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Atragon
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Country
: |
Japan |
| Year: |
1963 |
| Genre: |
Kaiju/Sci-fi
|
| Format: |
DVD |
| Running
Time: |
1H36 |
| Distributor: |
Tokyo
Shock |
| Date
reviewed: |
09/13/06 |
| |
|
| Producer: |
Tomoyuki
Tanaka |
| Director: |
Ishiro
Honda |
Cast: Yoko Fujiyama, Tadao Takashima,
Yu Fujiki, Kenji Sahara |
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Story:
The Mu Empire, an ancient civilization located deep
beneath the sea, wishes to reclaim their rule over all.
Enter Captain Jinguji, a man with the power to stop
them in the form of his super submarine. His reluctance
to help is dashed once his daughter is kidnapped, and
the great battle of our time is finally underway as
the powerhouse sub Goten-go goes headfirst in an assault
against the Muans.
Review: Here's something that will be familiar
to two completely separate groups of people. For one,
old school fans of Ishiro Honda's work will delight
at the fact that they can finally watch another notable
entry into his catalogue domestically. From the beginning,
you get the unmistakable notion that this is an iconic
part of his oeuvre. On the other hand, there's the
new rising legion of kaiju fans teethed on the millennium-era
Godzilla flicks. These cats will recognize the film's
super-powered submarine right off the bat, thanks
to its appearance under the brave, mustachioed control
of fighter Don Frye in Ryuhei Kitamura's FINAL WARS.
Neither of these groups will be disappointed in ATRAGON.
Heck, neither will anyone else. Honda's 1963 sci-fi
yarn about an ancient race trying to bully their way
up from the ocean in hopes of ruling us all is as
epic as it sounds. Everything from the lavish sets
and miniatures of the Mu empire to the Goten-go itself
looks fantastic. If comparisons could be drawn to
any other of this team's productions off-hand, THE
MYSTERIANS would be a sure bet. There are a lot of
similarities when it comes to exploring the strange,
almost neo-archaic world of the Muans. Sure, they
won't ask you to don a cape when you enter their base,
but their presence in the movie lends a remarkable
magic to the production that is indicative of the
quality expected when you get a feature from Ishiro
Honda and FX master Eiji Tsuburaya.
ATRAGON is about patriotism and nationalism just as
much as it is about cool special effects and snaky
sea monsters. Captain Jinguji, played sternly by Jun
Tazaki, is a man left burning from a long-passed war
in contrast with a nation that has had time to think.
His "never surrender" resolution is an ideal
that parallels that of the antagonist, the Empress
of Mu. Captain Jinguji is just as much of a relic
as the ancient civilization that threatens Japan,
and it takes something as drastic as his daughter's
abduction to really kick him in the ass and wake him
up.
Tsuburaya's effects are memorable, to say the absolute
least. Aside from a few exceptions, the world created
here seems pretty tangible. There are definitely a
couple of sequences that will have everyone doin'
the Manda Dance, though. What's Manda, you ask? Why,
it's the obligatory giant monster of the movie, of
course! Honestly, the awkward way in which this sea
dragon is implemented does a good job of giving away
the fact that it wasn't a part of Honda's original
vision. Rather than providing a hulking menace to
the ordeal, Manda almost comes off as an otherworldly
comic relief of sorts; it writhes and wiggles with
the monster-effects equivalent of a worm on a hook.
As essential as giant monsters usually are to pretty
much anything, one wonders what Honda's film would
have been like without a tacked-on rubber menace.
A great cast portraying mythical nutjobs and clingers-on
of the war, another brilliant score by Akira Ifukube,
and one-of-a-kind effects that only this camp could
provide; what more can you ask for? At its simplest,
ATRAGON succeeds thanks to its Weekly World News-esque
tabloid reality. If you're not already sold on the
whole tokusatsu/kaiju thing, then classics like these
are a good place to start. Pop this in your DVD player
and start swaying to the rhythm like Manda post-haste.
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DVD
[ NTSC, Region 1
] :
Media Blasters' Tokyo Shock label is going nuts with
these awesome old-school releases. This isn't really
a celebration of a packed-to-the-brims DVD, but a relieved
acknowledgment that it exists subbed in the US at all.
Along with the crisp, anamorphic transfer (2.35:1),
this disc has some audio variety to it. Both the English
and Japanese tracks are available in either mono or
5.1. As for extras, there's actually a commentary; one
with assistant director Koji Kajita. Other than that,
you'll find the original trailer as well. Not bad at
all.
Reviewed
by Joseph Luster
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| Story |
Cast |
Entertainment |
Subtitles |
Overall |
| 3.5 |
3.5 |
4.5 |
5 |
4.5 |


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| © 1999-2005 by KFC
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