#Gamera Super Monster
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Gamera!
#gamera#ć¬ć”ć©#kaiju art#showa era#kaiju#turtle#left handedness#pen and paper#fan art#my post#colored art#my art#art#traditional art#traditional drawing#pen and ink#gamera the giant monster#daiei film#tokusatsu#kadokawa#gamera vs jiger#gamera vs. gyaos#gamera vs zigra#2d art#2d artwork#gamera franchise#gamera series#artwork#fanart#gamera super monster
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French poster for Gamera Super Monster [x]
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Gamera Super Monster Gallery - Invincible Super Monster Gamera By Almighty Rayzilla
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Gamera Movie Marathon
Gamera the Giant Monster / The Invincible
Gamera vs Barugon
Gamera vs Jiger
Gamera vs Guiron
Gamera vs Zigra
Gamera vs Gyaos
Gamera vs Viras
Gamera Super Monster
Gamera Guardian of the Universe
Gamera 2 Attack of Legion
Gamera 3 Revenge of Iris
Gamera the Brave
#gamera movie marathon#Gamera movie#gamera movies#gamera the giant monster#gamera the invincible#gamera vs barugon#gamera vs jiger#gamera vs guiron#gamera vs zigra#gamera vs gyaos#gamera vs viras#gamera super monster#gamera guardian of the universe#gamera 2 attack of legion#gamera 3 revenge of Iris#gamera the brave#gamera#gyaos#guiron#zigra#iris#legion#barugon#jiger#Zedus#Toto#hyper gyaos#gamera franchise#movie marathon
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Gamera Super Monster is a funny movieĀ
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Film Ranking and Retrospective
So, after evaluating all twelve Gamera films based on purely objective metrics like turtle spin velocity, character development, how much I cried, number of potential sapphic relationships, and least amount of tapeworm, here they are from favorite to least favorite:
Gamera the Brave
Gamera: Guardian of the Universe
Gamera 3: Revenge of Iris
Gamera 2: Advent of Legion
Gamera: Super Monster
Gamera vs. Zigra
Gamera vs. Guiron
Gamera vs. Barugon
Giant Monster Gamera
Gamera vs. Gyaos
Gamera vs. Viras
Gamera vs. Jiger
Gamera the Brave takes the top spot for being so much more than it needed to be, perhaps taking a few steps outside what makes a typically good monster movie to just be an all-around great film. Of course, the Heisei trilogy still arenāt far behind, balancing the two a lot better than the Brave does and building an excellent cast of characters to the point that the hardest decision on this entire list, and the one Iām most likely to go back on at any moment, is ranking these three films against each other. Super Monster reaches for the stars just like the Brave does, daring to be something wholly unique despite its objective flaws, and is held back only by a gut punch ending after the likes of which I canāt actually make myself put it higher than the Heisei films. And of course, the rest of the Showa films are still going to end up ranked lower by being products of their time and having a relatively limited approach to in-depth storytelling, but there are still some I find exceptional for more unique reasons than I once thought I would. I even genuinely like most of Jiger, itās just so much sensory hell it can be tricky to watch.
But my goals during this extended fixation werenāt really centered on pitting the films against each other - there was a lot of discovery, too. About halfway through March I did something I hadnāt expected Iād want to at the beginning, and bought myself the Arrow Video complete Showa era collection, mainly to get a physical copy of Super Monster but also with the bonus of getting to see Japanese versions of all eight films. In fact, Iāve now seen the Showa films probably just about any way one can see them, be that the subtitled original Japanese version, the AIP dub or first import English version, the Daiei pre-international dub (which Iāve learned is a more accurate term than āSandy Frankā), the MST3K edition, the MST3K KTMA edition, the MST3K Fanmade edition, or specifically in Gamera: Super Monsterās case, the Elviraās Movie Macabre edition or the Cinema Insomnia edition thatās missing a whole third of the movie.
Thatās quite a lot of watching the Showa movies, and I think really a big theme for all of this was gaining a better appreciation of those films, specifically Noriaki Yuasa and his vision. He imagined Gamera as a hero for children, specifically because, as a child himself, living through the second World War and its aftermath, he came to believe adults were untrustworthy and too easily swayed by propaganda, and if that doesnāt make him the most relatable kaiju film directer of all time I donāt know what could possibly top it. Screw Gamera: Rebirth, the next one should be Gamera vs. Fox News.
Oh, right, speaking of which, I havenāt talked about that, either. And thatās because most of the major reasons I like the existing Gamera films so much tend to be more happenstance, and have little to do with how well theyāve followed the franchise formula. So far, nothing about Gamera: Rebirth has told me anything about how well it will handle its human characters, whether any of their stories will be relatable to me personally, whether itāll have a strong environmental stance like Zigra, and actually with what weāve seen of the cast, it seems like there arenāt going to be too many women in this series at all. Of course, that could always change, and thereās always a chance the one lady weāve seen in the trailers could be compelling enough on her own to still make it a favorite, like with Mai in Gamera the Brave, but we wonāt know anything for sure until release. But if, as seems most likely, Rebirth really is just a throwback to the early Showa era, I think now I can be a little more okay with that.
(I do actually quite like the monster designs revealed thus far. If I ever go back and write that possible Gamera vs. the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles sequel, thereās a good chance of that magenta Neo-Jiger showing up in the Triceraton arena).
I think, if I were to put into words what makes Gamera unique among kaiju cinema, itās that Gamera is most consistently a story about a giant monster interacting with humans, in most cases one or more specific humans. When I write for Toho kaiju (and by that I mean Battra), Iāll admit Iām basically just using yet another combination of the 37853590434 creative ways people have come up with to tell a story thatās still really about humans but using the monsters as the characters - and we do this because the monsters do have character. Unlike most giant creatures in the west, Japanese daikaiju represent things, they have emotions and personal values and life purposes, and often unique dynamics in interacting with one another. But you canāt really do much with just this side of things for the Gamera franchise, since thereās not a single monster in any of the full-length films whose relationship with Gamera is anything but antagonistic. But Gamera is already about the relationship between humans and monsters, and that was what I wanted to specifically take these couple of months to explore here, as itās very similar to the stories I've already been straying farther from canon in order to tell with the friends and enemies of the other Big G.
As far as most of the western kaiju fandom is concerned, having such a focus on humans might appear to be the biggest risk the Gamera movies ever took, given how many fans I often see dismissing the human characters as unimportant at best, annoying at worst. Personally, I beg to differ, and the more I rewatch these films, the more Iāve begun to appreciate how remarkable it is that this one subset of historical foreign cinema, with the characters it portrays and the values it represents, became embedded in western culture all because there happened to be a market for imported special effects films. There are actually quite a lot of kaiju movies whose stories inspire me to want to write about the humans as well as the monsters. But the top of that list, if I wrote it out, would probably be stacked with more Gamera movies than anything else.
#gamera#kaiju#tokusatsu#yuasa noriaki#noriaki yuasa#gamera the brave#gamera super monster#gamera vs zigra#a lesbian reviews all the gamera movies#gamera march#gamera april
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Gamera Super Monster (1980)
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Gamera: Super Monster Gallery - A poster advertisement called Sayonara Dojira (Godzilla) that appears in the film
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The movie itself is terrible, but these three are Lesbian Icons
The lovely superheroines, The Space Women - Marsha, Kilara, and Mitan - from the film Gamera: Space Monster (1980).
#gamera#gamera super monster#it's basically if steven universe and a kaiju clipshow ran into each other at top speed
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Now watching:
#Gamera: Super Monster#noriaki yuasa#mach fumiake#yaeko kojima#yoko komatsu#keiko kudo#koichi maeda#gamera#gyaos#zigra#viras#kaiju#kaiju summer
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Watching the Godzilla marathon so poll!
Of controversial Kaiju opinions!
#kaiju#gamera#gojira#godzilla#godzilla king of the monsters#godzilla minus one#Iris (kaiju)#Mothra#Seriously the new cgi gamara series is better then that dumb Godzilla anime#Singular point was trash#Super excited about the new movie from the shin Godzilla folks#Also Iris was not evil just misguided and really screwed over by the ketyperry girl.#>~> ill die on that hill
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So not only did Toru Kawai (Godzilla in Zone FighterĀ &Ā Terror of Mechagodzilla and Gamera in Gamera, Super Monster) play the Tyrannosaurus Rex in The Last Dinosaur, but he was also back in that suit to play Dinosaur Emperor Urulu in Great Dinosaur War: Aizenborg. But this does beg the question-- is that Kawai in the Tyrannosaurus suit dancing to Pink Ladyās U.F.O. in Uruluās final episode (#19)? https://youtu.be/wGutIVBCxbY?t=7
#Toru Kawai#Godzilla#Gamera#Tsuburaya#The Last Dinosaur#Aizenborg#Izenborg#Ururu#Urulu#Pink Lady#UFO#The Attack of the Super Monsters#suitmation#things that make you go hmm
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