Tuesday 18 August 2020

Gamera, The Giant Monster (1965) Review

 

 

 

As the 1960s saw a boom in the Kaiju film genre, there was one giant turtle in particular looking to be a true rival to the King of the Kaiju himself, Godzilla.
His name was Gamera, and in 1965 came his first movie Gamera, The Giant Monster.
And while it was success and spawned a franchise inlcuding at present, 12 movies, this first film isn't exactly Gojira, in fact, when compared to the majority Godzilla's other movies,
at this early stage, Gamera seems less like a rival and more like a bargain bin cousin.

Now to be fair, it didn't have the biggest budget and that smooth of a production, and I certainly don't think the movie isn't enjoyable becuase I do like it.
But it is incredible clunky, and can get a little tedious in its third act and just lacks the overall polish that the Godzilla film has.

The actual monster action is quite fun, you get a nice little bit of destruction in there and I like Gamera's look, though it is the typical type of action you usually see in a solo kaiju movie.

The human stuff on the other end isn't so good. The acting is definitely mixed particularly early on when you've got these American Navy seals who are so bad they're literally just reading from the script at a couple of points, though it does admittedly provide a few laughs.
The majority of these human scenes however, are made of them trying to figure out what Gamera is and how to stop them, so again, the typical kind of thing you get in these movies, and that's what provides tedium, especially with it not being paced very well, it can tend to drag.
They also have the addition of some delusional kid who is obsessed with Gamera and thinks he's good, being competely clueless to the death and destruction he causes, which is a funny thing to witness.

The film is also shot in a black and white, which isn't really an issue, and it does certainly looking pretty good in places, but quite often the film is incredibly dark looking and almost indistuingishable on occasion, and that's even with Arrow Video's lastest HD remaster, which is probably the best that it could look in this present day.

Overall, the first Gamera film is a very generic schlocky solo giant monster film, that doesn't really do anything new to make it stick out, with most of its enjoyment stemming from its monster action and its clunkiness. It's pretty fun, but definitely one that I would only recommend to the hardcore Kaiju crowd. ***

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