To give even more power to this reclamation of everyone’s
favorite jetpack kaiju, Arrow Video has amassed a massive new collection of all
12 of Gamera’s films. With the original run of 8 films, the 90s trilogy, and
the final film – Gamera the Brave from 2006, this collection features
them all. This series of reviews for the set will go briefly through each entry
and then recap at the end thoughts and opinions on the set itself. Considering
the amount of films included, this series of articles will definitely be as
massive as Gamera, but will serve as a guide to all the films.
GAMERA VS JIGER (1970)
Director: Noriaki Yuasa
There has to be a Rolling Stones joke somewhere that I can
use with the name Jiger, but it’s just sitting on the tip of my tongue. Fine,
fine. That was a terrible way to start this latest article going over the next
three films of this glorious Gamera Complete Collection, but I certainly
couldn’t help myself. Maybe it’s because I was having so much for with Gamera
Vs Jiger that it just carried right over. Nonetheless, here we are and
either you’ve stopped reading altogether or you’re just along for the rocket
turtle ride.
By this time in the Gamera franchise, the formula is
now firmly set in stone. The relative ease of how the previous film filtered
its main concepts into a fully science fiction fueled narrative spills over
into this one. Instead of science fiction though, Gamera and our human
protagonists firmly plant themselves on Earth and within the realm of the
fantastical. Jiger is an ancient monster buried under an unearthed statue and
when the people try to move the statue, Jiger comes out to kick two hundred
metric tons of ass. There’s a lot about the statue, how a piece of it is key in
defeating the new horned foe, but most of it is just plot to feature the 1970
Expo center, kids who have to take a submarine instead of Gamera to fight off a
parasitic baby Jiger, and more kaiju battles than any previous film.
As always, the plot is relatively thin and the narrative is
simplified to appeal to families with children, but it gets through it with
relative ease that doesn’t feel too forced. The highlight of Gamera Vs Jiger
is the immense amount of battles and how this new villain seems to feature a
thousand tricks to defeat our heroic titan turtle. Some of it is silly, all of
it is gimmicky, and it doesn’t quite have the edge of the previous film (pun intended),
but Gamera Vs Jiger is a welcome addition and an easily entertaining
watch.
GAMERA VS ZIGRA (1971)
Director: Noriaki Yuasa
With each film in this Gamera Collection, I start off
by watching the introduction by August Romone. Having seen Gamera Vs Zigra
before, it was a film that I never loved, but knowing some of the history
behind it through his introduction has made me a little more forgiving. It’s
this kind of context, information, and analysis that makes this set worth
watching. The problem that Gamera Vs Zigra suffers from is directly
related to its history and how it’s studio was on the ropes and budgets were
being cut during production of this film. It suffers from it. Quite obviously
at times.
As with the last few entries, this one follows the same
formula. At this point, you should know it if you’ve been following this series
of reviews. I’ll skip the basics. Instead of the more fantasy inspired plot and
villainous kaiju elements of the last film, Gamera Vs Zigra returns to
the science fiction where a space ship (which doubles as a submarine –
reminding me how much this series weirdly focuses on underwater elements)
filled with a giant end up at odds with some kids and our reptilian hero. There
is another environmental focus for the film, a theme this series tends to flirt
with at times, and a Sea World park is the basis for the human element. A human
element that tends to be completely unmemorable, for the record. The problem
with the film is that, for as odd as it can be, it’s a rehash of various other
films mashed into one. Gamera has had to battle a shark before. He’s battled a
villain with a slicing laser. Kids running from aliens is redundant and the
film never quite finds that new angle to really add to it – outside that our
evil kaiju, Zigra, can talk to people. Cool?
Director Noriaki Yuasa does get to toy with some new ideas
with the visuals. The film, since its villain is a giant ass laser shooting
shark, sets most of its battles at the bottom of the ocean and with that comes
some fun new visuals. Truthfully, it’s when Gamera gets Zigra onto land and
starts throwing it around that I certainly had the most fun with the film, but
the battles are decent for the ones in the film. This time around there seems
to be less of a focus on maximizing the carnage on screen, no doubt due to the
previously mentioned budget cuts, and Zigra doesn’t quite have the tricks in
his (fin) sleeves that fans would be used to by this time, but it’s enjoyable
enough. All in all, this film just lacks in silliness and creativity that makes
the formula feel fresh seven entries in. In fact, this would be the last film
in the series for almost a decade before the next one.
GAMERA: SUPER MONSTER (1980)
Director: Noriaki Yuasa
What in the Godzilla’s Revenge kind of hell is this film?
Coming out almost a full decade after the previous release, the collapsing of
its studio, and a bunch of other questionable business shenanigans, Gamera: Super
Monster feels like the cheap, ill-advised, and final gasp of a studio desperate
the completely drain every dollar from one of its more lucrative franchises. It’s
such terrible concept, where 95% of the Gamera footage is stock footage “greatest
hits” from previous films, that it feels baffling and, dare I say it as a fan
of this series even with its ups and downs, offensive. The new footage surrounds
three interstellar heroines attempting to protect the Earth from invaders, with
the help of a musically inclined child, and it essentially just as them fuckin’
around and watching clips with the audience and yelling things like, ‘Go
Gamera! Kick the shell out of the bad kaiju!’ The storyline is utter nonsense
and the new footage looks cheap, rushed, and poorly executed.
Returning to the director’s chair is long time Gamera
head-hauncho Yuasa, but man does this feel like he was asked to try and revive
a dead and highly flogged horse with this one. Sure, he gets to use all of the
cool kaiju battles from previous films (and oddly enough, a couple of sequences
of anime differentiate the kid’s dreams from reality – cause, sure, why the
hell not?) but it hardly feels cohesive and just smacks of bad creative choices
made my bad business decisions. To spend more time expressing my perplexed
dismay and outright anger at just how awful Super Monster is as an ending
to the original run – would just be as redundant as the film. Think of it as a
bonus feature for the set and only watch if you’re a glutton for pain.
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