Ishiro Honda
- Taketori Washizu
- Joined: Fri Jun 03, 2005 2:32 pm
- HerrSchreck
- Joined: Sun Sep 04, 2005 3:46 pm
Tons of stuff in the genre realm of course (I know because I have em, being an insufferable addict for cheeseball monster movies: all the Gojira fillms, Rodan, Mothra, Varan, Matango-- not cheesball but a marvelous study of addiction--, Dogora, Atragon, Mysterians, other wild one shots like Frankenstein v Baragon).
On the other hand the status of his melodramas I'm totallyt at a loss.
On the other hand the status of his melodramas I'm totallyt at a loss.
- Tribe
- The Bastard Spawn of Hank Williams
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 11:59 pm
- Location: Toledo, Ohio
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Re: Ishiro Honda
Dave Kehr on Mothra
August 16, 2009
DVDs
Mothra Lives! Beware, New Kirk City!
By DAVE KEHR
EVEN if you don’t know the Japanese director Ishiro Honda, you almost certainly know some of his offspring. They tend to be large, mostly lizardlike creatures with attitude problems and a propensity for tromping destructively through downtown Tokyo: “Godzilla†(1954), “Rodan! The Flying Monster†(1956), “Varan the Unbelievable†(1958), “Mothra†(1961), “Ghidrah, the Three-Headed Monster†(1964) and so on and so on, through a series of sequels, crossovers and spinoffs that continued through Honda’s retirement in 1975, with “Terror of Mechagodzilla.â€
Most of these movies were released in the United States in cut and dubbed versions, shown at Saturday matinees, drive-ins and on television (ceaselessly it seemed). At first these exotic imports stimulated awe and wonder in their young viewers. Later, as those viewers grew up and movie special effects became more expensive and sophisticated, the blatantly obvious spectacle of stuntmen dressed in big rubber suits rampaging through balsa-wood office blocks began to seem campy and quaint.
But Honda’s films, particularly when seen in their uncut, Japanese-language versions (increasingly available, thanks to home video), retain a charm and earnestness that few digital age monster movies — exemplified by the disastrous 1998 remake of “Godzilla†— can approach. The persuasiveness of the special effects, creatively engineered in the great majority of Honda’s films by the technician Eiji Tsuburaya was always beside the point in these pictures, which were more like marvelous puppet shows. The strings often showed, literally and figuratively, but such was the affectionate, after-school spirit of the enterprise.
Each of Honda’s giant monsters (known as kaiju in Japan) possessed a distinct personality. They ranged from the adorably clumsy, childlike Godzilla (who would eventually grow up to be a responsible parent and defender of the Japanese nation) to the slimier, more serpentlike Ghidrah, a bad-boy juvenile delinquent whose destructive behavior often had to be reined in by good-guy monsters acting in tandem.
But these films weren’t only innocent allegories of childhood and adolescence. Born out of the nuclear anxiety that followed World War II, Honda’s early movies explicitly link their monsters to atomic testing, as do several American pictures of the same period. But unlike, say, the purely malevolent mutants of Hollywood’s “It Came From Beneath the Sea†(1955) or “Them!†(1954), the kaiju are ambivalent figures, sometimes blindly destructive, sometimes friendly, effective allies. In Japan, where the American occupation ended only in 1951, these lumbering beasts seem also to reflect the complex, contradictory attitudes about the United States, the annihilating conqueror now become an inescapable partner in political rebirth and economic development.
A new three-disc set from Sony, “Icons of Sci-Fi: Toho Collection,†demonstrates the wide range of attitudes found in Honda’s films. The set contains both the original Japanese and the cut-and-dubbed American versions of three films: “The H-Man†(1958), “Battle in Outer Space†(1959) and “Mothra†(1961). Of these only “Mothra†can be strictly classified as a kaiju eiga (monster movie); the other two find Honda working in different genres, but bending their structures to fit his themes.
Like the original “Godzilla,†both “The H-Man†and “Mothra†trace their origins to the widely reported news in 1954 that a Japanese fishing boat ventured too close to an atomic test site, and several crew members came down with radiation sickness. In “The H-Man†radiation sickness becomes a sort of communicable disease, spreading like a plague through the Tokyo sewers. The first victim is a burglar who melts away in the rain while trying to make a getaway.
Instead of a science fiction adventure “The H-Man†takes the form of a police thriller, not unlike “Stray Dog,†a 1949 film on which Honda had worked as an assistant to the director, his old friend and colleague, Akira Kurosawa. The police investigation leads to a Western-style nightclub, where the vanished suspect’s girlfriend is a torch singer, chanting ballads in throaty English.
The police are skeptical until other gangsters start going up in blue flames. Only when Japanese scientists order a complete destruction of the American club and its surrounding neighborhood (the sewers are set on fire, using Mitsubishi gasoline!) is the threat temporarily abated.
The more optimistic science-fiction epic “Battle in Outer Space†imagines all the nations of Earth — but mainly, Japan and the United States — getting together to fight a sinister alien race that has established a base on the Moon. A body-snatching theme (one of the allied spacemen falls under alien mind control) points toward familiar cold war brainwashing obsessions: these all-purpose aliens seem to be Soviet Russia and Communist China combined, and they are up to no discernable good.
The aliens first annihilate New York and the Golden Gate Bridge before heading on to the real value target, Tokyo, where the Japanese Self-Defense Forces use ground-based heat rays to shoot saucers out of the sky. (American advisors look on admiringly.) The sequence powerfully suggests Pearl Harbor therapeutically turned inside out, with heroic ground gunners battling enemy aircraft. For Eiji Tsuburaya, the special effects director, this was not new territory: one of his earliest assignments was the wartime propaganda film “The War at Sea from Hawaii to Malay†(1942) in which he used his now familiar miniatures to recreate the Pearl Harbor attack.
By the time of “Mothra†relations have worsened to the point where America appears under the (faintly medical) pseudonym “Rolisica,†a nation of greedy businessmen represented by a show-business entrepreneur (clearly modeled on Robert Armstrong’s character in “King Kongâ€) who kidnaps a pair of “secret fairies†from an island being used for bomb tests. The fairies — tiny identical twins — are drafted as the stars of a campy jungle revue staged in a Tokyo theater.
They use their reedy voices to summon forth the mythical protector of their native island, a giant silk worm who promptly swims to Japan and spins a cocoon in Tokyo Tower. When Mothra emerges, his first priority is to flap his giant wings over to Rolisica, where he levels the capital, New Kirk City.
With its fluorescent colors and exotic design “Mothra†is probably Honda’s most profoundly folkloric film, drawing on traditions of Japanese nature gods to imagine a force superior to American economic and military strength. But Honda is no reactionary Japanese militarist.
“Mothra,†like many of Honda’s films, ends with a simple and sincere moral precept, directed toward the audience: “May all the world’s peoples live together in peace and harmony!†the repatriated fairies proclaim. And if they don’t, there’s always a giant lizard handy to knock them back into line. (Sony Pictures Home Entertainment, $24.96, not rated)
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HarryLong
- Joined: Tue Nov 25, 2008 4:39 pm
- Location: Lebanon, PA
Re: Ishiro Honda
I've gone in exact reverse ... as a youngster I found the Gojira, etc. movies awful, not a patch on O'Brien & Harryhausen Big Beastie flicks. Maybe it didn't help that my first expsoure (and in a theater, not on TV) was KING KONG VS GODZILLA with that awful, awful suit for Kong.At first these exotic imports stimulated awe and wonder in their young viewers. Later, as those viewers grew up and movie special effects became more expensive and sophisticated, the blatantly obvious spectacle of stuntmen dressed in big rubber suits rampaging through balsa-wood office blocks began to seem campy and quaint.
But, partly due to the original versions of some of the films becoming available (GOJIRA was almost a revelation) and also finally seeing some of Honda's better films such as H-MAN and MATANGO (which had to have been at least aprtly inspired by a William Hope Hodgson short story), I'm coming to a greater appreciation. I'm looking forward to this set.
(Maybe it's something to do with aging ... I like the Mexican horror films better now that I did when I was younger ...)
- Tribe
- The Bastard Spawn of Hank Williams
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 11:59 pm
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Re: Ishiro Honda
I saw most of those movies (before I was 10) in the mid-60s as they reached the screen here in the USA, and my reaction was as Kehr describes. I was fascinated by the darn things...as I got older however, they became high camp to me. But now (into my 50s), I find them endearing and, when watching the original Japanese versions (I had only seen the butchered American releases), they are actually pretty entertaining sci-fi movies.
- HerrSchreck
- Joined: Sun Sep 04, 2005 3:46 pm
Re: Ishiro Honda
I love em all. That's a pretty darned good set. I've seen the original Japanese versions of all three films and can say they're all excellent.. The H Man is bugged out, with a dude who can dematerialize into a kind of liquid crystal snot at will, dribbling and flowing around and nuking his foes... all for the love of a woman. I often get this film confused with the (also excellent, also Honda) Human Vapor.
Mothra of course needs no explanation-- plus it brought The Peanuts (the twin mini-fairies) into our living rooms when kids!
I recently copped a gander at Half Human, in it's dubbed US version w Carradine. But I've gotten my hands on the original Japanese version, with no subs this time, unfortunately.
Mothra of course needs no explanation-- plus it brought The Peanuts (the twin mini-fairies) into our living rooms when kids!
I recently copped a gander at Half Human, in it's dubbed US version w Carradine. But I've gotten my hands on the original Japanese version, with no subs this time, unfortunately.
- Yojimbo
- Joined: Fri Jul 04, 2008 2:06 pm
- Location: Ireland
Re: Ishiro Honda
I've only gotten around to watching this set now, or at least two-thirds of it, - after buying it a year or two backHerrSchreck wrote:I love em all. That's a pretty darned good set. I've seen the original Japanese versions of all three films and can say they're all excellent.. The H Man is bugged out, with a dude who can dematerialize into a kind of liquid crystal snot at will, dribbling and flowing around and nuking his foes... all for the love of a woman. I often get this film confused with the (also excellent, also Honda) Human Vapor.
Mothra of course needs no explanation-- plus it brought The Peanuts (the twin mini-fairies) into our living rooms when kids!
I recently copped a gander at Half Human, in it's dubbed US version w Carradine. But I've gotten my hands on the original Japanese version, with no subs this time, unfortunately.
I absolutely adored 'Battle in Outer Space' which I'd never even heard of before, and have already watched it twice over two consecutive nights, - the English dub and the wonderful commentary track.
Watching it as part of a double-bill with a long-time favourite US sci-fi of mine, 'This Island Earth' was particularly telling: TIE had rather too much talk, and science, for at least the first half of its running length, although it compensated with the spaceship scenes, and the gorgeous, criminally all-too-brief Planet Metaluna scenes, whereas 'Battle in Outer Space' charmed me from the get-go: even its brief romantic interlude brought a smile to my face.
'The H Man', like TIE, took a while to get going; again, too many 'talky' scenes, but it more than compensated with a number of masterly tension-packed scenes
Since watching 'Battle' I went out and ordered every Honda sci-fi film I could lay my hands on
And I can't wait to watch 'Mothra'
- HerrSchreck
- Joined: Sun Sep 04, 2005 3:46 pm
Re: Ishiro Honda
Dont miss DOGORA or MATANGO other Honda one-offs that are truly excellent and totally original. Also THE HUMAN VAPOR, which gives Toho stalwart Yoshio Tsuchiya a great lead role... his favorite of his very long and illustrious career... (still alive I believe, and as obsessed with unidentified flying objects as ever.)
- Yojimbo
- Joined: Fri Jul 04, 2008 2:06 pm
- Location: Ireland
Re: Ishiro Honda
I've ordered the first two, and am eagerly scanning my shipment notifications: I'm not a huge Godzilla fan, per se, - although the original film is a Mastepiece, in anybody's language, or genre, - but, in the right hands, these films are just a joy to watchHerrSchreck wrote:Dont miss DOGORA or MATANGO other Honda one-offs that are truly excellent and totally original. Also THE HUMAN VAPOR, which gives Toho stalwart Yoshio Tsuchiya a great lead role... his favorite of his very long and illustrious career... (still alive I believe, and as obsessed with unidentified flying objects as ever.)
(I'll keep an eye out for THE HUMAN VAPOR)
I'm a child of the mid-50s, so flying saucers were 'still around' when I started at school; and those 'little green men'
- Yojimbo
- Joined: Fri Jul 04, 2008 2:06 pm
- Location: Ireland
Re: Ishiro Honda
'pretty darned good' reminds me of that legendary Twin Peaks coffee: I presume that must rank as quite a compliment with you, also, meinherr. I'm still beaming from that final shot in 'Mothra'HerrSchreck wrote:I love em all. That's a pretty darned good set. I've seen the original Japanese versions of all three films and can say they're all excellent.. The H Man is bugged out, with a dude who can dematerialize into a kind of liquid crystal snot at will, dribbling and flowing around and nuking his foes... all for the love of a woman. I often get this film confused with the (also excellent, also Honda) Human Vapor.
Mothra of course needs no explanation-- plus it brought The Peanuts (the twin mini-fairies) into our living rooms when kids!
Spoiler
that cheerful farewell to the flying monster that had all but obliterated two Metropolis(es)
It may owe a huge debt to 'King Kong', and such as the criminally underrated 'Mighty Joe Young', but it is more than sufficiently original to merit belonging in that august company, on its own terms. Unquestionably one of the finest DVD purchases I've ever made and one that I'm already looking forward to revisit