Godzilla Minus One (2023)
I saw this at the cinema and remember that the first reel was blurred, so it was nice to see it properly.
As a genre film, it’s excellent. It’s barely a kaiju film, but the monster bits are extremely well done and memorable. Take note, Godzilla x Kong. There’s a real sense of menace and scale to the scenes involving the Big G.
Fundamentally, it’s not a film about Godzilla. It’s about national identity, the ethics of service, courage, guilt and redemption. It’s about people thrown together after a nightmare and trying to rebuild their lives.
There’s some great character growth. The male lead fights a war in his head until he realised that bravery and service doesn’t have to translate to suicide. The female lead despairs but doesn’t give up hope that he’ll want the family they’ve assembled. There’s some lovely support from the neighbour and the boat team.
The sense of time and place is expertly achieved. It could be a film just about postwar Japan. Replace Godzilla with a natural disaster and the themes still work. He’s got no personality - he’s a faceless threat, like a tornado. It’s all very deliberate, in order to present a character piece.
It’s a very fine film even without the kaiju stuff. The kaiju scenes are sparse and impactful. As such, will find the film boring. It’s not a monster mash-up like the Hollywood ones. If the characters hook you, then it’s a winner. If they don’t, it'll bore the shit out of you.
9/10 from me.
Noticed afterwards that Netflix have the black and white version on. I’ll watch that properly at some point. I watched a few scenes and it looks brilliant. I know it wasn’t filmed with shadows and black and white cinematography in mind, so it’s literally a conversion of what’s on screen without much artistic consideration for the medium, but it added even more raw grittiness to the narrative.