Watched: 08/16/2025
Format: Amazon
Viewing: Third, I think
Shin Godzilla (2016) is currently enjoying a theatrical re-release because, I guess, why not?
Godzilla Minus One was supposed to be in theaters for a week, and wound up playing for months and making crazy bank compared to original estimates, and then landed a much deserved
Academy Award.
Yes,
Shin Godzilla is also in the process of being released on
4K disc, and, looks, kids.... there's something your favorite blogger would sure like to open on Christmas morning.
I will never not tell this story, so here goes: PaulT, Jamie and myself went to a mid-day screening of
Shin Godzilla at the old
Alamo Ritz, I think in January of 2017. We were excited, the place was almost sold out in the middle of the day... it was a whole scene. Then the movie started and a piercing tone hit the theater.
They paused the movie and the manager came out and said "has anyone seen this before?" A few hands went up. "Is this supposed to be happening?" No. "Ok!" So she disappeared. We hung out for a while.
Apparently the distributor had sent out their digital copies with 1k tone and there was nothing the
Drafthouse could do. So I think we got out money back and went to
Shakespeare's nextdoor for a beer.
Anyway - I've seen the movie since. But not since seeing
Godzilla Minus One. Or spending
COVID lockdown watching every single live-action Godzilla movie.
First - this one isn't for the kids. It's a movie that happens to have a Godzilla in it as a stand-in for any disaster, but in this case, it was pretty specifically the
Fukushima nuclear accident that hit Japan in 2011. I think
Shin Godzilla is a genuinely really, really good movie when it comes to the challenge of bureaucracy and systems built to ensure safety by way of democratic processes, something I'm pretty familiar with after spending a lifetime in state-funded higher education, State government and, recently, local government. That a single decision must pass through up to five levels and reach a "final decider" to do the obvious, and that person is hopelessly compromised by politics, optics and party machinery has real world consequences.