Below is my review and grade for the movie ‘Godzilla’. I
wrote this assuming you have seen the movie, or do not care about spoilers.
[SPOILER ALERT]
Let them fight!
What I liked about the film
relatable. Bryan Cranston’s performance tears at your emotions, and I immediately bought in. The scene where he has to close the door on his wife was heartbreaking. Even though I had seen that shot in the trailer, It still got to me. Also, when he is trying to get the real answers for what is happening, you are rooting for him as an audience member. His portrayal of this damaged, conflicted character completely sucks you in.Then I really enjoyed the end of the first act when everything is building up to the reveal of the first monster, it has thriller aspect to it.
Visuals – How they depicted Godzilla and the other monsters
in the film was magnificent. It almost made me squirm in my seat whenever they
showed a close up of the monsters. I definitely had a lot of “oh, shit” moments
going on in my head. The visual effects were phenomenal, and they looked
completely realistic. The way they
walked and fought through the different cities was great. I especially loved
the scenes of Godzilla swimming with his “fins” out, or the impact of him
coming out of the ocean. However, my favorite scene visually has to be when the
paratroopers are sky diving down into the city right near Godzilla with their
red flares streaking. That was one of the most beautiful shots I have ever seen
in an action movie.
Directing – The director, Gareth Edwards, I thought did a great job in the film really making the
audience apart of the story. The way he shot a lot of the scenes really made us
see everything that was happen from the human perspective. Doing so, it creates
even more fear and terror, as we seem just as hopeless as the humans running
for their lives in the movie. Even though I feel this was a little over done, I
like the scenes of the news broadcasting the fights on TV. It definitely was
good break in the action, and added a little humor to the situation. Going back to the scene of the paratroopers
sky diving; when he put us inside of Aaron Taylor Johnson’s goggles, that was
very cool. It gave you a better scale of Godzilla, and made you think how absolutely
ridiculous and terrifying this must be.
There were a lot of key decisions made from behind the camera, and it
definitely paid off.
Act 3 – The last 20
minutes of this movie is what made the film worth going to see. The ending
fight scene is
by far the best part of the movie. The fight between Godzilla
and the two other monsters was exactly what I wanted to see, I just wish there
could have been more of that. I understand that they needed to build to that
point, but I’m just being selfish and wishing we could’ve seen more of the
monster’s fighting. Regardless, the visual effects were stunning and
terrifyingly realistic. I wish I could go back and just watched this part of
the movie again. Then obviously the best part of the fight was when Godzilla used
his radiation fire breath against the monsters. Not only is that cool enough by
itself, but when he opened one of the Muto’s mouths and breathed fire down his
throat.… that was one of the most bad ass things I have ever seen. The movie
did not fall short in this aspect of the movie and I am happy that they got at
least this part of the film right.
What I didn’t
like about the film
Act 2 – I probably
could have taken a nap during this entire part of the movie, and I probably
would’ve enjoyed it more. It hurts me to say that I was actually bored in the
movie theatre when this part of the film was occurring. I just felt liked it
dragged on and there wasn’t a lot of meaningful plot lines. For example, Aaron
Taylor Johnson and that little boy he helped on the train…what was the point of
that? I just felt the film lost its humanity after Bryan Cranston was killed.
Cranston’s character was the person who brought the audience in and made us
care about this world and these people. Then once that was taken away from us,
we had no connection with Aaron Taylor Johnson’s character, and it just felt
forced. Speaking of…
The Ford Brody character/Loss
of the human element – This is nothing against Aaron Taylor Johnson, because I
think he is a good actor. However in this movie, this character just fell
short. I think it’s a
combination of poor writing and ATJ’s inability to
display different emotions effectively. I felt like he had the same facial
expression for the entire movie. As I said above, it felt like the movie forced
us to relate to this character, and it didn’t work. We weren’t as emotionally
invested into Ford, as we were to Bryan Cranston’s character. So I didn’t seem
to care about him or his storyline. The connection between him and Elizabeth
Olsen was fine, but I felt like there needed to be a stronger storyline
involved. I just felt myself waiting for the end to happen and to see the
monsters. A film like this should have the audience enthralled with the
pressures and issues that the humans are dealing with, and then, oh yeah,
there’s a freaking monster coming out of the water. That would’ve elevated the
end of the movie even more if they had that platform to build off of.
Overall, I enjoyed the movie and I would
recommend the average movie-goer to go see it. They definitely captured
Godzilla perfectly, and the visual effects are phenomenal. I liked how they
made Godzilla an anti-hero, and a ‘protector’ of earth. There are some
magnificent scenes that were amazing to watch in the theatre and there were
more surprises than I expected. The movie does drag on during the middle of the
film, and it hurts the movie as a whole. Also, this is a film where the
trailers were very well done and made you believe something different, which is
disappointing. However, Bryan Cranston and the ending fight scene is what made
this an enjoyable film.
Score: 7/10
No comments:
Post a Comment