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Posted: |
May 24, 2014 - 10:35 AM
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By: |
Tall Guy
(Member)
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Not being an expert, in the late 70s I saw Godzilla vs the Cosmic Monster, which 'co-starred' Mechagodzilla and King Cesar, the latter had a catchy little piece sung to him by a girl in front of a lake. Does this movie also have another title? Now please forgive me as I now digress. In the same double bill was a 1973 movie called Beyond Atlantis. I presume it used stock music because, and this is something only my fellow Brits here of a certain age will appreciate, as a fight scene between two women was brewing I felt I knew the scoring from somewhere. Until this moment where I suddenly realised it was the same music used for the opening theme to the UK's commercial channel's national News at Ten!!!! The recognisable bit is around the 23 sec mark. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BJoXpJFHGs4 Great spot, Paul. I miss the BONGs - but thought we might get a couple near the end, there... And finally... Back on topic, I've only heard a couple of marches from Ifukube's scores (which also turned up on Takeshi's Castle, of all things), but very much enjoy them. Ditto the Cloverfield tribute, great fun.
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GODZILLA VS. THE THING KING KONG VS. GODZILLA (Japanese version) GODZILLA 1985
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Like Thor, my Godzilla viewing experience is limited––though I can add Godzilla '54 to my brief seen list. David Arnold's Godzilla '98, however, is one of my all-time favorite scores, regardless of genre. Alexandre Desplat's contribution was surprisingly entertaining for its unabashed bombast and––along with Bryan Cranston––the best part of the frustratingly vanilla film; though I don't know how well the score would play on its own. And Thor, I do recommend seeing the original. Technological limitations apart, the film is worth watching for its story, its characters, and its striking imagery. It's been awhile so the specifics are hazy for me, but I recall being quite moved by a scene toward the end where one brave character dives into the ocean, I assume on a one-way-ticket mission to destroy Godzilla. Definitely worth a watch for fans of science-fiction cinema. Ifukube's music is not a bad selling point, either. I'm sorry I missed out on the LLL release. I hope it makes it back to CD someday.
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Not being an expert, in the late 70s I saw Godzilla vs the Cosmic Monster, which 'co-starred' Mechagodzilla and King Cesar, the latter had a catchy little piece sung to him by a girl in front of a lake. Does this movie also have another title? Now please forgive me as I now digress. In the same double bill was a 1973 movie called Beyond Atlantis. I presume it used stock music because, and this is something only my fellow Brits here of a certain age will appreciate, as a fight scene between two women was brewing I felt I knew the scoring from somewhere. Until this moment where I suddenly realised it was the same music used for the opening theme to the UK's commercial channel's national News at Ten!!!! The recognisable bit is around the 23 sec mark. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BJoXpJFHGs4 Great spot, Paul. I miss the BONGs - but thought we might get a couple near the end, there... And finally... Back on topic, I've only heard a couple of marches from Ifukube's scores (which also turned up on Takeshi's Castle, of all things), but very much enjoy them. Ditto the Cloverfield tribute, great fun. Thanks TG. I only mentioned it because mentioning the Godzilla film reminded me of this funny moment, and had to get it off my chest, even if it might've found a slightly bigger response as a topic on it's own. I just remember my uncle and myself howling with laughter at this incident., and was very pleased to find that YouTube had the very example. Of course I know now how stock music is used all over the place and such things can crop up. As for Godzilla I too have only seen a handful of films. King Kong vs Godzilla was the first on tv as a kid, along with King Kong Escapes at the cinema (which I prefer), and now have both on dvd. Then Cosmic Monster was next, and finally in the UK's Channel 4 showed a whole bunch, in the eighties I believe. These included Destroy All Monsters which I had longed to see since a visit to Canada in the 70s as a 12 year old, and bought a copy of The Monster Times which featured it. That same visit to my sister's allowed me to see Frankenstein Conquers the World. I did enjoy the '98 version but was dismayed at the monster not looking the same. I should be seeing the new one this week sometime. As for the music (at last – on topic!), I do like the theme that the Big G has in many of the Japanese movies, which I assume is the one everyone's mentioned, though nothing has yet made me go so far as to buy an album of music. I'd be delighted if I felt the need to put that right after this week's visit to the cinema.
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