Godzilla! (found high-quality release of kaiju film; 1977)

From The Lost Media Wiki
Revision as of 11:56, 2 November 2021 by YoshiKiller2S (talk | contribs)
Jump to: navigation, search
Godzilla Title Card.png

Title card from the high-quality version.

Status: Found

Date found: 17 Feb 2018

Found by: GenoCuddy

Godzilla!, Often called Cozzilla, for its director Luigi Cozzi, is a 1977 colourized version of the 1954 film Gojira, only available for homeownership through TV recordings and bootleg DVDs. No known versions include the ending, although it has surfaced on YouTube, and the "full" version that surfaced online in 2014 was a very low-quality recording that had the text from the end of the reel included in the movie, as it hadn't been run properly.

There are rumours that a high-quality 8mm print surfaced in recent years, but it was never released, and the movie has never had a proper home media release. An old introduction used on TV shows some very high-quality footage, where the colours are actually quite distinct, while most versions of the movie available are quite faded and poorly aged.

The movie spliced in footage from other sources, which is fairly effective at some points but makes it look messy at others. Most of the footage is from The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms and Godzilla, King of the Monsters. There is also at least one scene from 1955's Godzilla Raids Again, as well as footage from the wars (which does result in actual human death on screen). The base movie does seem to be from King of the Monsters, although there is added footage from Gojira.[1]

Availability

It is unlikely the movie will ever receive a restored release since Toho studios have never mentioned it at any point, and it's unknown if the current owners will release it. It is also notable that side B of the original soundtrack to the movie hasn't been released on CD, although it does appear on a rare EP.

On February 17th, 2018, user "GenoCuddy" uploaded a high-quality restoration of the film to archive.org. He was given a 35mm print of the film to work with, and he almost lost all of his work due to his computer dying, but luckily he did save an earlier attempt on a DVD.

Gallery

The full 1080p restoration of Godzilla!.

References