Tuesday, October 27, 2009

The Problems of a King Kong Vs Godzilla Remake

King Kong vs Godzilla remake updates are met with various reactions from monster cinema fans. The possibility of a King Kong vs Godzilla remake is a dream match and sounds too good to be true. Some sci-fi fans are skeptical of a sequel or remade version because Toho Company practices the tradition of using live actors in rubber costumes stomping on miniatures, as opposed to modern day CGI. Of course there are movie fans who do not want to see another version of this movie because the original 1963 movie featuring these two icons was so poorly received in the West.

All of that being said this movie would do well in the box office depending on which special effects method Toho and Universal agreed upon, and how the production's marketing campaign would be handled. With the success of the big gorilla in 2005 and Cloverfield in 2008, audiences are open-minded about a modern take of giant monsters. Monster forums and streaming video websites show that there is an underground push for a rematch between these two behemoths.

Although Toho's mutated dinosaur is a Japanese cultural icon, the big G's United States film translations have always been less than spectacular; from bad dubbing and poor special effects to cultural differences between the United States. and Japan, mainstream movie going audiences in America just don't get the cult phenomena. Much of that has to do with the costumes and mini cities. If Universal and Toho are going to invest money in a King Kong vs Godzilla remake, this must be addressed. The big question is: should both monsters be rendered in CGI?

The box office success of TriStar's 1998 version of the radioactive green lizard was because of two things: a very expensive marketing campaign and the fact that Big G was CGI instead of a man in a suit. Although this success may lead us to believe that it is a no-brainer to use CGI in the future, this is not the case. The TriStar monster had none of the unique features of the Japanese dinosaur, and long time fans disliked that version. The Japanese protested the movie, and this stopped talk about a King Kong vs Godzilla remake using CGI.

Toho is very well aware of the market for a King Kong vs Godzilla remake, and if they do join together with Universal there will pressure to appeal to broad audiences to create a blockbuster mega event. Toho did a test run with another movie and a CGI version of their beast and it went over well with test audiences. Toho does not want to offend their loyal Japanese fan base who respect the hard work the production crews perform to create the miniaturized sets and monster choreography, so they will do the market research before giving their blessing for CGI. Universal would not accept rubber costumes, so this will be a major debate for both parties.
Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Damian_Conrad

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