In Godzilla Minus One, Government Won't Save Anyone When the Crisis Comes
To fight the King of the Monsters, private citizens must band together.

From its very first appearance in 1954, Godzilla, the hulking, fire-breathing, skyscraper-sized monster, has represented national trauma. In his earliest incarnations, he was an avatar of nuclear destruction, stomping and smashing his fat legs through Japan's urban landscapes. A man in an awkward lizard suit became the embodiment of a wounded country's lingering psychic pain.
In the decades since, Godzilla has become a sillier figure, pitted against various other goofy-looking giant monsters, and refashioned, at times, as a hero, defending little people from even worse threats. Some incarnations—particularly Gareth Edwards' 2014 big-budget Hollywood blockbuster Godzilla—have tried to return to the awe-struck terror of the original. But the sequels have been romps, playfully ridiculous in tone and bordering on camp.
Godzilla Minus One, the new film from longtime Japanese monster movie producer Toho, finds its way back to the soul of the original, casting the lizard monster as an all-encompassing national emergency, part natural disaster, part infrastructure collapse, part foreign attack. And in this version, world governments are either powerless or checked out for political reasons. It's a movie about how when a crisis comes, the authorities won't save anyone—leaving private citizens to stand up for themselves.
The movie is set in the aftermath of World War II, in a Japan defeated militarily and in spirit. At the center of the story is guilt-wracked kamikaze pilot Koichi Shikishima, who faked mechanical issues with his plane in order to avoid having to execute a suicide attack. Shikishima has seen Godzilla once before, trampling an island at the end of the war, but now he's back home, trying to rebuild his life in a war-wrecked city.
Inevitably, Godzilla looms just outside the frame. The monster has grown in size thanks to American nuclear tests, and when it finally arrives in mainland Japan, mid-movie, the destruction it causes is devastating. Ports and cities are demolished, and tens of thousands of lives are lost.
But the post-war government, which has been defanged by its losses, won't do anything to prevent another attack. And the U.S. military won't step in either, for political reasons having to do with rising Soviet tensions.
And thus, defense of the homeland falls to private citizens. Much of the movie's third quarter is designed as a sort of "explain the third-act plan" sequence of the type often found in action-heavy blockbusters. Think, for example, of the scene in Star Wars where the rebels gather to plan the trench-run attack on the Death Star.
But in this version, much of the sequence involves convincing private citizens, mostly ex-naval servicemen, to join the effort, embracing a plan in which they might lose their lives, even after surviving the war. The conversation dwells on the ways the Japanese government failed its citizens and soldiers throughout the war, sending them into battle unprepared and letting supply lines run empty. And now, in a crisis that rivals the war, it is refusing to step in. The assembled men hem and haw, but ultimately agree: the plan to stop the monster must be private, organized and executed by those whose lives are actually under threat. There is no one else they can count on but themselves.
What follows is a rousing monster takedown finale with clear echoes of Star Wars, Independence Day, and—most of all—Jaws. It's not too much of a spoiler to say that Shikishima, the guilt-wracked kamikaze pilot, finds the will to live by embracing the idea that he's in control of his own life and providing something of value to his community, in direct contrast to the pointless suicidal sacrifice demanded by the wartime government. The movie's big idea is that life is worth living for yourself, your loved ones, and your community, that you have to find your own purpose and make your own way in the world, because when everything goes to hell, the authorities won't be there to save you.
Or at least, that's one of its big ideas. The other is that nearly 70 years later, Godzilla still rules. The lumbering lizard kaiju is still a symbol of national psychic trauma—but learning to conquer your demons and fight him off can be the path to rebirth.
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So, Japanese culture becoming more individualistic even as American culture becomes less.
Japanese culture may be moving towards more individualism (a good thing), but given they are perhaps the most tribalistic race and nation, with huge deference to their political authorities on Earth, that's not much of a change. Seems more like a message the government can't do much after it lost a war. Further, it's anti-American blaming Godzilla's growth on US nuclear testing. I wouldn't expect much better from Japan.
It would be better if "learning to conquer your demons and fight him off can be the path to rebirth" when the demon is the government, but the only government demon appears to be the USA.
I make this argument, knowing Japan violates the Convention on the Rights of the Child, as well as the Hague Convention on International Child Abduction, when it comes to a Japanese parent illegally fleeing any country with their child, even against the other parent's and the local court's wishes. That's protecting Japanese parents who break the law in other countries in which they resided (and often where their child was born) and putting Japanese citizens' desires over the other parent's wishes.
I've heard this movie is pretty good, however, I don't know if I can enjoy it if no one in the cast looks like me.
"if no one in the cast looks like me."
Nice try Lizard person. We know that Godzilla is your pin up girl.
Wait, what? Godzilla's a girl? But I thought only men went on destructive rampages and did mass murder. Learn something new every day.
It's not too much of a spoiler to say that Shikishima, the guilt-wracked kamikaze pilot, finds the will to live...
Dude, that was so fucking foreshadowed it may as well been spray-painted on a wall.
Didn’t he already have the will to live when he skipped out on the kamikaze mission?
Throughout the movie he's shamed by his fellows for his failure as a kamikaze. It becomes obvious that his plan is to sacrifice himself. It also becomes obvious that the new plane has an ejection seat when deficiencies of the old plane are listed. That's the foreshadow. But you would have missed it because you're dumb. Now I ruined the surprise.
sarcasmic 6 hours ago
Flag Comment Mute User
Have you ever considered telling someone you disagree with why what they say is wrong, as opposed to telling them that they as a person are wrong? You don’t change minds by attacking people. That just puts them on the defensive.
And you wonder why no one treats you like a civil human being and tries to engage in real conversation?
The only way out of this is an immediate apology to Don't look at me! and you haven't got the guts or the decency to ever admit you made a mistake.
The measure of a man is not whether he makes mistakes, but how he recovers from them.
Apologize for what? Saying "you're dumb" to a guy who thinks "Ideas!" is witty and insightful?
That’s not the reason behind saying that.
Then I don't understand. I would never try to convince you of anything, because you're part of the crowd that will call me a liar if I say the sky is blue. If you weren't a white-knighthing suckup I would treat you like someone with a mind that could be changed. But you're a bad-faith actor. So I'd never flatter myself into thinking I could change your mind.
No, it’s because you are a hypocrite.
That's not what you replied to.
That's what you replied to. An honest attempt to start a conversation.
You are even dumber than everyone thinks.
Not understanding the concept of spoiler alert, are you?
Honestly, fuck any kind of nanny-scolding about spoilers.
You know who started that shit? Fucking Roger Ebert because he didn't want people revealing that the exotic chick in The Crying Game was actually an extremely pretty dude. We seriously don't need to be perpetuating a legacy started by that pompous asshole.
Wonka teeters toward something Libertarian. People will decry the capitalism aspect of it but I think it's more crony capitalism and the state/institutional abuses highlighted in the film.
A movie that teaches "no one is coming to save you."
Refreshing.
And the Japanese people, having a cohesive culture, band together to save the country, and no one whinged about pronouns or their oppression.
and...
militarily and in spirit. At the center of the story is guilt-wracked kamikaze pilot Koichi Shikishima, who faked mechanical issues with his plane in order to avoid having to execute a suicide attack.
It also sounds like a story of redemption.
It is, and very well done, as well as the depiction of a Japan ruined by war. Godzilla seems like overkill after all the bombings and privation.
An interesting contrast to "Shin Godzilla," which featured a much more functional Japanese government. Also a very good movie.
Yeah, one of the themes of the movie is Koichi finally accepting his responsibilities and his duties instead of trying to avoid them, which pops up quite a bit through the first two acts.
It was incredibly refreshing to watch a movie where the characters went through logical development arcs, neo-marxist wokey messaging isn't ham-handedly inserted everywhere, and the CGI and effects were incredible for a movie that only cost $15 million to produce. That's about $10 million less than one of the trash episodes of She-Hulk cost Disney to make. The whole movie had the tone of something that was made in 1987, but got misplaced by the production crew and lost for 3 decades, and was only released after some janitor came across the can in a Burbank warehouse.
Also, I highly prefer Godzilla being shown as an enemy of humanity, and this version was fucking fantastic. He starts off as basically being a wild animal that's simply acting on instinct, and morphs into something far more malevolent after people decide to fuck with him.
If you have ever seen a Godzilla monster movie on TV as a kid, you will surely love this homage from Toho movies. The drama! The plan! The Plan B! The Plan B backup Plan! The wavy-haired scientist! The stodgy Naval captain! The emotionally-wracked failed Kamikaze pilot.
There are no plot twists. At. All. But man, what a trip down memory lane! Just pure fun, from beginning to end.
That should have been the article!
So it takes a world-ending monster for people to wake up to the fact that Ayn Rand was right? So sad, humanity.