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Big and Stupid
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What the new, monstrously
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budgeted Godzilla brings home is that size doesn't matter--that
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tacky crudeness harnessed to a real vision can have more brute power than all
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the state-of-the-art computer wizardry that Hollywood's money can buy. This
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time, the title titan is a devil-visaged lizard who convincingly wrecks
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Manhattan; lays a load of eggs that hatch velociraptor-like little (i.e.,
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9-foot) dinosaurs; and gets nailed on his way to Brooklyn by a coalition of
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scientists, the military, and the French secret service (don't ask). The movie,
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directed and co-written by Roland Emmerich, the Teutonic schlockmeister who
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awed (or stupefied) the world with Independence Day (1996), isn't
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entirely lame. The way the beast is finally snared has a certain architectural
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piquancy. And sequences of the great lizard winding among skyscrapers as if
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they're hedges in a lawn maze--his tail sheering off floors as it whips around
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corners--have been engineered with bravura. Otherwise, size really is about all
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that this tedious, underpopulated beanbag of an epic has going for it. Its
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brain remains disproportionately teensy.
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It's no
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big news that in the Japanese Godzilla (or Gojira ), the creature
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(played by a guy in a rubber suit stomping around a miniature Tokyo) was a
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metaphor for the A-bombs that leveled Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Even in the
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American edit, with Raymond Burr tacked on as a portentous reporter, the aura
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of mourning was palpable. Godzilla is the only cheesy disaster flick
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that feels as if it was made by people who'd actually lived through some kind
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of horrific devastation. And even after countless sequels of escalating
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silliness--in which the monster became Japan's savior, battling other mutant
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reptiles and space aliens and rescuing Japanese boys who'd call out (in
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laughably dubbed English): "Thanks, Godzilla! Come back soon!"--Godzilla
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retained a nuclear-haunted nobility.
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I'm not just endorsing retro-chic when I say that the guy
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in the rubber suit is more fun. For my money, he's also scarier. I don't
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want an anatomically correct Godzilla. The original Godzilla is a
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dragon , a mythical destroyer who's close in spirit to the Jewish legend
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of the Golem--the colossal, indestructible clay man summoned up out of all the
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dark forces of this world who can't be destroyed by any of this world's
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weapons. The Godzilla who lumbers through a metropolis on two legs, erect,
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slowly crushing cars and knocking over buildings, robotically training his
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radioactive breath on anything and everything he sees, is a mythical vision of
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Armageddon.
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The new,
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down-to-earth Godzilla is much closer to the tyrannosaurus of Jurassic
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Park and to American giant-monster pictures such as The Beast From
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20,000 Fathoms . He's almost never erect--he stoops to incinerate. He's
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supposed to be smart. He can out-swim torpedoes and dodge heat-seeking missiles
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(which take out the Chrysler Building, among other man-made wonders). And just
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when people say, "Whew! I think I lost him!" he pops out from some cunning
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hiding place and gobbles them down. So why does he still strike me as a less
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than formidable opponent? Well, any forefather (and, given his reproductive
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capacities, foremother) of a new species that chooses to travel halfway around
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the globe to lay his eggs in the middle of Manhattan doesn't seem built to
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survive, evolutionarily speaking.
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Emmerich cribs his basic suspense techniques
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(the low-angle camera riding in on open-mouthed spectators) from Spielberg's
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Jaws and Jurassic Park , his egg imagery from Alien , his
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marauding baby dinosaurs from Gremlins , and a scene of the U.S. Army
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striding through some South Seas devastation from Apocalypse Now . What's
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uniquely his own is the way the havoc periodically grinds to a halt to make
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room for "relationship" scenes, in which the characters maintain a soap-opera
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obliviousness to everything (crumbling skyscrapers, fire-breathing beasts) but
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their feelings .
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Oh yes, there are human
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characters, sort of. Matthew Broderick, that charmingly worried wise guy, plays
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an expert in radioactive genetic mutations. He stays heroically credible even
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as the film grows insanely incredible, as when he has to pretend to outrun the
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rampaging 30-story Godzilla for half the length of Manhattan island in a tiny
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yellow cab. The other performances are as crude as the writing, although Hank
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Azaria brings terrific bonhomie to the part of a daredevil TV cameraman, and
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the brilliant Harry Shearer doesn't entirely disgrace himself as a pompous
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anchorman. As a member of Broderick's team, the spiky, forward redhead Vicki
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Lewis could have walked off with the picture if she hadn't been brushed aside
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in favor of a dumb blond aspiring TV reporter, played by Maria Pitillo--a
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sitcom actress who can't utter a line without the left side of her mouth
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curling up in Valley Girl incredulity or down in Valley Girl petulance.
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Contrary to what you might have read (or awaited hopefully), Mayor Ebert and
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his contentious aide, Siskel, do not get squashed.
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Which brings me to another
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well-known critic: Aristotle, who, at the dawn of Western drama, deemed
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spectacle the medium's least important component. It's true that cinema is a
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less cerebral form, and that much of what Aristotle considered a thrilling
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night out would make us commit suicide out of boredom. But if, as a filmmaker,
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you're going to make spectacle the top priority, you'd better show us stuff
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we've never seen before. You'd better keep those miracles coming, or we're apt
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to grow nostalgic rather quickly for the days of spaceships on wires and
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monsters in rubber suits.
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