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A Critical History and Filmography of Toho's Godzilla Series

A Critical History and Filmography of Toho's Godzilla Series

List Price: $48.50
Your Price: $48.50
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Unhealthy Cult Book....
Review: The author seems to go on and on and be really obssessed with these movies and on the people who make them. Godzilla was okay for the 1960's, but today in this age of over-doing things, Godzilla has regretfully become unhealthy cult entertainment, whose fans are geeks that have no life. This book is prove of that.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Best of the Godzilla Film books. Excellent!!!
Review: As a long time fan of Godzilla films, I'm always on the lookout for new books on the subject. I must say that Kalat's book is among the best I've ever seen, and is unique in that it studies the films from a cultural and sociological standpoint. Kalat's text is clear, his facts are correct, and his observations are interesting and often enlightening.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: An excellent look at Godzilla from a cultural standpoint.
Review: As a long time fan of Godzilla films, I'm always on the lookout for new books on the subject. I must say that Kalat's book is among the best I've ever seen, and is unique in that it studies the films from a cultural and sociological standpoint. Kalat's text is clear, his facts are correct, and his observations are interesting and often enlightening.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Great Book ... Not Only for Godzilla Fans !
Review: I am not a Godzilla fan (I don't dislike them; I am neutral towards them). But this book is amazing even if you don't care about the movies, because like them or not, Godzilla movies are an important part of our modern culture. This book is detailed, interesting, always enlightening, and very often hilarious to read. A great book can be a pleasure to read even for those who would not be interested in the subject. This is such a book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The BEST Godzilla Book!
Review: Quite Simply the best book on Godzilla. Thoughtful, Informative, insightful, Never stooping to the level of "gee, I loved this film when I was 12 so it MUST be great!" A type of "critical " writing too often encountered in fan oriented reviews, as well as a few more recent books to come out.If you love godzilla, the good AND the bad (yes children, there is such a thing as a BAD Godzilla Film...just watch Megalon, Gigan,godzillas revenge, King kong vs...ETC..)Get this book Now!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The BEST Godzilla Book!
Review: Quite Simply the best book on Godzilla. Thoughtful, Informative, insightful, Never stooping to the level of "gee, I loved this film when I was 12 so it MUST be great!" A type of "critical " writing too often encountered in fan oriented reviews, as well as a few more recent books to come out.If you love godzilla, the good AND the bad (yes children, there is such a thing as a BAD Godzilla Film...just watch Megalon, Gigan,godzillas revenge, King kong vs...ETC..)Get this book Now!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Best of the Godzilla Film books. Excellent!!!
Review: Several books have been published in the last year or two. Some only ok, a few quite good. This volume stands as the best, mostly on the strength of the authors well thought out critical evaluations of the movies. Unlike "The Monsters are Attacking Tokyo" and Japans Favorite Mon-Star" (both fine books ) Kalats writing is less fannish.more ballanced.Not as prone to regard the original films (at least the Honda Movies made between 1954-1969) as above more than the most gentle form of critical evaluation. Lets be honest here. Of the original 15 movies made up to 1975. Only 4 can be regarded as good to excellent. The original, Godzilla vs Mothra, Monster Zero and Destroy All Monsters. And the last two are quite silly (but Fun) The rest are a mixed bag, to say the least. Kalats book gives a mature look at all the godzilla films, Without an automatic dismisal of the more recent films as "lesser. His writing is excellent. His facts plentiful. A terriffic Read and a MUST for any fan of Godzilla, or Films in gereral. Great job!!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Japanese & American cultures view Godzilla differently.
Review: There are, of course, any number of books providing Godzilla's fans with critical filmographies of the movies and behind-the-scenes histories of their production. But David Kalat has done added something different to the tale.

"A Critical History and Filmography of Toho's Godzilla Series" (McFarland & Company, Inc.) is a book that might well have been called "A Cultural History . . ." In it, Kalat goes beyond the familiar telling of "how they did it" to tell the story of what the Godzilla has come to mean to his two biggest audiences, the Japanese and the Americans. The format of the book is familiar enough - a chapter for each film, beginning with a synopsis and continuing with the story of it's production and a critical appraisal. But each chapter is not meant to stand alone. This book has a running narrative describing the different ways the films have been received on opposite sides of the Pacific up to "Godzilla vs. Destroyer."

The story of the often profitable, but often tense, relationship between the Japanese producers and American viewers is detailed here as in few other books. And the tension that often exists between Japanese producers and Japanese viewers, and among the producers themselves, has never been described in as much detail as in Kalat's book. (Not in English, anyway.) For instance, in the second half of the Heisei series, Toho began actively pitching it's kaiju stories towards women, who make up the majority of Japan's moviegoing audience. Did you ever think of "Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla 2" as a chick flick? This is how Toho planned and presented it.

Kalat provides seperate chapters for the first King Kong, Rodan and Mothra films, to show the reader how they blended into, and influenced, Godzilla's world. Other chapters throughout the book describe Godzilla's "extracurricular activities" in television and merchandising. One chapter, "Godzilla vs. Ultraman,"

shows how Toho fell under the influence of it's own televised imitators in the early '70s, and how this influence showed up in the movies.

"A Critical History . . ." was published in 1997, when TriStar's "Godzilla" was still in production. But there is a chapter describing the various false starts of an American Godzilla film up to that time. It is a longer story than many fans might suspect.

David Kalat does an excellent job of telling the story of how the Godzilla's films came to be. He provides a bibliography and hundreds of reference notes, which is a good thing, because there will be many times when you find yourself flipping back to the notes to find out "where did he learn that?" But he's done something more important than that. He tells us why anyone should care about Godzilla. He shows us what the films mean, from more than one point of view. The tension between the points of view is the focus of his book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A great resource book
Review: This book had nothing but cold heart information. It was a sweet book :-

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: All the info you'll EVER need on Godzilla
Review: This book is GREAT! The KING of any and all Godzilla books. Kalat does a great job of showing how the American press and America in general missed much of what Godzilla is all about thanks to the way the movies were shown in America. He explains who godzilla is in the context of Japanese culture. A great index covers everything.


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