Watch: 怪獣大戦争 1965 123movies, Full Movie Online – Astronauts Glenn and Fuji are sent to investigate Planet X, a newly discovered planet located just beyond Jupiter. Back on Earth, Fuji’s younger sister Haruno meets with her boyfriend inventor Tetsuo Torii. He has developed a sound device that he sells off to a toy company represented by a woman named Namikawa. On planet X, Glen and Fuji encounter mysterious aliens known as the Xiliens. They seek the aid of Earth’s people to help save their world from “Monster Zero”. In exchange for borrowing Godzilla and Rodan, the Xiliens offer a cure for cancer. As Glenn investigates, he develops a romance with Namikawa and uncovers the Xilien’s true intentions..
Plot: Astronauts Glenn and Fuji investigate Planet X and encounter mysterious aliens known as the Xiliens, who ask Earth’s people to help save their world from “Monster Zero”. In exchange for borrowing Godzilla and Rodan, the Xiliens offer a cure for cancer. As Glenn investigates, he develops a romance with Miss Namikawa and uncovers the Xilien’s true intentions.
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6.2/10 Votes: 6,506 | |
57% | RottenTomatoes | |
N/A | MetaCritic | |
N/A Votes: 146 Popularity: 11.432 | TMDB |
We need from you Monster Zero 1 and Monster Zero 2, Godzilla and Rodan.
It’s one of those Godzilla movies where you fully understand why some fans of the “Zilla” series positively dislike it. The big atomic lizard is only a bit part player here, and when push comes to shove the monster mayhem is in short supply, which considering we also have Ghidorah and Rodan in the mix is for sure a bit of a waste. Yet this is one of the better sequels from Toho’s original wave, it quite literally has all the ingredients that made “Zilla” and the off-shoots so iconic.We are in live action cartoon territory, a sci-fi story of bonkers proportions yet engrossing all the same. The joyous model work synonymous with the series remains intact, the cardboard sets being obliterated are still fun to watch, and the divisive sight of “Zilla” doing the “shay” dance is in here whether you like it or not. More fun, though, is watching “Zilla” boxing the three headed Ghidorah, now that is comedy gold, if only the moody lizard had gone southpaw a bit earlier then saving the world could have been achieved quicker.
Great fun, could have been better from a monster point of view? Yes, definitely, but this be a nutty fruitcake production from Toho and amen to that. 8/10
“It’s not my day.”
I can only take these Japanese monster films in small doses, which is to say about every six months to a year so as not to get permanently loopy. The same thing with Seventies martial arts flicks. But I stick with them for the amusement factor because that’s basically what I see as their mission. I see that most of the reviews for this movie are hugely positive, and that’s fine, but even so, I don’t get the rationale for rating pictures like this a ’10’ because even if you’re a fan, you have to have seen “Star Wars” or “Alien” by way of comparison. I merely shake my head.At least the bonus for this viewer was the inclusion of Nick Adams in the cast. He proved he really was a rebel to take on this assignment, appearing in the cast credits as Nikku Adamusu. But the odd thing was that his name in the story was Glenn, without noting whether that was the character’s first or last name. His astronaut partner on the space mission went by the last name of Fuji (Akira Takarada), which led me to question why everyone simply called him Glenn, no matter the context. The cast credit here on IMDb states Adam’s character as Glenn Amer, but one wouldn’t know that from watching the picture. Maybe Amer was short for American.
Say, I had to laugh when Spaceship P-1 landed on Planet X, and the hatch door used to leave the ship actually had dents in it. Still, that was a whole lot better than the spaceship used in the 1959 flick “Teenagers From Outer Space”. In that one, you can see the futuristic technology of space age hammer and nails at work. So you can actually measure the progress of sci-fi special effects used in this film compared to the one that came out six years earlier.
The best and funniest moment in this picture occurred when Godzilla and Rodan defeated King Ghidorah on Planet X. Right after, Godzilla went into this goofy looking dance number that had me baffled. That simply reminded me that these Toho films were primarily put together for a pre-teen audience, so with that in mind, it seemed rather logical. What’s not logical is why I still watch this stuff. But rest assured I’ll be back in another six months or so. Or wait, maybe sooner, because I just happened to come across a copy of “Mothra vs. Godzilla”.
Original Language ja
Runtime 1 hr 21 min (81 min) (Germany), 1 hr 33 min (93 min) (USA), 1 hr 34 min (94 min) (Japan), 1 hr 14 min (74 min) (re-issue) (Japan)
Budget 0
Revenue 3000000
Status Released
Rated G
Genre Action, Adventure, Sci-Fi
Director Ishirô Honda
Writer Shin’ichi Sekizawa
Actors Nick Adams, Akira Takarada, Jun Tazaki
Country Japan, United States
Awards 1 nomination
Production Company N/A
Website N/A
Sound Mix Mono (Westrex Recording System)
Aspect Ratio 2.35 : 1
Camera N/A
Laboratory N/A
Film Length N/A
Negative Format 35 mm
Cinematographic Process Tohoscope
Printed Film Format 35 mm