'Godzilla 1985' presents a fascinating case study in franchise reinvention. By cleverly ignoring most of its predecessors and forging a direct link to the 1956 'Godzilla King of the Monsters' through the return of Raymond Burr, it succeeds…
Godzilla 1985
Originally released in Japan as "The Return of Godzilla" in 1984, this is the heavily re-edited, re-titled "Godzilla 1985". Adding in new footage of Raymond Burr, this 16th…
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This re-edited 'Godzilla 1985' is a peculiar beast, aiming to recapture the spirit of the original American cut by reintroducing Raymond Burr. While the intention to restore a darker, more serious tone is evident, the execution feels somewhat…
A welcome return to form, 'Godzilla 1985' (known as 'The Return of Godzilla' in Japan) bravely resets the narrative clock. By positioning itself as a successor to the original 1956 American release, complete with new Raymond Burr scenes,…
Godzilla 1985' is an interesting beast, a Frankensteinian creation for the American market that stitches Raymond Burr back into the Godzilla mythos. It consciously eschews the campier sequels, aiming for a return to the original's nuclear allegory. The…
This iteration, subtitled 'Godzilla 1985' for Western audiences, attempts a bold narrative manoeuvre by ignoring most of the franchise's sequels and acting as a direct follow-up to the 1956 'Godzilla King of the Monsters.' The inclusion of Raymond…
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'Godzilla 1985' occupies a peculiar but intentional place in the long-running series. It is the sixteenth film in the franchise and was released as a re-edited and re-titled version of the 1984 Japanese film 'The Return of Godzilla.' Crucially, it acts as a sequel only to the 1956 American cut, 'Godzilla King of the Monsters,' effectively rebooting the continuity for Western audiences by ignoring the intervening sequels.