Godzilla, King of the Monsters!

    Godzilla, King of the Monsters!
    1956

    Synopsis

    During an assignment, foreign correspondent Steve Martin spends a layover in Tokyo and is caught amid the rampage of an unstoppable prehistoric monster the Japanese call 'Godzilla'. The only hope for both Japan and the world lies on a secret weapon, which may prove more destructive than the monster itself.

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    Cast

    • Raymond BurrSteve Martin
    • Akira TakaradaOgata
    • Momoko KôchiEmiko Yamane
    • Akihiko HirataDr. Serizawa
    • Takashi ShimuraDr. Yamane
    • Frank IwanagaSecurity Officer
    • James HongOgata / Serizawa (voice) (uncredited)
    • Sachio SakaiHagiwara
    • Fuyuki MurakamiDr. Tabata
    • Ren YamamotoSeiji

    Recommendations

    • 91

      Entertainment Weekly

      Godzilla is still the most awesome of tacky movie monsters — a Jurassic knockoff of King Kong whose ritual stomping of Tokyo never quite lets you forget that you’re watching a man in a lizard suit trash a very elaborate toy train set.
    • 75

      TV Guide Magazine

      While much of Godzilla, King of the Monsters is second-rate, there's no doubt that you're watching a star being born.
    • 70

      Time Out

      This ballad of destruction reveals itself as one of the most exciting, enjoyable and moving of them all.
    • 63

      ReelViews

      This is the one Godzilla movie in which the title character plays second fiddle to the humans. While the film's moral and ethical situations are interesting, they are not as compelling as the film's adherents would have us believe, and their resolutions are simplistic.
    • 60

      The Guardian

      The Americans got hold of the much superior Japanese original, Godzilla, and edited into it 20 minutes-worth of Burr, with his vacant and oddly stiff expression, in order to spice things up. Still, without Godzilla: King of the Monsters!, the awesome cinematic hero might have remained a merely regional success, a giant Japanese lizard confined to its own country.
    • 40

      Film Threat

      The 1956 film, which adds Raymond Burr as reporter Steve Martin, feels like watching the original version through a foggy window. The end result is the feeling that something is missing.
    • 30

      The New York Times

      The whole thing is in the category of cheap cinematic horror-stuff.

    Seen by

    • emzak
    • Inari Ōkami