Shin Ultraman
- 2022
- 1h 52min
El gobierno japonés libra una batalla implacable y desesperada contra los invasores alienígenas conocidos como la Especie S, hasta que la esperanza para la humanidad surge en forma de un mis... Leer todoEl gobierno japonés libra una batalla implacable y desesperada contra los invasores alienígenas conocidos como la Especie S, hasta que la esperanza para la humanidad surge en forma de un misterioso guerrero gigante procedente del espacio.El gobierno japonés libra una batalla implacable y desesperada contra los invasores alienígenas conocidos como la Especie S, hasta que la esperanza para la humanidad surge en forma de un misterioso guerrero gigante procedente del espacio.
- Premios
- 4 premios y 5 nominaciones en total
Argumento
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesThe filmmakers used still frames from the original series Ultraman (1966) as storyboards.
- Citas
Yumi Funaberi: [livid about losing all of her work] Who insisted on making these regulations? A close environment and no backups? I want to **** them!
Akihisa Taki: [still stunned; in English] ... me, too...
- Créditos adicionalesThe title swirls into place in a manner homaging the Urutora Q (1965)/Ultraman (1966) title sequence... to reveal the Shin Godzilla (2016) film title. It then changes to the actual film title in the classic red and white Ultraman colors.
- ConexionesFeatured in Horror's Greatest: Giant Monsters (2024)
- Banda sonoraM87 (Em HachijuuNana)
Music and Lyrics by Kenshi Yonezu
Performed by Kenshi Yonezu
(Sony Music Labels Inc.)
In a reimagining of the Ultraman story, giant unidentified lifeforms known as "S-Class species" begin to emerge on Earth. The Japanese government established the SSSP, the S-Class Species Suppression Protocol, to eliminate all threats.
A mysterious alien entity, dubbed Ultraman, appears to save humanity from the giant monsters.
Shinji Higuchi's last film Shin Godzilla, a satire about government bureaucracy disguised beneath a kaiju movie, was a head scratcher that played better in premise than in execution. The central gag of government staff workers endlessly running into offices drowning in the bureaucratic process, ran dry after twenty minutes.
For Shin Ultraman, writer-director Shinji Higuchi tones down that satirical voice. There's no satirical target here and thus there's less sprinting into offices but the human characters remain cardboard cut-out caricatures.
When there's no monster fight happening, the scenes are just the SSSP staff explaining what needs to be done in the most straight-faced manner with zero subtext, as if they were reading a Wikipedia summary out loud. There's no sense of who these characters are beyond their job description.
Hidetoshi Nikijima, the star of the Oscar-nominated Drive My Car, sadly has no character to play or given any life to breathe into the narrative as the head of the SSSP. With its star-studded Japanese cast, it is just a kaiju-sized opportunity wasted.
It's an odd narrative style that Shin Higuchi has chosen. The film is either complete showing or complete telling. There's no hiding exposition under natural-sounding conversational dialogue.
I fundamentally don't understand why the film is so deliberately distant and allergic to human emotions. Imagine if an alien remade Ultraman and only focused on the battles and just wanted to rush through the talky scenes. Shinji Higuchi is not an alien, but just choosing to be one for some reason.
What won me over about Shin Ultraman was the special effects, an intriguing combination of old school and modern CGI. Together with the film's retro look, it achieves a unique look of its own, especially in its kaiju battle sequences.
I have fond childhood memories of watching Ultraman and Japanese kaiju TV shows. The visual of two costumed actors fighting in a miniaturized city always looked convincing. When computer effects took over in mainstream films in the 2000s, miniatures got left behind. The weight of things was gone. I wondered why so few filmmakers hadn't combined miniatures with CGI.
In Shin Ultraman, that combination of old and new special effects is used to great effect. It retained the weight of things. Many times, my eyes couldn't distinguish whether it was a scale model or CG-it always seems in-between the two. My eyes just believed it and it viscerally transported me back to seeing Ultraman on TV when I was ten, which was amazing.
Sure, Ultraman's beam looks fake in that retro way. However, when Ultraman and the kaiju wrestle and crash into the miniature buildings, there's real weight. When Ultraman flies, it looks like a real man being pulled up into the air. When things explode, it looks like a real bomb went off.
Hopefully, movie audiences who are used to seeing Hollywood CGI blockbusters can keep an open mind and not dismiss this artistry as "retro for retro's sake". I'm glad there are filmmakers keeping miniatures alive.
Overall, I feel half and half about Shin Ultraman. It's really fun in a kitschy retro kind of way. But by the third act, I was yearning for more subtext and something deeper from the script other than what the characters plan to do next. That depth never came and it left me cold when the credits rolled.
I wouldn't sit through Shin Ultraman again in its entirety, but I'd happily watch the fights again or any special features behind the filming of the miniatures.
- ObsessiveCinemaDisorder
- 24 oct 2022
- Enlace permanente
Selecciones populares
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idiomas
- Títulos en diferentes países
- Tân Siêu Nhân Điện Quang
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Empresas productoras
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- 900.000.000 JPY (estimación)
- Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
- 601.490 US$
- Recaudación en todo el mundo
- 32.137.136 US$
- Duración1 hora 52 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.39 : 1