Godzilla fan art — the film aspires to a moodiness that rivals the original. |
I have waited many years to hear the great actor David
Strathairn say, "And where is Godzilla?"
The 2014 blockbuster spotlighting the giant radioactive lizard who was born the same year I was — 1954 — does about everything you can do dramatically within the very narrow range of a Godzilla movie. Director Gareth Edwards has brought visual poetry to a surprising amount of the film. And the destruction was both splashily spectacular and seen from a human's-eye view, which lent it a kind of awe sometimes.
The 2014 blockbuster spotlighting the giant radioactive lizard who was born the same year I was — 1954 — does about everything you can do dramatically within the very narrow range of a Godzilla movie. Director Gareth Edwards has brought visual poetry to a surprising amount of the film. And the destruction was both splashily spectacular and seen from a human's-eye view, which lent it a kind of awe sometimes.
Godzilla is kept offstage for much of the time, as befits
his star status, so that the human story can carry the freight. And for once
that human story isn’t merely an annoyance while we wait for the monster
battles, thanks to actors like Strathairn and Bryan Cranston doing the heavy
lifting.
Cranston’s emotional reality does a lot to ground the film
right from the beginning. Strathairn brings his restraint and intelligence to
the role of an admiral here, giving it authority without making it the usual
blustering, he-doth-protest-too-much testosterone fest. The husband, wife and
child at the “center” of the story are generic white bread bought at the
discount store, but they don’t get in the way of anything.
The plot double-talk doesn’t bear too close an examination,
and unfortunately the film’s most effective dramatic moment (which features
Cranston) comes right at the beginning. But the plot gymnastics manage to make
us sympathetic to Godzilla without impeding those metropolitan destructive
capacities for which we love him.
“That HALO jump was beautifully shot,” my friend Matt
Mattingly observed. “There was applause when SPOILER ... Godzilla breathed fire
for the first time.”
One thing that might have made it better would have been to
have Matthew Broderick casually incinerated in the blast, but you can’t have
everything, I guess.
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