One of the reasons District 9 did so well when it was released a month ago was because it told a familiar story in a fresh environment; no matter how time-honored certain science-fiction conventions are, it never hurts to see them set in a new context.
But Neill Blomkamp's terrific, thoughtful opus was hardly the first film to find universality—much less compelling fantasy storytelling—in specific cultural details; rather, that precedent likely goes to Ishiro Honda's Gojira, which combined traditional Hollywood storytelling and the troubles of postwar Japan in a dazzling display of artistic and technical virtuosity. Newly released on Blu-ray with a commentary track that highlights its historical and cultural relevance, this progenitor of Japanese monster movies is a sleeper triumph of storytelling that remains as devastating today as it did 55 years ago.
Thanks to a series of films that increasingly defined the character as a rubber-suited wrestler who did little more than square off against swinging prosthetic monsters, Gojira is no longer taken seriously as a fixture of the science fiction world. His iconography and his visual landscape is so deeply familiar to most people, even if they haven't seen many of his movies, that it seems impossible to imagine that anyone could or would tell a story with him at the center of it that wasn't at least in part a joke.
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Ultimately, if that recent success of District 9 means anything, it's that audiences are ready to embrace entertainment that also possesses a little intelligence, and Gojira is a film that similarly deserves to benefit from this underfed appetite for thoughtful thrills, especially now that it's available in a high-definition format. Of course, it remains to be seen whether Blomkamp's movie will stand the test of time, especially since Honda's had many of the same qualities and has since become a starting point for a series that while successful is considered a laughing stock. But if Gojira proves anything, it's that it's never too late to rediscover the real value of a truly great film; so even if in a decade (or five) District 9's status has somewhat diminished, it will nevertheless have Honda's now-proven classic to share company with it for years to come.
http://scifiwire.com/2009/09/review-why-gojira-was-the.php