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and it was quite a sobering experience. It's been re released in the theaters in the original Japanese version, with 20 extra minutes and sans the stupid Raymond Burr footage. It was not what I expected at all.
First of all, it was not dubbed. I have seen a hundred foreign films, so I didn't have a problem with it, but I was worried that my nine-year-old son would want to leave. Turns out, he handled it like a champ.
Even more striking was the difference between this film and later Godzilla films. I have shown my son a number of these, with names like "Godzilla vs. Mothra", "Godzilla vs. King Kong", "Godzilla vs. Ann Coulter", etc. Those films are, in essence, the precursor to the WWF: Two monsters battle it out for 90 minutes.
The original, however, is a serious anti-nuclear weapon parable. During the famous destruction of Tokyo scene, a mother says to her children "We will be with your father soon", and the clear implication is that the father died in the nuclear bomb blasts. After the attack, a scientist takes a Geiger Counter reading of a child, turns to one of the main characters, and shakes his head. The climax of the film is not a major battle, but a scientist committing suicide because he doesn't want the device he created, to kill Godzilla, to be used in the future as a WMD.
After the movie, I tried to explain these themes to my son. I didn't want to go overboard, because he is only nine, and he doesn't need to know quite yet how shitty the world can be. But I was still surprisingly impressed by the film.
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