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Related: About this forumOpinion: 'Godzilla Minus One': A monster of America's making (POSSIBLE SPOILER ALERT)
The Japanese film Godzilla Minus One is more than just another Godzilla film. Sure, its got all the familiar action the scenes of crushing terror, the drama of a monster from the sea destroying everything within reach of its powerful jaw and claws but it also contains a message that might be missed amid the realistic portrayals of urban destruction after the American fire-bombing of Tokyo and the Japanese surrender.
Not a single American appeared in the film other than one historic image of World War II conquering general Douglas MacArthur.
Aside from Japan saying America is wary of upsetting the Soviet Union by sending its ships and planes after the monster, the Yanks are hardly mentioned. The Japanese people, however, are shown aboard old warships, wearing familiar war-time uniforms, and heroically challenging the monster in dangerous high seas.
It becomes clear that the people of Japan are battling the monster on its own. Theres no sign of either their own government or of the American occupation force that ruled the proud nation from the time of Japans defeat in August 1945 to the signing of the treaty at San Francisco nearly seven years later.
These brave men have resolved to conquer the monster not only free of the strictures of their rigid bureaucracy, beholden as it was to the Americans, but also unfettered by MacArthurs Supreme Command of Allied Powers. No Americans are shown saying a word about Godzilla, much less confronting the monster. No U.S. military policemen are giving orders in the wreckage of Tokyo, and no Americans are visible elsewhere as the monster strides ponderously ashore, picking up railroad cars, trampling over buildings, hurling people hither and yon.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/opinion-godzilla-minus-one-a-monster-of-america-s-making/ar-AA1mwpog?ocid=msedgntp&pc=HCTS&cvid=a2e6c7778dd8449492d7a7b6279770d5&ei=35
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Opinion: 'Godzilla Minus One': A monster of America's making (POSSIBLE SPOILER ALERT) (Original Post)
YoshidaYui
Jan 2024
OP
underpants
(186,631 posts)1. I've always understood Godzilla movies to be Japan's post WWII
confidence rebuilding. I always thought Godzilla WAS the US.
Lithos
(26,452 posts)2. I had a slightly different understanding of Godzilla
Namely, it represented the utter destruction by Humans over nature be it by nuclear weapons, destruction of the environment, or just callous indifference. The movies have always represented the Japanese rising above it all and facing this as a people. Accomodating the US would complicate their story of Good vs Evil.