I saw the new movie, and it was classic stuff: ever more gigantic monsters trample on cities, while po-faced humans project their gnomic interpretations of the monsters’ intents on them, and while the monsters thrash at each other and go “GROOONK” as they stand atop rubble. If that’s all you need, you’ll enjoy it. It brought back memories of old Saturday matinees with Godzilla, Mothra, Rodan, and Ghidorah, all awful, but all marching through the same schtick, just like this one.
What did Boston do to deserve to be the locus of monster destruction, though?
doubtthat says
That is, in fact, all I need.
mikehuben says
Not my former home! I’d have to think hard to think of enemies there I’d want crushed.
I’m safe here in Ecuador. Nobody would bring giant monsters here: the Andes would make them look so small!
davidnangle says
Boston? That’s about three steps across, to a god of Zilla’s size.
pipefighter says
Right the fuck on!!!
randall says
Giving Ruth up to the Yankees? I thought that was paid off….
DonDueed says
We won too many sportsball championships.
Callinectes says
Boston knows what Boston did.
Pumako says
I would assume that, in order to truly be considered “King of the Monsters,” Godzilla needs to show he can defeat Tom Brady.
inflection says
New York, LA and Tokyo have been hogging all the mass destruction. Give another city a chance.
John Wilkins says
Have you ever been to Boston? I can’t think of a better place…
PaulBC says
Delayed reaction to the Big Dig?
Marcus Ranum says
I bet it didn’t make Boston traffic worse.
davidnangle says
Woo hoo! Parking just got way easier!
sirrod says
Was it ever determined what sin Sheboygan was guilty of?
Akira MacKenzie says
sirrod @ 14
Ha! I got that reference! I played that game once and, if memory serves, it was essentially a clone of Steve Jackson’s Ogre.
I’ve also been to Sheboygan a couple of times back in high school for forensics meets. As I recall, there wasn’t a lot there to interest a ravenous Daikaiju.
weylguy says
The original Godzilla (1954) was a favorite of mine, despite its comparatively cheesy special effects. But the movie was great, the music was great, and years later I realized it was more of an anti-war movie than a horror film (its Japanese title was actually Gojira, meaning “ape-whale”). Today’s CGI whoosh-bang crap just leaves me cold. Myers, you can have it.
zoniedude says
Uh, dude. Lizards are passe. You are into bugs now (assuming spiders are bugs) so don’t forget the giant praying mantis of 1957: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Deadly_Mantis
cgm3 says
Let us not forget Tarantaula (1955), The Spider (1958; it’s revived from a coma by rock-n-roll music), and, of course, Them! (1954; giant ants, but considered the seminal classic of the big bug genre).
blf says
The monsters get bigger every movie. Wait one or two, and it’ll be big enough to do to the whole of S.America what it did to Bambi.
Jonathan Norburg says
How could you leave Gamera out of your litany of giant Japanese monsters, or Kaiju?
larpar says
Why Boston, indeed. It doesn’t even rhyme with ‘Oh no’.
(‘Oh no, there goes Tokyo’ for non BOC fans)