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{{Mtab
{{Tab
|soundtrack={{soundtracktab|soundtrack=Varan (Soundtrack)}}}}
|credits  =Varan (film)/Credits
{{Infopelicula
|soundtrack=Varan (film)/Soundtrack
|type1      =Machine
|type2      =Flying
|header      ={{Toho Kaiju Film}}
|image      =000091.jpg
|caption    =The Japanese poster for Varan
|name        =''Varan''
|jp-title    =''Giant Monster Varan''
|us-title    =''Varan, the Unbelievable'' (1962)
|producer    =[[Tomoyuki Tanaka]]
|director    =[[Ishiro Honda]]
|writer      =[[Ken Kuronuma]], [[Shinichi Sekizawa]]
|composer    =[[Akira Ifukube]]
|distributor =[[Toho]]{{sup|[[Japan|JP]]}}<br>{{Small2|Crown International Pictures{{sup|[[United States|US]]}}}}
|rating      =Not Rated
|budget      =$?,???,???
|gross      =$?,???,???
|runtime    =87 minutes{{sup|[[Japan|JP]]}}<br />{{Small|(1 hour, 27 minutes)}}<br />70 minutes{{sup|[[United States|US]]}}<br />{{Small|(1 hour, 10 minutes)}}
|designs    =[[Varan|ShodaiBaran]]
}}
}}
'''''Varan''''' {{Nihongo|大怪獣バラン|Daikaijū Baran|lit. ''Giant Monster Varan''}} is a [[1958]] [[tokusatsu]] [[:Category:Kaiju Films|kaiju film]] produced by [[Toho]], and the company's last black-and-white kaiju film. It was released to [[Japan]]ese theaters on October 14, 1958.  
{{Infobox Film|ratings=yes
|type1        =Machine
|type2        =Flying
|image        =Japanese Varan poster.jpg
|caption      =The Japanese poster for Varan
|name        =''Varan''|titles=yes|alt-titles=yes
|dt          =''Varan'' (1958)
|jp-title    =''Giant Monster Varan'' (1958)
|us-title    ={{Small|''Varan the Unbelievable''}} (1962)
|producer    =[[Tomoyuki Tanaka]]
|director    =[[Ishiro Honda]]
|writer      =[[Ken Kuronuma]] (story), [[Shinichi Sekizawa]]
|composer    =[[Akira Ifukube]]
|distributor  =[[Toho]]{{sup|[[Japan|JP]]}}, Crown International Pictures{{sup|[[United States|US]]}}
|rating      =Not Rated
|runtime      =87 minutes{{sup|[[Japan|JP]]}}<br>{{Small|(1 hour, 27 minutes)}}<br>70 minutes{{sup|[[United States|US]]}}<br>{{Small|(1 hour, 10 minutes)}}
|aspectratio  =2.00:1{{sup|[[Japan|JP]]}},<ref name="Varan: a 2:1 SuperScope movie all along?">[https://www.tapatalk.com/groups/monsterkidclassichorrorforum/varan-a-2-1-superscope-movie-all-along-t60205.html Classic Horror Film Board: "Varan: a 2:1 SuperScope movie all along?"]</ref><br>2.35:1{{sup|[[United States|US]]}}<ref name="Galbraith IV">{{cite book|title=The Toho Studios Story: A History and Complete Filmography|author=Galbraith IV, Stuart|date=2008|publisher=The Scarecrow Press, Inc.|page=149|isbn=9781461673743}}</ref>
}}
{{Quote|The demon Varan rampages across the land, seas, and air! The definitive fantasy monster movie!|parenthetical=陸海空を暴れ廻る魔のバラン!空想怪獣映画の決定版!|Japanese tagline}}
{{Quote|The world is amazed by Godzilla and Rodan, but will be knocked for a ghoul by Varan.|International tagline}}
{{Quote|FROM A WORLD BELOW IT CAME TO TERRORIZE- TO DESTROY - TO REVENGE!|Poster tagline for ''Varan the Unbelievable''}}
'''''Varan''''' {{Nihongo|大怪獣バラン|Daikaijū Baran|lit. "''Giant Monster Varan''"}} is a [[1958]] [[tokusatsu]] [[:Category:Kaiju Films|kaiju film]] directed by [[Ishiro Honda]] and written by [[Shinichi Sekizawa]] from a story by [[Ken Kuronuma]], with special effects by [[Eiji Tsuburaya]]. Produced by [[Toho]], it was the company's last black-and-white kaiju film. It stars Kozo Nomura, Ayumi Sonoda, Fumito Matsuo, Koreya Senda, Akio Kusama, [[Yoshio Tsuchiya]], and [[Akihiko Hirata]]. The film was released to [[Japan]]ese theaters by Toho on October 14, 1958. Dallas Productions and Cory Productions produced a heavily re-edited English-language version of the film directed by Jerry A. Baerwitz and written by Sid Harris titled '''''Varan the Unbelievable''''', which starred additional English-speaking actors including Myron Healey, Tsuruko Kobayashi, Clifford Kawada, and Derick Shimatsu. Crown International Pictures released this version of the film to [[United States|American]] theaters on December 7, [[1962]].
{{TOC}}
{{TOC}}
==Plot==
==Plot==
A pair of red-trimmed off-white butterflies are found living in Japan. The insects are native to Siberia, so scientists find it strange that they would be discovered so far away from their homeland. In response, an expedition is dispatched to their habitat, located along the Kitami River, to discover why the insects might be living in Siberia. Two members of the scientific community helm the expedition, but are mysteriously crushed by something that the police can only describe as "powerful". The nearby villagers of the Kitami River insist that the deaths were a result of the wraith of their mountain god: Varan.
Professor Sugimoto, a biologist, sends two scholars to Iwaya Village in the Tohoku region of Japan to investigate the appearance of a butterfly normally native to Siberia. The expedition ends in tragedy when the two men are killed under unexplained circumstances. The superstitious natives blame the mountain god Baradagi, an angle played up in the press. [[Yuriko Shinjo]], a reporter and sister of one of the deceased students, intends to solve this new mystery and sets off for Iwaya Village with Horiguchi, a cowardly photographer, and [[Kenji Uozaki]], one of Professor Sugimoto's pupils.


Further intrigued, a larger expedition is then dispatched to the area. This time the investigation is funded by the film company "20th Century Mysteries Solved", an organization that seeks to uncover the truth behind the two deaths to report on it. Staff of the firm [[Yuriko Shinjo]] and Horiguchi lead the expedition along with [[Kenji Uozaki]], a member of the scientific community. The expedition travels further inland and stumbles upon a village doing a ritualistic prayer to their mountain god. The priest of the village warns the travelers that their presence will make the monster angry. The warnings fall of deaf ears, though, and the problem escalates when Ken, a young local boy, runs out of the village after his dog. The villagers are warned not pursue, as the priest explains that such action would anger the mountain god. Kenji challenges the priest's warning, asking if their beliefs are worth endangering the life of a child. The three members of the expedition then decide to take matters into their own hands and rescue the boy. The trio is separated, however, in the thick fog. Kenji and Horiguchi return to the village to rally the locals to help them, telling them their beliefs are little more than superstition. The villagers, minus the priest, agree, and head toward the lake to rescue Ken. Once there, Ken, along with Yuriko, are discovered. Their reunion is cut short, though, by the monster Varan rising from the Kitami River. The villagers flee back to their homes, but Varan gives chase. The aquatic monster enters the village, killing the priest who was guarding the entrance. The beast then proceeds to tear apart the huts inside. After the destruction, the monster retreats to his underwater lair.
While hiking to the village, the trio meets Gen, a native boy, who brings the group to the site of a ritual meant to appease Baradagi's wrath. A frightening noise sends the villagers into a panic and Chibi, Gen's dog, chases after the source of the bellowing sound. Despite pleas from the priest, Kenji leads Yuriko, Horiguchi, and a group of natives into Baradagi's forest to rescue the boy. Gen, his mother, and Chibi are reunited at the edge of the foggy lake. The reunion is short-lived, however, as a monstrous creature, identified as Baradagi by the natives, rises from the water and advances on the mountain village. The natives can only watch helplessly as the monster demolishes their homes before returning to the lake.


Reports of the creature's existence are sent back to Japan, and the defense force is mobilized near Kitami River to prepare for the beast's return. The nearby villages are evacuated, as tanks and ground artillery units move into position. Shortly after the evacuation, the military begins releasing toxins into the river to drive the monster out. The plan is a success, as Varan emerges from the water's surface. Phase two of the SDF's plan is put into operation, as tanks and artillery units began to unleash their destructive fury on the monster. The conventional weapons have no effect, though, and the military is forced to retreat. Amongst the confusion, Yuriko manages to get caught under a falling tree, placing her right in Varan's path. Kenji narrowly manages to save his colleague, though, and the two seek safety in a nearby cave. Varan pursues the two, reaching into the cavern with his claws. Luckily, the military intervenes, firing light bombs over the monster's head. Varan becomes attracted by the light, and climbs a nearby mountain in order to get a closer look. Once at the peak, though, Varan raises his arms to reveal hidden flaps of skins. The creature then leaps from the mountain and glides off into the sea.
Professor Sugimoto deduces the creature is a Varanopode, a reptile family that had lived 185 million years ago, and gives it the name [[Varan]]. The Defense Agency dispatches troops to the lake to counter the threat. Chemical explosives are effective in luring Varan from the bottom of the lake but enrage the monster. Varan easily survives the artillery assault and the Defense Forces order a retreat, during which Yuriko is separated from her colleagues. Kenji manages to rescue her, and to evade the advancing monster the two take shelter in a nearby cave. Varan pursues them, finally distracted by the JSDF's flares long enough for the duo to get to safety. The monster climbs the mountain. It spreads its limbs, displaying a thin membrane that allows it to glide away.


As the next day breaks, Varan's reign of terror continues as he capsizes a fishing boat not far from Tokyo's shores. The defense force then remobilizes, sending a squadron of jets to intercept the creature. The air crafts are met with little success, however, as Varan manages to sink one of them that ventures to close to the water's surface. Pleased with his success, the monster submerges and continues his descent toward Tokyo. The military moves into phase two of their counterattack, deploying a destroyer to the surrounding waters. Unfortunately, the destroyer's artillery has no effect against the creature. The SDF quickly launches a third campaign to try and stop Varan's advancement, this time using mine sweepers to seal off Tokyo. The attack, like the rest, is met with failure, though. Out of options, the defense force again remobilizes its forces to the area around [[Tokyo Bay]], lining the water with the destroyer and dispatching a battalion of tanks near [[Haneda Airport|Haneda airport]]. A large amount of Special Gunpowder, which they hope will have better success at destroying the monster, is also readied. Tokyo is then evacuated, as the military awaits the appearance of Varan.
Varan is next spotted in the Uraga Channel, heading southwest towards Tokyo. The combined forces of the Navy and Air Force set up a defense line to stop the monster at sea, but bombs, missiles, and depth charges all prove ineffective on the prehistoric monster. Scientists infer that Varan's tough exterior is responsible for its apparent immunity to conventional weaponry. It seems nothing will work against the creature until Dr. Fujimura reveals that he's invented an explosive designed to demolish rocks from the inside out. The Defense Agency gets to work adapting it as a weapon while simultaneously evacuating the coastal regions of Tokyo in preparation for a full-out assault on Varan at [[Haneda Airport]].


Day turns to night as Varan finally emerges from the water, ready to attack the Japanese mainland. The creature is immediately shelled by the surrounding forces, but that doesn't deter his advancement on land. Kenji, once again taking matters into his own hands, drives a truck filled with Special Gunpowder to the runway of Haneda airport. Varan advances on the small vehicle, as Kenji escapes to a safe distance. With Varan directly over the truck, the detonate trigger is pulled, causing the aquatic monster to fall flat on his stomach. The SDF celebrates prematurely, though, as the beast rises from the attack seemingly unfazed, and begins an assault on his hind legs. Light bombs are once again deployed to try and attract the monster, while the defense force witnesses Varan eating one of the flares. A new plan is then hatched, as they prepare light bombs filled with the Special Gun Powder. The bombs are unleashed, as the monster eats two of them out of the night sky. Shortly after, the first bomb detonates, causing the monster to retreat back to the sea. Varan is too late, though, as the second detonates as the creature is underwater and the defense force declares the creature dead.
Varan surfaces and is met with a fierce barrage of artillery. Meanwhile, the JSDF rigs a truck carrying a payload of Dr. Fujimura's explosive to collide with the monster once it reaches the shore. Kenji drives the truck into position and escapes in the nick of time, but the explosive does no damage to the creature's hardened shell. Now even further enraged, Varan decimates Haneda. A backup plan is devised to make Varan swallow the explosive attached to a flare, but the JSDF has to stall until the new device can be equipped on a helicopter. This second attempt proves successful: the charge detonates inside the monster's body, resulting in massive injuries to the creature. Mortally wounded, Varan crawls out to sea as a second charge detonates, killing the ancient menace.
==Staff==
==Staff==
{{Main|Varan (film)/Credits}}
{{Staffs
{{Staffs
|Directed by|[[Ishiro Honda]]
|Directed by|[[Ishiro Honda]]
|Written by|[[Ken Kuronuma]], [[Shinichi Sekizawa]]
|Written by|[[Shinichi Sekizawa]]
|Based on a story by|[[Ken Kuronuma]]
|Executive producer|[[Tomoyuki Tanaka]]
|Music by|[[Akira Ifukube]]
|Music by|[[Akira Ifukube]]
|Cinematography by|Hajime Koizumi
|Cinematography by|[[Hajime Koizumi]]
|Film Editing by|Kazuji Taira
|Production design by|Kiyoshi Shimizu
|Production Design by|Kiyoshi Shimizu, Akira Watanabe
|First assistant director|[[Koji Kajita]]
|Assistant Director|Koji Kajita
|Director of special effects|[[Eiji Tsuburaya]]
|Director of Special Effects|[[Eiji Tsuburaya]]
|First assistant director of special effects|Masanobu Deme
}}
===''Varan the Unbelievable''===
{{Staffs
|Producer/Director|Jerry A. Baerwitz
|Screenplay|Sid Harris
|Photography|Jack Marquette
|Special effects|Howard A. Anderson Co.
|Supervising film editor|Jack Ruggiero
|Assistant editor| Ralph Cushman
|Music editor|Peter Zinner
|Sound recording|Vic Appel
|Wardrobe|Robert O'Dell
|Makeup|Robert Cowan
|Assistant director|Leonard Kunody<ref name="Warren">{{cite book|title=Keep Watching the Skies! American Science Fiction Movies of the Fifties, Volume II: 1958-1962|author=Warren, Bill|date=1986|publisher=McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers|pages=708, 710, 771|isbn= 978-0-8995-0170-3}}</ref>
}}
}}
==Cast==
==Cast==
Line 52: Line 72:
|Akio Kusama|Military Officer Kusama
|Akio Kusama|Military Officer Kusama
|[[Yoshio Tsuchiya]]|Military Officer Katsumoto
|[[Yoshio Tsuchiya]]|Military Officer Katsumoto
|[[Akihiko Hirata]]|Fujimora
|[[Akihiko Hirata]]|Dr. Fujimura
|Minosuke Yamada|Secretary of Defense
|Minosuke Yamada|Secretary of Defense
|Fuyuki Murakami|Majima
|Fuyuki Murakami|Dr. Majima
|Takashi Ito|Ken
|Takashi Ito|Ken
|Fumiko Honma|Ken's Mother
|Fumiko Honma|Ken's mother
|Akira Sera|Village Priest
|Akira Sera|Village priest
|[[Hisaya Ito]]|Ichiro Shinjo
|[[Hisaya Ito]]|Ichiro Shinjo
|Nadao Kirino|Yutaka Wada
|Nadao Kirino|Yutaka Wada
Line 63: Line 83:
|Yoshikazu Kawamata|Jiro
|Yoshikazu Kawamata|Jiro
|Yasuhiro Kasanobu|Sankichi
|Yasuhiro Kasanobu|Sankichi
|Yoshifumi Tajima|Captain Uranami
|Yoshibumi Tajima|''Uranami'' captain
|Shoichi Hirose|Fisherman
|[[Shoichi Hirose]]|Fisherman
|Toshitsugu Suzuki|Fisherman
|Toshitsugu Suzuki|Fisherman
|[[Haruo Nakajima]], [[Katsumi Tezuka]]|[[Varan]]
}}
===''Varan the Unbelievable''===
{{Cast
|Myron Healey|Cmdr. James Bradley, U.S.N.
|Tsuruko Kobayashi|Anna Bradley
|Clifford Kawada|Captain Kishi
|Derick Shimatsu|Matsu<ref name="Warren"/>
*Hideo Imamura
*George Sasaki
*Hiroshi Hisamune
*Yoneo Iguchi
*Michael Sung
*Roy K. Ogata
}}
}}
==Appearances==
==Appearances==
Line 72: Line 106:
===Monsters===
===Monsters===
*[[Varan]]
*[[Varan]]
*[[Godzilla]] ([[ShodaiGoji|Stock Footage]], erroneous)
*[[Godzilla (First Generation)|Godzilla]] ([[ShodaiGoji|stock footage, erroneous]])
{{col-2}}
{{col-2}}
===Weapons, Vehicles, and Races===
===Weapons, vehicles, and races===
*[[M24 Chaffee Tank]]
*[[F86F Sabre]]
*[[24 Twin Rocket Car]]
*[[24 Twin Rocket Car]]
*[[Sikorsky H-19 Chickasaw]]
*[[M4A3E8 Sherman Tank]]
*[[M4A3E8 Sherman Tank]]
*[[P2V-7 Neptune]]
*[[M24 Chaffee Tank]]
*[[155mm Howitzer M1]] (Stock Footage)
*[[Mitsubishi F-86F Sabre|F-86 Sabre]]
*[[wikipedia:Ayanami-class destroyer|''Ayanami''-class destroyer]] (''[[wikipedia:JDS Uranami|Uranami]]'')
*[[wikipedia:Adjutant-class minesweeper|''Yashima''-class coastal minesweeper]] (''Yashima'')
*[[wikipedia:Sikorsky H-5|Sikorsky S-51]]
*[[Lockheed P-2 Neptune]]
*[[155mm Howitzer M1]] (stock footage)
*[[Landing Craft]]
*[[Landing Craft]]
{{col-end}}
{{col-end}}
Line 87: Line 123:
{{Main|Varan (film)/Gallery}}
{{Main|Varan (film)/Gallery}}
==Soundtrack==
==Soundtrack==
{{Main|Varan (Soundtrack)}}
{{Main|Varan (film)/Soundtrack}}
==Alternate Titles==
==Alternate titles==
*'''''Giant Monster Varan''''' (Literal [[Japan]]ese Title)
*'''''Giant Monster Varan''''' (literal Japanese title)
*'''''Varan, Monster from the East''''' {{Nihongo|東洋の怪物 大怪獣バラン|Tōyō no Kaibutsu Daikaijū Baran|Original Television Version Title}}
*'''''Monster of the East: Giant Monster Varan''''' {{Nihongo|東洋の怪物 大怪獣バラン|Tōyō no Kaibutsu Daikaijū Baran|original television version title}}<ref name="TSEMCW">{{cite book|title=[[Toho Special Effects Movie Complete Works]]|date=28 September 2012|publisher=[[villagebooks]]|page=34|isbn=9784864910132}}</ref>
*'''''Varan, the Unbelievable''''' ([[United States]])
*'''''Varan the Unbelievable''''' ([[United States]], United Kingdom)
==Theatrical Releases==
*'''''Varan the Incredible''''' (''Varan el Increíble''; [[Mexico]])
*'''''Varan: The Monster from Prehistory''''' (''Varan – Das Monster aus der Urzeit''; West Germany)
*'''''Varan, The Monster of the Orient''''' (''Varan, O Monstro do Oriente''; Brazil)
 
==Theatrical releases==
*[[Japan]] - October 14, 1958
*[[Japan]] - October 14, 1958
==Cancelled Television Version==
*[[United States]] - December 7, 1962
While most of AD-PT was closed down, the network ABC was still active. In 1958, they had been collaborating with Toho on a TV Movie called ''Varan, Monster from the East''. ''Varan'' was originally planned to air on American television, but this fell through. Toho set up a Japanese theatrical release date, added new scenes, deleted old scenes, and cropped the video to be released in theaters. It was later released in the [[United States]] in 1962 under the title ''Varan, the Unbelievable''. ''Varan'' was a black-and-white film, since it was meant for TV, while Toho had been making color kaiju films ever since ''[[Rodan (film)|Rodan]]'' in 1956. 47 years later in 2005, Toho and Tokyo Shock released ''Varan'' on DVD in Japan and the United States, including the unreleased television version in both releases.
*Canada - January 30, 1963
==[[United States|U.S. Release]]==
*United Kingdom - 1963
[[File:US_Varan.jpg|thumb|American Poster for ''Varan The Unbelievable'']]Following the abandonment of the television version of ''Varan'' and its Japanese theatrical release, Crown International Pictures acquired the rights to distribute the film theatrically in the United States in 1962. The American cut of the film, called ''Varan, the Unbelievable'', was heavily edited and bears little resemblance to the original Japanese version. Like what had been done with the American release of the original ''[[Godzilla (1954 film)|Godzilla]]'', Crown added newly-filmed footage of a western actor, Myron Healy, and made the plot focus on him. The film's story was changed drastically, revolving around an American military officer overseeing a chemical test in a lake on an island. Varan is never referred to by name in the film, only called "Obaki," and his roar is completely changed. The scene of Varan gliding from the cliff is removed, and close-up shots of Varan claw are added.
 
==Production==
Toho originally prepared ''Varan'' as a three-part made-for-television film with American cooperation, following the success of ''[[Rodan (film)|Rodan]]'' in the United States. [[Ken Kuronuma]] wrote the story, following a request by producer [[Tomoyuki Tanaka]] "to come up with something, anything" to fulfill the Americans' desire for another giant monster movie.<ref name="Ryfle and Godziszewski">{{cite book|title=Ishiro Honda: A Life in Film |author=Ryfle, Steve &  Godziszewski, Ed |date=2017 |publisher=Wesleyan University Press |page=148-150 |isbn=0819570877}}</ref> [[Shinichi Sekizawa]], who would become one of Toho's go-to science fiction writers, handled the script, his first in the genre for Toho.
 
Two scripts were completed, a preparatory draft and a final draft, both entitled ''Monster of the East: Giant Monster Varan'' and divided into four acts. In the former, the initial rocket scene is absent, with Shinjo's and Kawada's death cutting directly to Professor Sugimoto in his laboratory. The name "Baradagi" was also not present until the final draft, with the Iwaya villagers simply referring to Varan as a mountain god. Furthermore, rather than attacking Varan with depth charges at Tokyo Bay, the preparatory draft had the JSDF drop naval mines on the monster using a bathyscaphe at the suggestion of Uozaki. In the story's climax, the flare which was used to kill Varan was transported by a balloon rather than a helicopter.<ref name="TSEMCW"/>
 
Because it would be a television production, Toho decided to forego shooting in color (as with ''[[Rodan (film)|Rodan]]'') and Tohoscope (''[[The Mysterians]]''). Principal photography lasted 28 days, a significantly shorter span than most Toho films at the time.<ref name="Ryfle and Godziszewski"/>
 
After an American production company backed out during filming, Toho decided to restructure the project as a theatrical release. New footage was shot and all Academy ratio footage that was already in the can was modified as "Toho Pan Scope,"<ref name="Galbraith IV"/> a process similar to SuperScope or Superama in which 1.37:1 footage was cropped during post production to 2:1 and reformatted for anamorphic projection. [[Akira Ifukube]] also recorded a brand new score for the theatrical version of the film.<ref name="Romero, Anthony">[https://www.tohokingdom.com/cd/varan_toshiba.htm CD: Great Monster Varan]</ref> Director [[Ishiro Honda]] was disappointed with the finished product, citing the difficulty of modifying the story and aspect ratio to Toho's new demands.<ref name="Ryfle and Godziszewski"/> An incomplete reconstruction of the original television version was included as a special feature with Toho's DVD release of the film and was later ported to the Region 1 release from [[Media Blasters|Tokyo Shock]].
 
==Foreign releases==
===[[United States|U.S.]] release===
[[File:US_Varan.jpg|thumb|200px|U.S. lobby card for ''Varan the Unbelievable'']]The American version of ''Varan'', titled ''Varan the Unbelievable'', was distributed theatrically in the United States by Crown International Pictures on a double feature with ''[[wikipedia:The Silent Star|First Spaceship on Venus]]'', beginning on December 7, 1962.<ref name="Warren"/> This version was a co-production of Dallas Productions and Cory Productions with Jerry A. Baerwitz producing and directing a script by Sid Harris.<ref name="Warren"/> Production of ''Varan the Unbelievable'' began under the title ''Odoroku'' on October 17, 1960, according to a report in the same day's issue of ''Daily Variety''.<ref name="Classic Horror Film Board">[https://www.tapatalk.com/groups/monsterkidclassichorrorforum/varan-the-unbelievable-1962-t39448-s20.html?fbclid=IwAR1phxAz5hMjaO7dwhpSGOW7DvxLGnX79BGgHxlAgV5GrQzvBKSlk9in1Ow#p955082 Classic Horror Film Board: "VARAN THE UNBELIEVABLE (1962)"]</ref> Baerwitz's film is radically different from the Toho version. The sound design of all Japanese footage utilized in the American release (totaling some 30 minutes) is either completely jettisoned and rebuilt or left completely intact, suggesting that the production companies might have had only the fully mixed Japanese audio to work from.<ref name="Culver, Brian">[http://www.historyvortex.org/TohoInAmerica5.html/ The History Vortex: "Toho in American: Varan"]</ref>
 
Harris constructed an entirely new story with new characters that still manages to follow the basic narrative of the Japanese version.<ref name="Warren"/> The bulk of the new material is about chemical desalination tests carried out by Commander James Bradley, U.S.N. (played by Myron Healey), on the fictional Japanese island of Kunishiro-shima. These tests ultimately disturb the monster—called "Obake" in dialogue—until it's subdued in the city of Onita (Tokyo in Toho's version). While Bradley and his wife Anna (Tsuruko Kobayashi) become the focus of Harris's screenplay, the Japanese protagonists are still present in archive footage, albeit as "Paul and Shidori Iso," college friends of Anna Bradley. Notably, "Obake" is never seen flying in the U.S. release, although new special effects footage of the monster's claw was shot to replace a similar scene in the Japanese version.<ref name="Culver, Brian"/> Akira Ifukube's score is mostly deleted, with music editor Peter Zinner tracking in library cues such as portions of Albert Glasser's scores for ''[[wikipedia:Teenage Caveman (1958 film)|Teenage Caveman]]'' and ''[[wikipedia:The Amazing Colossal Man|The Amazing Colossal Man]]''.<ref name="Warren"/> Zinner later performed the same task on John Beck's Americanization of ''[[King Kong vs. Godzilla]]''.<ref name="Culver, Brian"/>
 
New footage for the American release was filmed in the Totalscope process with an aspect ratio of 2.35:1.<ref name="Galbraith IV"/>
 
After its theatrical release, ''Varan the Unbelievable'' could be seen on television through the 1980s.<ref name="Warren"/> Two video releases from VCI (Video Communications, Inc.) followed in the 1980s and in 1994, the latter being the final official release of the American edition. A 2005 DVD release through [[Media Blasters]] featured Toho's original Japanese version.<ref name="Culver, Brian"/>
 
An English version of ''Varan'', possibly different from the Crown International release and produced by Toho,<ref name="Galbraith IV"/> was advertised as available for export in the 1962 Toho Films Catalog.<ref name="Catalog">[[File:Toho Films 1962-39 Tsuburaya.jpg|150px]]</ref>
 
==Reception==
==Reception==
''Varan'' is often considered by many kaiju fans to be one of Toho's weakest films. One common criticism from fans stems from the film's story, claiming that it's a generic monster movie story, while other Toho kaiju and science-fiction films involved more complex and interesting stories. The film is still popular for introducing the monster Varan, who has only appeared in a cameo appearance and several non-film media since.
Film critics in both Japan and the United States dismissed ''Varan'' and ''Varan the Unbelievable''. A critic for ''Tokyo Weekly'' felt ''Varan'' offered "nothing new," while ''Variety'' called ''Varan the Unbelievable'' "hackneyed, uninspired carbon copy, serviceable only as a supporting filler."<ref name="Ryfle and Godziszewski"/><ref name="Warren"/>
 
"Even among Americans fond of Japanese monster films," wrote Bill Warren in his book ''Keep Watching the Skies! American Science Fiction Movies of the Fifties'', "the name ''Varan the Unbelievable'' carries little weight."<ref name="Warren"/> ''G-Fan'' reader polls have consistently ranked it in the lower echelon of Toho kaiju films, never giving it an average score higher than 6.1 out of 10. Elements singled out for praise are typically the Varan suit and Akira Ifukube's score.
==Video releases==
'''[[Media Blasters|Tokyo Shock]]''' DVD (2005)
*'''Region:''' 1
*'''Discs:''' 1
*'''Audio:''' Japanese (2.0 Mono, 3.0 Stereo, 5.1 Surround)
*'''Special features:''' Audio commentary by [[Varan]] suit maker [[Keizo Murase]]; lecture from Keizo Murase for High School Molding Seminar (29 minutes); reconstruction of the film's original TV version (54 minutes); two trailers for ''Varan''; trailers for ''[[The Mysterians]]'', ''[[Matango (film)|Matango]]'', ''[[wikipedia:One Missed Call (2003 film)|One Missed Call]]'', and ''[[wikipedia:Sky High (2003 film)|Sky High]]''.
*'''Notes:''' Out of print. A 2007 re-release in a Tokyo Shock box set called ''Toho Pack'' packaged it with the Tokyo Shock DVD releases of ''[[The Mysterians]]'' and ''[[Matango (film)|Matango]]''. The box set is also out of print.
'''Synergy Entertainment''' DVD (2011)
*'''Region:''' N/A
*'''Discs:''' 1
*'''Audio:''' English
*'''Special features:''' None
*'''Notes:''' Made-to-order DVD-R.
'''Reel Vault''' DVD (2015)
*'''Region:''' N/A
*'''Discs:''' 1
*'''Audio:''' English
*'''Special features:''' None
*'''Notes:''' DVD-R.
'''Toho''' Blu-ray (2022) [''Toho Monsters & Special Effects'']<ref name="Amazon Blu">{{cite web|url=https://www.amazon.co.jp/-/en/%E9%87%8E%E6%9D%91%E6%B5%A9%E4%B8%89/dp/B09W9QNJ64|title= 東宝 怪獣・特撮Blu-ray 2枚組 |date=30 March 2022|work=Amazon.co.jp}}</ref>
*'''Region:''' A
*'''Discs:''' 2
*'''Audio:''' Japanese (DTS-HD Master Audio Mono, 3.0, and 5.1)
*'''Subtitles:''' Japanese
*'''Special features:''' Two Japanese trailers and the international trailer, audio commentary by [[Varan]] suit maker [[Keizo Murase]], 8mm set footage (3 minutes), lecture from Keizo Murase for High School Molding Seminar (29 minutes), "Open the Box! Larval Form of the Giant Monster Varan" featurette, reconstructed soundtrack for the film's original TV version, still gallery
*'''Notes:''' Packaged with ''[[Gorath (film)|Gorath]]'', ''[[Dogora (film)|Dogora]]'', and ''[[Space Amoeba]]''. Due to the large number of special features in this set, only the supplements relevant to ''Varan'' are described above.
 
==Videos==
===Trailers===
{{Videos|
{{vid|<youtube width="300" height="169">ilNL-B1hMAc</youtube>|Japanese ''Varan'' trailer}}
{{vid|<youtube width="300" height="169">qYpF3nG1B6E</youtube>|Japanese international ''Varan'' trailer}}
{{vid|<youtube width="300" height="169">c7icP0wEaI4</youtube>|Japanese ''Varan'' newsflash trailer}}
{{vid|<youtube width="300" height="169">86ddPwUoMIA</youtube>|U.S. ''Varan the Unbelievable'' trailer}}
{{vid|<youtube width="300" height="169">TW50zhD1tSU</youtube>|German ''Varan'' video trailer}}
}}
 
===Miscellaneous===
{{Videos|
{{vid|<youtube width="300" height="169">lvwCVClvQf0</youtube>|Academy ratio effects outtakes}}
{{vid|<youtube width="300" height="169">gyl2TSQQq2c</youtube>|Ken Films Super 8 digest version of<br>''Varan the Unbelievable''}}
{{vid|<youtube width="300" height="169">VWapkk4Gqp4</youtube>|Analysis of stock footage used in<br>''Varan the Unbelievable''}}
}}


The American version of the film, ''Varan, the Unbelievable'', is widely disliked and infamous among fans. It is often accused of ruining the entire film and copying the strategy used in ''Godzilla, King of the Monsters!'', but executing it much less effectively. All of the changes, from Varan's roar to the added plotline about an American officer, are heavily criticized.
==Trivia==
==DVD and Blu-ray Releases==
*''Varan'' was released as a double feature with the Toho film ''I Am Three People'' {{Nihongo|僕は三人前|Boku wa Sanninmae}}.
<b>Tokyo Shock</b> DVD (2005)
*''Varan'' was the first Toho kaiju film to rely on stock footage from previous films to heavily pad out special effects sequences. Much of the final JASDF assault at Haneda Airport is lifted from ''[[Godzilla (1954 film)|Godzilla]]'' and ''[[Godzilla Raids Again]]''. Stock footage of [[ShodaiGoji|Godzilla]] from the 1954 film is used here to represent Varan's feet and tail smashing into buildings.
*Region: 1
*The people of Iwaya Village seem to be based on 1950s stereotypes of the ''[[wikipedia:Burakumin|burakumin]]'' people. The initial Toho Video release of ''Varan'' on VHS was edited to remove any potentially offensive content (including a line about the village being in "the Tibet of Japan"), although subsequent home video releases have restored the film to its complete length.<ref name="Culver, Brian"/><ref name="LD-DVD-BR">[http://www.ld-dvd-bluray.2-d.jp/smp/hikaku_varan.html LD, DVD and Blu-ray Gallery: "東洋の神秘" 大怪獣バラン]</ref>
*Discs: 1
*Audio: Japanese (2.0 Mono, 3.0 Stereo, 5.1 Surround)
*Special Features: Audio commentary by Varan suit maker Keizo Murase, lecture from Keizo Murase for High School Molding Seminar (29 minutes), reconstruction of the film's original TV version (54 minutes)
*Notes: Out of print. A 2007 release packages it with ''[[Matango (film)|Matango]]'' and ''[[The Mysterians]]''.
<b>Synergy Entertainment</b> DVD (2011)
*Region: N/A
*Discs: 1
*Audio: English
*Special Features: None
*Notes: Made-to-order DVD-R.


Though ''Varan'' is not available on Blu-ray, an HD version can be rented or purchased on the Japanese versions of Amazon Video and iTunes.
==References==
{{Reflist|30em}}
{{Varan}}
{{Kaiju Movies}}
{{Kaiju Movies}}
{{Comments}}
{{Era|TOH|SHO|FIL|VAR}}
{{Era|TOH|SHO|FIL|VAR}}
[[Category:Films]]
[[Category:Films]]
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[[Category:Japanese films]]
[[Category:Japanese films]]
[[Category:Films directed by Ishiro Honda]]
[[Category:Films directed by Ishiro Honda]]
[[Category:Kiryu Saga Continuity]]
[[Category:Kiryu series continuity]]
[[Category:Showa Films]]
[[Category:Showa Films]]
[[Category:Showa Continuity]]

Latest revision as of 05:25, 9 January 2024

Article.png
Image gallery for Varan (film)
Credits for Varan (film)
Varan (film) soundtrack


Varan
The Japanese poster for Varan
Alternate titles
Flagicon Japan.png Giant Monster Varan (1958)
Flagicon United States.png Varan the Unbelievable (1962)
See alternate titles
Directed by Ishiro Honda
Producer Tomoyuki Tanaka
Written by Ken Kuronuma (story), Shinichi Sekizawa
Music by Akira Ifukube
Distributor TohoJP, Crown International PicturesUS
Rating Not Rated
Running time 87 minutesJP
(1 hour, 27 minutes)
70 minutesUS
(1 hour, 10 minutes)
Aspect ratio 2.00:1JP,[1]
2.35:1US[2]
Rate this film!
3.32
(34 votes)

The demon Varan rampages across the land, seas, and air! The definitive fantasy monster movie! (陸海空を暴れ廻る魔のバラン!空想怪獣映画の決定版!)
„ 

— Japanese tagline

The world is amazed by Godzilla and Rodan, but will be knocked for a ghoul by Varan.
„ 

— International tagline

FROM A WORLD BELOW IT CAME TO TERRORIZE- TO DESTROY - TO REVENGE!
„ 

— Poster tagline for Varan the Unbelievable

Varan (大怪獣バラン,   Daikaijū Baran, lit. "Giant Monster Varan") is a 1958 tokusatsu kaiju film directed by Ishiro Honda and written by Shinichi Sekizawa from a story by Ken Kuronuma, with special effects by Eiji Tsuburaya. Produced by Toho, it was the company's last black-and-white kaiju film. It stars Kozo Nomura, Ayumi Sonoda, Fumito Matsuo, Koreya Senda, Akio Kusama, Yoshio Tsuchiya, and Akihiko Hirata. The film was released to Japanese theaters by Toho on October 14, 1958. Dallas Productions and Cory Productions produced a heavily re-edited English-language version of the film directed by Jerry A. Baerwitz and written by Sid Harris titled Varan the Unbelievable, which starred additional English-speaking actors including Myron Healey, Tsuruko Kobayashi, Clifford Kawada, and Derick Shimatsu. Crown International Pictures released this version of the film to American theaters on December 7, 1962.

Plot

Professor Sugimoto, a biologist, sends two scholars to Iwaya Village in the Tohoku region of Japan to investigate the appearance of a butterfly normally native to Siberia. The expedition ends in tragedy when the two men are killed under unexplained circumstances. The superstitious natives blame the mountain god Baradagi, an angle played up in the press. Yuriko Shinjo, a reporter and sister of one of the deceased students, intends to solve this new mystery and sets off for Iwaya Village with Horiguchi, a cowardly photographer, and Kenji Uozaki, one of Professor Sugimoto's pupils.

While hiking to the village, the trio meets Gen, a native boy, who brings the group to the site of a ritual meant to appease Baradagi's wrath. A frightening noise sends the villagers into a panic and Chibi, Gen's dog, chases after the source of the bellowing sound. Despite pleas from the priest, Kenji leads Yuriko, Horiguchi, and a group of natives into Baradagi's forest to rescue the boy. Gen, his mother, and Chibi are reunited at the edge of the foggy lake. The reunion is short-lived, however, as a monstrous creature, identified as Baradagi by the natives, rises from the water and advances on the mountain village. The natives can only watch helplessly as the monster demolishes their homes before returning to the lake.

Professor Sugimoto deduces the creature is a Varanopode, a reptile family that had lived 185 million years ago, and gives it the name Varan. The Defense Agency dispatches troops to the lake to counter the threat. Chemical explosives are effective in luring Varan from the bottom of the lake but enrage the monster. Varan easily survives the artillery assault and the Defense Forces order a retreat, during which Yuriko is separated from her colleagues. Kenji manages to rescue her, and to evade the advancing monster the two take shelter in a nearby cave. Varan pursues them, finally distracted by the JSDF's flares long enough for the duo to get to safety. The monster climbs the mountain. It spreads its limbs, displaying a thin membrane that allows it to glide away.

Varan is next spotted in the Uraga Channel, heading southwest towards Tokyo. The combined forces of the Navy and Air Force set up a defense line to stop the monster at sea, but bombs, missiles, and depth charges all prove ineffective on the prehistoric monster. Scientists infer that Varan's tough exterior is responsible for its apparent immunity to conventional weaponry. It seems nothing will work against the creature until Dr. Fujimura reveals that he's invented an explosive designed to demolish rocks from the inside out. The Defense Agency gets to work adapting it as a weapon while simultaneously evacuating the coastal regions of Tokyo in preparation for a full-out assault on Varan at Haneda Airport.

Varan surfaces and is met with a fierce barrage of artillery. Meanwhile, the JSDF rigs a truck carrying a payload of Dr. Fujimura's explosive to collide with the monster once it reaches the shore. Kenji drives the truck into position and escapes in the nick of time, but the explosive does no damage to the creature's hardened shell. Now even further enraged, Varan decimates Haneda. A backup plan is devised to make Varan swallow the explosive attached to a flare, but the JSDF has to stall until the new device can be equipped on a helicopter. This second attempt proves successful: the charge detonates inside the monster's body, resulting in massive injuries to the creature. Mortally wounded, Varan crawls out to sea as a second charge detonates, killing the ancient menace.

Staff

Main article: Varan (film)/Credits.

Staff role on the left, staff member's name on the right.

Varan the Unbelievable

Staff role on the left, staff member's name on the right.

  • Producer/Director   Jerry A. Baerwitz
  • Screenplay   Sid Harris
  • Photography   Jack Marquette
  • Special effects   Howard A. Anderson Co.
  • Supervising film editor   Jack Ruggiero
  • Assistant editor   Ralph Cushman
  • Music editor   Peter Zinner
  • Sound recording   Vic Appel
  • Wardrobe   Robert O'Dell
  • Makeup   Robert Cowan
  • Assistant director   Leonard Kunody[3]

Cast

Actor's name on the left, character played on the right.

  • Kozo Nomura   as   Kenji Uozaki
  • Ayumi Sonoda   as   Yuriko Shinjo
  • Fumito Matsuo   as   Horiguchi
  • Koreya Senda   as   Doctor Sugimoto
  • Akio Kusama   as   Military Officer Kusama
  • Yoshio Tsuchiya   as   Military Officer Katsumoto
  • Akihiko Hirata   as   Dr. Fujimura
  • Minosuke Yamada   as   Secretary of Defense
  • Fuyuki Murakami   as   Dr. Majima
  • Takashi Ito   as   Ken
  • Fumiko Honma   as   Ken's mother
  • Akira Sera   as   Village priest
  • Hisaya Ito   as   Ichiro Shinjo
  • Nadao Kirino   as   Yutaka Wada
  • Akira Yamada   as   Issaku
  • Yoshikazu Kawamata   as   Jiro
  • Yasuhiro Kasanobu   as   Sankichi
  • Yoshibumi Tajima   as   Uranami captain
  • Shoichi Hirose   as   Fisherman
  • Toshitsugu Suzuki   as   Fisherman
  • Haruo Nakajima, Katsumi Tezuka   as   Varan

Varan the Unbelievable

Actor's name on the left, character played on the right.

  • Myron Healey   as   Cmdr. James Bradley, U.S.N.
  • Tsuruko Kobayashi   as   Anna Bradley
  • Clifford Kawada   as   Captain Kishi
  • Derick Shimatsu   as   Matsu[3]
  • Hideo Imamura
  • George Sasaki
  • Hiroshi Hisamune
  • Yoneo Iguchi
  • Michael Sung
  • Roy K. Ogata

Appearances

Monsters

Weapons, vehicles, and races

Gallery

Main article: Varan (film)/Gallery.

Soundtrack

Main article: Varan (film)/Soundtrack.

Alternate titles

  • Giant Monster Varan (literal Japanese title)
  • Monster of the East: Giant Monster Varan (東洋の怪物 大怪獣バラン,   Tōyō no Kaibutsu Daikaijū Baran, original television version title)[4]
  • Varan the Unbelievable (United States, United Kingdom)
  • Varan the Incredible (Varan el Increíble; Mexico)
  • Varan: The Monster from Prehistory (Varan – Das Monster aus der Urzeit; West Germany)
  • Varan, The Monster of the Orient (Varan, O Monstro do Oriente; Brazil)

Theatrical releases

  • Japan - October 14, 1958
  • United States - December 7, 1962
  • Canada - January 30, 1963
  • United Kingdom - 1963

Production

Toho originally prepared Varan as a three-part made-for-television film with American cooperation, following the success of Rodan in the United States. Ken Kuronuma wrote the story, following a request by producer Tomoyuki Tanaka "to come up with something, anything" to fulfill the Americans' desire for another giant monster movie.[5] Shinichi Sekizawa, who would become one of Toho's go-to science fiction writers, handled the script, his first in the genre for Toho.

Two scripts were completed, a preparatory draft and a final draft, both entitled Monster of the East: Giant Monster Varan and divided into four acts. In the former, the initial rocket scene is absent, with Shinjo's and Kawada's death cutting directly to Professor Sugimoto in his laboratory. The name "Baradagi" was also not present until the final draft, with the Iwaya villagers simply referring to Varan as a mountain god. Furthermore, rather than attacking Varan with depth charges at Tokyo Bay, the preparatory draft had the JSDF drop naval mines on the monster using a bathyscaphe at the suggestion of Uozaki. In the story's climax, the flare which was used to kill Varan was transported by a balloon rather than a helicopter.[4]

Because it would be a television production, Toho decided to forego shooting in color (as with Rodan) and Tohoscope (The Mysterians). Principal photography lasted 28 days, a significantly shorter span than most Toho films at the time.[5]

After an American production company backed out during filming, Toho decided to restructure the project as a theatrical release. New footage was shot and all Academy ratio footage that was already in the can was modified as "Toho Pan Scope,"[2] a process similar to SuperScope or Superama in which 1.37:1 footage was cropped during post production to 2:1 and reformatted for anamorphic projection. Akira Ifukube also recorded a brand new score for the theatrical version of the film.[6] Director Ishiro Honda was disappointed with the finished product, citing the difficulty of modifying the story and aspect ratio to Toho's new demands.[5] An incomplete reconstruction of the original television version was included as a special feature with Toho's DVD release of the film and was later ported to the Region 1 release from Tokyo Shock.

Foreign releases

U.S. release

U.S. lobby card for Varan the Unbelievable

The American version of Varan, titled Varan the Unbelievable, was distributed theatrically in the United States by Crown International Pictures on a double feature with First Spaceship on Venus, beginning on December 7, 1962.[3] This version was a co-production of Dallas Productions and Cory Productions with Jerry A. Baerwitz producing and directing a script by Sid Harris.[3] Production of Varan the Unbelievable began under the title Odoroku on October 17, 1960, according to a report in the same day's issue of Daily Variety.[7] Baerwitz's film is radically different from the Toho version. The sound design of all Japanese footage utilized in the American release (totaling some 30 minutes) is either completely jettisoned and rebuilt or left completely intact, suggesting that the production companies might have had only the fully mixed Japanese audio to work from.[8]

Harris constructed an entirely new story with new characters that still manages to follow the basic narrative of the Japanese version.[3] The bulk of the new material is about chemical desalination tests carried out by Commander James Bradley, U.S.N. (played by Myron Healey), on the fictional Japanese island of Kunishiro-shima. These tests ultimately disturb the monster—called "Obake" in dialogue—until it's subdued in the city of Onita (Tokyo in Toho's version). While Bradley and his wife Anna (Tsuruko Kobayashi) become the focus of Harris's screenplay, the Japanese protagonists are still present in archive footage, albeit as "Paul and Shidori Iso," college friends of Anna Bradley. Notably, "Obake" is never seen flying in the U.S. release, although new special effects footage of the monster's claw was shot to replace a similar scene in the Japanese version.[8] Akira Ifukube's score is mostly deleted, with music editor Peter Zinner tracking in library cues such as portions of Albert Glasser's scores for Teenage Caveman and The Amazing Colossal Man.[3] Zinner later performed the same task on John Beck's Americanization of King Kong vs. Godzilla.[8]

New footage for the American release was filmed in the Totalscope process with an aspect ratio of 2.35:1.[2]

After its theatrical release, Varan the Unbelievable could be seen on television through the 1980s.[3] Two video releases from VCI (Video Communications, Inc.) followed in the 1980s and in 1994, the latter being the final official release of the American edition. A 2005 DVD release through Media Blasters featured Toho's original Japanese version.[8]

An English version of Varan, possibly different from the Crown International release and produced by Toho,[2] was advertised as available for export in the 1962 Toho Films Catalog.[9]

Reception

Film critics in both Japan and the United States dismissed Varan and Varan the Unbelievable. A critic for Tokyo Weekly felt Varan offered "nothing new," while Variety called Varan the Unbelievable "hackneyed, uninspired carbon copy, serviceable only as a supporting filler."[5][3]

"Even among Americans fond of Japanese monster films," wrote Bill Warren in his book Keep Watching the Skies! American Science Fiction Movies of the Fifties, "the name Varan the Unbelievable carries little weight."[3] G-Fan reader polls have consistently ranked it in the lower echelon of Toho kaiju films, never giving it an average score higher than 6.1 out of 10. Elements singled out for praise are typically the Varan suit and Akira Ifukube's score.

Video releases

Tokyo Shock DVD (2005)

  • Region: 1
  • Discs: 1
  • Audio: Japanese (2.0 Mono, 3.0 Stereo, 5.1 Surround)
  • Special features: Audio commentary by Varan suit maker Keizo Murase; lecture from Keizo Murase for High School Molding Seminar (29 minutes); reconstruction of the film's original TV version (54 minutes); two trailers for Varan; trailers for The Mysterians, Matango, One Missed Call, and Sky High.
  • Notes: Out of print. A 2007 re-release in a Tokyo Shock box set called Toho Pack packaged it with the Tokyo Shock DVD releases of The Mysterians and Matango. The box set is also out of print.

Synergy Entertainment DVD (2011)

  • Region: N/A
  • Discs: 1
  • Audio: English
  • Special features: None
  • Notes: Made-to-order DVD-R.

Reel Vault DVD (2015)

  • Region: N/A
  • Discs: 1
  • Audio: English
  • Special features: None
  • Notes: DVD-R.

Toho Blu-ray (2022) [Toho Monsters & Special Effects][10]

  • Region: A
  • Discs: 2
  • Audio: Japanese (DTS-HD Master Audio Mono, 3.0, and 5.1)
  • Subtitles: Japanese
  • Special features: Two Japanese trailers and the international trailer, audio commentary by Varan suit maker Keizo Murase, 8mm set footage (3 minutes), lecture from Keizo Murase for High School Molding Seminar (29 minutes), "Open the Box! Larval Form of the Giant Monster Varan" featurette, reconstructed soundtrack for the film's original TV version, still gallery
  • Notes: Packaged with Gorath, Dogora, and Space Amoeba. Due to the large number of special features in this set, only the supplements relevant to Varan are described above.

Videos

Trailers

Japanese Varan trailer
Japanese international Varan trailer
Japanese Varan newsflash trailer
U.S. Varan the Unbelievable trailer
German Varan video trailer

Miscellaneous

Academy ratio effects outtakes
Ken Films Super 8 digest version of
Varan the Unbelievable
Analysis of stock footage used in
Varan the Unbelievable

Trivia

  • Varan was released as a double feature with the Toho film I Am Three People (僕は三人前,   Boku wa Sanninmae).
  • Varan was the first Toho kaiju film to rely on stock footage from previous films to heavily pad out special effects sequences. Much of the final JASDF assault at Haneda Airport is lifted from Godzilla and Godzilla Raids Again. Stock footage of Godzilla from the 1954 film is used here to represent Varan's feet and tail smashing into buildings.
  • The people of Iwaya Village seem to be based on 1950s stereotypes of the burakumin people. The initial Toho Video release of Varan on VHS was edited to remove any potentially offensive content (including a line about the village being in "the Tibet of Japan"), although subsequent home video releases have restored the film to its complete length.[8][11]

References

This is a list of references for Varan (film). These citations are used to identify the reliable sources on which this article is based. These references appear inside articles in the form of superscript numbers, which look like this: [1]

  1. Classic Horror Film Board: "Varan: a 2:1 SuperScope movie all along?"
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Galbraith IV, Stuart (2008). The Toho Studios Story: A History and Complete Filmography. The Scarecrow Press, Inc. p. 149. ISBN 9781461673743.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 Warren, Bill (1986). Keep Watching the Skies! American Science Fiction Movies of the Fifties, Volume II: 1958-1962. McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers. pp. 708, 710, 771. ISBN 978-0-8995-0170-3.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Toho Special Effects Movie Complete Works. villagebooks. 28 September 2012. p. 34. ISBN 9784864910132.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 Ryfle, Steve & Godziszewski, Ed (2017). Ishiro Honda: A Life in Film. Wesleyan University Press. p. 148-150. ISBN 0819570877.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  6. CD: Great Monster Varan
  7. Classic Horror Film Board: "VARAN THE UNBELIEVABLE (1962)"
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 The History Vortex: "Toho in American: Varan"
  9. Toho Films 1962-39 Tsuburaya.jpg
  10. "東宝 怪獣・特撮Blu-ray 2枚組". Amazon.co.jp. 30 March 2022.
  11. LD, DVD and Blu-ray Gallery: "東洋の神秘" 大怪獣バラン

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