All Monsters Attack

1969 [JAPANESE]

Action / Adventure / Crime / Family / Fantasy / Horror / Sci-Fi

8
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Rotten 29% · 7 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled 18% · 2.5K ratings
IMDb Rating 3.9/10 10 5771 5.8K

Plot summary

Ichiro Miki is a child living in the industrial district of Kawasaki, where his parents' constant struggle to make ends meet often leaves the schoolboy alone. Constantly teased by a bully nicknamed Gabara, his only friends are toy consultant Shinpei and fellow classmate Sachiko. Ichiro turns to escapist dreams of Monster Island where he befriends the equally bullied Minilla.


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April 04, 2021 at 01:27 AM

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720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
641.03 MB
1280*544
Japanese 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 9 min
Seeds ...
1.16 GB
1920*816
Japanese 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 9 min
Seeds 11

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by IonicBreezeMachine 4 / 10

Is it the worst film in the franchise? Probably. Is it deserving of its level of scorn? Bit more complicated

Set at the end of the 1960s a young boy named Ichiro (Tomonori Yazaki) is a shy lonely boy who is often by himself due to his parents needing to work two jobs and is often a target for bullies such as Gabara (Junichi Ito) and his gang. Ichiro returns home after school to check in with his toymaker neighbor Minami (Hideyo Amamoto) who looks after him and then proceeds to dream about visiting Monster Island where Godzilla lives and going on adventures with Godzilla's son Minilla. When Ichiro comes across a driver's license in an abandoned building, he inadvertently crosses paths with two bank robbers who stole 50 million Yen.

Although Toho Studios had considered putting the Godzilla series to rest after Destroy All Monsters, the successful export of Destroy All Monsters to countries abroad most likely helped persuade Toho to continue the series. After a deal to co-produce an animated series with Filmation fell through (similar to Toho's deal with Rankin-Bass regarding King Kong Escapes' ties with the cartoon The King Kong Show), Toho continued with the mindset of producing an additional Godzilla film aimed at children that would be produced quickly and cheaply through use of stock footage. The film proved to be a decent performer at the time making about as much as Destroy All Monsters had made (and likely more profitable due to a reduced budget) but critical and audience reception has remained tepid to put it generously with many often declaring it the worst Godzilla movie. Objectively speaking, All Monsters Attack/Godzilla's Revenge falls short of the standards one expects from a Godzilla movie and yet at the same time I can't fully dismiss it either.

To get things out of the way: Yes, all the problems you've heard about this movie are true now and they were true then. The movie's brazen recycling of stock footage from the last three Godzilla films is massively excessive and the fact that much of the "plot" takes place in dream/fantasy sequences robs the movie of any real sense of stakes or weight for much of the time since we know it's a dream. Then of course we have Minilla who now speaks (with a gratingly silly voice in the American dub) and has the personality of being a cowardly simpleton alternating between hackneyed "Gee gosh" dialogue and his braying and squealing he had in the prior two films. There is some new monster footage featuring Godzilla and Minilla fighting against a new creature called Gabara and while Gabara's design isn't great it's good enough even if the fights feature a lot of flailing slapstick from Minilla.

So yeah, the actual monster element of this monster film isn't that great but at the same time I can't fully dismiss it. Despite the film having a clearly tighter budget, that frugalness does actually kind of work to the film's benefit in depicting contemporary Japan in the real world sequences. This is where I feel that director Ishiro Honda deserves some slack because Toho wanted a cheap children's movie using stock footage and they were going to get it, at least Honda tries to add some semblance of weight and substance to what could've been a purely cynical cash grab. As the film was made during a time of economic hardship in Japan where rising living costs necessitated both parents taking jobs leading to a rise in latchkey kids, you do get a sense of the times in which the film was made with how Ichiro and several other children are basically left to fend for themselves. While the plot where Ichiro comes across and foils two bank robbers has more than an air of the fantastical to it, you can see Honda trying to make an empowerment story for children in overcoming their own personal "monsters" and having that strength within themselves. Does that make the movie underrated? I won't go that far because the lackluster production values coupled with a sometimes confused script (such as the ending sequence where he beats his bullies only to befriend them through a mischievous prank) have issues that are hard to ignore, but given the time and situation surrounding this material this isn't as bad as it should be especially when compared to similar films like Gamera: Super Monster or Space Warriors 2000.

All Monsters Attack is clearly originated from cynical executives looking to sucker people into something with low costs and low effort, but at the same time that cynicism isn't coming through in the writing or direction. If you're looking for a Godzilla movie to watch this isn't one you should see as there are far better examples, but it also doesn't deserve as much scorn as I first thought.

Reviewed by mark.waltz 3 / 10

We've got the footage and we've got the costume sitting in storage. So why not?

A little runt of a kid gets lost in his fantasy world a Godzilla films as he fantasizes about visiting Monster Island and befriends "the son of Godzilla" who rescues him from a big pit and various other creatures. This film has him both in his real home and his make-believe world, and somehow he thinks that he's in some of the Godzilla movies that he's already seen, creating his own adventure. Baby lizard can talk (A goofy cartoon kind of speak), and obviously the mission of this dream is to get the kid to learn to stand up for himself, against bullies that overact so badly you long to see a monster appear and eat them. But he has to deal with real human monsters on Earth and addition to the bullies with two idiotic bank robbers who mamage to abduct him.

The dubbing for this film is truly absurd, with a Japanese used car salesman sounding someone like Paul Lynde and the two bank robbers equally as ridiculous. The storyline in real time is not very entertaining, so the limited footage on Monster Island ends up being the only interesting stuff, although it's still very juvenile in nature, obviously made for early Saturday matinee audiences and not really intended for mature viewers. At times, it's genuinely painful to sit through. The toy shop where the kid hangs out features some truly ridiculous Contraptions, including a moving glove that seems to be calling out "support your local police" or something along that nature. One of the creatures on the island has a dog barking like sound that has to be heard to be believed. The young monster gives a clue that even in the Monster World, there are wimps and nerds and bullies, and for those who haven't seen Son of Godzilla, the rocks baseball game between Godzilla and the lobster is edited in here, followed by the big lobster boiling moment. Overall, a pretty lazy production with nothing to offer to the series.

Reviewed by winner55 3 / 10

not recommended

This is really two films.

One film is a kid's visit to Monster Island, where he witnesses a compilation of fight scenes from "Son of Godzilla" and "G. Vs. the Sea Monster". Some of this footage looks like out-take or alternate take material; the whole Gabara episode may well have been intended for "Son of" and excised, in the way that "Frankenstein Conquers the World" was to include a fight with a giant squid, some footage of which finding its way into "King Kong Vs. Godzilla".

The second film is a story of a young boy of the working class in an overly-industrialized modern Japan, neglected by his parents, bullied in school, who finds himself kidnapped by a gang of bank robbers and has to learn courage and wit in order to deal with his situation.

The first film is notorious as a "stock-footage" fiasco with a talking monster. The edits only make evident weaknesses in the original material.

The second film is staggeringly depressing. When I first saw this, I wasn't sure how to respond, because certainly I wasn't looking for a grim expose of industrialized Japan. But the first episodes of this storyline, with its backdrop of empty lots and factory smokestacks billowing in the background, add up to a truly unpleasant experience.

Finally, at the center of all this is one of the more annoying child actors of the period. Hard to identify with, and easy to wish away, I feel no sympathy with him at all as an individual, only as representative of the thousands of neglected children like him.

It should be noted that the stock-footage here was filmed by the 'other Godzilla director', Jun Fukuda - so why does Ishiro Honda use it, why not use his own Godzilla material? A real enigma of a film, part overly serious tragicomedy, part self-lacerating rip-off.

Obviously not recommended except for Godzilla completists.

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