Shin Godzillas atomic fire scenes honestly was one of the most hair raising scenes in a movie ever. Goosebumps galore, as you witness minutes of absolute devastation.
Plus it definitely helped they apparently hid the big g actually firing his atomic breath in the marketing with the closest thing we got was shin godzilla in crayon shin chan but he used a classic wide blue beam
If you would find the lyrics of the song playing while Shin let out the first atomic breath, it might completely change your view, possibly of the entire movie. This was not a mindless monster destroying everything, it was a creature in pure agony, respresenting what suffering the victims of radiation poisoning went through.
Fun fact about Shin Godzilla. Hideki Anno had just finished the third Rebuild of Evangelion movie and was really depressed by it. Someone suggested he direct Shin Godzilla to help him deal with his depression. He did and he got over his depression and gave the Eva movies and franchise a happy ending. So thank you Shin Godzilla.
My favorite fact about Godzilla is that he's capable of absorbing and expelling radiation. Through this ability, he can render entire countries uninhabitable for thousands of years, can genocide entire ecosystems by standing there menacingly, and his Atomic Breath is pure focused radiation. In fact, that's why it's blue. Chekhov's Radiation, I believe it's called, is one of most deadly forms of radiation and large quantities of it distort light and therefore creating a blue glow.
Seems feeding Godzilla radioactive waste could be the solution to that problem, though considering it tends to make him bigger/stronger and possibly more aggressive, it might not be such a good idea after all 😅
its called cherenkov radiation... www.energy.gov/ne/articles/cherenkov-radiation-explained#:~:text=Cherenkov%20radiation%20happens%20when%20electrically,interact%20to%20give%20off%20light.
originally godzilla was supposed to be another species that had been burned and scarred from atomic testing. his original appearance he was a burn victim. @@sabishiihito
1998 Godzilla was actually a female. Was pregnant during the film. The animated series takes place after the movie, which features the offspring of the 1 in the live action production. These 2 are the most realistic in a sense because they actually look like a mutated iguana. Also the 1st Gojira to be so agile on land not just in the water.
Dean Devlin who co-wrote and produced the film stated that no while it does produce asexually it’s not a female. (My sources are the RU-vid channel Wikizllas 1998 Godzilla and Zilla Kaiju profile and the website named Wikizilla.)
The suit used in the first gojira movie was so bulky that the suit actor lost a lot of weight and ended up passing out quite often Later suits were slimmed down for safety reasons
My favorite fact about Goji comes from Goji 2014. They really liked the sound of godzillas new roar and went “Hey i wonder what this would sound like in real life.” And so they got a ton of massive speakers, put them in an array, and blasted it. They got a ton of complaints lmao
Gojira was released in 1954, as a film talking about the dangers of nuclear weapons. (I may have botched the full explanation, but I hope you get it.) Literally 9 years after the bombing of Hiroshima. So when that movie came out, you can imagine that event was still fresh in everyone's minds. So when watching this with that perspective in mind, you would realize how impactful it was, and why it was so intense when I was watching it. Edit: Also, the '98 Godzilla never had an atomic breath, like the others. So that was a lie. lol
When New Line Cinema got the rights to adapt Return of Godzilla for western audiences, they initially wanted to turn it into a comedy, and shot new scenes for the movie. Raymond Burr (who was in the original adaptation of Gojira turned Godzilla: King of the Monsters 1954 and star of Perry Mason) shut that down immediately said he'd walk if they did that. The producers listened, and while not as serious as the uncut film, still managed to keep the darker tone. That's one of the many interesting stories about Godzilla 1985.
Return of Godzilla, is also a direct sequel to Gojira, the original 1954 one, dismisses all the other Godzilla movies in between. Several Godzilla movies do this, so there's several different timelines, there's even time travel in one of the movies. It can get a bit daunting. Return of Godzilla returned the movie to a more serious/darker tone, as Godzilla in the 60s/70's was basically made for kids.
@@charminbaer2323 Yes, that is where Toho kept messing up. There was no need to keep rebooting the character since some of the movies before it were very good. The best reboot story was from Godzilla 2014 in which director Gareth Edwards said that in this movie's universe the Toho films were being made and were based on photos and pictures sent to the movie company from people who had seen Godzilla. Toho designed the basics of his looks from such items... and this is the part that gave me the good kind of chills where Gareth Edwards said, but when you see Godzilla in this movie, you're seeing the "real" Godzilla. Such a perfect way of not alienating fans of the Toho movies since, technically they were not ignored. After viewing that movie, I now think of the old Godzilla movies the way he said. Godzilla 2014 is, IMHO the only good movie from Legendary Monsterverse.
The Hanna Barberra cartoon Godzilla was huge! The little Godzilla was called "Godzuki" instead of Minya like the movies, and stayed with a research boat that explored the oceans. When they got in trouble, they could press a button to summon Godzilla, OR Godzuki could scream to summon him. The 1998 version was from the U.S., as opposed the rest being Japanese, hence the total change in looks.
I like how even from a layman's perspective Shin Godzilla stands out as the most insane and incredible of the entire series. Just the best Godzilla put to film
@@flap.d.jack247Shin Godzilla definitely isn’t the best but in my opinion, it’s definitely up there in design. I just wish the movie’s execution was better because all we know is that Shin evolved and just dies from being frozen. That’s it. Everybody keeps saying “Oh, Shin can evolve to consume the universe”, but the movie DOESN’T TELL US THAT! If he can’t evolve out of the freezing components they used, how in the darn hell can he evolve to take over the damn universe?
@@rainer999 lmao dont be a hater and in denial. it was in the productions notes or whatever of the guy who made it. he was a huge anime guy too. which played into shin godzilla powers. but had it got a trilogy of movies to flesh out the lore and other evolutions we would have gotten to see it. shin godzilla becoming what his name always hinted at. a GOD!! just cuz it didnt happen in the movie dont mean its not canon. it was intended. the ppl in the movie even hint at it so its semi canon. lol. 😁😄 sadly tho the anime guy didnt care to make anymore more movies and shin Godzilla is all we have. but thats fine. cuz its great and it is deff the most terrifying version of him. going way back to the original film where he isnt a friend or foe. just a consequence of mans sins against nature and force of nature. ...true godzilla. it fits.
A new Godzilla movie will be released in Japan on November 3rd of this year(Godzilla's birthday). The movie is set in 1944-1945 after the Pacific War, but I am really looking forward to seeing what kind of Godzilla it will become.
In the 2014 Godzilla movie, Godzilla measured 355 feet tall with a 550 foot, 4 inch long tail. In King Of The Monsters, he grew to 393 feet tall with a tail measurement of 582 feet. He has 89 plates running down his back, his palms measure 34 feet, 4 inches wide and his roar has a radius of 3 miles.
Godzilla's iconic roar was made by rubbing a leather glove on a bass and playing the sound backwards. Also the biggest godzilla on record so far is Godzilla Earth. America has made 2 godzilla films. The first being 1998 Tristar godzilla and the second being the monsterverse films. There's technically 5 godzilla film series, showa (1954-1975), Hesei (1984-1995), Millennium (1999-2004), Monsterverse (2014-2021) and Reiwa (2016-present)
The designs changed to suit the film: the "lazy eye" Godzilla from _Son of Godzilla_ was meant to make it seem gentler; the "puppy face" version from _vs Megalon_ and _vs MechaGodzilla_ made it more "kid friendly" but the old-school director who came back for _Terror of MechaGodzilla_ wasn't having that, so Big G got a more serious-looking design. The suits weren't always redesigned or rebuilt between movies so there's some overlap which the video skips; in fact, the one used for _vs Megalon_ was falling apart by the time they filmed _vs MechaGodzilla._ 3:19 Godzooky was the comic-relief (presumably adopted) "son of Godzilla" for the Hanna-Barbera cartoon. Most people loathe him.
My favorite Showa designs are the ones from King Kong vs Godzilla (I know this one is goofy looking but I have a special place for him since this was my first G movie), Godzilla vs Mothra (1964, a really solid design) Destroy All Monsters-Godzilla vs Gigan (again a really solid design) G vs Mecha Godzilla/Terror of Mechagodzilla (I do like the idea of him being like a grumpy dog, he's a reluctant hero)
One of the more interesting consequences of the suit's sometimes beginning to fail is that at least one director IIRC changed something in his movie because of it and it SHOCKED fans at the time. In vs Gigan there was some tearing damage on the suit near the right shoulder. And the director realized he could do something no other film to that date had done. - Show Godzilla BLEED Gigan is shown slashing at Godzilla with his "hook sword" arm and is the first Kaiju in the entire series of films to actually get past Goji's armor and lay a real hit on him - and make him bleed. Imagine Goji fans in the cinema at the time expecting the usual curb-stomp - and all of a sudden the realization hits - Godzilla is NOT totally invulnerable. He CAN lose. The stakes just got a LOT higher! And all because of a torn suit and a director that took advantage and improvised.
I recommend watching 54 Godzilla . It's one of the greatest films ever made, let alone the greatest kaiju/giant monster movie ever. Shin Godzilla is an amazing film as well and is Toho's only true remake of the original 54 in modern times. 97 Zilla was the first American take and it's Godzilla in name only. As Toho Said, it took t he God out of Godzilla. They actually used it to fight against the real Godzilla in Final Wars. Godzilla King of the Monsters was America's best take on Godzilla
in a novel series Godzilla went on a journey through the multiverse (string theory style) where he encountered strange worlds like one where time flowed in reverse. he proved to be immune to it's effects however and by the end of that novel series he gained time-space restoration powers. the comics have him time traveling and wiping out the Olympian gods and another has him decimating Hell itself.
Let me start off by saying as a fellow educator seeing how you take part in your students interests warms my heart. There have been a number of godzilla movie series. They each have their own interpretation of how he came to be. The earliest ones had him as a villain but then later on the godzilla franchise would use him as a gaurdian of earth against other kaiju (giant monsters). Some of them had godzilla as an ancient gaurdian of earth others such as the 1998 godzilla had him created by nuclear waste being eaten by a race of lizard in japan after the ww2 nuclear bombing of hiroshima and nagasaki. The 1998 movie godzilla was an american made godzilla movie and was nicknamed zilla for its different appearance. They showed cyber godzilla (a mechanised version of the 1998-2000 tv cartoon zilla)and 1 version of mechagodzilla at the end with some other kaiju that godzilla has faced over the years. I was a bit suprised they counted cyber godzilla and not space godzilla. There was an older movie that included an alien space godzilla. One of the older trilogy of godzilla movies included an alien race that had tried to take over by trying to control the kaiju. Thus godzilla had to stop them. That era is usually what most godzilla games are based in. The dancing godzilla near the begining is a referance to a silly scene that took place in the movie it was included in. As you coud probably tell not all godzilla movies are serious and some are meant for more comedic childish fun as in the creation of minizilla and hanna barberas godzilla. Hannah barbera was the creator of many old american cartoons such as scooby doo. Hope this helps clear up a little bit more about godzilla and you continue researching more on the franchise. There are tons more kaiju monsters to look into in the older movies that are not included in the new ones.
Shin Godzilla definilly my fav. His adaptations was creative and he/she was more of a bizarre phenomenon of nature than a character or animal. Second coolest is the Megaguirus Godzilla. He had a funny look on his face like a naughty cat. And a lot of character. Hist back blades were cool too.
The 1998 Godzilla was the very first American remake. Toho gave tristar the the rights to make an American Godzilla, but when Toho saw it, they got so upset and decided to declare that isn’t Godzilla and officially renamed it to Zilla
The best moment in Godzilla history happens at the very end of "Godzilla 2000" (which is the Japanese "Godzilla 2000" and not the American version with Matthew Broderick). *calm, whistful, angelic music plays over scenes of Godzilla rampaging through random Japanese city* Scientist: "We scientists produced this monster; Godzilla. And ever since we've tried to destroy him." Lady: "But the why...? Why does he keep protecting us?" Guy who loves Godzilla a little too much (in absolute reverence): "Maybe because... Godzilla is inside each one of us." *cut to Godzilla, spines begin to glow, and the lizard commences torching everything in sight as the dramatic and menacing music begins to swell* *roll credits* Fucking poetry in motion. *chef's kiss*
Alright fun fact: final wars Godzilla and 2000/aka 1999.has been shown in their movies on how durable they are. 2000 took a black hole gun firing down at him from a satellite which basically didn't phase him at all. And I believe the second time he got hit didn't faze him. For final wars he took a meteorite that was the size of a small planet if I remember correctly and was completely fine, he was standing in the middle of a destroyed Tokyo in a crater acting like it didn't happen. But not to mention he was using his atomic breath to slow it down or try to destroy it. So from just those two alone it shows how strong Godzilla can be. And one more thing there's a comics were two different Godzillas have shown how much stronger they can be than that. How Godzilla in hell is above universal if I remember member correctly. And Godzilla versus the Greek gods which he killed all of them except Zeus though was damn near close to killing him. Because Zeus had to use all of his power just to put him down.
Alright, you wanted fun facts? You got them Every monster in that "collection" of giant creatures is supposed to represent a socio-political issue, most often linked to Japan. Godzilla himself/itself is a beast that came from the sea after being mutated by nuclear radiation. It's Japan's fear of Nuclear destruction personified. In the first black and white movie "Gojira", he's as far from a protagonist, or even a character as you can get. He's a force. Nature's wrath punishing humanity for the crimes they've done (With nuclear testing in the sea, since that's where Godzilla/Gojira comes from) Unlike the american movies, which often focus on giant monster fights and use the carnage as a source of entertainment, that original movie treated Gojira as a looming threat and spent more time showing the realistic fear and suffering of Japanese civilians, as the monstrosity moves through the towns. The movie Shin Godzilla comes the closest to that. A lot of people were bored when watching how much talking and "Politics stuff" is in this movie, and cheered when the destruction came about. But actually, this was both a satire of how slow and useless Japan's government can be when deciding on literally anything while people are dying, the destruction, the atomic breath was supposed to be scary
Thank you for being a teacher. It is such an important job and definitely underappreciated and underpaid job. Regarding Godzilla, I'd recommend starting all the way back to his inception in 1954. I'm not sure what you teach but the original 1954 Godzilla is really a cautionary tale/warning about the devastation of nuclear war/weapons. Of course you are aware that the US dropped 2 nuclear warheads on Japan which basically led to their unconditional surrender in WWII. As a part of that surrender, the media.... or messages they were allowed to distribute about the war in general were most definitely monitored by the allies, and there is no way they would've been able to openly broadcast their true "feelings" or some of the footage of the devastation of the bombing on the civilian population. It was feared by the US mainly and her allies that it would have tainted the image of the war efforts (of course that is a very simplistic explanation, as much of the country essentially wanted retaliation and retribution for Pearl Harbor). That footage and the aftermath of the destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki was later released and now is openly available to view by anyone. The point is that since Japan couldn't blatantly report of the issues it dealt with after the war, the director of the original Godzilla movie in 1954 cleverly depicted a creature that embodied nuclear destruction, which was a brilliant way to communicate the message of the potential for destruction without angering and breaking any treaty conditions from the war. It was still very much at the forefront of the minds of the people of Japan since the bombings had only occurred 9 years prior. At the beginning, Godzilla was very much depicted as the embodiment of destruction and annihilation. Interestingly, that character and the "meaning" or "purpose" has evolved greatly over time, to everything from destruction incarnate, to childhood friend, to superhero (there was even a comic where the Avengers faced Godzilla), and the most recent depictions of him portray him as a force of nature, neither good, nor bad, it the purpose of maintaining/restoring balance of the natural order.
Teachers are underpaid? Compared to whom? in a free market where jobs diverse...people can flock to teaching positions...also teachers are public employees. their average salary is public record. Teachers per state make between 48-72 thousand a year....thats more than I got on me
From 1954 all the way to Terror of MechaGodzilla, this is the Showa Era, where Godzilla looked like this, and yes, with the body suit changes and all, which is basically the starting point of the Godzilla movies The Hanna Barbera Godzilla along with Godzooky is it’s own thing, it’s not canon to the series, and it’s breath, along with another character which I’ll get to in a bit, it’s just basically fire, not a flame of radiation From the Return of Godzilla and Godzilla vs. Destoroyah, this is the Heisei era, this is where they take the Godzilla stuff really seriously, and the breath attacks are just amazing, and uhh, the last film is a tearjerker, and one of the characters, Godzilla Jr., fans like more than Minilla, and they used Junior in some of their fanfics The 1998 movie, which fans think is the worst way America has done to create an American Godzilla, completely changing the look, it’s a mutated iguana and breathes fire again, it got so bad that Japan renamed it Zilla, but there’s one version of the Zilla design which fans say is a much better character overall The Animated Series is where the Godzilla character shined, and fans thought of a name for him, Zilla Jr., and the Cyber Zilla, is his mom From Godzilla 2000 to Final Wars, this is the Millennium Era, this is where I grew up in when I was born, and all of these movies are god tier, the designs of Godzilla are amazing, also the GMK Godzilla is actually a ghost The other spin-off Godzillas, Shin is the first, which it’s movie is spectacular and Shin is an amazing character, which he’s the most versatile, shooting a laser out of his mouth, tail and his dorsal spines, the only thing that’s a bit of an issue is he has tiny arms, his energy takes time to recharge and his back is a major weak spot. The Snow Godzilla is part of a train robot anime. Godzilla Earth is a character in the first ever anime and holds the record on being the biggest Godzilla ever, and it’s attacks are badass, though a lot of people say the three anime films are trash, which I don’t see why, but many people have different opinions. Singular Point is the second Godzilla anime and, it’s by far, the best one, admittedly, and that’s for me, some of the other Kaiju designs look really weird but they’re alright, Godzilla, oh boy, it’s flipping amazing. Called Godzilla Ultima, this incarnation is amazing, his atomic breath is spectacular, I recommend checking the anime out. Also both Ultima and Shin share a similar evolution with the first stage, second stage, third stage and the final stage And finally, the big one, starting from Godzilla 2014 to Godzilla vs. Kong, this is the Monsterverse, where each film makes Godzilla be an absolute badass incarnate. I highly, HIGHLY, recommend watching all four films
Eeeeh, some of these are an oversimplification of things. Like the TriStar 98 Godzilla is only called Zilla in media that came out after 1998, so he and his son are technically still called Godzilla. Cyber Godzilla is the Godzilla from the movie, and GMK Godzilla is made up of the ghost of Japanese WW2 atomic bomb victims you inhabit the body of Godzilla. (Aside: I thought the hype behind GMK was over inflated, until I saw it for myself. Now I understand why many fans, myself included, consider it the best Godzilla movie ever!)
@@cooltrainervaultboy-39 Is this a translation difference? Because in the GMK I saw, Ghost Godzilla was created by the spirits of the victims of Japanese aggression in WWII, all the foreigners who died at the hands of the Japanese, and that was why it attacked Japan in the first place.
@@cooltrainervaultboy-39 No worries, it happens🤗. Another interesting thing, is the beating heart seen at the end of GMK, is a reference to the Toho movie Frankenstein vs. Baragon (a.k.a. Frankenstein Conquers the World). This has some interesting implications.
So if you don’t know what the strongest Godzilla is, it’s thermal nuclear Godzilla. He has a thermal nuclear atomic breath and he has the thunder poles. It’s a big explosion He could get up to hot as the sun
I would Recommend "Godzilla: Stareating Wings" for a Reaction Actuall Title is Japanese But you will find it. Its Basicly a Remake of the Figth from The movie "Godzilla: Planeteater" A Movie which is Hated by every Godzilla-Fan
You should watch the original version (Japanese not the American re-cut) it is a very good movie exploring the after effects of the atomic bomb on the Japanese by giving them a tangible form in Godzilla. Here is a bit of trivia for you the director of Godzilla 2014 just wasn't sure about the Godzilla roar for the movie so to get a real feel for it he borrowed the Rolling Stones giant wall of sound speaker stack that they use in stadium concerts then turn them up he could experience the roar, the roar was heard over a mile and a half away
Fun fact:From 1977 to 1979, Marvel ran a 24-issue comic book series featuring Godzilla, which saw him square off against both the Avengers and the Fantastic Four.
godzilla 1998 and its kin were the start of the zilla subspecies. they are still large, but small in comparison. still strong, but quite weak in comparison. basically they are the lightweights that lack in brute strength, but can burrow and are generally more agile. not one of them have successfully faced a gojira ( the main godzilla group) though. not anything official exactly, to be noted
@@agentmoss true, the not quite official thing is it being a subgroup. and yes, they did face off, but it was rather pathetic on Zilla's part, if were being honest
@@agentmoss the officialness of it is questionable. what I mean is is it considered a Godzilla at all, or just a type of monster in the franchise? according to the 98 movie its still a Godzilla, as it is with the cartoon with its child. on the other hand, according to Toho its really not a Godzilla, but they also didn't force them to just call it Zilla either, not even after the fact...unless I've missed where they have done, that is. ergo, whilst everyone in the fandom wants it to just be a different type of monster, and not a Godzilla, its not officially been declassified as one either. Toho's Zilla could also be classified as not really a relative of either, as its a bit different in appearance, and much larger than the 98 one and its offspring, plus we never seen any breath attack of any kind from it, at least there. so, whilst its essentially Zilla to everyone, it may not be either. and yes, the different Godzillas vary in size and appearance too, but they were always accepted by fans and Toho as Godzillas, where as no-one other than the company behind it had it as a Godzilla. on the other hand, it could still be classed as one, as it was officially licenced, and there is such variation in the Godzillas already. you get the point, its questionable about whether its an offshoot, or not
@@christophermonteith2774 It's official in final wars that it's Zilla, it's just that Toho definitely bought the rights to Zilla just so they could kill it off. Tbh almost the majority of Godzilla fans and non fans alike dislike Zilla. It's pretty much the bastardization of Godzilla, hence why it's now known as just Zilla.
Fun Fact: For the Godzilla Final Wars Movie Toho bought the rights for the 1998 version of the Zilla ( American Godzilla) just to kill it because the company was so Furious at the 1998 quote unquote Godzilla film turned out
The very first Godzilla design was designed to look like a nuke head explosion because Godzilla was made to remind people what nukes were used for (destroying stuff
Ok, y there is a lot to unpack here. From 1954-1975, Godzilla's size didn't change but as buildings got bigger, his size had to increase. Several versions were animated, either American (78,98) or anime.
Godzilla is one of the strongest kaijus in the world he does not be intimidated so easily he is so powerful that no other Kaiju has the guts to stand up to him
I highly recommend that you take your class to see Godzilla Minus One. First of all, his atomic breath is absolutely terrifying and secondly, it is an absolute masterpiece of a film.
Godzilla: born from 1954 awakens by hydrogen bombs went on a rampage in Tokyo and returns in 1955s Godzilla raids again got defeated by getting buried in ice. Godzilla has been popular from Japan in 2021 some fans state him (Godzilla 2021) as the strongest Godzilla throughout his history
I am not too sure if anyone else has said this but the previous year before the first Godzilla movie was a movie called The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms which was one of the Monster movies that made the Godzilla franchise to be born
I love the new Godzilla, he has emotion and anger issues lol. But he legit saves the kids in the bus on the bridge, and saves the girl in the stadium again in King of the Monsters.
DARK fact: in the original 1954 japanese version of gojira, this movie was meant to be a metaphors on what the destruction of a atomic bomb can create. The path gojira leaves behind his is to resemble the wasteland left from the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings whit gojira's stomps being bombs dropped on japan. Gojira's suit skin was also made to resemble the skin of Hiroshima bomb victims with radiation poisoning
Godzilla Earth is still one of my favorite incarnations, because he lived for so long that he grew from an Avatar of Destruction into a God of Destruction that can break mountains with a tail swipe and his atomic breath can literally reach orbit. But I do really love Legendaries Godzilla, Old G that just wants to take a long nap but those damn humans keep creating messes he has to clean up. He'd kill em all if they just weren't so adorable otherwise.
The one with the creepy face (Due to the eyes being all white) is actually the bad guy in his film. Godzilla, Mothra, King Ghidorah.. With Ghidorah swapping to be a protector of Earth, while Godzilla is a spirit of wrath.
Fun fact: 1954 thats when this man loved this godzilla suit and it started heating up but he didn’t care and it got so heated up that he melted and fused with the suit now ain’t that 😦 scary
THE first Godzilla movie was called GOJIRA (1954). It came out a year after America's BEAST FROM 20,000 FATHOMS! Although the two movies are about giant reptilian creatures who emerged from the deep sea, that's where the resemblance ends. Godzilla's creators used him as a metaphor of atomic weaponry and the potential destruction they can cause! The original GOJIRA is an unexpectedly powerful film.
Fun fact: shin godzillas atomic beam cant be controlled hes just cooling down from evolving after days since he’s basically suffering in the whole show 😊
Godzilla '98, yeah we don't talk about him, only the past couple Godzillas have been good, the Legendary pictures Godzilla and Shin Godzilla, which is great to watch because it shows how a government can or cannot handle a disaster like Godzilla