Editor’s Note: This was originally published for FANGORIA on August 18, 2000, and we’re proud to share it as part of The Gingold Files.
This is not going to be one of those reviews devoted to explicating how Godzilla 2000 is better than the Roland Emmerich/Dean Devlin movie. We all knew it would be, and the fact is that the Japanese monster exhibits more personality in one reaction to an alien spacecraft than the U.S. beast demonstrated in his entire film, so letโs leave it at that. Nor will much time be spent harping on the fact that the movie has been dubbed for U.S. consumption, because a) we all knew it would be, and given that, b) thereโs probably no way it could have been done and not looked silly.
But at least whoever supervised the dubbing had some fun with it; there are dialogue homages to Dr. Strangelove and Superman that were undoubtedly not in the original script, plus a few nicely sarcastic lines. When a scientist asserts that Godzilla should be preserved for study instead of destroyed, a military man remarks, โYeah, and meanwhile, he just keeps leveling Tokyo.โ
True words, of course, but he doesnโt spend quite enough of Godzilla 2000 doing so. As a reintroduction of the famous kaiju following his death in Godzilla vs. Destoroyah, the new movie doesnโt do much in the way of reinvention, aside from altering his appearance somewhat. He isnโt even granted a new backstory; heโs just there, a given on the Japanese landscape, to the point where the main human characters are the self-styled โGodzilla Prediction Networkโ consisting of a father and young, so-precocious-you-could-smack-her daughter who spend their time chasing the monster down. Others involved are an ambitious female reporter and various officials of the CCI (Crisis Control Intelligence) agency, who must deal not only with Godzilla but a malevolent alien spacecraft that is first uncovered as a massive rock at the bottom of the ocean.
The spacecraft, in fact, has almost as much screen time as Godzilla, particularly after it blasts the monster back into the ocean and takes up residence atop a skyscraper. Trouble is, itโs not very interesting as a โcharacter,โ and nor, for that matter, are most of the people. As a movie overall, Godzilla 2000 isnโt a patch on Shusuke Kanekoโs magnificent Gamera 3 (the yardstick by which all kaiju films must now be judged), and only really comes to life when Godzilla himself is on screen.
Fortunately, thatโs often enough to make Godzilla 2000 more than entertaining enough for monster mavens. While the Big Gโs look has changed, the attitude has not, and one character even makes reference to the fact that his basic mode is aggression, not retreat (perhaps in riposte to the U.S. movie, in which the opposite is true). The final act, in which the spaceship transmogrifies into a semi-Godzilla clone called Orga, with huge Gorgo-like claws, is about 20 minutes of nonstop building-smashing nirvana. In the smoky nighttime cityscape, the beasts trade blows and death rays before Orga attempts to engulf our hero, in a scene redolent of Freudianism that may be the most perverse in the history of the Big Gโs films. If this lengthy setpiece doesnโt bring out the kaiju-loving kid in you, nothing will.
The special FX during the climactic action are significantly better than those during the early scenes, which suffer from occasional shaky process work. The image overallโat least on TriStarโs U.S. printsโhas a grainier cast than one expects from a modern fantasy film, which gives the movie a lower-rent look than it deserves. This wonโt help the movie to be seen as more than kitsch by many American viewers, which is unfortunate, because the modern kaiju films are worth taking seriously, even when (as here) the material isnโt top-flight. Look past the dubbing, and Godzilla 2000 offers an integrity and respect for its genre that puts the facetiousness of many U.S. filmmakers to shame.