Gamera vs. Guiron: Difference between revisions

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{{Tab
{{Tab
|soundtrack=Gamera vs. Guiron (Soundtrack)
|soundtrack=Gamera vs. Guiron/Soundtrack
|credits=Gamera vs. Guiron/Credits
|credits=Gamera vs. Guiron/Credits
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|type1      =Ice
|type1      =Ice
|type2      =Dark
|type2      =Dark
|type        =[[Gamera|Gamera]] [[:Category:Gamera Films|Films]]
|type        =''[[Gamera (franchise)|Gamera]]'' [[:Category:Gamera Films|films]]
|name        =''Gamera vs. Guiron''
|name        =''Gamera vs. Guiron''
|prev        =Gamera_vs. Viras
|prev        =Gamera_vs. Viras
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|dt          =''Gamera vs. Guiron'' (1969)
|dt          =''Gamera vs. Guiron'' (1969)
|name        =''Gamera vs. Guiron''|titles=yes|alt-titles=yes
|name        =''Gamera vs. Guiron''|titles=yes|alt-titles=yes
|jp-title    =''Gamera Against Giant Evil Beast Guiron'' (1969)
|jp-title    =''Gamera vs. Giant<br>Evil Beast Guiron'' (1969)
|us-title    =''Attack of the Monsters'' (TV 1969)
|us-title    =''Attack of the Monsters'' (TV 1970)
|producer    =[[Hidemasa Nagata]]
|producer    =[[Hidemasa Nagata]]
|director    =[[Noriaki Yuasa]]
|director    =[[Noriaki Yuasa]]
|writer      =[[Nisan Takahashi]]
|writer      =[[Nisan Takahashi]]
|composer    =[[Shunsuke Kikuchi]]
|composer    =[[Shunsuke Kikuchi]]
|distributor =[[Kadokawa|Daiei Motion Picture Company]]{{sup|[[Japan|JP]]}}<br>American International Television{{sup|[[United States|US]]}}
|distributor =[[Daiei]]{{sup|[[Japan|JP]]}}, [[American International Pictures|AITV]]{{sup|[[United States|US]]}}<ref name="Craig">{{cite book|title=American International Pictures: A Comprehensive Filmography|author=Craig, Rob|date=2019|publisher=McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers|page=44|isbn=9781476666310}}</ref>
|rating      =Not Rated
|rating      =Not Rated
|budget      =¥24,000,000<ref name="Galbraith">{{cite book|title=Monsters Are Attacking Tokyo! |author=Stuart Galbraith IV |date=1998 |publisher=Feral House |page=74 |isbn=0-922915-47-4}}</ref>
|budget      =¥24,000,000<ref name="Galbraith">{{cite book|title=Monsters Are Attacking Tokyo! |author=Stuart Galbraith IV |date=1998 |publisher=Feral House |page=74 |isbn=0-922915-47-4}}</ref>
|runtime    =82 minutes{{sup|[[Japan|JP]]}}<br />{{Small|(1 hour, 22 minutes)}}<br>80 minutes{{sup|[[United States|US]]}}<br>{{Small|(1 hour, 20 minutes)}}
|runtime    =82 minutes{{sup|[[Japan|JP]]}}<br />{{Small|(1 hour, 22 minutes)}}<br>80 minutes{{sup|[[United States|US]]}}<br>{{Small|(1 hour, 20 minutes)}}
|aspectratio =2.35:1
|aspectratio =2.35:1{{sup|[[Japan|JP]]}}<br>1.33:1{{sup|[[United States|US]] TV}}
}}
}}
'''''Gamera vs. Guiron''''' {{Nihongo|ガメラ対大悪獣ギロン|Gamera tai Dai Aku-jū Giron|lit. ''Gamera Against Giant Evil Beast Guiron''}} is a [[1969]] [[tokusatsu]] [[kaiju]] [[:Category:Kaiju Films|film]] produced by [[Kadokawa|Daiei Motion Picture Company]] and is the fifth entry in the [[Gamera]] series. It was released to Japanese theaters on March 21, 1969.
{{Quote|Controlled from the mysterious tenth planet, the immensely powerful Giant Demon Beast! The Earth is in danger! Launch the counter strategy, Gamera, you can do it!<br>|parenthetical=謎の第十惑星があやつる、すごい威力の大悪獣! 地球があぶない! がんばれガメラ、逆転作戦開始せよ!|Japanese tagline}}
'''''Gamera vs. Guiron''''' {{Nihongo|ガメラ対大悪獣ギロン|Gamera tai Daiakujū Giron|lit. "''Gamera vs. Giant Evil Beast Guiron''"}} is a [[1969]] [[tokusatsu]] [[kaiju]] [[:Category:Kaiju Films|film]] directed by [[Noriaki Yuasa]] and written by [[Nisan Takahashi]], with special effects by Yuasa. Produced by [[Daiei]], it is the fifth entry in the [[Gamera (franchise)|''Gamera'' series]] as well as the [[Showa era|Showa series]]. It stars Nobuhiro Kashima, Christopher Murphy, Miyuki Akiyama, Eiji Funakoshi, Kon Omura, Yuko Hamada, Edith Hansen, Reiko Kasahara, and Hiroko Kai. The film was released to Japanese theaters by Daiei on March 21, [[1969]] as a double feature with ''[[Yokai Monsters: Along with Ghosts]]''. [[American International Pictures|American International Television]] released an edited English-dubbed version titled '''''Attack of the Monsters''''' to television in the [[United States]] in [[1970]].
 
When young boys Akio and Tom board a mysterious [[Terran UFO|spaceship]], they find themselves transported to the planet [[Terra]] and encounter two alien women, Barbella and Florbella. While the two aliens seem friendly at first, the boys learn they intend to eat their brains before escaping to [[Earth]]. Fortunately, [[Gamera (Showa)|Gamera]] arrives to rescue Tom and Akio, but first he must contend with the Terrans' guardian monster, [[Guiron]]. ''Gamera vs. Guiron'' was followed by ''[[Gamera vs. Jiger]]'' in [[1970]].
{{TOC}}
{{TOC}}
==Plot==
==Plot==
After news reports of strange transmissions being received from space, [[Akio]] and his friend [[Tom]], who had been staying with Akio's family saw through their telescope [[Terran UFO|a spaceship]] that descends into a nearby field. They attempt to go to see it, but are promptly returned to bed by Akio's mother. The following morning, With Akio's little sister [[Tomoko]] in tow, they ride out to the field on their bicycles the next day to investigate. On the way there they are stopped by Officer [[Kon Kondo]], who warns them not to get into any trouble or he will shave their heads. They quickly discover the spaceship and climb aboard. While pressing switches while playing, they accidentally launch the ship, leaving Tomoko behind. As they speed into space, [[Gamera]] flies up beside them in an attempt to save them, but he cannot keep up with the spaceship, and they land on an unknown planet, which Akio hopes is free of war and traffic accidents. Shortly after arriving, the boys witness [[Gyaos#Gamera vs. Guiron|Space Gyaos]] attempting to attack the colony they had discovered, before [[Guiron]] emerged and cut it to bits after it attempted to fire a laser at Guiron that reflected off of his bladed face, slicing off Space Gyaos' leg. They enter one of the buildings, and come in contact with two women, named Barbella and [[Florbella]] that inform them that the planet is called [[Terra]], they are called [[Terrans]], and that the monster Guiron is their watchdog. On Earth, Tomoko attempts to inform her mother, Tom's mother, and Officer Kondo of the fate of the boys. Kondo believes her story, and tries his best to help while everyone else believes he is only humoring her. After explaining that they had called the ship back from Earth in hopes of escaping, the Terrans begin to make plans to escape while secretly plotting to escape their world Devastated by Gyaos, eat the boys' brains to consume their knowledge of Earth and leave to live there in their two-man ship. They hypnotize the boys, shave Akio's head and just before they make the incision to remove his brain, Gamera arrives to save them. Gamera battles fiercely with Guiron, but is badly wounded and is left for dead belly up at the bottom of a lake. The Boys then use Tom's toy Dart gun to escape their cage and the Terrans try to fly away, but their spaceship is damaged and crashes, wounding Barbella. Florbella kills her, and Gamera is roused from the lake. Guiron shoots shuriken into Gamera's limbs, but he is able to defeat Guiron with the aid of a guided missile launched by Akio and Tom, and kill Florbella. He then welds the Terran UFO back together with his flame breath and carries them home in his mouth, where the media, their parents, Tomoko, and Officer Kondo eagerly await them. Akio shares with them his revelation that while he wanted a world free of war and traffic accidents, such a place did not exist, and that humanity would have to make Earth a place without war or traffic accidents. Gamera then flies away into the skies.
After news reports of strange transmissions being received from space, friends [[Akio]] and [[Tom]] observe through their telescope [[Terran UFO|a spaceship]] that descends into a nearby field. They attempt to go to see it but are promptly returned to bed by Akio's mother. The following morning, with Akio's little sister [[Tomoko]] in tow, they ride out to the field on their bicycles to investigate. On their way, they are stopped by Officer [[Kondo]], who warns them not to get into any trouble or he will shave their heads.
 
Tomoko discovers the spaceship in the vacant lot where they play. Finding it unoccupied, Akio and Tom climb aboard. They playfully press several switches, accidentally launching the ship and themselves into space. Beyond the Earth's atmosphere, [[Gamera]] flies alongside the ship in an attempt to save the two children, but he cannot keep up with the alien craft. It speeds off into the far reaches of the solar system.
 
Some time later, the boys awaken to find the ship has crash-landed on an unknown habitable planet, housing an apparently advanced civilization. Departing the craft to investigate the mysterious world, the boys immediately witness a [[Gyaos#Gamera vs. Guiron|Space Gyaos]] attacking the nearby colony. They take cover and observe an immense [[Guiron|knife-headed monster]] emerge, quickly cutting the Space Gyaos to pieces. The monster carefully dissects its opponent before returning to its lair under a nearby river.
 
The boys enter one of the alien buildings, itself part of an enormous complex. In the control room, they meet two alien women who identify themselves as [[Barbella]] and [[Florbella]]. The women explain that the planet, [[Terra]], lies in Earth's orbit directly opposite the Sun and that their civilization had prospered for many years until a malfunctioning computer brought calamity upon them, causing flocks of Space Gyaos to overrun the city. From the control center, they command their monster Guiron to protect themselves. The other [[Terran]]s, they explain, had left the planet to find another inhabitable world, only to meet an unfortunate end. The two women, the last of their race, had called out into space for help - the source of the mysterious radio signals - and had sent the ship to Earth, hoping other beings would return to Terra to help. Tom and Akio agree to help the women repair the ship and return them to Earth.
 
On Earth, Tomoko attempts to inform her mother, Tom's mother, and Officer Kondo of the fate of the boys. The two mothers believe it to be a trick the boys are playing so that Tom can stay with Akio. Kondo, however, believes Tomoko's story and tries his best to help despite everyone else's assumption that he merely humors her.
 
Unbeknownst to the boys, Florbella and Barbella plot to escape to Earth themselves in their repaired two-man craft. To better prepare themselves for Earth, they intend to consume the boys' combined knowledge by eating their brains. They hypnotize the boys and shave Akio's head, but are interrupted by the appearance of Gamera in the city. The women sic Guiron on him while they hurry to repair the ship. Gamera battles Guiron fiercely, but is badly wounded and left for dead belly-up at the bottom of a lake. The boys come to, but are once again captured by the Terran women. This time imprisoned in the control room, they use Tom's toy dart gun to escape their cage, in the process unintentionally pressing other control switches. The Terran women make their escape but Guiron, having been loosed by the boys, cuts the escaping ship in two. Barbella is wounded in the crash. Florbella mercilessly kills her before returning to the relative safety of the Terran complex.
 
Gamera is roused from the lake and resumes his battle with Guiron. The Terran watchdog gains an advantage by shooting shuriken into Gamera's limbs. It turns towards the control center, having sighted the boys. Frantically trying to defend themselves, Akio and Tom launch a couple of [[Terran Missile Launcher|guided missiles]]: one slams into a far-off building, killing Florbella, while the other is intercepted by Gamera, who hurls it through the shuriken port on Guiron's head. Gamera blasts Guiron, detonating the explosive and killing the enemy monster. He then uses his flame to weld the Terran UFO back together. The boys board the ship, which Gamera carries to Earth in his mouth. Back in the vacant lot where the ship had earlier landed, Tom and Akio are welcomed home by their parents, the media, Tomoko, and Officer Kondo. Akio shares with them his revelation that, while he wanted a world free of war and traffic accidents, such a place did not exist, and that humanity would have to work together to make Earth a better place. Gamera flies away as the three children thank him for his help.
==Staff==
==Staff==
{{Staffs
{{Staffs
|Directed by=[[Noriaki Yuasa]]
|Directed by|[[Noriaki Yuasa]]
|Written by=[[Nisan Takahashi]]
|Written by|[[Nisan Takahashi]]
|Produced by=Hidemasa Nagata
|Executive producer|[[Hidemasa Nagata]]
|Music by=Shunsuke Kikuchi
|Planned by|[[Kazumasa Nakano]]
|Cinematography by=Akira Kitazaki
|Music by|[[Shunsuke Kikuchi]]
|Edited by=Zenko Miyazaki
*"[[Gamera March]]"
|Special Effects by=Kazufumi Fuji
|*Composed and arranged by|[[Kenjiro Hirose]]
|*Lyrics by|Hidemasa Nagata
|Cinematography by|Akira Kitazaki
|Edited by|Zenko Miyazaki
|Production design by|[[Akira Inoue]]
|First assistant director|[[Masao Kobayashi]]
|Director of special effects|Noriaki Yuasa (uncredited)
}}
}}
==Cast==
==Cast==
{{Cast
{{Cast
|Nobuhiro Kashima|[[Akio]]
|Nobuhiro Kashima|Akio
|Christopher Murphy|[[Tom]]
|Christopher Murphy|Tom
|Miyuki Akiyama|[[Tomoko]]
|Miyuki Akiyama|Tomoko
|Eiji Funakoshi|Dr. Shiga
|Eiji Funakoshi|Dr. Shiga
|Kon Omura|Officer [[Kon Kondo]]
|Kon Omura|Officer "Kon" Kondo
|Yuko Hamada|Kuniko
|Yuko Hamada|Kuniko, Akio's mother
|Edith Hansen|Elza
|Edith Hansen|Elza, Tom's mother
|Reiko Kasahara|Florbella
|Reiko Kasahara|Florbella, [[Terran]]
|Hiroko Kai|Barbella
|Hiroko Kai|Barbella, Terran
|Sho Natsuki|Newspaper reporter
|Teppei Endo|Newspaper reporter
|Tsutomu Nakata|Newspaper reporter
|Masaki Minamido|Observatory technician
|Kita Daihachi|Policeman
|[[Umenosuke Izumi]]|[[Gamera]]
|[[Umenosuke Izumi]]|[[Gamera]]
}}
===Titan Productions English dub===
{{Cast
|Corrine Orr|Tomoko
|Bret Morrison|Dr. Shiga / Policeman / Newspaper reporter
|Earl Hammond|Officer "Kon" Kondo / Narrator
|Lucy Martin|Florbella / Elza
|Larry Robinson|Newspaper reporter
}}
}}
==Appearances==
==Appearances==
Line 67: Line 101:
*[[Gyaos#Gamera vs. Guiron|Space Gyaos]]
*[[Gyaos#Gamera vs. Guiron|Space Gyaos]]
*[[Gyaos]] (stock footage)
*[[Gyaos]] (stock footage)
*[[Viras]] (mentioned)
{{Col-2}}
{{Col-2}}
===Weapons, Vehicles, and Races===
===Weapons, vehicles, and races===
*[[Terrans]]
*[[Terran]]s
*[[Terran UFO]]
*[[Terran UFO]]
*[[Terran Missile Launcher]]
*[[Terran missile launcher]]
*[[Virasian UFO]] (stock footage)
*[[Virian UFO]] (stock footage)
{{Col-end}}
{{Col-end}}


Line 78: Line 113:
{{Main|Gamera vs. Guiron/Gallery}}
{{Main|Gamera vs. Guiron/Gallery}}
==Soundtrack==
==Soundtrack==
{{Main|Gamera vs. Guiron (Soundtrack)}}
{{Main|Gamera vs. Guiron/Soundtrack}}
==Alternate Titles==
==Alternate titles==
*'''''Gamera vs. Giant Evil Beast Guiron''''' (Literal Japanese Title)
*'''''Gamera vs. Giant Evil Beast Guiron''''' (literal Japanese title)
*'''''Gamera vs. Giant Evil Beast X''''' {{Nihongo|ガメラ対大悪獣X|Gamera tai Dai Aku-jū Ekkusu|Early Japanese Title}}
*'''''Gamera vs. Giant Evil Beast X''''' {{Nihongo|ガメラ対大悪獣X|Gamera tai Dai Aku-jū Ekkusu|early Japanese title}}
*'''''Gamera vs. Guiron: Giant Evil Monster''''' (English Japanese DVD Title)
*'''''Gamera vs. Guiron: Giant Evil Monster''''' (English Japanese DVD title)
*'''''Attack of the Monsters''''' ([[United States]])
*'''''Attack of the Monsters''''' ([[United States]])
*'''''Gamera vs. Guillon''''' (United States Video Title)
*'''''Gamera vs. Guillon''''' (United States video title)
*'''''King Kong Against Godzilla''''' (''King Kong contro Godzilla''; Italy)
*'''''King Kong Against Godzilla''''' (''King Kong contro Godzilla''; Italy)
*'''''The Attack of the Monsters''''' (''O Ataque dos Monstros''; Brazil)
==Theatrical releases==
*[[Japan]] - March 21, 1969
*Italy - 1969; 1977
==[[United States|U.S.]] release==
Like the three previous Gamera films before it, ''Gamera vs. Guiron'' was not released theatrically in the [[United States]], but was instead released to television syndication by [[American International Pictures|American International Television]] beginning in [[1970]] under the title ''Attack of the Monsters''. As was the case with its release of ''[[Gamera vs. Viras]]'', American International Pictures had the film dubbed into English at Titan Productions, Inc. and voice actor Bret Morrison was credited as the re-recording director.<ref name="Craig"/> Due to content that would have been deemed too graphic for U.S. television at that time, AITV drastically edited the battle between [[Guiron]] and [[Gyaos#Gamera vs. Guiron|Space Gyaos]], which in the Japanese version ended with Guiron completely eviscerating his foe. In the re-edited sequence, Space Gyaos merely flies away after losing a foot in battle.
In the 1980s, the North American video and TV rights to five ''[[Gamera (franchise)|Gamera]]'' films, including ''Gamera vs. Guiron'', were acquired by Sandy Frank Film Syndication. Frank's company used a previously-unreleased English-dubbed version of ''Gamera vs. Guiron'', produced by Pedro Productions for [[Daiei]],<ref name="Guiron Dubbers">[http://forrestcrow.proboards.com/post/1153838]</ref> as a basis for its version. New credits and onscreen text were affixed to the film, which otherwise remained unedited.<ref name="Galbraith, AOTM review">{{cite book|title=Monsters Are Attacking Tokyo! |author=Stuart Galbraith IV |date=1998 |publisher=Feral House |pages=138-139 |isbn=0-922915-47-4}}</ref> Sandy Frank's ''Gamera vs. Guiron'' debuted in the U.S. in television syndication in [[1987]]; a VHS release from [[wikipedia:Celebrity Home Entertainment|Celebrity Home Entertainment]] followed [[1988|the next year]]. This version of the film was twice lampooned on the movie-mocking television series ''[[Mystery Science Theater 3000]]''. It was first riffed on the show in [[1989]], during the series' original broadcast on the Minneapolis-area station KTMA. A new episode featuring the movie was produced in [[1991]] for the show's third season on the Comedy Central cable network.<ref name="MST3K">{{cite book|title=The Mystery Science Theater 3000 Amazing Colossal Episode Guide |authors=Trace Beaulieu, Paul Chaplin, Jim Mallon, Kevin Murphy, Michael J. Nelson, Mary Jo Pehl |date=1996 |publisher=Bantam Books |pages=xxxiv, 50 |isbn=0-553-37783-3}}</ref> The latter version was one of 30 episodes repurposed into two hour-long shows on ''The Mystery Science Theater Hour'', which began airing in [[1993]].
The film has been released on DVD and Blu-ray in its original Japanese audio with English subtitles by [[Shout! Factory]], [[Mill Creek Entertainment]], and [[Arrow Video]]. AITV's ''Attack of the Monsters'' has been released on DVD by countless different home video companies who assumed it was in the public domain.


==[[United States|U.S.]] Release==
==Video releases==
Like the three previous Gamera films, ''Gamera vs. Guiron'' was not released theatrically in the continental [[United States]], but was shown on television by American International Television in 1969, under the title ''Attack of the Monsters''. AIP-TV drastically shortened the battle between [[Guiron]] and [[Gyaos|Space Gyaos]] due to its graphic content, showing Space Gyaos flee after losing a foot. The international English-dubbed version of ''Gamera vs. Guiron'', by Pedro Productions <ref name="Guiron Dubbers">[http://forrestcrow.proboards.com/post/1153838]</ref> and released by Sandy Frank Film Syndication, was featured on Season 3 of the movie-mocking television series ''[[Mystery Science Theater 3000]]''. It was also riffed on the show during its original broadcast on the Minneapolis-area station KTMA. The film has been released on DVD in its original Japanese audio with English subtitles by both Shout! Factory and Mill Creek Entertainment. While the original Japanese version and the international dub are copyrighted, the AIP-TV version is in the public domain<ref name="">[https://archive.org/details/AttackOfTheMonsters#review-1395891146]</ref>
'''[[Shout! Factory]]''' DVD (2010)
*'''Region:''' 1
*'''Discs:''' 1
*'''Audio:''' Japanese (1.0 Mono), English (1.0 Mono, international and AITV dubs)
*'''Special features:''' Photo galleries
*'''Notes:''' All versions of the film use the same Japanese video track, with the AITV dub reverting to the international dub during scenes cut from the former version. Packaged with ''[[Gamera vs. Jiger]]''.


==Video Releases==
'''[[Mill Creek Entertainment|Mill Creek]]''' DVD (2014) [''Gamera: The Legacy Collection'']
<b>Shout! Factory</b> DVD (2010)
*'''Region:''' 1
*Region: 1
*'''Discs:''' 4
*Discs: 1
*'''Audio:''' Japanese (1.0 Mono)
*Audio: Japanese (1.0 Mono), English (1.0 Mono, international and AIP-TV dubs)
*'''Special features:''' None
*Special Features: Photo galleries
*'''Notes:''' Packaged with ''[[Gamera the Giant Monster]]'', ''[[Gamera vs. Barugon]]'', ''[[Gamera vs. Gyaos]]'', ''[[Gamera vs. Viras]]'', ''Gamera vs. Jiger'', ''[[Gamera vs. Zigra]]'', ''[[Gamera Super Monster]]'', ''[[Gamera the Guardian of the Universe]]'', ''[[Gamera 2: Attack of Legion]]'', and ''[[Gamera 3: Revenge of Iris]]''.
*Notes: All versions of the film use the same Japanese video track, with the AIP-TV dub reverting to the international dub during scenes cut from the former version. Packaged with ''[[Gamera vs. Jiger]]''.


<b>Mill Creek</b> DVD (2014) [Gamera: Legacy Collection]
'''Mill Creek''' Blu-ray (2014) [''Gamera: The Ultimate Collection Volume 2'']
*Region: 1
*'''Region:''' N/A
*Discs: 4
*'''Discs:''' 2
*Audio: Japanese (1.0 Mono)
*'''Audio:''' Japanese (Dolby Digital 2.0)
*Special Features: None
*'''Special features:''' None
*Notes: Packaged with ''[[Gamera (film)|Gamera]]'', ''[[Gamera vs. Barugon]]'', ''[[Gamera vs. Gyaos]]'', ''[[Gamera vs. Viras]]'', ''[[Gamera vs. Jiger]]'', ''[[Gamera vs. Zigra]]'', ''[[Gamera: Super Monster]]'', ''[[Gamera: Guardian of the Universe]]'', ''[[Gamera 2: Attack of the Legion]]'', and ''[[Gamera 3: Revenge of Iris]]''.
*'''Notes:''' Packaged with ''Gamera vs. Jiger'', ''Gamera vs. Zigra'', and ''Gamera Super Monster''.


<b>Mill Creek</b> Blu-ray (2014) [Gamera: Ultimate Collection, Volume 2]
'''[[Arrow Video]]''' Blu-ray (2020/2021) [''Gamera: The Complete Collection'' and ''Gamera: The Showa Era'']
*Region: N/A
*'''Region''': A and B
*Discs: 2
*'''Discs''': 8 (''The Complete Collection''] or 4 (''The Showa Era'')
*Audio: Japanese (Dolby Digital 2.0)
*'''Audio''': Japanese and both English dubs (DTS-HD Master Audio Mono)
*Special Features: None
*'''Subtitles''': English
*Notes: Packaged with ''[[Gamera vs. Jiger]]'', ''[[Gamera vs. Zigra]]'', and ''[[Gamera: Super Monster]]''.
*'''Special features''': Audio commentary by David Kalat, introduction by [[August Ragone]] (11 minutes), opening and end credits from the AITV and Sandy Frank version of the film (5 minutes), Japanese theatrical trailer, American TV spot, scans of Neptune Media's ''Gamera'' series liner notes, and an image gallery. ''Gamera: The Complete Collection'' includes 12 art cards by [[Matt Frank]], a map of Gamera's appearances throughout the world, and two books; the first collects ''A History of Gamera'' by Patrick Macias, a 1996 [[Noriaki Yuasa]] interview by David Milner, [[kaiju]] x-ray illustrations by Jolyan Yates, three ''Fangoria'' articles on the Heisei ''Gamera'' trilogy by [[Norman England]], a guide to the English dubs of the ''Gamera'' series by James Flower, and information on the transfers presented in the set, while the second reprints the comics ''[[Gamera (comic)|Gamera]]'' and ''[[The Last Hope]]''.
*'''Notes''': ''Gamera: The Complete Collection'' is out of print. Packaged with the other 11 ''[[Gamera (franchise)|Gamera]]'' films in ''The Complete Colection'' and the other seven Showa ''Gamera'' films in ''The Showa Era''. Due to the large number of special features in these sets, only the supplements pertinent to ''Gamera vs. Guiron'' are described above.
==Videos==
==Videos==
===Trailers===
{{Videos|
{{Videos|
{{vid|<youtube width="300" height="169">OtIDF3DqI2o</youtube>|Japanese ''Gamera vs. Guiron'' trailer}}
{{vid|<youtube width="300" height="169">RYus5FfyiZ0</youtube>|Japanese ''Gamera vs. Guiron'' trailer}}
{{vid|<youtube width="300" height="169">dyvFLf9tnVM</youtube>|American ''Attack of the Monsters'' TV spot}}
{{vid|<youtube width="300" height="169">_SdM-CwOCB8</youtube>|U.S. ''Attack of the Monsters'' TV spot}}
{{vid|<youtube width="300" height="169">8NqgFQqoeGM</youtube>|''[[Mystery Science Theater 3000]]'' episode K08 - ''Gamera vs. Guiron''}}
{{vid|<youtube width="300" height="169">2vWLwuWPLsQ</youtube>|''[[Mystery Science Theater 3000]]'' episode 312 - ''Gamera vs. Guiron''}}
{{vid|<youtube width="300" height="169">a_2Aos7BBHM</youtube>|Guiron vs. Space Gyaos clip}}
}}
}}
===Miscellaneous===
{{Videos|
{{vid|<youtube width="300" height="169">7r37EaogcRc</youtube>|''[[Mystery Science Theater 3000]]'' episode K08 - ''Gamera vs. Guiron''}}
{{vid|<youtube width="300" height="169">kuDZXHN5vcs</youtube>|''[[Mystery Science Theater 3000]]'' episode 312 - ''Gamera vs. Guiron''}}
}}
==Trivia==
==Trivia==
*''Gamera vs. Guiron'' was theatrically released in Japan on a double bill with ''[[Yokai Monsters: Along with Ghosts]]''.
*Originally, a new [[kaiju]] called [[Monga]] was to appear in this film alongside [[Guiron]], but due to time and budget limitations the [[Gyaos]] suit and props from ''[[Gamera vs. Gyaos]]'' were simply painted silver and used as Space Gyaos.
*Originally, a new [[kaiju]] called [[Monga]] was to appear in this film alongside [[Guiron]], but due to time and budget limitations, the [[Gyaos]] suit and props from ''[[Gamera vs. Gyaos]]'' were simply painted silver and used as [[Gyaos|Space Gyaos]].
*This is the first film to feature [[Umenosuke Izumi]] as [[Gamera (Showa)|Gamera]]'s suit actor. Izumi would reprise the role in the following year's ''[[Gamera vs. Jiger]]''.
*The ''Attack of the Monsters'' version of ''Gamera vs. Guiron'' is one of seven giant monster movies which can be viewed in its entirety within the 2022 video game ''Kaiju Wars'', along with ''[[A*P*E]]'', ''[[Gamera vs. Viras|Destroy All Planets]]'', ''[[Gamera the Giant Monster|Gammera the Invincible]]'', ''[[Pulgasari (film)|Pulgasari]]'', ''[[wikipedia:Tarantula!|Tarantula]]'', and ''[[Yongary, Monster from the Deep]]''.
*Gurion's battle with Space Gyaos is the only kaiju fight in the ''Gamera'' films where [[Gamera]] himself is not a combatant.  
==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}
{{Kaiju Movies}}
{{Kaiju Movies|tab=Gamera}}
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[[Category:Japanese films]]
[[Category:Japanese films]]
[[Category:Showa Series]]
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[[Category:Films dubbed into English twice]]
[[Category:Films dubbed into English twice]]
[[Category:Films riffed on Mystery Science Theater 3000]]
[[Category:Films riffed on Mystery Science Theater 3000]]
[[Category:Films dubbed by Titra/Titan]]
[[Category:Films dubbed by Titra/Titan]]

Latest revision as of 18:18, 1 February 2024

Article.png
Image gallery for Gamera vs. Guiron
Credits for Gamera vs. Guiron
Gamera vs. Guiron soundtrack


Gamera films
Gamera vs. Viras
Gamera vs. Guiron
Gamera vs. Jiger
Gamera vs. Guiron
The Japanese poster for Gamera vs. Guiron
Alternate titles
Flagicon Japan.png Gamera vs. Giant
Evil Beast Guiron
(1969)
Flagicon United States.png Attack of the Monsters (TV 1970)
See alternate titles
Directed by Noriaki Yuasa
Producer Hidemasa Nagata
Written by Nisan Takahashi
Music by Shunsuke Kikuchi
Distributor DaieiJP, AITVUS[1]
Rating Not Rated
Budget ¥24,000,000[2]
Running time 82 minutesJP
(1 hour, 22 minutes)
80 minutesUS
(1 hour, 20 minutes)
Aspect ratio 2.35:1JP
1.33:1US TV
Rate this film!
3.52
(29 votes)

Controlled from the mysterious tenth planet, the immensely powerful Giant Demon Beast! The Earth is in danger! Launch the counter strategy, Gamera, you can do it!
(謎の第十惑星があやつる、すごい威力の大悪獣! 地球があぶない! がんばれガメラ、逆転作戦開始せよ!)
„ 

— Japanese tagline

Gamera vs. Guiron (ガメラ対大悪獣ギロン,   Gamera tai Daiakujū Giron, lit. "Gamera vs. Giant Evil Beast Guiron") is a 1969 tokusatsu kaiju film directed by Noriaki Yuasa and written by Nisan Takahashi, with special effects by Yuasa. Produced by Daiei, it is the fifth entry in the Gamera series as well as the Showa series. It stars Nobuhiro Kashima, Christopher Murphy, Miyuki Akiyama, Eiji Funakoshi, Kon Omura, Yuko Hamada, Edith Hansen, Reiko Kasahara, and Hiroko Kai. The film was released to Japanese theaters by Daiei on March 21, 1969 as a double feature with Yokai Monsters: Along with Ghosts. American International Television released an edited English-dubbed version titled Attack of the Monsters to television in the United States in 1970.

When young boys Akio and Tom board a mysterious spaceship, they find themselves transported to the planet Terra and encounter two alien women, Barbella and Florbella. While the two aliens seem friendly at first, the boys learn they intend to eat their brains before escaping to Earth. Fortunately, Gamera arrives to rescue Tom and Akio, but first he must contend with the Terrans' guardian monster, Guiron. Gamera vs. Guiron was followed by Gamera vs. Jiger in 1970.

Plot

After news reports of strange transmissions being received from space, friends Akio and Tom observe through their telescope a spaceship that descends into a nearby field. They attempt to go to see it but are promptly returned to bed by Akio's mother. The following morning, with Akio's little sister Tomoko in tow, they ride out to the field on their bicycles to investigate. On their way, they are stopped by Officer Kondo, who warns them not to get into any trouble or he will shave their heads.

Tomoko discovers the spaceship in the vacant lot where they play. Finding it unoccupied, Akio and Tom climb aboard. They playfully press several switches, accidentally launching the ship and themselves into space. Beyond the Earth's atmosphere, Gamera flies alongside the ship in an attempt to save the two children, but he cannot keep up with the alien craft. It speeds off into the far reaches of the solar system.

Some time later, the boys awaken to find the ship has crash-landed on an unknown habitable planet, housing an apparently advanced civilization. Departing the craft to investigate the mysterious world, the boys immediately witness a Space Gyaos attacking the nearby colony. They take cover and observe an immense knife-headed monster emerge, quickly cutting the Space Gyaos to pieces. The monster carefully dissects its opponent before returning to its lair under a nearby river.

The boys enter one of the alien buildings, itself part of an enormous complex. In the control room, they meet two alien women who identify themselves as Barbella and Florbella. The women explain that the planet, Terra, lies in Earth's orbit directly opposite the Sun and that their civilization had prospered for many years until a malfunctioning computer brought calamity upon them, causing flocks of Space Gyaos to overrun the city. From the control center, they command their monster Guiron to protect themselves. The other Terrans, they explain, had left the planet to find another inhabitable world, only to meet an unfortunate end. The two women, the last of their race, had called out into space for help - the source of the mysterious radio signals - and had sent the ship to Earth, hoping other beings would return to Terra to help. Tom and Akio agree to help the women repair the ship and return them to Earth.

On Earth, Tomoko attempts to inform her mother, Tom's mother, and Officer Kondo of the fate of the boys. The two mothers believe it to be a trick the boys are playing so that Tom can stay with Akio. Kondo, however, believes Tomoko's story and tries his best to help despite everyone else's assumption that he merely humors her.

Unbeknownst to the boys, Florbella and Barbella plot to escape to Earth themselves in their repaired two-man craft. To better prepare themselves for Earth, they intend to consume the boys' combined knowledge by eating their brains. They hypnotize the boys and shave Akio's head, but are interrupted by the appearance of Gamera in the city. The women sic Guiron on him while they hurry to repair the ship. Gamera battles Guiron fiercely, but is badly wounded and left for dead belly-up at the bottom of a lake. The boys come to, but are once again captured by the Terran women. This time imprisoned in the control room, they use Tom's toy dart gun to escape their cage, in the process unintentionally pressing other control switches. The Terran women make their escape but Guiron, having been loosed by the boys, cuts the escaping ship in two. Barbella is wounded in the crash. Florbella mercilessly kills her before returning to the relative safety of the Terran complex.

Gamera is roused from the lake and resumes his battle with Guiron. The Terran watchdog gains an advantage by shooting shuriken into Gamera's limbs. It turns towards the control center, having sighted the boys. Frantically trying to defend themselves, Akio and Tom launch a couple of guided missiles: one slams into a far-off building, killing Florbella, while the other is intercepted by Gamera, who hurls it through the shuriken port on Guiron's head. Gamera blasts Guiron, detonating the explosive and killing the enemy monster. He then uses his flame to weld the Terran UFO back together. The boys board the ship, which Gamera carries to Earth in his mouth. Back in the vacant lot where the ship had earlier landed, Tom and Akio are welcomed home by their parents, the media, Tomoko, and Officer Kondo. Akio shares with them his revelation that, while he wanted a world free of war and traffic accidents, such a place did not exist, and that humanity would have to work together to make Earth a better place. Gamera flies away as the three children thank him for his help.

Staff

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

Cast

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

  • Nobuhiro Kashima   as   Akio
  • Christopher Murphy   as   Tom
  • Miyuki Akiyama   as   Tomoko
  • Eiji Funakoshi   as   Dr. Shiga
  • Kon Omura   as   Officer "Kon" Kondo
  • Yuko Hamada   as   Kuniko, Akio's mother
  • Edith Hansen   as   Elza, Tom's mother
  • Reiko Kasahara   as   Florbella, Terran
  • Hiroko Kai   as   Barbella, Terran
  • Sho Natsuki   as   Newspaper reporter
  • Teppei Endo   as   Newspaper reporter
  • Tsutomu Nakata   as   Newspaper reporter
  • Masaki Minamido   as   Observatory technician
  • Kita Daihachi   as   Policeman
  • Umenosuke Izumi   as   Gamera

Titan Productions English dub

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

  • Corrine Orr   as   Tomoko
  • Bret Morrison   as   Dr. Shiga / Policeman / Newspaper reporter
  • Earl Hammond   as   Officer "Kon" Kondo / Narrator
  • Lucy Martin   as   Florbella / Elza
  • Larry Robinson   as   Newspaper reporter

Appearances

Monsters

Weapons, vehicles, and races

Gallery

Main article: Gamera vs. Guiron/Gallery.

Soundtrack

Main article: Gamera vs. Guiron/Soundtrack.

Alternate titles

  • Gamera vs. Giant Evil Beast Guiron (literal Japanese title)
  • Gamera vs. Giant Evil Beast X (ガメラ対大悪獣X,   Gamera tai Dai Aku-jū Ekkusu, early Japanese title)
  • Gamera vs. Guiron: Giant Evil Monster (English Japanese DVD title)
  • Attack of the Monsters (United States)
  • Gamera vs. Guillon (United States video title)
  • King Kong Against Godzilla (King Kong contro Godzilla; Italy)
  • The Attack of the Monsters (O Ataque dos Monstros; Brazil)

Theatrical releases

  • Japan - March 21, 1969
  • Italy - 1969; 1977

U.S. release

Like the three previous Gamera films before it, Gamera vs. Guiron was not released theatrically in the United States, but was instead released to television syndication by American International Television beginning in 1970 under the title Attack of the Monsters. As was the case with its release of Gamera vs. Viras, American International Pictures had the film dubbed into English at Titan Productions, Inc. and voice actor Bret Morrison was credited as the re-recording director.[1] Due to content that would have been deemed too graphic for U.S. television at that time, AITV drastically edited the battle between Guiron and Space Gyaos, which in the Japanese version ended with Guiron completely eviscerating his foe. In the re-edited sequence, Space Gyaos merely flies away after losing a foot in battle.

In the 1980s, the North American video and TV rights to five Gamera films, including Gamera vs. Guiron, were acquired by Sandy Frank Film Syndication. Frank's company used a previously-unreleased English-dubbed version of Gamera vs. Guiron, produced by Pedro Productions for Daiei,[3] as a basis for its version. New credits and onscreen text were affixed to the film, which otherwise remained unedited.[4] Sandy Frank's Gamera vs. Guiron debuted in the U.S. in television syndication in 1987; a VHS release from Celebrity Home Entertainment followed the next year. This version of the film was twice lampooned on the movie-mocking television series Mystery Science Theater 3000. It was first riffed on the show in 1989, during the series' original broadcast on the Minneapolis-area station KTMA. A new episode featuring the movie was produced in 1991 for the show's third season on the Comedy Central cable network.[5] The latter version was one of 30 episodes repurposed into two hour-long shows on The Mystery Science Theater Hour, which began airing in 1993.

The film has been released on DVD and Blu-ray in its original Japanese audio with English subtitles by Shout! Factory, Mill Creek Entertainment, and Arrow Video. AITV's Attack of the Monsters has been released on DVD by countless different home video companies who assumed it was in the public domain.

Video releases

Shout! Factory DVD (2010)

  • Region: 1
  • Discs: 1
  • Audio: Japanese (1.0 Mono), English (1.0 Mono, international and AITV dubs)
  • Special features: Photo galleries
  • Notes: All versions of the film use the same Japanese video track, with the AITV dub reverting to the international dub during scenes cut from the former version. Packaged with Gamera vs. Jiger.

Mill Creek DVD (2014) [Gamera: The Legacy Collection]

Mill Creek Blu-ray (2014) [Gamera: The Ultimate Collection Volume 2]

  • Region: N/A
  • Discs: 2
  • Audio: Japanese (Dolby Digital 2.0)
  • Special features: None
  • Notes: Packaged with Gamera vs. Jiger, Gamera vs. Zigra, and Gamera Super Monster.

Arrow Video Blu-ray (2020/2021) [Gamera: The Complete Collection and Gamera: The Showa Era]

  • Region: A and B
  • Discs: 8 (The Complete Collection] or 4 (The Showa Era)
  • Audio: Japanese and both English dubs (DTS-HD Master Audio Mono)
  • Subtitles: English
  • Special features: Audio commentary by David Kalat, introduction by August Ragone (11 minutes), opening and end credits from the AITV and Sandy Frank version of the film (5 minutes), Japanese theatrical trailer, American TV spot, scans of Neptune Media's Gamera series liner notes, and an image gallery. Gamera: The Complete Collection includes 12 art cards by Matt Frank, a map of Gamera's appearances throughout the world, and two books; the first collects A History of Gamera by Patrick Macias, a 1996 Noriaki Yuasa interview by David Milner, kaiju x-ray illustrations by Jolyan Yates, three Fangoria articles on the Heisei Gamera trilogy by Norman England, a guide to the English dubs of the Gamera series by James Flower, and information on the transfers presented in the set, while the second reprints the comics Gamera and The Last Hope.
  • Notes: Gamera: The Complete Collection is out of print. Packaged with the other 11 Gamera films in The Complete Colection and the other seven Showa Gamera films in The Showa Era. Due to the large number of special features in these sets, only the supplements pertinent to Gamera vs. Guiron are described above.

Videos

Trailers

Japanese Gamera vs. Guiron trailer
U.S. Attack of the Monsters TV spot

Miscellaneous

Mystery Science Theater 3000 episode K08 - Gamera vs. Guiron
Mystery Science Theater 3000 episode 312 - Gamera vs. Guiron

Trivia

References

This is a list of references for Gamera vs. Guiron. 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. 1.0 1.1 Craig, Rob (2019). American International Pictures: A Comprehensive Filmography. McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers. p. 44. ISBN 9781476666310.
  2. Stuart Galbraith IV (1998). Monsters Are Attacking Tokyo!. Feral House. p. 74. ISBN 0-922915-47-4.
  3. [1]
  4. Stuart Galbraith IV (1998). Monsters Are Attacking Tokyo!. Feral House. pp. 138–139. ISBN 0-922915-47-4.
  5. Trace Beaulieu, Paul Chaplin, Jim Mallon, Kevin Murphy, Michael J. Nelson, Mary Jo Pehl (1996). The Mystery Science Theater 3000 Amazing Colossal Episode Guide. Bantam Books. pp. xxxiv, 50. ISBN 0-553-37783-3.CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)

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