Sunday, December 31, 2023

THE PRODUCERS @ 55

Max Bialystock's days as a hot shot Broadway producer are long gone. These days, he seduces little old dowagers, puts on shows that flop off Broadway and pockets the difference. One day Leo the accountant comes to do the books and is bullied into getting creative with the numbers but realises that more could be made from a guaranteed flop than a hit, as long as the investment campaign was ambitious/crooked enough. Max flashes dollar signs and seduces Leo into partnership. At the end of a caffeinated slog they find the perfect flop, a romping musical called Springtime for Hitler. The fact that I just laughed when I typed that title is why this movie works today.

The basic story of its development was that Mel Brooks thought The Producers up as a Broadway show, then more realistically plotted it as a novel and then finally as a movie. More recently, it has become a Broadway show again which is a hit wherever it goes and in a magical realist turn became a second movie. This story holds fast through all of its incarnations and is never not funny. For me, though, nothing has outdone this 1968 film.

That has to do with writing that's sharp as a tack, bold ideas and characters that might almost play themselves were it not for the explosive talents on screen. Zero Mostel thunders as Max, using his girthy physicality and ear splitting bellow. He is a pirate of Manhattan, ruled by his senses and insatiable appetites. And this was the film that turned up and coming dramatic actor into the Gene Wilder of sudden screaming hysterics which served him for the rest of his career. That might seem to sell him short but the Gene Wilder persona gave him a passport to audiences who could not tire of his terrifying comic chops. This brought the darkness essential to the colourful Willy Wonka and got him through the cute pairings with Richard Pryor later in the '70s. Mostel and Wilder teamed up again for the American Film Theatre's Rhinoceros to great effect.

But no subsequent outing ever quite topped the opening of The Producers where the nebbish Leo is driven to inconsolable hysterics by the roaring bear of Max. Wilder takes Leo's breathless agony so close to breaking into fantasy that our own anxiety in the viewing of it has no recourse but to laugh even louder. There's a scene in You Can't Take it With You where Jimmy Stewart is explaining to Jean Arthur how his scream travels through his body, getting tighter and tighter until she's the one who screams. That's as close as I can get to a precedent to Wilder's megaton of panic. Nothing else in film comedy comes close. And this is before we get to its cause.

Zero Mostel's Max needs only seconds to understand how to play Leo. While it does take a lot f trial and error to turn it off, by the time he tries a smile and finds it effective you know he's sorted the deal with the accountant. There are two phases of this. First, he pleas with Leo to cook the books, tightening the tension until he moves right into Leo's ear and screams, "HELP!" And then the more extended seduction of the professional in the office and beyond it to greater Manhattan, infecting Leo with his moreish lust for the good life. It's hard to imagine why this twin assault of character realisations could work until you see it happen. It's in the experience itself which is why the opening twenty minutes of this film always feels fresh.

But then the gags keep coming. Kenneth Mars' Franz Liebkind, author of Springtime for Hitler, shows his ineptitude in concealing his loyalty to the crushed Nazi legacy. ("He's wearing a German helmet!" Leo scream-whispers to Max on seeing Franz for the first time.)  He knows he shouldn't be open about it in his adopted New York but the slightest of triggers take him right back to the Swastika beer steins. Can we still laugh at a joke Nazi? We have seen the neo version hook themselves on to protests about anything in the past few years, raising their profile as they lift their hands in the armpit inspection salute. Their public violence seems only to have been encouraged by the attention. However, Brooks knew well that few things are funnier in politics than powerless tyrants, the roaring mice of history. He's not defusing the gravity of Nazism, more saying, "Yeah, well who won?"

Roger De Bris is the flamboyant disaster of directors is played with glee by Christopher Hewitt. His personal assistant, Carmen Ghia (yes, just like the car), is more openly gay and this is the source of humour. De Bris enters his first scene in a tight fitting ball gown which he completes with a permy looking wig. The banter between the two is brittle camp, bitchy and intimidating. While we are clearly meant to identify with Max and Leo's discomfort, I feel that the portrayals survive well, not as definitive examples of gay men but two bound companions in the theatre world who know each other just a little too well, gay or not. What stereotyping there was in 1968 can be safely disposed of today. The scene will still be funny.

How about Ulla, then, the Swedish P.A. apparently hired from the yellow pages of the sex trade? Fresh out of Uni when my humour bypass was still in effect, this was a stumbling block for me. The point here is not that she's an archetypical dumb blonde but that Max's grasping response to his ill gotten wealth is to expose his pitiable vanity by all but buying a beautiful, young woman he doesn't even have to speak to. She's a trophy and, if that was ever a point of audience to Max empathy that moment is long past.

Where the creaks really show and persistently, though, is in the actor chosen by the team to play Hitler. He wanders in, expecting to audition for a hippy musical. After hours of show songs (delivered in a dizzying montage) Laurence St Dubois, or LSD, brings his band on to do something more up to date. The song is so good it could be a Doors parody, escalating from love power to, "hey world, you stink!" The problem is not the datedness of the music or even attitude; any Zillenial groover could do as much and in and add some tasty ambiguity. It's the reactions from the crew whose wide eyed gapes are shown in still shots (this also happens in the production scenes and I still don't quite get it). It's scarcely credible that theatre types in the Age of Aquarius would be so gobsmacked (of course, it's the imagined audience's response that's being evoked but still). Today, you might have someone make self harm a feature of the audition piece but then the further you go along that way the harder you'd have to work to bring it back to comedy.

The shocks work better when the curtain goes up and we see the opening number. This is still incredible, from the Nazi dancing, the Miss Pretzel and Miss Beer, the ship guns puffing off toward the audience to the big finish where the chorus line circles in formation as a  huge swastika. "Springtime for Hitler and Germany. Winter for Poland and France." The twist this leads to (no spoilers, I don't care how old it is) is a surprisingly relaxing one but then we get the real finale which carries us back to the opening punch.

Mel Brooks didn't always reach this standard afterwards. Everything that followed had its moments and Young Frankenstein approaches equity as a whole film. But if none of those other titles made it out of the gate The Producers would stand as a moment of genius whose electric punch of an opening is maintained continually and reinforced with charges of equal power right through to the risky success of actually showing the stage show and pushing it repeatedly. If it hadn't done that we might have seen it if we set the auld VCR for a 3a.m. appearance back when they did that. It bothers me that the more recent musical might block people from discovering this shorter, deeper and funnier original but I'm confident that any who do make the journey past will find its treasure.

Friday, December 29, 2023

Review: POOR THINGS

Godwin Baxter, in a way both Dr Frankenstein and his creature, lives in his London mansion surrounded by a herd of hybrid animals like a goose dog and a dog chicken. Also, present, and learning slightly by the day is Bella, a young woman resurrected to become both herself and her child (not spoiling how). Into this odd arrangement comes the spark of the first act in the form of Duncan Wederburn who spirits Bella away from her cloistered realm and into a kind of Grand Tour of Europe. If you're thinking fairytale keep thinking it but maybe ramp up the R rating to include scenes of a sexual nature, lots of them. Duncan is a kind of prince but he is a prince from magical realism so he has both educative intentions and the libido of a rabbit. But as we see Bella's enlightenment emerge in bursts and starts we can only count the scenes until all of this explodes.

Yorgos Lanthimos' apparent whimsy is a tightly woven tapestry. In a version of the world that stands somewhere between steampunk and Dr Seuss but has real cities like London or Lisbon in it, the master of Greek Weirdcore has pushed his already rich and strange vision into one that recalls Universal horror of the 30s (with fisheye lenses) and the startling colour of the touring scenes. That said, he's not just throwing everything he's already done at the screen. 

This feels as studied and deliberate as The Favourite with its Vermeer pallet and the switch between sex and violence between characters. As we travel with Bella through her self discovery, only peripherally aided by Duncan, Godwin (mostly referred to by her as God) and fellow travellers, we get a strong sense of Voltaire's story Candide in which an innocent is dealt blow after blow of learning experiences except that instead of the constant optimist Pangloss we get the raging narcissistic cynic. But Bella's development, from puerile ego driven by id toward wholeness, is textured and frequently worrisome.

This film lands on the shoulders of Emma Stone. She presents a convincing human monster with her emerging posh accent sounding nurtured rather than cultured and a halting walk that is somewhere between a wind-up toy and Elsa Lanchester's birdlike flitting in Bride of Frankenstein. Under her lengthening mane of void-black hair her bug eyes absorb universes. It's feat of performance, allowing her staggered speech development credibility to the point where the first few complete sentences feel weighted by danger as they are uttered, allowing us to both worry and marvel at her at once.

Mark Ruffalo struggles with his accent but so comically that it might as well be the results of his character's own affectations. His journey is toward entropy, disintegrating steadily and shows a similar commitment to Stone's (but hers blows everyone offscreen). Willem Dafoe, under stitches and prosthetics, yet delivers a decaying sagacity that doesn't quite understand the cruelty he has inflicted with his wonders. He adopts a soft Celtic burr which gives him a paternal presence with a creepy edge. Margaret Qualley's role is a brief one but she demonstrates a flair for silent comedy. Her Sanctuary partner Christopher Abbot has a lot less trouble with his accent than Ruffalo but his must be right for the sadistic Alfie to work. It's a hell of a cast.

Lanthimos is using a commissioned music score for the first time and it makes strong use of motif to suggest Bella's increasing sophistication as well as quirky stabs of instruments electronically detuning. Considering previous outings like the sourced cues in The Favourite, I wonder how heavily he leaned on Jerskin Fendrix.

This is one of those films where the auteur calling the shots has long been comfortable with his sense of adventure he no longer cares if it's boundary pushing or not as long as it works. It does tell a story in linear fashion but it will still sit wrong with a lot of people who might be expecting a quirk-fest or a star vehicle. It is a supercharged fable, continually entertaining but thought provoking and it is a hell of a way to end my cinema year with a bang. Like your flavours on the rich side? Get a ticket to this and don't wait for streaming; sit down in the dark with people you don't know and let it flow in.

Tuesday, December 26, 2023

Review: DREAM SCENARIO

Paul Matthews, a flubby, aging academic who has been promising the world and himself that he'll write that book, begins appearing in people's dreams. It could be a family member (like the first scene of the film) or a total stranger. He keeps getting accosted by people who tell him of the dreams but one detail is increasingly disturbing him: he just appears, playing no part, neither saving nor antagonising the dreamer. Even in other peoples' dreams, he's flavourless and ineffectual. At first, this turns into a benign fame. His students want selfies with him and an online publishing/advertising firm are very keen. But this is an extended fable and that fame must turn into infamy which it does, quickly and punitively.

The apparently effortless fame of the online world and the post-truth culture hauls Paul so swiftly that he has no time to adjust to it let alone use it to his advantage. Even when his relative innocence is tested the occasion is ruined with a kind of sexual whiplash. When this is followed by a moment of fury (unrelated) the shift happens. This is where it might have got sidetracked into settling for a cheap shot at cancel culture and stayed where it was (after all, those who seek to cancel him have nothing but hallucinated actions to base their condemnation). But the film's insistence on developing Paul's predicament and character mercifully take us well beyond this.

I thought of a few things while watching this film. The first is how much more eloquent the thoughts on the influence of dream states this tale is than Christopher Nolan's Inception. Where that movie really only ends up being a  multilevel labyrinth game, this feels more solid and consequential. I also kept thinking of the short satire Muskrat Fun for Everyone by Stan Dryer. This short fiction which appeared in Playboy begins as a man's curiosity over a shady personal ad leads him into eventual public execration despite his having done nothing he is accused of. The cancel culture notes here seem clever at first as the case against Paul is due entirely to acts others have dreamed, hallucinations. However, the jokes about getting him in line with the likes of Jordan Peterson, Joe Rogan and Tucker Carlson are much funnier. The cancellation is just a tool here, not the basis of the story. That rests with Paul and his relation to the crazy world around him and his own lifelong acquiescence. (I also need to mention, here, the direct sourcing of an old piece of internet folklore.)

There are many riches of contemporary satire on display here like the company offering a technology that allows them to enter dreams (with appropriate safeguards) to advertise and the notion of "dreamfluencers" as well as young entrepreneurs who blend genuine enthusiasm with conscience-free greed. But Dream Scenario sheds its satirical skin by the third act and heads for something more profound and IRL. After the tribulation, Paul has a way back to discover and what it will cost. The warmth to this journey (wherever it leads) lifts this story well above those whose motivations fall more to base ridicule (e.g The Menu, The Hunt, the irredeemable Triangle of Sadness). I won't spoil the ending of this film but can say that the telescoping of some of its elements is textbook but heavily satisfying. And that's before the very last moment.

A strong cast plays well but in this story the shoulders that bear it are those of Nicholas Cage. Cage began in his uncle Francis' movies and travelled to arthouse roles before establishing himself as a buff action hero ready to compromise any reputation he had already won with image-busting weirdness. He has come to publicly acknowledge this and have fun with it. However, he has still a few hard pebbles set aside like his unlovely portrayal of the alcoholic in Leaving Las Vegas, studied neurosis of a ficitonalised real author Charlie Kaufman in Adaptation, the smellable feral revenger in Pig and now the dowdy no-one here. He's already done his WTF performances and can star in movies that only require he show fury with a grin. Then there's this. He fits into the vision of a cinematic world of a young (i.e. not yet forty) auteur who continues to explore the strange thing that truth has become. Cage gives us a solid core so that Dream Scenario never gets twee or cute, that its laughs are loud and its appeals to the heart are strong.

Thursday, December 21, 2023

MY 2023


A year of contrasts with a statistically correct big middle section. The ones I put in the middle are not films I necessarily dislike, I enjoyed most of them. It's just that they didn't have that extra element that took them higher. Similarly, the ones in the top list are not necessarily impeccable: they just all had that element, whatever it was. And the ones at the bottom are more likely disappointments than outright stinkers. This is because, as an amateur critic, I pay for my cinema tickets and tend not to pay to hate watch anything. It's most likely that I'll outright rail against things I've taken a chance on at MIFF as there's usually less or no hype about them and it's hard to tell in advance whether they're worth my time (this is an acceptable gamble with festivals, though). These aren't all the movies I saw this year, just the ones I wanted to comment on.

TOP

TALK TO ME - Now this is how you get away with a possession story after decades of Exorcist knockoffs (which continue into the new century). Making the danger of it drug-like was inspired and it still gives beyond that innovation. Outstanding. Film of the year.


THE BANSHEES OF INISHERIN -  Takes the cute Irish tale and turns it into an eviscerating fable of friendship. Extraordinary.

WOMEN TALKING -  Women who have been barred from education have to establish the language to use in order to make one of three cases in response to a local crime. Does what it says on the tin but what it says on the tin is extraordinary.

EMILY THE CRIMINAL - In which deadpan comic champ Aubrey Plaza loses herself in a thankless character role and comes out intact and more. 

PEARL - If Mia Goth was the one to watch in several small roles she bursts through the screen in this afterthought sequel that outdoes its original. Can't wait for Maxxxine.

INFINITY POOL - Oops, Mia Goth again, this time in a thrill kill cult (or are they?) finding a violence high in a fable like magical arrangement. Cronenberg Jr fell close to the tree.

LATE NIGHT WITH THE DEVIL -  Australian made but with American sensibility, this works a treat in pushing the post Nixon America into the post Exorcist culture. A delight.

BOTTOMS -  Funniest film of the year as gay teens start a fight club to lure their cheerleader crushes. It works but that's only the beginning. Funniest film of the year.

GODZILLA MINUS ONE -  From the gleaming Toho logo to the end credits, this proves that only a drop of originality is needed to lift a remake into the lofty realm of its original. Thrilling in its execution and sobering in its anti-war message.

PAST LIVES - Minimalist tale that takes a little too long to get to its quietly devastating final zinger but that is so strong that the dragginess in the middle feels like waiting rather than boredom.

WALK UP - Another Hong Sang-soo mini wonder of personal histories and the effects of impulsive decisions.

DREAM SCENARIO - A fable of fame for the social media aeon that fleshes out its satire with real warmth. A kind of Being John Malkovich for next week. Stellar turn by Nic Cage.

POOR THINGS - Lanthimos extends his already rich psychosocial pallet with this magical realist trek. Outstanding performance by Emma Stone.


MIDDLE

BARBIE - Great fun with satirical punch and a warm hearted message. I kept wanting more cultural pushback in Barbie's trek to self-actualisation but then, the satire and big numbers kept me laughing too hard to care much. Maybe a trim here and there.




OPPENHEIMER - First hour of three wasted in a needless "previously on Buffy" sequence and then an overlong vindication sequence with a spectacular story of the atomic bomb retelling in the middle. Nolan makes the package bigger than the product again.

SANCTUARY - Clever powerplay two hander gets bogged in its own process in the second act. The final moments redeem this but the drag lingers in the memory after the credits roll.

BROKER - Heart rending but satisfying road movie about how the idea of family can transcend blood ties.

EGO: THE MICHAEL GUDINSKY STORY - A decent enough document of a cultural giant that tends to glide over the more troubling aspects and deeds. That said I'd watch it again if it came up on streaming.

FOE  - Black Mirror episode stretched too far but redeemed by good performances.

THE ROYAL HOTEL - Well wrought scenes of toxic masculinity served positively with nuance but lacks a second act to render the finale as powerful as it should feel.  

YOU'LL NEVER FIND ME - Overlong reveal of the situation drags a good tight and atmospheric two hander.

MONOLITH - Thoroughly enjoyable fable of who gets to control the narrative with clever use of humanity's darker urges accelerated by communication technology.

FORBIDDEN PLAY - By the numbers J-horror revisit by the genre's inventor is perhaps one notch above okay.

IMMERSION - A coodabeen from another J-horror master moves too sluggishly to fulfil its promises.

BEAU IS AFRAID -  I liked this a lot better than everyone I talked to who saw it. It is self-indulgent and overlong but does make sense for anyone with the patience to think it through.

OF AN AGE - Decorous love story doesn't outstay its welcome. Perhaps a little overserious.

TAR - Great star turn by Cate Blanchett in a tale that works well but lacks power in the delivery of its narrative cataclysm.

M3GAN - Fun but feels too slight, even for its more general rating.

KNOCK AT THE CABIN - The twist is there's no twist. It's ok.

SCREAM VI - Some good sequences but the adherence to the rules is long overstretched by now. 

TOTALLY KILLER - Back to Friday the 13th. 

GODLESS: THE EASTFIELD EXORCISM - Kept wanting this one to explore the differences between the supernatural and scientific side. It does come down on one over the other but by that time it feels less powerful than it might have. That said, very good performances and production.


BOTTOM

TRIANGLE OF SADNESS - Hot shot Swedish auteur seeks to dazzle with a diminishing stock of tricks which amount to the insertion of disruptive motifs. It's a windscreen wiper, it's a lift door closing, it's a cleaner's trolley bashing against a wall, it's a wave bashing against the beached lifeboat, it's ... it's any other damned thing available that distracts an audience from the low substance count on screen. Bullshit from start to finish.

THE BOOGEYMAN - By the numbers conventional Stephen King adaptation from the guy who innovatively used the zoom meeting as a horror setting during COVID. I hope he gets trusted to do something more original next.

EVIL DEAD RISE - Great effects showreel with a few bones thrown to the franchise. It's ok.

IT LIVES INSIDE - Potentially strong monster entry dilutes its cultural assimilation theme until it's just a boogeyman figure scaring people.

THE MENU - If you're going for satire, try respecting your audience's intelligence. Could done iwth a massive edit of every obvious statement in it. Then again, you might not have a movie left. Smug rubbish.

THANKSGIVING - By the numbers '80s-style slasher set in the present does what it says on the tin. I will struggle to remember it.

DRACULA THE LAST VOYAGE OF THE DEMETER - Over-conventional and unscary waste of a good idea.

IT'S A WONDERFUL KNIFE - Soft and over-conventional waste of a good title.

ASTEROID CITY - Didn't bother but put it here, anyway.

Thursday, December 14, 2023

Review: BOTTOMS

PJ and Josie, two girls at the bottom of the school social ladder (being both gay and untalented) resolve to break their outsider status by forming a fight club with the pretence of empowering the female contingent of the student body but the aim of getting with the cheerleaders. The big game is coming up and the approach of the Huntington school football team is heralded with Hate Week style propaganda and mythology of ultraviolence. School life is revving up. Even more that PJ and Josie's ploy works and cheerleaders do turn up for the fight club training. Partly, this is due to the inadvertent untruth that the pair are fresh out of Juvie with grim records.

If this makes you think of the quirkier or edgier high school comedies like Booksmart or Heathers you're close but not quite there. Bottoms is reminiscent of those and more but its tougher cartoony approach takes it way out of that area. While it observes the three act arc of conventional narrative it also allows an unsettling imbalance to thrive which ensures that as soon as something gets too familiar there will be something to pull the rug on it. 

This is a school run by a principal whose stake in the team quarterback lies somewhere between an eye for future funding and pagan idolatry, and the football teams only wear their football gear. In warning the school on the PA about the advent of the feared Huntington team he gets a girl to deliver a testimony about how she was cornered by a Huntington player one night. The account is delivered flat, like an alpha girl getting out of detention and ends with, "and now I'm fucked!" Characters react with identical complex lines that would be impossible in real life but they also respond to other situations realistically and without wisecracks. The sense that the chaos is only just likely to rebalance itself is palpable. 

However, this keeps the cuteness in check with grimmer moods and material. In a script that has more throwaway one-liners than a week of Tina Fey's dreams there is a surprising level of sobering material on abuse and even rape. As a film that is undeniably a black comedy it keeps the easy charm of girls playing tough vulnerable to bruising. In a South Park way, the final act triumph (not saying how) serves both the satire-lover's thirst for punchy retribution and the comedy audience's need for brightness.

Good writing needs good playing. Rachel Sennot and Ay Edeberi as PJ and Josie respectively provide a core of two life long friends with real chemistry. If you saw Sennot in Bodies Bodies Bodies, she's even faster talking and more solidly grotesque here. Ruby Cruz as an uncharacteristically developed quirky character kept reminding me of Meg Tilly whom she resembles physically but also behaviourally. Nicholas Galitzine as the team QB surprises with his miasmic mix of machismo and prissy self-absorption. Really, the whole cast brings it.

With new things to say within the niche but well loved sub-genre and a very deft hand that steers between light and tough nimbly, Bottoms is one of the very best comedies I've seen in years. It's dizzying but committed. How dizzying, how committed? Well, I was a young adult in the early '80s and hated the Song Total Eclipse of the Heart more than any other musical statement of the time. It's used here in a way that is belly laugh funny and also culturally vengeful. Bottoms is a film of extremes and contrasting extremes. It is a chaos given form by the most moreish icing you've tasted since childhood. Dig the fuck in!

Tuesday, December 12, 2023

Review: GODZILLA MINUS ONE

Koichi cheats death by landing his kamikaze plane at an island maintenance base instead of the side of an American ship. The ground crew don't have a lot of time for recriminations over this as what they at first take to be a new Yankee weapon reveals itself to be the massive roaring reptile that the locals call Godzilla. Everyone is hurled about like rags and all but Koichi and the chief of the crew who knows the pilot's secret.

Back in the wreckage of Tokyo Koichi fails to find his family whose house is entirely at street level but gets involved with a young woman who has just saved a baby from a bomb site. Back at her place the story morphs into the kind of people first neo-realism Japanese cinema was good at after the war. Time passes and the pair, still not officially married, get jobs that help them climb out of their slough. She commutes to Ginza for an office job. He gets good hazard pay cleaning up American mines in the ocean. He has nightmares of the monster from the island, they haunt him like his war guilt. They are about to come true right where he lives.

Japanese cinema took decades to address its war history and the spectre of the atomic bomb bled into the least expected places like samurai movies or folk horror like Onibaba where distant clouds from battles or despoiled cities filled the medieval skies. In 1954 Ishiro Honda made Godzilla which directly dealt with the bomb and its effects, giving birth to a mythology where science in the service of warfare brought forth monsters the size of city blocks. The pushback against the monster is through an equally terrifying weapon developed during the war in Japan. The film, monster movie or not, examines the ethics of this and the emotional darkness of its potential use. The inventor needs rescue from depression, skulking in his home, hiding his face. The war and its cataclysmic finale was to keep rumbling in the cinema.

Godzilla Minus One's title refers to Japan being returned to zero by the war and plunged into the negative by Godzilla, brought forth by the war. The central notion haunting characters is how the war has left them, particularly those for whom there has bee no resolution, Like Koichi the kamikze. Godzilla's natural nuclear weaponry adds a heavy despair to the spectacle of its city-demolishing walk. That nightmarishly gigantic spectre of Hiroshima is there to return for as long as the monster can roam. Koichi getting speckled with splats of black rain while Godzilla bashes his city, is heartrending.

But this is a Kaiju movie and knows it. The humbler family scenes to begin with have their resonance and keep the stakes in our recall but Kaiju movies demand spectacle and we get just that. The huge spikes rising from the waves like a forest of shark dorsal fins are a terror. The sight of the monster rising from the waters and suckerpunching warships is powerful and thrilling. The city scenes of destruction will test your sense of vertigo as train cars are hurled through the air (one of which has a major character holding on to a rail too far above the ground to witness easily.

Gareth Edwards' 2014 U.S. reboot was a thrill, as well. I saw it in 3D and it played as you might imagine, with the action leaving everything else behind. There is a moment in it where Ken Watanabe calls the monster Gojira. Less than a minute later, one of the military types around him turn that into Godzilla and we never hear the Japanese pronunciation again. Godzilla Minus One doesn't need the translation. Nor does it need the transport to a comfort point of familiar Western settings. A Japan exhausted by war is asked to exhaust itself all over again. And as we look upon the wreckage of the bombed cities and then those devastated by monstrosity we cannot fail to recall the look of the vision leading news video for the past few years in Kiev and now Gaza City. Godzilla Minus One did not have to have those in mind when it went into production, it only had to remember the urgency of the original and repeat its plea for the people of the Earth to end the war, whichever one it happens to be, all war, finished, silence, birdsong. It is fitting that Gareth Edwards said after a screening of this film, "this is what a Godzilla movie should be like." Too bloody true.