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Posted by Sampo, on August 7th, 2017  Haruo Nakajima, who spent two decades playing Japan’s most famous Tokyo-stomping kaiju, has died at the age of 88.
Over to our resident kaiju expert, Reaper G, for the details. Reap?
MSTies will remember him as the titular star of the film featured in episode 213- GODZILLA VS. THE SEA MONSTER.
Born January 1, 1929, in Yamagata, Japan, Nakajima was a young actor and stuntman at Toho Studios, appearing in such films as Akira Kurosawa’s “The Seven Samurai” and Ishiro Honda’s “Eagle over the Pacific”, when he was given the job that would define him — donning the 220-lb. suit to play a 50-meter, fire-breathing radioactive dinosaur in the film “Gojira”, later distributed worldwide as “Godzilla, King of the Monsters.”
“Katsumi Tezuka and I both tried on the Godzilla costume during the first day of shooting,” said Nakajima in an interview with David Milner of “Kaiju Conversations. “The costume was very stiff and heavy. I could walk about thirty feet in it, but Mr. Tezuka could only walk about ten feet in it. There were three cables coming out of the back of the costume. Two were for the operation of the eyes, and one was for the operation of the mouth. Eizo Kaimai was responsible for the movement of the eyes and the mouth. The ASA speed of the film that was used at the time was very slow, so the set had to be very brightly lit. Another actor complained that the lights made it too hot inside the costume, but I never complained.”
Despite the weight, heat, explosions and a near-drowning experience in a water scene, Nakajima was Toho’s monster man for 18 years. He continued to play the iconic kaiju in “Godzilla Raids Again”, “King Kong vs. Godzilla,” “Mothra vs. Godzilla,” “Ghidrah, the Three-Headed Monster,” “Godzilla vs. Monster Zero,” “Sea Monster,” “Son of Godzilla,” “Destroy All Monsters,” “Godzilla vs. Hedorah” and “Godzilla vs. Gigan”. In the latter two films, he battled monsters played by Kenpachiro Satsuma, who would go on to play Godzilla from 1985 to 1995.
He also played the monsters in “Rodan,” “The Mysterians” (as the robot Mogera), “Varan the Unbelievable,” “Mothra” (working the larva’s head), “Matango” (as a mushroom man), “Frankenstein Conquers the World” (as Baragon), “War of the Gargantuas” (as Gaira the Green Gargantua, a role he particularly liked due to the suit’s light weight and being able to see out the monster’s eye holes), “King Kong Escapes,” “Latitude Zero” (as the winged lion and a giant rat), and “Yog, Monster from Space” (as Gezora). He also served monster duties on the TV series “Ultra Q”, “Ultraman” and “Ultra Seven.” He also choreographed the monster battles in these films.
Occasionally, he got a bit part in human form. You can see Nakajima in human form as a doomed sailor in “The H-Man” and a general in “Destroy All Monsters”.
In his later years, Nakajima was a frequent guest at sci-fi conventions worldwide, particularly ones with Godzilla themes.
“Inside the Godzilla suit, it was very dark, lonely and isolated,” said special effects director Teruyoshi Nakano. “Usually the person who wears the suit becomes nervous and anxious. During summertime it’s very hot, it can become hell in there. But Mr. Nakajima always persevered. He acted in the suit underwater, he was buried underground, he withstood pyrotechnic explosions … and through it all he was always Godzilla.”
Thanks to Timmy and Paul for the heads ups.
Posted by Sampo, on August 5th, 2017 This one is simple: Strangest moment in a season 11 movie.
Me, I have to go with the unexplained and unexplainable giddy laughter in “Cry Wilderness.”
Your vote?
Please feel free to suggest future topics, season 11-related and non-season 11-related.
Posted by Erhardt, on August 4th, 2017
Posted by Sampo, on August 3rd, 2017
Movie: (1966) A Russian version of the Cinderella story includes a mushroom sprite, a bear-headed hero and house with legs.
First shown: 7/12/97
Opening: Mike Nelson IS Lord of the Dance!
Intro: Mike mediates a squabble between Bobo and Brain Guy
Host segment 1: Crow hires a Russian expert
Host segment 2: Crow’s a bear, while Bobo and Brain Guy find common ground
Host segment 3: Crow hires another Russian expert–or someone like him
End: Tom fails in his attempt to be cute; Bobo and Brain Guy discuss ape movies, but Pearl returns to settle the matter
Stinger: “Bring on my fiancee!”
    (287 votes, average: 4.66 out of 5)
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• For the longest time, there was the “Russo-Finnish troika” of “Day the Earth Froze,” “Sinbad” and “Sword and the Dragon.” The Sci-Fi era needed one too, I guess, so now it’s a quartet, and wow, is this one ever out there. It’s not directed by Aleksandr Ptushko, as they other ones were, but it definitely has that weird vibe that gives them plenty of riffing fodder, and they do a great job with it. Some of the host segments are great, others don’t do much for me.
• Check out Mary Jo’s take on this episode here.
• This episode was included on Shout!Factory’s Mystery Science Theater 3000 Collection: Vol. XVIII.
• To start things off, we get one of the host segment highlights of the season as Mike parodies human peacock Michael Flatley, especially his deeply self-satisfied, nose-breathing smirk.
• Mike almost puts one over on Brain Guy, who is almost sucked into the theater, but not quite.
• Obscure reference: Hildegard von Bingen. Even I needed to look that one up. The next time somebody tries to tell you all MST3K does is fart jokes, remind them of THIS.
• The segment where Crow becomes a bear is another gem, a great example of Bill’s slightly demented Crow, very different from Trace’s Crow but very funny. Grr!
• Crow is still a bear when he returns to the theater.
• That’s Patrick as Yakov Smirnoff; and that’s Paul as Earl Torgeson. Both the “Crow hires an expert” segments didn’t do much for me. Yakov’s standup act wasn’t quite as lame as they make it out to be, and the second bit just sort of wanders off without a real payoff.
• In the comments, a number of readers have noted that by about eight episodes in, Bobo’s character had totally, well, devolved. When we first met him at the beginning of the season, he was a sophisticated gentleman and scientist. Slowly but surely the writers changed him into the happy-go-lucky, termite-eating dimwit who so exasperates Brain Guy and Pearl. Not really a criticism. Just an observation.
• Dalesim: As thug smells his hand, Mike: “Hm. I thought I was Dale!”
• Cast roundup: Georgiy Millyar and Valentin Bryleyev were both in “The Day the Earth Froze.” That’s it.
• CreditsWatch: Kevin again gets the “Produced & Directed” credit. Following this episode, Grip Mike Parker takes two episodes off. And this was the last episode interns Tamara Melloy and Randy Smith worked on.
• Fave line: “Apparently there’s no Finnish word for ‘subtle.’ ” Honorable mention: “I thought Jerry Garcia was Father Mushroom.”
Posted by Sampo, on July 31st, 2017 We have news Shout about Volume 39 and the future of MST3K releases:
The set will be available Nov. 21, 2017, and available for pre-order on the Shout! Factory website and Amazon later this week. We hope you’ll share this update with your readers.
It will be a four-disc set, here are the titles:
The Amazing Transparent Man
Girls Town
Diabolik
“Satellite Dishes”
The 4th disc, called “Satellite Dishes” is a collection of the host segments from episodes from the remaining unreleased episodes. They are:
Ep #201 Rocketship X-M
Ep #212 Godzilla Vs. Megalon
Ep #213 Godzilla Vs. The Sea Monster
Ep #309 The Amazing Colossal Man
Ep #311 It Conquered the World
Ep #416 Fire Maidens from Outer Space
Ep #418 The Eye Creatures
Ep #807 Terror from the Year 5000
Ep #809 I Was A Teenage Werewolf
Ep #905 The Deadly Bees
Ep #906 The Space Children
Ep #913 Quest of the Delta Knights
Despite our best efforts to include the remaining unreleased episodes, due to licensing issues, it is very likely that Volume 39 will be the last collection of never-before-released episodes, and that these remaining episodes may never get a legitimate release. With this in mind, we decided the next best option was to release the remaining host segments by themselves.
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