Tag Archives: Godzilla Minus One

Godzilla Minus One gets a Luxury Footwear and Apparel Line

Toho International, the distributor behind the Academy Award-winning Godzilla Minus One, has partnered with Japanese fashion brand ha | za | ma to release handcrafted luxury footwear and apparel inspired by the film. Matching the showstopping design first worn by Godzilla Minus One Director Takashi Yamazaki and his team at the 96th Academy Awards, U.S. fans can pre-order exclusively through Godzilla.com until August 29. 

With Godzilla’s hand functioning as a heel, the luxurious Dress Shoes of Destiny (MSRP: $725) and Heeled Pumps of Destiny (MSRP: $650) feature a black leather design with gold accents. Alongside the footwear, Toho International and ha | za | ma are releasing an elegant Godzilla Face Metallic T-Shirt (MSRP: $100) in red, turquoise and white screen printed colorways. 

Mondo reveals a Godzilla Minus One/Minus Color Poster Variant launching Thursday

Celebrate Godzilla Minus One‘s historic Academy Award win with a new black and white poster variant from Mondo, available on their site for pre-order this Thursday, March 14 through Monday, March 18.

The Godzilla Minus One/Minus Color Screenprinted Variant Poster features artwork by Tony Stella and is a “Timed Edition” and retails for $80. Its estimated shipping is June 2024.

Godzilla Minus One/Minus Color Screenprinted Variant Poster

Wonka delivers the sweets with a weekend box office win

Wonka

Wonka took the top spot at the weekend box office grossing an estimated $39 million. Internationally, the film blew up with $112.4 million delivering an opening weekend total of $151.4 million.

The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes held on to second place with an estimated $5.8 million to bring its domestic total to $145.2 million. Internationally, it grossed $21.7 million over the week to bring that to $144.4 million. Worldwide, the movie has grossed $289.7 million.

The Boy and the Heron slipped from first to third adding $5.2 million to its domestic total bringing that to $23.1 million. Internationally it added $2.5 million to bring that total to $86.8 million. Worldwide, the movie has grossed $109.9 million.

Godzilla Minus One slipped one spot to fourth with an estimated $4.9 million. The movie has grossed $34.3 million domestically. Internationally, it added $3.2 million to its total which is now $29.8 million. Worldwide, the movie has grossed $64.1 million.

Trolls Band Together rounded out the top five grossing an estimated even $4 million to bring its domestic total to $88.7 million. Over the week, it grossed $3.8 million internationally where it has now earned $94.5 million. Worldwide, the movie has grossed $183.1 million.

In comic film news…

The Marvels added an estimated $514,000 to its domestic total to bring that to a little over $84 million. Things are going a bit better internationally where the film added $2.8 million over the week to bring it to $119.3 million. Worldwide, the movie has grossed $203.3 million.

The week’s overall box office success…

Numbers have 56 films earning $75,975,634 from 35,513 theaters. That’s a slight improvement from the previous weekend’s $71,131,971 from 41,237 theaters and 59 films. The average earning was $2,139.38 which is about a third more than the previous weekend’s $1,724.96.

Godzilla Minus One is the top grossing live-action Japanese film in North America. Check out a new clip!

This past weekend Godzilla Minus One roared into cinemas worldwide, leaving an indelible mark as the biggest foreign film opening of 2023! The film is now the highest grossing live-action Japanese film in North America — grossing $14.36 million! The colossal success of this cinematic masterpiece has not only captured the hearts of fans but has also set a new standard for international films at the box office.

The opening weekend was the biggest Stateside debut of a foreign film this year.

Due to the success, the film will expand from 2,308 locations to 2,540.

To celebrate this historic occasion, check out a new clip from Godzilla Minus One. Brace yourselves for an adrenaline-pumping sneak peek into the epic battles and jaw-dropping special effects that have earned Godzilla Minus One its well-deserved acclaim.

You can read our review of Godzilla Minus One.

Renaissance: A Film by Beyoncé’s songs knocks off Songbirds & Snakes to take the weekend box office

Renaissance: A Film by Beyoncé

Renaissance: A Film by Beyoncé was the top film at the weekend box office debuting with $21 million domestically. While a decent opening, it’s far short of Taylor Swift’s $92.8 million for her Eras Tour film debut. While many probably saw gold in that stat, Beyonce’s more down to earth debut may prevent a rush of the genre. Internationally, Renaissance: A Film by Beyoncé has grossed $6.4 million for a worldwide debut of $27.4 million.

In second place was The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes which grossed an estimated $14.5 million to bring its domestic total to $121.2 million. Internationally, the film has grossed a similar number $122.7 million for a worldwide total of $243.9 million.

In third place, Godzilla Minus One debuted with an estimated $11 million. Internationally, the film has grossed $23.1 million for a worldwide debut of $34.2 million.

Trolls Band Together held on to fourth place with an estimated $7.6 million to bring its domestic total to $74.8 million. Over the week, it grossed $4.4 million internationally to bring that total to $85.8 million for a worldwide total of $160.6 million.

Rounding out the top five was Wish, which Disney might have wished went straight to streaming. The film dropped 62.4% from its debut to gross just $7.4 million. The film has managed just under $42 million in two weeks. International totals aren’t much better with $22.3 million grossed over the week to bring that to $39.6 million. Worldwide, the film has grossed just $81.6 million.

In comic film news…

The Marvels continues to stumble being knocked out of the top ten after just four weeks. Coming in eleventh, the film added an estimated $2.5 million to its domestic total to bring that to $80.7 million. Things are going a bit better internationally where the film added $4.3 million over the week to bring it to $116.3 million. Worldwide, the movie has grossed a little over $197 million.

The week’s overall box office success…

Numbers have 51 films earning $97,199,355 from 38,462 theaters. That’s a dip from the previous weekend’s $116,002,064 from 33,729 theaters and 53 films. The average earning was $2,527.15 which is about a third less than the previous weekend’s $3,439.24.

Godzilla Minus One gets a final trailer


Godzilla Minus One
, written and directed by Takashi Yamazaki,  sees an already devastated postwar Japan facing a new threat in the form of Godzilla. Out in theaters now, the film has gotten a final trailer celebrating its release.

The film stars Ryunosuke Kamiki, Minami Hamabe, Yuki Yamada, Munetaka Aoki, Hidetaka Yoshioka, Sakura Ando, and Kuranosuke Sasaki, with music by Naoki Sato. 

You can read our review of Godzilla Minus One.

Movie Review: Godzilla Minus One turns the iconic kaiju into the God of Monsters

Godzilla Minus One

From the very first trailer on, it was evident Godzilla Minus One was setting its sights on echoing the roaring debut of the nuclear monster back in 1954. Gojira, directed by Ishirō Honda, was a visceral kaiju allegory for the newly minted atom bomb world, a giant creature feature that turned the titular monster into a reminder of the position humanity put itself in by creating weapons of mass destruction. It looked at the state of things at a macro level, from a pretty frightening vantage point. Minus One goes for a more focused approach, putting soldiers and their PTSD at the forefront for a different look at the consequences of human-led devastation and the towering psychological obstacles it creates for those tasked with carrying out militaristic violence.

Godzilla Minus One, directed by Takashi Yamazaki, follows a soldier called Koichi (played by Ryunosuke Kamiki) as he comes home from the war with not just the trauma of his failed mission as a kamikaze pilot but also as a survivor of a battle against a young Godzilla. During that encounter, his inability to act in a key moment of the fight led to the deaths of several soldiers, a decision that’ll haunt him for almost the entirety of the film.

Koichi returns to his hometown only to see it buried under rubble, the victim of allied bombing. As he tries to salvage whatever he can to make his home again, he meets a woman called Noriko (played by Minami Hamabe), a woman in a precarious position that’s trying to survive with a baby in hand. He takes both of them in and time passes. Just as things start getting rebuilt, Godzilla is awakened by atomic bomb tests and Japan is reminded once more that wars never truly end. They just assume a different form.

Godzilla Minus One

From the very first Godzilla movie on, audiences have gotten uniquely different iterations of the classic kaiju. He’s gone from King of the Monsters to Japan’s protector to a parody of himself and back again. In Hideaki Anno and Shinji Higushi’s 2016 Shin Godzilla (widely considered as the best Godzilla movie after the 1954 original), for instance, he becomes a force of nature that exposes humanity’s inability to coordinate a unified response to solve a problem. The film mocks the government’s insistence on bureaucracy to problem-solve and how contradictory the efforts end up being. Godzilla represents the consequences of such dysfunction and how destructive it can be.

In Minus One, Godzilla is essentially turned into a god. He’s the ultimate expression of cataclysmic consequence. Director Yamazaki frames every scene he’s in with a sense of finality that absolutely terrifies. Godzilla’s arrival means humanity is about to get judged, harshly. It’s an impressive showcase of the giant monster that makes for one of the most tense-inducing portrayals of it in franchise history. It’s all reflected in his powers this time around. Without spoiling anything, just know you’re in for a few surprises that both make this version of the monster unique while updating certain aspects of it to make sure the metaphors on display hit harder.

The severity of Godzilla’s presence, what it implies, does an excellent job of imbuing the Japanese soldier experience with a sense of duty and hope that isn’t always given the attention it deserves in war movies. Koichi’s character, for instance, wears his PTSD on his sleeves, constantly reminding the audience his war is a constant and that it didn’t end with the armistice that brought the conflict itself to a close. Trauma does not sign off on this process and thus owes it no recognition. The film hits you over the head with this idea, but it’s in service of setting up a different outcome for the soldiers driving the story.

Godzilla Minus One

Koichi’s supporting cast does an incredible job of exploring the range of trauma and disillusionment that ailed soldiers in the postwar period. One character of note is Sosaku Tachibana, played by Munetaka Aoki, a soldier that also survived the first Godzilla attack along with Koichi. His trauma manifests as anger, making his own war one of disappointment in his brother in arms. The way the movie tackles the diversity of trauma, though, is by highlighting the things soldiers have in common rather than the things that separate them.

By turning trauma into a unifying force, Minus One opens the doors for hope and healing to come through as real and attainable things. War movies dealing with the similar themes rarely opt for hope. Minus One does and it makes for a welcome deviation from the norm. It actually makes the Godzilla scenes feel scarier as the possibility of surviving the giant monster raises the stakes considerably. The audience is encouraged to cheer for the story’s heroes more so than in other stories that deal in war.

Naoki Satô pulls all this together with one of the best Godzilla scores to date. It’s surprisingly restrained but possessed by an epic sense of dread and momentousness that captures the god-like terror of the iconic creature. There’s one particular sequence that feels ripped straight out of Stephen Spielberg’s Jaws that ramps up the horror of facing a giant monster at sea by relying on doom-charged sounds that slightly quicken whenever Godzilla gets closer to the boat he’s chasing. Not a single musical cue is wasted in this regard, giving individual action sequences their own identities. Even when the requisite theme music from the original Gojira (composed by Akira Ifukube) kicks in during one sequence, it doesn’t overshadow Satô’s score. In fact, I wanted to see how that particular sequence would’ve played out with Satô’s score accompanying it.

Godzilla Minus One

Godzilla Minus One is a triumph. It earns a spot among the greatest Godzilla movies ever made, right next to the original one and Shin Godzilla. It’s integration of multiple war metaphors along with tense kaiju action lets it stand on its own. What makes it soar, though, is how it manages to turn an already iconic monster into an even more impressive and colossal version of itself. The age of the King of Monsters is over. The age of the God of Monsters has begun.