PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
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TU PUNTUACIÓN
Los reporteros de la revista Hiroyuki Kurosaki y sus colegas trajeron de vuelta a Japón a un niño monstruo que acababa de nacer de un huevo emitido en la aislada isla de Obelisco en el Mar d... Leer todoLos reporteros de la revista Hiroyuki Kurosaki y sus colegas trajeron de vuelta a Japón a un niño monstruo que acababa de nacer de un huevo emitido en la aislada isla de Obelisco en el Mar del Sur.Los reporteros de la revista Hiroyuki Kurosaki y sus colegas trajeron de vuelta a Japón a un niño monstruo que acababa de nacer de un huevo emitido en la aislada isla de Obelisco en el Mar del Sur.
Tamio Kawaji
- Hiroshi Kurosaki
- (as Tamio Kawachi)
Yûji Odaka
- Prof. Daize Tonooka
- (as Yuji Kodaka)
Yôko Ôyagi
- Aihara
- (as Yoko Oyagi)
Argumento
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesThe main and end title music heard in the overseas releases of this film (for example, Monster from a Prehistoric Planet in the U.S.) were from an earlier film also scored by Seitaro Omori, the Nikkatsu teen drama/comedy film Youth Song (1959).
- PifiasAt 54:00 when airplanes attack the Gappas, for a brief moment during a view from an airplane target one can see where the fake sky backdrop ends and the movie studio beyond it.
- Citas
President Funazu: Like it? I call it Playmate Land.
- Versiones alternativasIn all English-dubbed versions of the film, the rock and roll theme song titled "Great Giant Beast Gappa" (heard in both the opening credits and the ending of the original Japanese version of it) is replaced by standard orchestral music. Also, the Japanese version features a song titled "Keep Trying, Baby Gappa!" (heard in the scene at the end of the film where the male and female Gappas are reunited with their baby). In all English-dubbed versions, the song's vocals are cut and thus, it becomes an instrumental song.
- ConexionesEdited into Enano Rojo: Meltdown (1991)
- Banda sonoraDaikyojû Gappa
("Great Giant Beast Gappa")
Opening and Ending Theme (Japanese version only)
Music by Masao Yoneyama
Arrangement by Iwao Shigematsu
Lyrics by Hikari Ichijô
Performed by Katsuhiko Miki
Reseña destacada
Move over Dr Strangelove; "Monster from a Prehistoric Planet" is the new satire in town. Okay, maybe my sarcasm is unjustified, Japanese satire is either too high brow for me or gets completely lost in translation. And its perfectly easy to loose anything in the atrocious dubbing kaiju films get plastered with.
If I'm kind I have to call it a parody of King Kong; as the film deals with an expedition force, who are trying to find exotic animals for a new theme park, stumbling across a mysterious island where the indigenous tribe (who look strangely similar to Japanese with coal on their faces) worship a god called Gappa. The expedition take a baby Gappa back to Japan, with the parents in hot pursuit. Cue the miniatures.
With the hideously handled love side story and the hilariously sentimental finale, I can only assume that this film was intended as tongue in cheek fare, and the satire label certainly confirms this. This aside however, the film is terrific by the standards of the time, with incredible amounts of destruction and very little time to breathe in between. Whether I'm missing the supposed hard-hitting social satire I don't really care; "Monster from a Prehistoric Planet" is a wonderfully extravagant example of monster films done properly, with a plot that doesn't dither amount and action that moves back to Japan pretty swiftly and doesn't let up from then on. The clichés are all over the place but this is hardly an issue, intentional or otherwise. Certainly, a kaiju film trying its hand at satire would be expected to be about as subtle as a ton of bricks, and with this in mind the film could have turned out a hell of a lot worse.
(To the elite, "Monster from a Prehistoric Planet" has a special appeal. The Gappas are the very same monsters that menaced Kryten and Rimmer on wax world in series 4 of Red Dwarf; and as Kryten observed, you've probably seen more convincing dinosaurs in a packet of "wheatie flakes")
If I'm kind I have to call it a parody of King Kong; as the film deals with an expedition force, who are trying to find exotic animals for a new theme park, stumbling across a mysterious island where the indigenous tribe (who look strangely similar to Japanese with coal on their faces) worship a god called Gappa. The expedition take a baby Gappa back to Japan, with the parents in hot pursuit. Cue the miniatures.
With the hideously handled love side story and the hilariously sentimental finale, I can only assume that this film was intended as tongue in cheek fare, and the satire label certainly confirms this. This aside however, the film is terrific by the standards of the time, with incredible amounts of destruction and very little time to breathe in between. Whether I'm missing the supposed hard-hitting social satire I don't really care; "Monster from a Prehistoric Planet" is a wonderfully extravagant example of monster films done properly, with a plot that doesn't dither amount and action that moves back to Japan pretty swiftly and doesn't let up from then on. The clichés are all over the place but this is hardly an issue, intentional or otherwise. Certainly, a kaiju film trying its hand at satire would be expected to be about as subtle as a ton of bricks, and with this in mind the film could have turned out a hell of a lot worse.
(To the elite, "Monster from a Prehistoric Planet" has a special appeal. The Gappas are the very same monsters that menaced Kryten and Rimmer on wax world in series 4 of Red Dwarf; and as Kryten observed, you've probably seen more convincing dinosaurs in a packet of "wheatie flakes")
- wierzbowskisteedman
- 30 jun 2006
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- How long is Gappa the Triphibian Monster?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- Títulos en diferentes países
- Gappa the Triphibian Monster
- Empresas productoras
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
- Duración1 hora 30 minutos
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1
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By what name was El monstruo que amenaza al mundo (1967) officially released in India in English?
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