All right, indulge me for a moment. Or rather, the child in me.
King
Kong vs. Godzilla was one of my favorite movies growing up in the 70s. I must have watched it a
dozen times, and this was the era before VHS tapes, DVDs, DVRs, and Netflix.
You had to wait for it to come on one
of the dozen or so TV channels we had, and been lucky enough to catch it. But
catch it I did. This 1963 extravaganza, along with some Harryhausen films like Jason and the Argonauts and classic 50s
sci fi flicks like The Thing and The Day the Earth Stood Still made my
childhood magical.
Over the years I’ve been disappointed with the
remakes, to say the least. First was that awful flick in the late 90s, then was
fat Godzilla in 2014. Terrible. But I got wind a few years ago that Kong was
now going to be in the picture and, I have to confess, I got a little excited.
This would be a perfect movie to bond with my youngest
daughter, I remember thinking. Alas, too many years passed and now, firmly
ensconced at the fulcrum between tween and teen, she decided to take a hard
pass on it when my friend invited me over this past weekend to watch it.
Now, this is the guy I go to movies with – or used to,
pre-Wu Flu – to catch the horror and SF flicks the wife showed no interest in.
(And, corollary-wise, she’d go see chick flicks and Rom-Coms with my friend’s
wife – it’s a win-win all around!) We’d make our movie-going an adventure,
usually hitting up a bar for a few beers and shooting the breeze before going
in. But since the theaters are still locked down, something was missing.
But he more than made up for it. Somehow he came
across six authentic movie theater chairs. Modern ones. You know, the ones that
recline and have the food tray swivel across your lap and the hole for your
64-ounce soda. He installed them in two rows of three in his den, with the row
behind raised a foot on a carpeted wooded dais. Then he installed a massive
flat screen with all the acoustical trappings – bass, overhead speakers, side
speakers, you name it. It is as close to being in a movie theater that one can
get.
So he wanted to know if I wanted to watch it with him
last Friday night. Now, I still apologize to him for dragging him to Godzilla 2014 all those years ago. But a
quick google of Godzilla vs. Kong showed
that it was actually getting positive reviews. I agreed and drove over,
stopping at Liquorland for a six-pack of Yuengling to split.
What did I think of Godzilla vs Kong?
I really, really enjoyed it. I knew what I was signing
up for, and it wasn’t going to be Citizen
Kane, or even a more modern classic like John Carpenter’s The Thing or James Cameron’s Aliens. But for what it was, two giant
monsters slugging it out Sumo-style (with Kong hurling a right cross that could
fell Tyson), it was pretty darn good.
Yeah, all the human characters are cardboard.
Yeah, the plot is completely unhinged from reality ( –
Hollow Earth? Really?)
Yeah, you get the feeling entire subplots had been
edited into oblivion, so the resulting story makes little sense if thought
about too hard.
Yeah, the dialogue is LOL goofy at times.
Yeah, twists can be seen a continent away.
But the CGI was phenomenal. There were futuristic
hovercrafts and a world where gravity worked in weird ways. I bought into the
special effects completely, wholly, and in totality. That is the secret of this
big loud dumb fun flick.
Was it the fact I saw it on a giant TV screen? Sure.
Was it the fact that every Kong or Godzilla roar or stomp thudded my heart a
couple millimeters to the side without fail? Yep. Was it the fact I was
enjoying a film with my friend and some delicious beers in the Covid
Apocalypse? You know it.
I won’t rehash the plot, such as it was, here. But the
bottom line is based on the brawling of the behemoth beasts –
Godzilla >
Kong
Kong >
Mecha-Godzilla
Mecha-Godzilla > Godzilla
My favorite scene? When Mecha-Godzilla attains
sentience in the background behind moustache-twirling bad guy’s final
monologue.
Grade: solid A for pure childhood entertainment.
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