is all acceptable, and having the human storyline intersect with the giant monster stuff by having a man who can transform into Ultraman is a nice way to bridge what often feels like separate parts of the same kaiju movie. It feels like Shin Godzilla in parts, when it comes to the human stuff, but never feels quite as cutting or clever as that film was, with its satirical elements and the way it unapologetically mocked bureaucracy.

For some fun action and spectacle, I think it would've been a decent watch if it had been in Japanese with subs. The dubbed version I'd give lower than a 6/10, but I won't knock the film overall for that; I'm trying to imagine how I'd feel if the version I'd watched had been the proper one. And I do ultimately think I still would've felt disappointed by the final half-hour or so of this, the pacing, and the familiarness of many of its sci-fi concepts, even if there is still a bit of fun to be had within its two-hour runtime.
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7/10
Amazing!! Just amazing even if you are not a fan!!
mohammadirfan27424 May 2022
What a movie!! Shin ultraman is a love letter for a ultraman fans and even if you are not a fan, This movie is just amazing and treat to watch!! Great CGI, nostalgic evil Characters and most importantly the direction!! Everything was just amazing and really new to watch!! Worth giving a try for not a fan and ofcourse for the fans.. this is a must watch for you guys!! And yes! Nagasawa masami is a MVP!!!
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7/10
Sometimes it lacking something
bondmanuel6 October 2022
All those kinda negative review is almost all true and happen to me. But still there something we can enjoy like several first fight is interesting but not that memorable. CGI also not that bad its still comparable with shin godzilla. Maybe with less destruction effects. Just hoping this movie gonna revived Ultraman but for me it gonna be hard to gained new fans from this movie. Is hard because sometimes the story is good and had nice pace. But then there's some unnecessary scene, plots hole, also those romantic wannabe is really bad. Also how the camera capturing main female is disturbing for me it just really unnecessary.
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7/10
It is a OK
ginesdaisuki15 May 2022
Warning: Spoilers
I was concerned what if this movie would be disappointing us like Shin-Godzilla before I watched this movie. Because I am a huge fan of ultraman series since I was kid. The director might destroy our ultraman images.

But it is not so bad. Actually i like this one. But I don't get it the end scene. It comes suddenly and I expected following reasonable scene but there is no more film. Like cut 5 or 10 minutes by mistake. Also the scene which is suddenly finished fight with Alien Mefilas. His morphed human character is nice, captured the original one. I thought alien Mefilas more involves in the story, but he gone almost abruptly without certain reason. This move's Some of parts I don't get it, but it entertained me. That's good side.

Lastly the actor who plays ultraman morphed himan, Takumi Saito is well done. His voice is attractive. So based on the above, it is enjoyable movie. Attractive. So based on the above, it is enjoyable movie.
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3/10
For Diehard Fans
Gleunji15 September 2022
This could be the end of Ultraman.

Another unnecessary reboot which could be interesting if the origin story was actually exciting. Weak characters with pointless plot, a try hard comedic, and a villain that is less interesting than brainless monster.

For a country with highest technology, I expected the CGI to be better, but it's just like watching animation. Better off using a man in costume. Even the series are way better.

But seriously, unless you are a diehard fan, it's best to save your time and not watching this boring, actionless film. You won't miss anything, as the film doesn't build up to something else.
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8/10
A Love Letter for The Fans But Still Need More Improvements
geraldkweesar14 October 2022
After waiting for more than 5 months waiting for an international release, finally here it is, Shin Ultraman, and a review of it.

Shin Ultraman starts with a really great introduction to its universe, the problem they're facing, human characters, and our hero Ultraman himself.

The introduction is short but the director succeed at showing the audience everything in less than 2 minutes, even for the people who have never see Ultra-Q or the original Ultraman series can understand it very well.

The film pacing feels great up until the end of the first phase. All of a sudden the plot became very rushed and it feels like some elements from the original series are cramped into the script only to please the fans who have seen it.

CGI was an OK, still need a lot of work in some scenes, especially with the motion of the characters, but the rest are just acceptable.

I believe it will be a much better film is the duration is at least 20 minutes longer.

Conclusion: For the fans of old era's Tokusatsu, especially Ultra series will undoubtedly love this film with all of its references, but for those who's not a fan will probably struggle to reach the end of the film~
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7/10
Well made
ashfordofficial17 October 2022
1. A reimagining of Ultraman and the 37th film in the Ultraman franchise. The second live-action installment in Hideaki Anno's Shin Japan Heroes Universe. An epic tokusatsu entry with brilliant and realistic practical and visual effects combined with outstanding battle choreography. Well written dialogues with humour and political awareness regarding Japan's weak government bureaucracy and United States' over dominance in Japan's internal affairs.

2. A reimagining of Ultraman and the 37th film in the Ultraman franchise. The second live-action installment in Hideaki Anno's Shin Japan Heroes Universe. An epic tokusatsu entry with brilliant and realistic practical and visual effects combined with outstanding battle choreography. Well written dialogues with humour and political awareness regarding Japan's weak government bureaucracy and United States' over dominance in Japan's internal affairs.
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3/10
Overexpected..
rtrsgwr14 May 2022
I love the director's last film "Shin Godzilla" because it focuses on bureaucratic struggles as well as visually astonishing creatures messing around actual cities in Tokyo. That authenticity was quite new to me and contributes the film's mult-layered attractiveness. As of the latest one of Shin series, those factors are mostly diminished and replaced by awkward plays of a heroine who has been one of the most popular (but not much talented) actors in Japan.
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9/10
I am not a boomer but ultraman is my childhood
lolihentai-569436 July 2022
I understand the design philosophy behind most of the scene and its a homage to OG ultraman hayate. If you have been watching ultraman since your childhood you know ultraman is actually a dark and entertaining story with alot of meaning treat it like eva. It is depressing at time but ultraman signify the light to your dark times. Thats why hikari is a word been used over and over again. If your new and just judge based on omg idk whats going on go and find the meaning behind it there.you may find your answers.
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7/10
Very fast paced, still enjoy it
hiraishinnojutsu1 November 2022
5 episodes crammed into almost 2 hour of duration! For a non-fan and first timer (meaning first time watching the original ultraman or it's modern reincarnation) like me, it's quiet annoying and confusing since it doesn't give us much time to know, root, or sympathize with any of the characters. But for the fans of the original series (the 60's version), it's quiet probably gonna be a nostalgia trip with all the namedrops, the designs, and even the fight choreography that pay homage to the original source material. Love the fact that the Anno made sense some of the elements from the original series to appeal to the updated modern science and technology while making sure the movie doesn't lose its fantasy status. It's always a win to a science enthusiast like me everytime a filmmaker gets the science right or at least sounds plausible to audiences with different levels of science comprehension even though it's beyond applicable in real life.

7.5/10.
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3/10
Just INSULTING in every single way possible!
isamuominae24 October 2022
I grew up watching the Showa original Ultraman TV series as a kid and means a lot of my childhood, still thinking that is a amazing achievement 56 years ago with no modern technology they could made that show.

But the last decent Ultraman made was the TV series Ultraman 80 in 1980/81. After that Tsuburaya halted productions, returned like 15 years late and decide new approach using JPOP boy bands instead actors as protagonists, really bizarre computer graphics and horrible/cheap scripts... those newly TV series never worked once over past two decades like was on the Showa series.

This time is worse, even with more budget and a "reboot" as excuse. Mediocre writing, really a hideous script, not convincing acting, very bizarre computer graphics, few decent pratical effects and whatever else.

This "flick" is pretty much is a slap in face.

Hard to process how bad is, was clearly made for kids, newcomers or fanatic public that are satisfied with the current mediocre quality of the Ultra franchise over past decades consuming everything without bother with quality.

If you really enjoyed those retro Showa Ultraman series, you will hate this one. Nothing in this movie can be saved, only the soundtrack have homages to the original TV series... but overall was a sad experience and waste of time.

Avoid all costs and go watch the old Showa TV series, is way more rewarding than watch this abomination.

Tsuburaya is pretty much dead intellectually now.

Is a very sad reality, their legacy is only the past (Showa only) because the present is totally forgettable and the future is pretty much inexistent when the subject is quality.

Lucasfilm can still deliver decently Star Wars projects, even sometimes they miss over past decades. Same rule apply to CBS Paramount with Star Trek franchise.

Tsuburaya? Nope.

Seems a lost case, very a sad one.
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7/10
Ulasan Dan pendapat tentang film Shin Ultraman
animewagaku5 November 2022
I think this is pretty good, the plot is unpredictable, the minuses in this film's scene scene are that the movement is very fast, so there are parts that should be good, so it's uncomfortable. But this film has a lot of advantages that are highlighted, namely fighting. The cinematography is also quite good and there are many words that are catchy and I like the characterizations that are mefilas in their goals. Instead of saving, they want to control the earth and its contents. So it's ok for this film because as a cure for the longing for the Ultraman series, especially Shin Ultraman, it is still worth watching and watching because there are many advantages in it, especially For lovers of the Tokusatsu series, especially Francise Ultraman, Hopefully the next film can be better and memorable in the hearts of the viewers and connoisseurs of Tokusatsu Ultraman.
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7/10
Shin Ultraman (2022)
thecinephilereviews29 January 2023
Best known for creating the popular anime 'Neon Genesis Evangelion.' Hideaki Anno serves as writer, co-producer and co-editor in this new adaptation of the 1960's character Ultraman. An extraterrestrial "dubbed" Ultraman crash lands on Planet Earth and becomes humanity's sworn protector, with the aid of the S-Class Species Suppression Protocol (SSSP) established by the Japanese government.

Modern Japan has evolved into a new battleground for giant creatures known as "Kaiju" to wreak havoc. Upon taking human form and living as one with the population to have an understanding of the human species. Ultraman concludes that mankind is worth dying for, and altruistically risks his life for the greater good. The audience is treated to bombastic action sequences, well-baked choreography and various fighting techniques from our champion which raises the entertainment value. The CGI is pretty outdated and don't translate well in certain scenes. But I wanted to overlook this flaw as I was devoted towards immersing myself in this universe. A large criticism I have is the narrative's lack of coherency. It contains an episodic structure where five stories are condensed into one feature. Making it difficult to engross ourselves into the storyline with too many subplots and a heavy amount of exposition to follow. This made the experience a bit tedious to say the least.

Despite the underdevelopment of the characters, they were likable as they had specific traits that helped them stand out. Whether it be Takumi Saitoh as the determined Ultraman or Masami Nagasawa as newcomer Hiroko Asami, delivering a humorous and charismatic portrayal of his "buddy" within the SSSP. Her onscreen presence was a favorite of mine. As the credits began to roll, I yearned for more substance due to the interesting premise. The storyline could have had a broader impact on the viewer, if fleshed out by the writer.

IG: thecinephilereviews.
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6/10
Ultra wild at times
Horst_In_Translation26 February 2023
Warning: Spoilers
"Shin Ultraman" is a fairly new Japanese movie from 2022 that is also in the Japanese language and if you pay close enough attention, then you will also come some English and Russian very briefly apparently. I am not entirely sure about the runtime here, but it is definitely somewhere between 110 and 120 minutes, so the two-hour mark is not far away in any case. This is fairly fitting because there is a 2016 film named "Shin Gojira" and that one runs for two hours indeed and you see the title is similar in terms of the first word at least and Shinji Higuchi and Hideaki Anno worked together on this film back then too and for this film from over five years ago, they were co-directing, but here Higuchi is the director and Anno is the writer and this is not a given if you take a look at the gigantic amount of films that Anno has directed throughout his career. Both of them are around the age of 60 now by the way. One is slightly under, the other slightly older, but this can of course have changed a lot already if it takes you a little longer to get here and read this review of mine. I am a bit surprised this film scored hardly any awards attention at all. I see one nomination for the visual effects, but this is apparently it and looks to me as if the movie is also released now in most countries and areas of the world, so I am not sure it will come out anywhere in the future. I saw it today as some kind of special event. Otherwise, I probably also would not have come across it. There was no really big release here in Germany I think. I doubt I would not have heard from it otherwise, so most likely the film went a lot under the radar.

With the cast, I cannot really say a lot here. Japanese movie buffs will probably recognize more than I did. Akari Hayami looks pretty stunning, but I guess they decided to hide it pretty much with her glasses and haircut to make sure that nobody is really competition here in terms of looks for Masami Nagasawa, who is also the closest this film has to a female lead. One I must mention 100% is Hidetoshi Nishijima and he is of course the lead actor from "Drive My Car", the film that won the foreign language category at the Oscars not too long ago. Very easy to identify the actor, even if I must say I did not remember the name. Maybe my loss. It was always nice though when he was on the screen, which sadly did not happen a lot of the time here. The material the actor had was a bit on the underwhelming side, even if you could surely feel his great screen presence. But this is never a film that is about the actors really anyway. It is all about the sci-fi component almost from beginning to end here. I personally preferred the beginning or the first half of the film I should say. At the very start, they rushed in some big creatures that posed a threat to Japan and they also told how they managed to eventually defeat those creatures. There is a new one coming though that creates a great deal of havoc and said creature is on its way to a facility that it may not reach under any circumstance.

Luckily, for all the human protagonists in here, an almost God-like giant that they call Ultraman shows up right on time to stop the creature and the creature is defeated and gone. I like the idea how it devoured electricity and this electricity made it visible and without the electricity you could not see it. In the second half, Ultraman is then rather up against characters that look a bit more like humans, but the truth is they are all aliens. Ultraman himself is also exposed as he was in disguise before that and seemed to be a perfectly normal human, well not too normal but he was a bit of a loner apparently. I must say the longer the film went, the more bizarre it became and I also found the story more and more difficult to understand. Had it been always like in the last 40 minutes, I would have given an even lower rating here, but luckily it was rock-solid early on. It was a very gimmicky film at times. The entire first hour almost is a huge tribute to old Japanese monster movies and pretty enjoyable as such. Made me curious to watch some of those for sure. Another thing I found fascinating here is the comedic aspect. All the comedy comes from exaggerated sci-fi moments and depictions you can say, at least if I am going by where the audience from my screening laughed the most. The only moment that was a bit of an exception maybe was when we see another extraterrestrial character shake hands with the Prime Minister of Japan. Everybody was laughing there, but everything else had all kinds of supernatural components and not necessarily as much situational comedy. The exaggeration was the key to comedic entertainment there, even if I would definitely not call this film a comedy. It will make you smile though.

Some of the laughs from my crowd were honestly as exaggerated as the film itself here and there. I found it interesting though how there is never the slightest bit of comedy at all to the dialogues here. They always mean business 100%. Interesting that a film with this approach still makes so many people laugh. The ending was in a way a feel-good ending then. The planet is saved and the title character, in his human form, is back on Earth again. Maybe not too realistic with what he went right before that, but still. I do wonder though why he cared so much about the Earth at all. I mean he is literally ready to lose everything if he can save our planet and its inhabitants, even if he is saved in the end then too. There are some really bizarre moments in here that come out of nowhere like when we see the female protagonist suddenly being really big as well. This also did not add a lot in terms of the story. Then there is this moment in which Ultraman rather early, after having defeated the dino-like creature pulls him up as if he was a feather and flies off to take him somewhere where he can never threaten mankind again. I guess gravity was not a really big thing in this movie. As for the protagonist's identity, you could kinda guess it after the second time the human character turns into Ultraman and when immediately afterwards we see him in his human form again and how he shows up there, there was clearly something going on. After the first fight, I did not see it happen. By the way, where did this dino creature then learn to dig through the ground/soil anyway?

So yeah, there is some good to this film and also some not so good, but all in all I would say that the film's strengths and decent moments are more frequent than the film's weaknesses, even if it is far from a perfect film. Just pointless fun I would call it for the most part. I am still not sure if the one camera shot at the female protagonist during her introduction and where the camera is pointing to exactly was intended in a slightly sleazy fashion or if it was mere coincidence there. We cannot know for sure unless we ask the director. But this was just a minor aspect anyway. I think this is it then. I give "Shin Ultraman" a thumbs-up overall and I wonder if Higuchi and Anno will release other "Shin..." films in the next few years. I would maybe watch again, even if not overly enthusiastic. This one here ends in a way where you could say that a sequel is possible, but then again Ultraman was basically up against such strong forces here that an equally big challenger, let alone a bigger one seems unlikely. So yeah go see this film, either the entire thing or just the first 45 minutes. I liked it there the most how it combined old Japanese movie monsters with the film age of superheroes (Marvel etc.). This is where "Shin Ultraman" shone the most.
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2/10
poorly told premature story without mise en scène.
yokozunafabi16 May 2022
Re-review. Its is based on the mythology of the Theft of fire, and the titular Ultraman as the trickster. Despite its concrete plot, its ruined by 112 min of recital of importunate lines without any character development nor emotional expression. Though it claims to be a "Science Fiction Film" from its title, its absent from social commentary, artistic expression, ideas, nor acting. Not even a story. It is a patchwork of favorite scenes from the original "Ultraman," stitch together with prematurely understood ideas, and filled with easter eggs that serves very little purpose. Its an expensive "fan made video." But, hardly a "film" with mise en scéne.
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8/10
Shin Ultraman is a magnificent addition to the modern monster universe, a definite must-see
kevin_robbins18 November 2023
I recently watched Shin Ultraman (2022) on Amazon Prime. The plot revolves around Japan facing relentless attacks from gigantic monsters, prompting the creation of a government task force. Despite their meaningless efforts, a silver robot-like creature appears miraculously, effortlessly destroying the monsters. The government agency strives to understand the origin and nature of this metallic being.

Directed by Shinji Higuchi (Shin Godzilla) and featuring Takumi Saitoh (13 Assassins), Masami Nagasawa (Mother), Hidetoshi Nishijima (License to Live), and Akari Hayami (Zom 100: BucketListers of the Dead).

This movie is truly impressive. The monsters are meticulously crafted, providing a realistic feel. The CGI, appearance, and demeanor of each monster are outstanding. Ultraman's powers, showcased in action scenes, are tremendous, eliciting empathy for the monsters. The transformation scenes are equally captivating. While there's some CGI overuse (flying humans were comical), the storyline has a strong setup and premise, though the ending falls slightly short, opting for an epiphany over an epic monster battle.

In conclusion, Shin Ultraman is a magnificent addition to the modern monster universe, a definite must-see. I'd rate this a solid 8/10 and highly recommend it.
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7/10
The Ultraman tokusatsu meets arthouse
darkmax2 October 2022
There are those that dissed this movie because they do not understand the way it is done in. This is not the Ultraman series that aired in Japan on Sunday mornings in the days long gone. Neither is it for those who have no idea about its premise. This is Higuchi's homage to the original series in a more arthouse format. The dialogues are few and sometimes infer more than what is said. The way the some of the scenes are framed is a pure homage to the old series, especially the macronization of Ultraman.

One will also notice a few cast members who appeared in Shin Godzilla appearing in similar roles here. Is this some sort of connection between the two movies? We shall see.
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3/10
I really didn't like it.
Skipfishh14 March 2023
I'm a super fan of the early Ultraman era, it marked my childhood. Both the "Ultraman" (1966-1967) series, whose protagonist was Shin Hayata, and "Return of Ultraman" (1971-!972), with the giant hero's body passing to Hideki Gô's responsibility. Even as an adult, I watched it several times.

When I saw the first teasers of this new film appearing, I was very excited, it reminded me a lot of this nostalgic Ultraman of yesteryear, very different from the modern Ultraman of the last decades, it seemed that I would meet my favorite childhood hero again (along with Batman). Mistake, what a crappy movie.

In addition to being poorly done (okay, Ultraman has always been poorly done), the script is confusing and bad, the soundtrack is terrible, and the film can't decide between ancient and modern Ultraman, it doesn't fit anywhere. The resemblance to the original Ultraman exists in appearance and appearance alone, that's all, everything else is completely lost.

All of this would be acceptable if only it were a good movie in every other respect, but no, nothing is saved. Anything. Real crap.

I rate it 3 out of 10 for Ultraman's nostalgic look alone. The film takes 0 out of 10.
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10/10
Magnificent movie worthy of Tsuburaya's creation
wcw4392112 January 2023
A giant in red and silver.

A warrior of light from beyond the stars.

In our time of greatest need, he comes swiftly to our aid.

He--is Ultraman.

I had high hopes for this movie, and it did not disappoint. I was a fan of the original Ultraman in 1966, and this is a reimaging of that series, compressed into about two hours. The SSSP (Science Patrol in the American dub of the series) doesn't have the fancy weapons and vehicles of the original, but they seem to get along without them. I liked the actors in the movie, especially Masami Nagasawa, who plays Hiroko Asami new to the SSSP from Japan's intelligence service. (I find her quite fetching, and I shall have to learn more about her.)

One of the first sites I found on the internet when I joined online with my little WebTV set was Wayne Koizumi's Absolute Ultraman. It had just about everything you could know about every Ultraman series and movie made, and then some. I was so disappointed when he took the site down--it was like a longtime friend had moved away. I hope he's well, and liked this movie as much as I did.

This movie has a two-night showing in American theaters--last night was a subtitled version, and tonight's (1-12) will be dubbed in English. If there is any movie that is best appreciated by seeing it in the theater, it is this one.
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7/10
A Love Letter For Classic Tokusatsu Fans
TheGrox12 October 2022
Shin Ultraman really is a movie made by fans and for fans, you can really see the passion behind it shines through in the work with the reference & little nods to the classic show here and there while still being its own thing and not being overly relying on them

Shin Ultraman kinda feels like "Rebuild of Evangelion" of The Ultraman franchise, i guess it make sense considering the people who worked on Rebuild of Evangelion (Hideaki Anno & Shinji Higuchi) also worked on this too, so the style and vibe kinda rubbed off into this movie

it faithfully captures the spirit of the Original 66 Ultraman show not just by using classic design, sound effect, & amazingly remade soundtrack (which are composed & arranged by the talented Shiro Sagisu) but also by understanding the core theme massage & philosophy of the classic show while still putting its own spin to it by adding stuffs like social & political commentary in them

but the movie aint perfect i feel like the movie is structured kinda weird, it felt like watching 5 different episodes instead of a 1 cohesive movie and also the CGI while it looks amazing most of the times it can look wonky sometimes i hope they improve that in the sequel but overall its a must watch for a tokusatsu fans..
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5/10
Nostalgic but full of pedantic as always
diversitytetsu14 May 2022
It revealed that Anno's fundamental Policy for his "Shin-" world must be "Full of pedantic, which aims at making spectators puzzled and then feel inferiority leading to illusion making his work deserve great appreciation by overwhelmingly arcane jargons. His screenplay is tactically woven at the level where audience can follow quite marginally. That tone of his work would work as a hypnotic pill making audience anxious first, but finally amazingly excited with full of dopamine. I remember that he confessed the strategy once in certain TV program. We will see the same culture in coming next Shin-Masked Rider.
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7/10
Solid Adaptation of a Classic Show
Reviews_of_the_Dead14 January 2023
This is a movie that I got the chance to see when my brother-in-law Pete invited me. He won tickets to the Gateway Film Center. What is funny is that he had no idea what this was. I had never seen an episode or any of the iterations of this hero. I did at least have an idea of who Ultraman was and bit of what we would get. This kicked off with an introduction from I believe the director, Shinji Higuchi. That set the stage.

We get a crash course of the world that this takes place in. It is ours, but Japan is being attacked by 'S-Class Species'. We would know them as kaiju. A defense force is created to deal with these. This includes different types of scientists as they help to identify and catalogue. One day, things take a turn. A giant man in a silver suit appears. He is referred to as Ultraman. He defeats a kaiju with ease. This makes Earth a target by extraterrestrials. Ultraman will need to decide to stay and fight or leave to protect humanity.

So, even though I had an idea of what I was getting here, it didn't fully prepare me. This felt to me like they took three or four episodes of the television show. One would end and the next problem would begin. This moves at such a fast pace that it was hard to follow in the beginning. I did settle in though. It seems like I'm just slamming this. I don't want that to be what you think. Seeing Ultraman fight the kaiju in the beginning was fun. If anything, I wanted them to slow that down to do more of. This is more of Ultraman dealing with other aliens. That also plays into commentary.

That is where I'll go. This feels a lot like Shin Godzilla, just toned down a bit. We see that there are government organizations that don't necessarily work well together. Each one wants the glory. There are also sediments of the United States with a negative light. As an American, I get it. We do step in and take things. We also do what we can to ensure no one gets more powerful than us. It feels like this movie is pushing to have Japan rise back to being a world power. I don't think there's anything wrong with this either.

Other than that, I'd say that the acting is good. They go a bit over the top at times, but I think that is in line with previous iterations. Takumi Saitoh was good as Shinji Kaminaga. Masami Nagasawa was quite attractive. I liked her as Hiroko Asami. I like the rest of their team as well. The effects here rely quite a bit on CGI. That's fine. I preferred doing things with suits, but I acknowledge that is more expensive. The effects here aren't bad though. This is well-made. I will give them that. With the almost two-hour runtime, this flies by.

All then I'll say to end this out is that this wasn't for me. I don't hate it. I wonder if I went back and watched the original stuff and then came into this if it would work better for me. That might be something I do one day.

My Rating: 6.5 out of 10.
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6/10
Pretty good but expected more
Jithindurden1 January 2024
I have maybe seen a couple of episodes of Ultraman as a kid and don't even know which era it is from. So, I didn't really get any references in this. It starts off like it's a sequel to Shin Godzilla, as Japan is constantly inder kaiju attacks and the fast-paced meetings and conferences to deal with it. But it slowly changed the pace and kind of turned into feeling like a TV show. The characters are given more importance here but everyone is designed to be weird which isn't necessarily bad but as the film relies on that connection it didn't completely work either. The kaijus, the mind-controlling and shapeshifting alien villains etc seemed to be something these Tokusatsu genre films love. Even though the alien villains' plans are much like how they'd do it in the old days, the way they presented them made them feel exactly like politicians which I enjoyed really well. The film is often very silly but doesn't really embrace that and even tries to be philosophical at times which just feels like a confused attempt more than anything. Not a bad start of the year, but a bit disappointing considering the reputation of these films.
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