Showing posts with label Lists. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lists. Show all posts

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Misleading Giant Monster Movie Posters (Part 2)

Sorry about the wait between posts- busy personal schedule and all that. Let’s continue onward, shall we?


Godzilla vs. Megalon


The Poster:

Godzilla and his new rival, Megalon, have both climbed to the top of the World Trade Center towers and are about to commence in a battle that will probably flatten New York city!


The Movie:

Godzilla nor Megalon get anywhere near New York. At the time of its production, the Godzilla franchise was at a low point, budget-wise, so a fight in the middle of a city with plenty of collateral damage was definitely out of the question. So where do the monsters have their skirmish in the film? Why, in a big, nondescript patch of countryside with nary a skyscraper to be seen.


It’s commonly believed that the choice to depict the two monsters atop the World Trade Center towers was most likely a shallow attempt to capitalize on the buzz surrounding the Dino De Laurentiis’ remake of King Kong, which was to be released that same year.

The Wasp Woman


The Poster:

A hapless (and shirtless) man has fallen into the clutches of an abomination with the body of a humungous wasp and the head of a human woman! Judging by the pile of skeletal remains underneath her, she has an voracious appetite for humans and will undoubtedly move on to that city in the distance for the main course!


The Movie:

This particular poster achieves a two-punch deception in that the monster in the movie:


1) Isn’t giant-sized.


2) Sports an opposite arrangement of animal/human body parts.


In the film, Wasp Woman is the owner of a cosmetic corporation who, through overdosing on a serum derived from the royal jelly of a queen wasp, periodically undergoes a crazy transformation. The change doesn’t make her any bigger or mutates her from the neck down, but it does give her the head of a wasp...


... that kinda looks like a Pokémon.


Godzilla vs. the Thing


The Poster:

A rather elongated Godzilla is facing off against some spiky, tentacled horror that cannot be fully seen! What could it be? There’s nothing in Toho’s pantheon of daikaiju from that period in time (1964) that even looks remotely close to this unknown creature! I’m perplexed but intrigued! Mostly perplexed, though.

The Movie:

The Thing? It’s Mothra.


Apparently the American distributor, AIP, had concerns that Western audiences might be less than enthusiastic about a movie about a mutant dinosaur fighting an enormous moth and decided to play up Godzilla’s opponent as part-mystery, part-thorny octopus. Even the title alone is confusing; when I first saw this on TV as a wee, impressionable youngster, I kept waiting for the mysterious “thing” to show up, even long after Mothra made her appearance in the film.


Arguably, this particular poster- out of all the ones mentioned on this list- is the worst offender of the lot. Although the previously mentioned entries play fast and loose with exaggeration, they still all stem from some kernel of truth at their respective cores. Godzilla vs. The Thing is only one that flat out lies by prominently advertising something that simply isn’t in the movie.


You win, Godzilla vs. the Thing- your poster is the most misleading of all! Here’s a cake to celebrate your victory:


Monday, August 22, 2011

Misleading Giant Monster Movie Posters (Part 1)

I absolutely adore old sci-fi and horror film posters. In this age of internet tubes and knowing everything about a film before it even hits the theaters, it’s easy to forget that once upon a time, posters were used as a legitimate device to entice unsuspecting patrons into buying an admission ticket. And, as is the case with advertising, there was always a certain amount of... embellishment present. After all, the only way you were going to get an audience to pay money to see something like this:


...was to market it like this:


That being said, there are cases where the level of exaggeration went a little TOO far and what the poster artwork promised veered straight into the territory of outright dishonesty. The following are some of my favorite examples.


Yog, Monster from Space (a.k.a. Space Amoeba)


The Poster:

A trio of humongous, mutant sea creatures are squaring off in a three-way rumble! Awesome! And look- the original Japanese version of the poster features a similar image, thus confirming that said brawl will happen!


The Movie:

The brawl doesn't happen. In fact, the cuttlefish monster is killed off before the other two even make an appearance. Granted, the turtle and crab get into a brief altercation at the very end of the movie but it just doesn't make up for the anticipated triple beat down. However, the deception didn’t end with the poster. Check this out:


Seemingly, in an attempt to perpetuate the poster’s deception, the promotional photographs for the movie also featured the three monsters fighting each other!


Oh, Toho... when will the lies stop?


Reptilicus


The Poster:

An enormous dragon is destroying the Golden Gate Bridge! San Francisco is screwed!


The Film:

While the movie is about a dragon-like creature and does feature a scene with a bridge, that's pretty much where the similarities end. Much like the poster for The Giant Claw, using an image of Reptilicus as it appears in the film wouldn’t be a very good idea. Unfortunately, the artist’s attempts to punch up the monster’s appearance was, perhaps, a little too effective as the end result is something legitimately cool-looking when compared to the actual thing:


And the Golden Gate Bridge? It’s a nice example of “localization” so as to make the movie (or the poster, anyway) more relatable to an American audience. Reptilicus takes place in Denmark and while there is a scene involving a bridge, it’s actually the Langebro bridge in Copenhagen:


For the record, it doesn’t get destroyed either.


The Crater Lake Monster


The Poster:

A Tyrannosaurus Rex has somehow survived to modern day and is about to make a meal of two hapless boating enthusiasts! I'm sure it's only a matter of time before it wanders into a nearby town or resort and goes all Valley of the Gwangi on the locals!


The Movie:

Here's a riddle: when is a T-Rex not a T-Rex? When it's a plesiosaur.


That's right- not only is the actual monster of the movie is an entirely different creature than what’s advertised but it also operates in a completely contrasting environment. It's like making a film about a murderous killer whale but then adorning the film’s poster with an image of a grizzly.


The poster was eventually corrected, but you have wonder what the movie’s producers were thinking the first time around. Perhaps they REEEALLY liked Tyrannosauruses or something.


More to come in part two!

Saturday, February 2, 2008

Top 10 Weird Giant Movie Monsters

While enormous apes and mutant dinosaurs are usually the first things that come to mind when one thinks of city-destroying behemoths, there have been a few concepts over the years that have inspired more chuckles and bewilderment than spectacle. This isn’t to say that I would consider the creations on this list as unwelcome in the annals of giant monster movies (well, maybe except for the killer bunny rabbits); if anything, their strangeness adds a kind of eccentric flavor to the genre as a whole.

In order to qualify for the list, as well as to round the entrants down to a reasonable number, two criteria had to be met:

1) The creature had to come from a movie specifically about a giant monster, not from one wherein a giant monster happens to be in it.

2) The monster’s context in the film had to be at least relatively serious (thus adding to the unintentional weirdness). The Stay Puft Marshmallow Man, for example, doesn’t count because his appearance in Ghostbusters is meant to be a joke.

10. Mothra

Let’s face it, an insect as benign as a moth is a rather strange choice to enlarge into a giant, intimidating monster. They’re not aggressive by any stretch and don’t even possess the ability to bite or sting; they simply fly around and repeatedly slam into light fixtures. Making said monster fuzzy and imbuing it with a color scheme that suggests candy would tumble out of its body if it were struck hard enough isn’t exactly helping things either. As her cinematic appearances wore on, Mothra began to sport increasingly fanciful powers that would make an entomologist weep, including (but not limited to) plasma beams, generating a poisonous powder that could reflect energy, and shooting quill-like stingers from her abdomen. This concept was taken even further when she starred in her own trilogy of films during the 90’s and displayed a Pokémon-like ability to evolve into different, specialized forms (like an armored body or one that could swim underwater). The crazy superpowers can be somewhat excused in that Mothra is supposed to be a mystical being, but it doesn’t make them any less bizarre.

Also, she has a larval form that looks like a colossal dog turd. There, I said it.

9. Ebirah

Sharks. Octopi. Sea Snakes. Moray Eels. Even though the ocean is full of dangerous and fearsome creatures that could be used as potential giant monsters, the filmmakers of Godzilla vs. the Sea Monster (a.k.a. Ebirah, Horror of the Deep) decided to settle on a species of marine life best known for being deep fried and dipped into cocktail sauce. Eibrah’s design does little to offset the problem, as he almost appears to have a long, pointy nose and moustache, evoking images of the gun-toting, bandito lobsters from an old Muppet Show sketch involving the Swedish Chef. The kicker though, is that Ebirah is really only a threat to puny humans and puny humans alone (and assuming said puny humans aren’t decently armed, as evidenced in Godzilla: Final Wars) as his two run-ins with Godzilla during the course of the movie simply result in embarrassing ass-kickings.

8. Guilala

When it comes to designing a monster, any creature that falls under the classification of “alien” is understandably allowed a certain amount of leeway in regards to sporting an offbeat appearance (since an alien, by the very definition of the word, is supposed to look unusual). However, this can occasionally open the door for unintentionally humorous-looking creations. Such was the case in the film The X from Outer Space featuring the space monster, Guilala. He’s definitely an extraterrestrial; one that looks like a cross between a chicken and a lizard with a body that’s been assembled from Japanese pork dumplings. But as an extra precaution to drive home the whole alien theme, the film’s designers gave the monster a pair of springy, cartoon-like antennae on the top of his head that bounce around with an almost hypnotic allure. Whenever Guilala appears in the movie- bam! Your eyes go right to 'em. It cannot be resisted. Unfortunately as such, the result is a goofy-looking menace from space that just can’t be taken seriously, no matter how much the film tries to convince the audience otherwise.

7. Guiron

Although Gamera has a Rogues Gallery that isn’t as recognizable as some of Godzilla’s more famous enemies, there is one creature in the bunch that outshines all others in terms of its general peculiarity. In Gamera vs. Guiron, the giant flying turtle heads to the plant Terra to rescue a pair of hapless Earth children from evil space women, but first has to contend with their watchdog beast, Guiron. Said monster can be best described as such: imagine if a shark, a frog and a machete participated in a disturbing three-way and then, through a combination of pixie dust and blasphemy, had a baby. That’s Guiron in a nutshell. Granted, much like aforementioned Guilala, Guiron can also play the “well, he is an alien so he can be weird-looking” card, but it’s hard to ignore the fact that he basically amounts to a malevolent cutlery/toad thing. And as if his appearance alone isn’t strange enough, he also possesses the ability to shoot ninja throwing stars out from a hole just above his eye socket. That trait combined with the whole “knife for a head” theme that not only raises suspicions about Guiron’s possible origins as an artificially-created, biomechanical monster, but also as to what the filmmakers were smoking when they came up with the idea for the character in the first place.

6.Megalon

Godzilla has more than his fair share of unusual opponents over the years, but arguably one of the most outlandish was the titular adversary from Godzilla vs. Megalon. Despite being based on an insect motif, Megalon sports a bipedal, human-like body more akin to a Power Rangers villain than the typical Toho tradition of a animal-like monster or enlarged bug (not terribly surprising considering that Ultraman and other similar Japanese superhero shows were enjoying popularity in Japan at the time). While his rather fantastical offensive capabilities (a horn on the top of his head can fire electricity and explosive napalm balls can be spit out from his mouth) certainly adds to his strangeness, the real showpiece of this particular monster is his hands- or rather, lack thereof. Instead of the expected claws or bug-like pincers, Megalon’s arms end in drills. Functional drills. I need not say more.

5. Japanese Frankenstein

Leave it to Japan to come up with quite possibly the strangest take on the Frankenstein’s Monster; in Frankenstein Conquers the World, a homeless feral child finds and consumes the irradiated heart of the monster (which, as it turns out, had been transported to the Hiroshima Army Hospital in Japan during World War 2 just in time for the atomic bomb to be dropped on the city) which causes him to grow into a gangly-limbed humanoid resembling equal parts caveman and inbred hillbilly. As he is a much “smaller” (about 60 feet tall or so) giant monster than the standard Toho kaiju, the film’s director portrayed Frankenstein with a generous (almost unbefitting) amount of mobility and speed, allowing the creature to bound across the Japanese countryside like a hyperactive child and partake in an energetic wrestling match with the other monster in the film, Baragon. And while said fight is entertaining, the fact that the gangly Frankenstein manages to hold his own against (and eventually triumph over) his comparably larger and sturdier-looking adversary is just another layer of icing on this surreal little cake of a movie.

4. The Giant Claw

While Godzilla was an allegory about the horror of the atomic bomb, The Giant Claw serves as a cautionary tale about sending special effects work to Mexico in order to save money; in doing so, the film ended up with one of the most laughable movie monsters to ever hit the screen, giant-sized or otherwise. The beast in question is an alien buzzard/vulture from an anti-matter galaxy (!) as portrayed by a bug-eyed, rubbernecked marionette complete with a comical-looking tuft of hair protruding from its otherwise bald head. The bird is so totally ridiculous in appearance that it completely undermines the intended drama of every scene it appears in. Apparently the cast of the movie had no idea what the finished monster would look like until they attended the premiere and watched the embarrassing final product. Rumor has it that one of the lead actors left the screening and promptly headed to a nearby bar to get drunk- an understandable maneuver, really.

3. The 50-Foot Woman

The Amazing Colossal Man was one of the first films to explore the idea of a giant-sized human as a monster, which was soon followed by a take on the same idea with a feminine twist; but whereas the idea of gargantuan bald man wearing what looks like a diaper is truly horror incarnate, an attractive, scantily-clad, giant woman with a knockout figure is the kind of monster you’d probably run towards rather than away from. The “attack” in Attack of the 50 Foot Woman isn’t really much to speak of either, in both the original and the 1993 remake starring Daryl Hannah- the most significant collateral damage that the title character pulls off in both versions is wrecking a couple of rooftops. Most normal-sized women are capable of that with a bit of determination.

2. The Lepus

Rabbit: an animal whose name is synonymous with terror... that is, if you’re a carrot. Unfortunately for human audiences, Night of the Lepus features a variety of mutant wildlife that’s just too cute to be taken seriously. The fact that they’re also flesh-eaters simply makes the idea all the more ridiculous. It further didn’t help that the giant rabbits were realized in the film by way of having plump, fuzzy pet store bunnies move around on miniature sets in slow motion. At least the movie poster had the common sense to omit any images of giant rabbits and instead opted to play up the mystery of what the monsters in the film might possibly be, thus pulling off the cinematic equivalent of receiving a Christmas present in the shape of a motorcycle that is actually a creatively arranged collection of socks and underwear underneath the wrapping paper.

1. Gamera

A gigantic, tusked, fire-breathing turtle that flies by means of jet propulsion and protects the children of the world; the core concept in and of itself simply wins hands down for being the most oddball of the lot. Just read that opening description again out loud if you’re not convinced. Adding fuel to the fire was the fact that the original films were intended for a younger audience, which lead to a wealth of campy antics like (but not limited to) Gamera swinging around on a giant horizontal pole like an Olympic gymnast (Gamera verses Guiron), striking the armored plates on the back of an enemy monster like a xylophone in order to musically reproduce his signature theme song (Gamera verses Zigra) and even flying unaffected through the vacuum of outer space. Stranger still, the early nineties saw the character re-imagined in a trilogy of films that took the idea of a giant, jet-propelled turtle and actually made it awesome- no easy feat. With twelve films under his belt, Gamera has proven that sometimes even the strangest ideas can be every bit as enduring as their more grounded counterparts. We salute you, friend to all children.