Godzilla (Blu-ray) PG-13
The world ends, Godzilla begins.
Out of Print:
Future availability is unknown
on most orders of $75+
|
Brand New
|
Also released as:
Godzilla (Blu-ray + DVD)
for $15.30
Godzilla
for $12.60
Godzilla (4K UltraHD + Blu-ray)
for $31.50
Blu-ray Details
- Rated: PG-13
- Run Time: 2 hours, 3 minutes
- Encoding: Region A
- Released: February 7, 2017
- Originally Released: 2014
- Label: Warner Home Video
Performers, Cast and Crew:
Starring | Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Ken Watanabe, Elizabeth Olsen, Juliette Binoche, Sally Hawkins, David Strathairn & Bryan Cranston | |
Performer: | Richard T. Jones, Victor Rasuk, Patrick Sabongui, Eric Keenleyside, Al Sapienza, Garry Chalk & Hiro Kanagawa | |
Directed by | Gareth Edwards | |
Edited by | Bob Ducsay | |
Screenplay by | Max Borenstein | |
Composition by | Alexandre Desplat | |
Story by | Dave Callaham | |
Produced by | Bob Ducsay, Jon Jashni, Mary Parent & Thomas Tull | |
Director of Photography: | Seamus McGarvey |
Entertainment Reviews:
The new Godzilla, best seen in 3D IMAX to revel in his textured scales, his heaving gills, his deafening digital roar, is a rock star, the effing real deal in FX monster cool.
Rolling Stone
Rating: 8/10 --
Godzilla doesn't always work, but when it does it's an effective and visually stunning take of a contemporary myth that will surely please fans of kaiju culture. [Full review in Spanish]
Full Review
Código espagueti
3.5 stars out of 4 -- Like the 1954 original, it's a combination epic horror film and parable of nature in revolt, filled with odd ellipses and surprising but appropriate storytelling choices...
RogerEbert.com
Rating: 3.5/5 --
Godzilla is certainly a remarkable improvement on the Roland Emmerich film but there could have been more Godzilla.
Full Review
Solzy at the Movies
The film suffers exposition overload and the plot threads unravel somewhat; the script by Max Borenstein veers off in one direction too many. This is no fault of the cast, a solid mix of the veteran and the new.
Full Review
Times of Malta
Godzilla himself is a marvel of state-of-the-art craftsmanship, looking bigger and bulkier than he ever has before and shaking the whole theater with his timeless, metallic bellow. -- Grade: B+
A.V. Club
4 stars out of 5 -- When the beast is finally unleashed, the set-pieces are worth savouring.
Total Film
Product Description:
The king of all monsters returns in this Warner Bros./Legendary Pictures production helmed by Gareth Edwards (MONSTERS). As the story opens in Japan, we find dedicated nuclear power-plant manager Joe Brody (Bryan Cranston) so caught up in his work that he forgets it's his birthday. Sending his young son Ford off to school before reporting to the plant with his wife Sandra (Juliette Binoche), who works in the reactor, Joe begins to suspect that some suspiciously patterned seismic activity may be something more sinister than shifting tectonic plates He's right, too, because when the plant goes into meltdown mode and Sandra gets caught on the wrong side of the containment door, a massive cover-up ensues. Fifteen years later, Ford (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) has become a bomb-disposal expert in the U.S. military. He's just returned home to his wife Elle (Elizabeth Olsen) and their son Sam (Carson Bolde) when he gets word that Joe been arrested in Japan. Long estranged from his father, who was written off as a conspiracy theorist for his failed efforts to prove the Japanese government was attempting to hide something about the earlier disaster, Ford nevertheless ventures to Japan to get him out of jail, and reluctantly agrees to join him in traveling to their old home in the quarantined zone. Subsequently taken into custody, the pair end up in the very plant where Joe used to work, and where scientists Dr. Ichiro Serizawa (Ken Watanabe) and Vivienne Graham (Sally Hawkins) are studying a massive cocoon-like structure that appears to feed on radiation. The situation turns critical when the events of the present begin to mirror those of the past, and a terrifying winged-creature dubbed a "MUTO" is unleashed. Meanwhile, as the military attempts to devise a plan to destroy the beast, signals indicate that it had been calling out to something before it broke free, and the scientists learn that it has awoken a towering, godlike leviathan that has lied dormant for centuries, and may be mankind's only hope for restoring the balance of nature.