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Jimmy’s Notes on ‘Episode 25: Dogora, the Space Monster (feat. Michael “The Kaiju Groupie” Hamilton)’

Normally, my notes on mini-sodes—even extended ones—tend to be short.

Not today!

This week I earn my paycheck (and the ire of Marchand and “Mr. Groupie”) with a list of notes that would make Glen and the rest of my NASA trainers quite proud.

Five, four, three, two, one…

Liftoff!

My Notes

  • It’s “mark 3” not “mach 3,” Mr. Groupie. Do you have Kilara on the brain?
  • Regardless, I tried to ask the Board which “friend” I was building the Serpentera Mk. 3 for, and they wouldn’t tell me. I admit I’m a little concerned given that the previous models were used by alien invaders, and I have a history with extraterrestrial invasions.
  • Mr. Groupie got me swearin’ on the air! I went back to my New York roots!
  • Yes, the beginning of this film reminds me of being at NASA. And let me tell you, their space monster procedures were abysmal! I blame the bureaucracy.
  • Mr. Groupie, I’m as nostalgic as the next NASA engineer. We’re by definition geeks, and nostalgia runs deep in geek culture. You know this.
  • “Space junk”? You realize how often that joke came up while I was in NASA? Pshaw!
  • Yeah. That so-called “podcast.” 🙄
  • Oh, come on! You can’t put the word “space” in anything and make me like it. (Okay, maybe “space dog.”)
  • The scientific name given the giant bees (besides “Dogora deterrent”) by the Japanese scientists here is Kyodai Mitsubachi. Security Chief Douglas Gordon, on the other hand, nicknamed one the “Queen B—ch’ (although, I think he stole that from Tab Murphy).
  • Yes, I met Cthulhu. I’ve read the right pages of the Necronomicon to know how to deal with him.
  • Nathan, I’m surprised you didn’t compare Dogora’s weakness to the Martians dying from the common cold in War of the Worlds.
Star Wars Yoda GIF - StarWars Yoda Sad GIFs
  • Yes. I’m an unabashed fanboy for Kumi Mizuno and Nick Adams.
Tom Cruise Deal With It GIF
  • I think Nathan and Mr. Groupie were a bit confused. I’d sent feedback for 20 Million Miles to Earth not Monster Zero at the time of this broadcast. I tried to correct them, but they didn’t catch it. (Speaking of which, I did write that Monster Zero e-mail for Kaiju Weekly).
  • Yes, Carl Craig and I can both speak Japanese. I’m proud of that. Perhaps I should use it more often.
  • Yeah, Marchand, I’m going to have to give you some laser pistol safety training before I take you to my range again. And yes, you shoot like a Stormtrooper. But sure, Mr. Groupie, I’ll take you to my range next time you’re here.
  • Oh, I’m serious about that duel, Mr. Groupie. I’ll get it approved with the Board. Perhaps they’ll allow it if our weapons are set to stun. Too bad you backed down
  • I think you mean “west coast” not “west side,” Nathan. Or do you have Russ Tamblyn on the brain?
  • Yeah…Yakuza friend. I used to know him back in my scouting days. It’s not Masao. Gamera kids would never become Yakuza. Mostly because I think he might eat them if they did.
  • You called it “Daimajin Strikes Back” again, Marchand!
  • Yes, the Board likes 100 Grand bars. I tried Reese’s Pieces at first because of a movie I saw in the early ‘80s, but it didn’t work.
  • It wasn’t easy getting that clause added to your contract, Nathan. That’s how I discovered the Board liked 100 Grand bars.
  • Nathan eats super-spicy Jelly Belly jellybeans to put up with me.
  • “Like somebody I know”? Oh yeah. I know all about him. That was the last time I let him near my armed drones.

Now for Nathan’s leftover notes.

The Film:

  • Jimmy has a soft spot for this one because he’s a sucker for space monsters. (And I feel no shame. –Jimmy)
  • The opening and credits do remind me a bit of Battle in Outer Space.
  • Komai: Who’s almost the same character in Ghidorah.
  • (Typo in subtitles: “big jib.”) (They should’ve had me edit it. –Jimmy)
  • They were very trusting that the truck drivers would see her and not run her over.
  • Mark Jackson is Herbie’s new driver. (Only because he stole that Love Bug. –Jimmy)
  • The references to monsters as if they’re normal lends credence toward this being in the Showa-verse like Danny and I said. (See video and bonus episode. –Jimmy)
  • “Wine delivery”? When was that a thing before InstaCart?
  • This is the only time I can think of in a Showa Toho film that references ninjas—and it’s by an American! (Of course! Because they’re awesome! –Jimmy)
  • The big metal box—is that how you get some of your figures shipped, Michael?
  • The goon eating the rock candy that isn’t a diamond is trademark Sekizawa.
  • Oh crap! Dogora sounds like a Matango! Dr. Douriff might try to summon him! (Uh…someone keep every Lovecraft book away from him! –Jimmy)
  • I love how Komai casually climbs down the building to the next room.
  • The old “crystallographer” is a typical scientist who somehow knows all sciences.
  • This could almost be an Ultra Q episode.
  • The Ifukube music during the venom manufacturing montage sounds like what he’d compose for destroying the control device in Destroy All Monsters.
  • Labs around the world work to study and manufacture the wasp venom. Honda’s “brotherhood of man” theme.
  • Now we have the Mission: Impossible! scene with fuse and trying to get the gun. (A Walther PPK, to boot). Thank God Komai is a decent shot! (Where’s Tom Cruise when you need him? Oh yeah, in the gif above. 😛 –Jimmy)
  • There is some real military stock footage in this.
  • This guy’s obsession with dynamite and throwing sticks of it is hilarious!
  • And of course, the woman dies clutching a fistful of diamonds. (You sexist! Just kidding, of course. –Jimmy)
  • Ever seen ThunderCats? There was an episode where it rained rocks like in this.
  • Spin on Sekizawa’s formula: kaiju doesn’t solve human problem, but solving kaiju problem does solve human problem.
  • And all the diamonds are fake!
  • “Peaceful applications” of the tech developed to kill Dogora? Very idealistic. Very Honda.

Honda Biography

  • Japanese criminologists call the early 1950s-early 1960s the “period of gang wars.” Economic growth led to red light districts where crime thrived. This accounts for the popularity of gangster (yakuza) films during this time and why such elements were added to this film and Ghidorah the Three-Headed Monster.
  • The authors argue that one could interpret Dogora’s destruction of a TV satellite at the beginning of the film as a commentary on the banality of television or the monster’s appetite for coal a concern over industrial pollution. Even the specter of radioactive isotopes left over from the nuclear bombings. But they say the film doesn’t think much of these.
  • Jojiro Okami wrote the treatment, which was changed by Honda and Sekizawa, who added cops and robbers. He wasn’t consulted, which was usual.
  • Robert Dunham’s phrase, “Oh, Kami-sama” (“Oh, God!”) is a very western use of Japanese.
  • The original script was much more ambitious, with several ‘luminous monsters attacking New York and space stations while consuming diamonds and carbon. The Japanese authorities capture one and learn it can be killed with beta rays. Sadly, the film suffered from budget cuts.
  • It left so little of an impression, actor Natsuki didn’t recall being in it in 1996.

LeMay

  • TV Guide description read on Sanford and Son: “A giant coal-sucking jellyfish from space runs afoul of gangsters and is defeated wasp venom.”
  • “Uchu kaiju” = “space monster” (We knew all about those at NASA. –Jimmy)

Brothers

  • Influenced by the James Bond series (particularly Goldfinger)
  • Fewer deaths, more laughs in these films now.
  • Argues that the characters are overshadowed by the monsters. Honda’s characters are a “side-element” to the monsters.
  • The film’s poor box office made Tanaka take this formula further.

Notes on the Yakuza:

  • “Boryokudan, another word for Yakuza, is considered an insult. It refers to degenerate, violent gangsters with no sense of tradition or honor. This i­s how the Japanese police refer to the Yakuza.” (https://people.howstuffworks.com/yakuza.htm)
  • “Members are meant to observe strict codes of loyalty, silence, obedience, and the like.” (https://allthatsinteresting.com/yakuza-history/2)
  • Unlike in the film, women are marginalized in the Yakuza. Even wives and daughters are mostly servants. Sometimes they’re even used as prostitutes. However, Fumiko Taoka filled the power vacuum left by her husband for several months after he died, making one of the few women to be a boss (and it was for one of the largest gangs in Japan).
  • The Japanese government has employed them, but details are hazy. When President Eisenhower visited Japan in 1960, he was flanked by Yakuza bodyguards.
  • The drug trade is quite profitable for them. They run most of the drug traffic in the country, particularly meth. One member said, “One sure way of making money is drugs: that’s the one thing you can’t get hold of without an underworld connection.”
  • They also got involved in white-collar crime. “Early on, the Yakuza’s role in white-collar crime was mostly through something call Sōkaiya – their system for extorting businesses. They would buy enough stock in a company to be able to send their men into stockholder meetings, and there they would terrify and blackmail the companies into doing whatever they wanted.” … “At their peak, there were 50 registered companies listed on the Osaka Security Exchange that had deep ties to organized crime.” (https://allthatsinteresting.com/yakuza-history/4)
  • They now prefer using these legitimate businesses to make money rather than commit crimes.

That wraps things up.

Mr. Groupie insisted on driving Serpentera Mk. 3 back to West Virginia. Despite my hesitation, I let him. Thankfully, he didn’t wreck it (although we did have a close call with the Gateway Arch. Stop flying that low, Groupie!)

Tune in next week when Nathan is joined by Joe and Joy Metter to wrap up the “Daimajin Days” with Daimajin Strikes Again. I’m still recovering from injuries I suffered in that episode—but not from Joy!

Then Mr. Groupie’s partner in crime at Kaiju Weekly, Travis Alexander, joins us for an MIFV Halloween with Frankenstein Conquers the World (#Justice4Baragon).

Follow me on Twitter: @NasaJimmy

Follow the Board on Twitter: @MonsterIslaBOD

#JimmyFromNASALives
#WeShallOvercome

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Episode 25: ‘Dogora, the Space Monster’ (feat. Michael ‘The Kaiju Groupie’ Hamilton)

Hello, kaiju lovers!

Making his third trip to Monster Island—but his first appearance on MIFV—is none other than the Kaiju Groupie himself, Michael Hamilton. He paid Nathan and Jimmy a visit to discuss Dogora, the Space Monster, which was one of three kaiju films released in 1964 by Toho. The titular space squid is a nightmare straight out of an H.P. Lovecraft story—minus the sorta lame weakness. (To quote Batman, “Bees. My god.”) Nathan and Michael also discuss Japan’s infamous mafia, the Yakuza, since there are elements of it in this film. Enjoy!

Check out Michael’s titular podcast and social media here.

Episode image created by, well, Michael Hamilton.

Read Jimmy’s Notes on this episode.

We’d like to give a shout-out to our Patreon patrons Travis Alexander and Michael Hamilton (co-hosts of Kaiju Weekly); Danny DiManna (author/creator of the Godzilla Novelization Project); Eli Harris (elizilla13); Chris Cooke (host of One Cross Radio), and Bex from Redeemed Otaku! Thanks for your support!

You, too, can support us on Patreon!

This episode is approved by the Monster Island Board of Directors.

Podcast Social Media:
Twitter
Facebook
Instagram

Follow Jimmy on Twitter: @NasaJimmy
Follow the Monster Island Board of Directors on Twitter: @MonsterIslaBOD

#JimmyFromNASALives       #MonsterIslandFilmVault

© 2020 Moonlighting Ninjas Media

Bibliography/Further Reading:

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Episode 24: The Metters vs. ‘Return of Daimjain’

Hello, kaiju lovers!

We have many happy (and not-so-happy) returns in this episode. Nathan’s friends Joe and Joy Metter are back to continue the “Daimajin Days” by discussing Return of Daimajin. They also brought their dogs, Teddy Kong and Bitzilla, although they’re a little quieter this time around. Regardless, this is the second of the Daimajin trilogy from 1966, and while it’s mostly a rehash of the first film that doesn’t quite rise to its heights (until maybe the last 10-15 minutes), it does bring a few new things to the table. These include a lake parting that rivals The Ten Commandments, a Daimajin with a less gray morality scale, and villains who believe in the supernatural and tremble.

Unfortunately, MIFV’s intrepid producer, Jimmy From NASA, continues doubt Joy’s swordfighting ability. To test her mettle, he sics certain winged gremlins from the future on her—with surprising results!

All this plus the Toku Topics is Shintoism, Shinto shrines, and torii gates since all those factor into this film.

Episode image created by Michael Hamilton.

We’d like to give a shout-out to our Patreon patrons Travis Alexander and Michael Hamilton (co-hosts of Kaiju Weekly); Danny DiManna (author/creator of the Godzilla Novelization Project); Eli Harris (elizilla13); Chris Cooke (host of One Cross Radio), and Bex from Redeemed Otaku! Thanks for your support!

You, too, can support us on Patreon and get perks like this starting at only $3 a month!

This episode is approved by the Monster Island Board of Directors.

Read Jimmy’s Notes on this episode.

Timestamps:
Intro: 0:00-5:34
Entertaining Info Dump: 5:34-11:00
Toku Talk: 11:00-46:05
Advertisement: 46:05-46:57
Toku Topic: 46:57-1:30:48
Outro: 1:30:48-end

Podcast Social Media:
Twitter
Facebook
Instagram

Follow Jimmy on Twitter: @NasaJimmy
Follow the Monster Island Board of Directors on Twitter: @MonsterIslaBOD

www.MonsterIslandFilmVault.com

#JimmyFromNASALives       #MonsterIslandFilmVault

© 2020 Nathan Marchand & Moonlighting Ninjas Media

Bibliography/Further Reading:

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Episode 22: The Metters vs. ‘Daimajin’

Hello, kaiju lovers!

Despite some recording/broadcasting issues with a new microphone (which will be remedied for future episodes), Nathan was joined once again by his friends Joe and Joy Metter, who were vacationing on Monster Island. They started the “Daimajin Days” by screening and discussing the first film in Daiei’s Daimajin trilogy from 1966. These films combine the kaiju and chanbara (“samurai”) genres to create some of the most unique examples of both. While Joe and Joy aren’t connoisseurs of kaiju, they are fans of samurai films. They, along with Nathan, connect this film to Rurouni Kenshin, Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, and of course Star Wars. (You can fill that space on your MIFV bingo card this week). Also making a return is their dog Teddy Kong, and he brought his friend, Bitzilla. You’ll hear them several times during the episode. Teddy really wanted to see Gamera for some reason. (Because he was hungry for turtle meat?) The only buzzkill—besides the recording issues—was MIFV’s intrepid producer, Jimmy From NASA, butting heads with Joy over sword fighting. Geez.

Since this is a period piece, the Toku Topics are the Sengoku Period of Japanese history and the coming of Christianity to Japan.

We’d like to give a shout-out to our Patreon patrons Travis Alexander and Michael “The Kaiju Groupie” Hamilton (co-hosts of Kaiju Weekly), Danny DiManna (Godzilla Novelization Project), Eli Harris, and Bex (host of the Redeemed Otaku) (who joined just before this episode was posted)! Thanks for your support!

You, too, can support us on Patreon!

This episode is approved by the Monster Island Board of Directors.

Read Jimmy’s Notes on this episode.

Timestamps:
Prologue: 0:00-2:34
Intro: 2:34-6:52
Entertaining Info Dump: 6:52-12:35
Toku Talk: 12:35-1:03:24
Toku Topic: 1:03:24-1:33:14
Outro: 1:33:14-end

MIFV Social Media:
Twitter
Facebook
Instagram

Follow Jimmy on Twitter: @NasaJimmy
Follow the Monster Island Board of Directors on Twitter: @MonsterIslaBOD

www.MonsterIslandFilmVault.com

#JimmyFromNASALives
#MonsterIslandFilmVault

© 2020 Moonlighting Ninjas Media

Bibliography/Further Reading:

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Bonus Episode #4: Interview with Ben Chaffins

Hello, kaiju lovers!

As a special Fifth Wednesday Bonus Episode (which will become a regular feature of the show), I interviewed SciFi Japan writer Ben Chaffins about his new book, Discovering Tokusatsu. In it he chronicles his many quests to get interviews with high-profile people working in tokusatsu filmmaking. You’ll hear about how Ben got his gig at SciFi Japan, why he wrote the book, and how much of a “stan” he is for Ultraman: The Next and Ultraman Nexus (whose special effects director he interviewed for an exclusive chapter in this book).

Oh, and by the way, Ben’s Twitter profile pic is Ultraman Nexus with sunglasses. Deal with it! 😛 Follow Ben on Twitter and Instagram.

We’d like to give a shout-out to our Patreon patrons Travis Alexander and Michael Hamilton (cohosts of Kaiju Weekly); Danny DiManna (Godzilla Novelization Project); elizilla13; and Chris Cooke (host of One Cross Radio)! Thanks for your support!

You, too, can support us on Patreon!

This bonus episode is approved by the Monster Island Board of Directors.

Podcast Social Media:
Twitter
Facebook
Instagram

Follow Jimmy on Twitter: @NasaJimmy
Follow the Monster Island Board of Directors on Twitter: @MonsterIslaBOD

#JimmyFromNASALives
#MonsterIslandFilmVault

© 2020 Moonlighting Ninjas Media

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Episode 21: ‘Matango’ (Mini-Analysis)

Hello, kaiju lovers!

An artsy Japanese horror film about mushrooms based on a British short story?

That’s sounds insane enough to work!

Despite getting slapped with the schlocky English title, “Attack of the Mushroom People,” Matango ranks as one of director Ishiro Honda’s greatest achievements in tokustasu filmmaking. Screenwriter Takeshi Kimura considered it to be his magnum opus. It’s a story replete with subtlety and symbolism, an indictment of Japan’s newfound opulence and decadence in the early 1960s, and it’s as relevant now for any audience as it was back then. It’s such an important film, Nathan and his intrepid producer, Jimmy From NASA, interview the only scientist on Monster Island’s who’s brave and/or crazy enough to study the Matango—with frightening results! 

Featuring Daniel DiManna as the voice of Dr. Dante Dourif.

Episode image created by Michael Hamilton. Check out his podcast, The Kaiju Groupie.

This is meant to supplement this episode of Kaijuvision Radio: Episode 45: Matango (Attack of the Mushroom People) (1963) (Westernization and Globalization)

We’d like to give a shout-out to our Patreon patrons Travis Alexander and Michael Hamilton (cohosts of Kaiju Weekly); Danny DiManna (Godzilla Novelization Project); elizilla13; and Chris Cooke (host of One Cross Radio)! Thanks for your support!

You, too, can support us on Patreon!

This episode is approved by the Monster Island Board of Directors.

Podcast Social Media:
Twitter
Facebook
Instagram

Follow Jimmy on Twitter: @NasaJimmy
Follow the Monster Island Board of Directors on Twitter: @MonsterIslaBOD

www.MonsterIslandFilmVault.com

#JimmyFromNASALives       #MonsterIslandFilmVault

© 2020 Nathan Marchand & Moonlighting Ninjas Media

Bibliography/Further Reading:

  • “Attack of the Mushroom People: Ishiro Honda’s Matango William Hope Hodgson’s ‘The Voice in the Night’” by Anthony Camara (Monsters and Monstrosity from the Fin de Siécle to the Millennium, edited by Sharla Hutchinson and Rebecca A. Brown)
  • “The history and current state of drug abuse in Japan” by Kiyoshi Wada (Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, Jan 2011, vol. 1216, no. 1, p 62-72)
  • Ishiro Honda: A Life in Film, from Godzilla to Kurosawa by Steve Ryfle and Ed Godzisewski
  • “Ishiro Honda-thon Ep. 5: Matango (1963) Review” by Adam Noyes (AN Productions) (YouTube)
  • Kaijuvision Radio, “Episode 8: King Kong vs. Godzilla (1962)”
  • “Methamphetamine Solution: Drugs and the Reconstruction of Nation in Postwar Japan” by Miriam Kingsburg (The Journal of Asian Studies, Feb. 2013, vol. 72, no. 1, p. 141-162)
  • Mushroom Clouds and Mushroom Men: The Fantastic Cinema of Ishiro Honda by Peter H. Brothers
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Episode 20: Bex vs. ‘Rebirth of Mothra III’

Hello, kaiju lovers!

Twelve-centimeter girls, tiny robot dragons, and redemption—and we’re not talking about the movie!

After some shenanigans with Jimmy From NASA’s teleporter, Nathan and resident “Mothrian” Bex (Redeemed Otaku podcast) finish the “Summer of Mothra” with the surprisingly good Rebirth of Mothra III. Although, maybe they’re just riding high on Bex’s hyperbolic enthusiasm over this movie. But it isn’t hard to improve on the empty, fluffy whimsy of the second one. There’s a lot of meat (bubble) to chew on thematically. Not to mention it also features one of the best-looking King Ghidorahs ever, time travel, and dinosaur puppets. However, Bex gets so carried away with her newfound faith in Mothra, she gets a visit from Monster Island’s chaplain, Rev. Mifune! Uh-oh….

For the first time, we’re covering not one but two Toku Topics: the hikikimori and Aokigahara (Aoki Forest). The child hero, Shota, is likely a member of the former, and much of the movie is set in that infamous forest.

It’s an episode that spans the emotional gamut, that’s for sure!

BE SURE TO LISTEN UNTIL AFTER THE CREDITS!

Here are the Redeemed Otaku episodes Nathan (and his friend Eric Anderson) appeared on to discuss the Godzilla Anime Trilogy:

Godzilla: Planet of the Monsters
Godzilla: City on the Edge of Battle
Godzilla: The Planet Eater

We’d like to give a shout-out to our Patreon patrons Travis Alexander (host of Kaiju Weekly), Danny DiManna (Godzilla Novelization Project), elizilla13, and Joejira! Thanks for your support! (And also to Michael “The Kaiju Groupie” Hamilton, who joined just before this episode was posted).

Read Jimmy’s Notes on this episode.

Timestamps:
Prologue: 0:00-2:20
Intro: 2:20-6:25
Entertaining Info Dump: 6:25-12:57
Toku Talk: 12:57-1:24:26
Promo: 1:24:26-1:25:16
Toku Topic: 1:25:16-2:10:53
Outro: 2:10:53-2:19:46
Epilogue: 2:19:46-end

MIFV Social Media:
Twitter
Facebook
Instagram
Patreon

Follow Jimmy on Twitter: @NasaJimmy

#JimmyFromNASALives

© 2020 Moonlighting Ninjas Media (and Becky “Bex” Smith)

Bibliography/Further Reading:

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KAIJU CON-LINE 2020 Promo

From the event’s official website:

MARK YOUR CALENDARS, MONSTER KIDS!
ON THE WEEKEND OF JULY 11 & 12, THE MONSTERS ARE IN REVOLT AS KAIJU CON-LINE TAKES OVER THE INTERNET!

WHAT IS KAIJU CON-LINE?
WITH THE CANCELATION OF THE ANNUAL GATHERING OF KAIJU FANS, A FEW MOTIVATED MONSTER MANIACS ARE REPLICATING A SMALL PORTION OF THE FUN WITH THEIR FELLOW FANS ON THAT SAME WEEKEND, LIKE A VIRTUAL CONVENTION.

OVER THE WEEKEND, A MYRIAD OF ONLINE ACTIVITIES ARE AVAILABLE FOR KAIJU FANS AROUND THE GLOBE TO ENJOY – ALL FOR FREE.

YES, KAIJU CON-LINE IS A FREE EVENT! WE ARE DOING WHAT WE CAN TO MAKE THIS SHOW AS AWESOME AS POSSIBLE AND REACHING OUT TO MEMBERS OF OUR KAIJU COMMUNITY TO HELP IN A NUMBER OF WAYS TO CONTRIBUTE. WE HOPE YOU HAVE A MONSTROUS TIME AT KAIJU CON-LINE FROM THE COMFORT OF YOUR OWN HOME!

(END)

Join Nathan Marchand and Danny DiManna (author and creator of the Godzilla Novelization Project) for their panel, “The Original MCU: Connecting Showa Era Continuity” Sunday at 2pm EST. They will connect the dots in the often loose continuity of Toho’s Showa era tokusatsu films.

This is all only some of the great programming being offered this weekend! Check it out!

Special thanks to Henry the Host of the “It Came from a Monster Movie!” podcast for this promo.

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Episode 16: Bex vs. ‘Rebirth of Mothra’

Hello, kaiju lovers!

Today we’re giving you something you perhaps didn’t know you wanted—a deep dive into Rebirth of Mothra, the first of a trilogy produced by Toho after retiring Godzilla (again). Depending on how you feel about this movie, you may love or hate this episode. What you will love, though, is the Tourist joining Nathan this week is none other than Bex from Redeemed Otaku. Since Nathan appeared on her podcast to discuss the Godzilla Anime Trilogy, he’s having her on three episodes as part of the “Summer of Mothra” while we all await the release of Godzilla vs. Kong (yes, much to anime-loving Bex’s chagrin, she’s filler). Their spirited discussion references and compares this film to a multitude of unrelated media, including The Lion King, Power Rangers, The Neverending Story, Sentinels of the Multiverse (a card game), and Panzer Dragoon(a video game). It’s quite meme-tastic with catchphrases like, “lightning and lasers,” and Nathan’s favorite, “Deus ex Mothrica” (he has issues with the movie’s ending). The Toku Topic is deforestation in Japan. While that may not sound exciting, it has deep connections to the movie and the Japanese national spirit. All this plus some Jimmy From NASA antics and more in the latest episode of MIFV!

Here are the Redeemed Otaku episodes Nathan (and his friend Eric Anderson) appeared on to discuss the Godzilla Anime Trilogy:

Godzilla: Planet of the Monsters
Godzilla: City on the Edge of Battle
Godzilla: The Planet Eater

ANNOUNCEMENT: We now have a Patreon! If you’re able to support the show in these crazy times, please do. There are three levels, each with its own perks. Here’s a link. Shout out to our first Patron, Travis Alexander (co-host of Kaiju Weekly), who pledged at the Day Pass Tourist level! Thanks, man!

Read Jimmy’s Notes on this episode.

Timestamps:
Intro: 0:00-5:11
Entertaining Info Dump: 5:11-11:55
Toku Talk: 11:55-1:29:31
Toku Topic: 1:29:31-2:09:11
Outro: 2:09:11-end

MIFV Social Media:
Twitter
Facebook
Instagram

Follow Jimmy on Twitter: @NasaJimmy

www.MonsterIslandFilmVault.com

#JimmyFromNASALives

© 2020 Moonlighting Ninjas Media

Bibliography/Further Reading:

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