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Monday, March 23, 2026

Godzilla’s Anime Trilogy: Attack On Titan On PCP, Part One

 

By Joe Gibson

 

The following is the first part of the transcript of a recent video on Plan9Crunch’s YouTube page that you can watch here: Godzilla's Anime Trilogy: Attack On Titan On PCP

 

Hi. Welcome back to Plan9Crunch. I am Joe Gibson.

In all my time talking about Godzilla here, I have been quite open about my disdain for Polygon’s Godzilla anime trilogy. In the deepest part of my being, I know these movies to be terrible and among the worst the franchise has to offer, and I have never really given myself the opportunity to lay out my best arguments for that case. However, even now I don’t really want to do that. Let’s set aside how that is poisoning the well to the audience about experiencing what is perhaps the most niche sector of this franchise that still involves feature films; it is just not that interesting to me to try to tear down a trilogy without some nuanced gimmick. I have also grown to appreciate these films in their own way. The design for Godzilla Earth, while slow, immobile and barely qualifying as something that only animation could create, is actually probably one of my top ten designs for Godzilla. I just think it’s neat with some sleek muscle patterns and a very meme-able face.

 

I also have a warped kind of nostalgia for these films because I was there following along with the updates before the films came out, catching every new report about what the first Godzilla anime would be like. I witnessed when the officially reported title for the first film changed from Godzilla: Monster Planet to Godzilla: Planet Of The Monsters, and I was there when we got early translations for what would eventually become City On The Edge Of Battle as Mobile Battle Breeder City. In both cases, the earlier title was technically more accurate to the film than the later, but that’s not the point. I have experienced both hype and letdown with this trilogy, and I’m really not that devoted to trashing on it outside of throwaway jabs and tangents in other videos. That said, I still think the trilogy deserves a slightly negative video essay exploring some of my issues with it. One common critique of the trilogy is how derivative it seems of Attack on Titan, and, don’t worry, I’ll unpack what all that means in a second, but the discussion I want to create here is that the Godzilla Anime Trilogy is very much like AOT but far less mature in its storytelling and implementation of themes.

 

And this is important to note. Even though I am using Attack On Titan as the positive example by comparison, my criticisms will not simply be “this is not what Attack on Titan did so it is bad.” That wouldn’t really make much sense. This trilogy never had a chance of doing exactly what Attack On Titan did because the manga was still ongoing when this trilogy was in production. Heck, this trilogy managed to preemptively include a plot point from AOT before AOT’s manga even got around to that (I’ll explain that when it comes up later), so if that were my metric, rest assured it wouldn’t be an unfair hindrance to these films.

 

So how else do I frame this comparison if not “living up to a source material.” Well, have you ever heard the expression that X thing is like Y thing on crack, as in crack cocaine, the drug? Maybe you have, maybe you haven’t. Essentially, it is a comparative tool wherein I acknowledge base level similarity but through the lens of hyperactive, frenetic or melodramatic exaggeration of certain elements. The problem is that it does not really work in this instance. Though undeniably similar, as we will get to, the anime trilogy is a lot more subdued and restrained than the comparative high energy battle anime of AOT. Okay so then it was all about finding a different drug with the desired exaggerations from AOT’s tone, and that was difficult to find with an innocuous google search term. But eventually I settled on PCP, so please indulge me as I run through the side effects of PCP we’ll want to keep in mind. This part of the video is technically a drug abuse PSA, so if the YouTube algorithm suppresses this video, well I shouldn’t finish that thought. On that note though, this essay will discuss topics pertaining to drug abuse obviously but also depression and suicide, so viewer discretion is advised.

 

   

 

Phencyclidine, known for the purposes of this essay as PCP or Angel Dust, is a hallucinogenic and dissociative drug that can lead to many side effects but especially lethargy, disorientation, hallucinations, sense of detachment, lack of concentration, loss of coordination, agitation, bizarre behavior, a dangerously inflated sense of strength and invulnerability, memory loss and unconsciousness. I am getting this information from Americanaddictioncenters.org. The image you see on your screen is from The Carolina Center recovery .com and adds suicidality and coma to this list. So, basically, the methodology of this exercise is to pinpoint how the anime trilogy expresses its themes about humanity and see if the tone registers with a certain disorientation and sense of detachment or lack of concentration or if the choreography entails a sense of lethargy and relies on unconscious hallucinations or if the ways characters act are informed by the side effects of dissociative drugs instead of rational acting. If the lead for example demonstrates violent suicidal behavior, delusions of grandeur, a sense of detachment from his life, stupor and notable memory loss, then there you go. I think it is a fair criticism to say “the emotional maturity of this series is akin to that of someone addicted to PCP.” Ah yes and the ways people abuse PCP are plenty: it can be a white powder, a yellow liquid, a tablet, eye drops, an injection or in a cigar. So very adaptable and I think ultimately very fair to use for such a sweeping analysis.  In any case, let us proceed to some background information on the trilogy itself so we can actually begin the analysis proper.

 

 

Between 2017 and 2019, Netflix released three Godzilla anime films. Animated by Polygon Pictures, these were to be Godzilla’s first official feature film foray into animation, though as I understand it the 2021 Netflix series Godzilla Singular Point went into production first. Recently, I have heard commentators posit that the trilogy is not really that good of a demonstration to anime fans what Godzilla represents nor to Godzilla fans what anime entails, and that is largely because the style of animation was a costly 3DCG that simulates live action but resulted in a very sluggish Godzilla with very little screentime. So a limitation of the technology, same as the goofy suits between 1955 and 1975. Also a very experimental format that settled the uncanny valley in regards to how tokusatsu and anime are usually shot. (Consider the way this distorts our sensory perceptions of the ways characters can move and their body awareness.)

 

The premise is equally uncanny between old and new, traditional and experimental. Giant monsters have pushed the remains of humanity into one cramped area (that’s the Attack On Titan part), but it is to the spaceship Aratrum, and, while humanity is in space for 20 years before they decide to come back, 20,000 years have passed on Earth. The Xilien and Simeon aliens from the Showa series are back but as members of this defeated coalition, as their plans to defeat the monsters have failed. Also, it is best to get to this out of the way now, the Xiliens became the Aryan Exif aliens, and the space monkey Simeons became the dark skinned humanoid Bilusaludo aliens. This is not a Critical Race Theory Essay, so I’m not going to read too deep into that except to say they act more like deconstructions of fantasy elves and dwarves than they do real world stereotypes. The lead character is Captain Haruo Sakaki, and you can recognize his first name from the original Godzilla suit actor Haruo Nakajima and his fierce and petulant anger from Attack on Titan’s protagonist Eren Jaeger, but, as you will soon find out, there is a lot more to talk about this trilogy as a whole than what just came before. Still, maybe I should expand on that history first.

 

 

Running between 2009 and 2021, Attack On Titan, originally called Shingeki no Kyojin, is a very popular manga and eventually anime series by Hajime Isayama. The basic premise there is that man-eating ogres called Titans have forced the remnants of humanity that they have not already killed into German towns housed within three massive walls, and everything appears to be somewhere between medieval times and the 1800s, though the title of episode one clarifies that 2000 years of history are relevant to this world. Within the desperate struggle to survive, one teenager is angry enough to try and fight all of the Titans to reclaim his world. That is Eren Jaeger, and his best friends Mikasa and Armin seem skilled and smart enough respectively to help him achieve his goal if they and their allies can survive long enough to see it through. I am trying not to spoil too much…Yet, but that is roughly what you will need to understand going into the first few arcs of AOT. After that point, twists and turns abound with realistic government corruption, dangerous political intrigue, betrayals, doomed love, and a final stretch that decodes the subtext of the Titans and lays bare as text what the whole story was really about the whole time. I think it is really a masterclass and an amazing political thought experiment while delivering on amazing fight scenes. Not everyone sees it that way, and, fair enough, Attack on Titan is not on trial today. Maybe you will prefer the approach of the trilogy. With all this context out of the way, let us begin.

 

So the title is Godzilla: Planet of the Monsters, what if I call it–

 

GODZILLA: Planet of PCP

 

In this film, Haruo is the driver on the mission to return to Earth. Put as simply as possible, he comes up with a battle strategy that could have defeated Godzilla in the past that motivates his human, Exif and Bilusaludo allies to help him test it out.

 

Haruo is very clearly an Eren expy because of his tragic backstory and how that shapes him into an angry yet cunning and charismatic leader among his equals. Eren always wanted to fight for his freedom even when he was a child, but, in episode one, we are there with him when Titans breach Wall Maria and eat his mother in front of him, and, from that point on, we empathize with him and understand why he takes military training so seriously and how he inspires the other cadets in the battle of Trost. Even though Haruo also witnessed Godzilla killing his parents, traumatizing him as a child, the introduction we as the audience get to him is not that, but we see him attempting suicide terrorism, threatening him to blow himself up in an effort to prevent their scout ship from leaving to a nearby prospective planet.

 

Okay there is actually more to it than just that. Haruo justifies his dissidence by giving a fair argument that the central council is knowingly sacrificing the elderly people aboard the ship just to make sure there are less mouths to feed. This is driven by necessity with willing participants as we find out but still represents an inability of the existing governmental structure to take care of its people. This plot point of sending the elderly on a mission outside of the walls also appears in AOT, and it was the first of many scenes showing a logical but terrible human cost to survival, raising the question of if it is worth it. The trilogy does not have the same time or space as a four season show, but this, as the introduction to this question, is sufficient and snappy. Haruo is vindicated as the scout ship explodes, and he is remanded into military custody. And then we learn his backstory. But why, oh why did they choose to write it this way?

 

PCP is not the reason this trilogy is the way it is (that’s post hoc wishful thinking); Gen Urobuchi was the writer, and Kobun Shizuno and Hiroyuki Seshita codirected. As I understand from post-mortem interviews after the fact, Gen Urobuchi is to blame for the nihilism on display, Seshita brought an enthusiasm for using the Godzilla IP and its staples to bring in a new audience, and Shizuno had no prior knowledge of Godzilla and adjusted the other two men’s suggestions into new trajectories. So stuff like the technology obsession and worship migrating from the Xiliens to the Bilusaludo is more likely an inconsistent reference changed by Shizuno than the work of Seshita or Urobuchi, and, well from Gamera Rebirth, we know that the details of Void Ghidorah were precious enough to Seshita to retrofit onto Viras though with a more weighty flesh and blood fight. So all this to say that yes, a trio where one man is writing a depressing treatise on nihilism with franchise references, another guy loves the franchise and wants to expand the audience, and the third guy has no clue of the first thing in the franchise and shoots down or warps the other two guys’ suggestions is absolutely a scenario that fits the PCP abuse side effects of lack of concentration, sense of detachment, and memory loss in a very unique way that I hope you can appreciate.

 

In Attack On Titan, despite being the protagonist through the entire run and the main character by runtime for the first three seasons, Eren is not the narrator; his friend Armin is. And immediately that works into the themes and tone the show is portraying. Armin, as a character, has an unparalleled hope for the future, and framing Eren through his narration allows for us to see a great range of Eren’s emotional capacity. In Planet of The Monsters, Haruo gives the narration of the backstory of the monsters and fall of humanity, and, again, the way that we explore these events are through his perception and worldview, so very angry and bitter. He has characters to balance out his extremism, but the script does not elevate them to major characters until the sequel.

 


It kills me that right after Haruo’s failed suicide terrorism, almost every shot has warm hues cast over it and lights going in and out of focus that make it hard to focus on what we are seeing, but when he literally narrates that he still remembers the flames from Godzilla’s destruction, the shot is the clearest blue it could possibly be. And yes uh I bet you didn’t expect so early to find a match for the blurred vision and dizziness PCP symptoms, but yeah. I didn’t even draw too much attention to those, but already the film is playing along with me here. 

 

Okay, this whole visual element is actually very odd because the characters make a point of space and the Aratrum being functionally a frozen hell. The planet they are seeking, Tau-e, is warm, so it is more interesting to look at complicated shots that incorporate both, but the juxtaposition would be better served if Earth wasn't also blue and Mechagodzilla City also a dead and sterile environment.

 

Okay back to the guiding narration. I actually am a proponent of telling and not showing a good deal of the time. There simply is not enough time in a movie to show everything you need to get across to the audience, especially in diegetic ramblings. I mean that more in the regards to “kaiju started appearing in the late 1990s, Godzilla came last and was unstoppable by human or monster, then the aliens came and also failed to stop him, then the survivors evacuated.” Haruo has a very personal connection to Godzilla that takes a more show don't tell approach, but the majority of information in this flashback has to be told. Still, I do criticize Haruo's moment with Godzilla because I think it could have communicated its point better overall, and actually Attack on Titan does that plot point better so we can look at that again.

 

When it comes to Godzilla's emotions and intent, he is often ambiguous especially now that we don't have the benefit of a human acting in his suit. It is very difficult to understand Shin Godzilla's motivations just looking at him moving forward and spewing beams. Actually ironically enough, that movie has to tell us through the nondiegetic lyrics of Who Will Know what is going through his head. That's not a critique of Shin Godzilla, just evidence of my point. The Godzilla in Minus One is much more easily understandable because you can see his rage when he steps on people, tears through buildings and tries to bite the Shinden. The tooth and nail destruction Godzilla does in the original film is the most visceral, and the crocodile melee crawl and slashing of Kong he does in GvK sticks with you as much as his best atomic breath finishers do.

 

 

Eren Jaeger has to witness a very disturbing Smiling Titan eat his mother, and Haruo has to witness Godzilla shoot down a transport that also contains his parents. This is not a measuring contest, but let us compare for a moment how hard of a punch that packs. Eren is ripped away from the rubble of his home, dragged as he tries to go back and save his mother, while Haruo is at a much safer distance, dragged and unable to go back for a necklace while we don’t even see his parents die. Yes, there is such a thing as subtlety (we’ll actually soon get to why I don’t think this trilogy understands it as well as AOT), but this is supposed to motivate us to follow Haruo on his journey because of our attachment to revenge for what Godzilla did to him. It would be a small change but admittedly might balloon the budget because of this art style to have Godzilla actually crush Haruo’s parents and then we see how Yuko’s grandfather saved him so that his death on the emigration shuttle a scene ago now retroactively carries more weight. This is a minor point; let’s carry on.

 

Haruo finishes his recap monologue by asking variations of the same question why. Why are they still alive? Why did this happen to them? And those are what we will have to examine throughout the film, but he also states that kindness and pride are gone in this Aratrum culture. For one thing, the film will later prove him wrong on the kindness part, and he very clearly is prideful by thinking he is the only one who can or wants to draft a plan to defeat Godzilla, but genuinely having thought about this, I think the only reason he said that is so we can have the immediate juxtaposition to Metphies being nice to Haruo and think ‘maybe this guy is manipulating him,’ Metphies of course being derived from Mephistopheles and being the main Exif character and I guess priest in their religion who offers forgiveness rites to prisoners. 

 

The way that this trilogy builds up to plot twists in comparison to Attack on Titan is a lot more simple. “What if the character that is high up in a cult and literally gives Haruo information about the past while lying to the council is lying to and manipulating Haruo’s psyche and memories?” is one such example. Also, let’s have Haruo ask if the reason this happened to them is that it was an inevitable punishment for humanity but he then says no and that it is because they did not give it their all against Godzilla so that when the trilogy ends and they all failed to kill Godzilla again, the only other option on the table is that it was punishment for humanity and their technology when Godzilla, especially one that is made of plant life, could come from anywhere for any reason.

 

Again I do not want to just say “well this isn’t Attack on Titan so it’s bad.” It is just inviting comparison by ripping off Attack on Titan and then self aggrandizing over its themes and foreshadowing even while it strips down the amount of characterization and action that went hand in hand with AOT’s reveals. 

 

Haruo releases his manifesto/Godzilla battle plan, and it is important enough for the council to discuss it amongst their bleak survival possibilities because everyone on the ship is reading it. Earlier, Haruo broadcast his terroristic opposition to the Tau-e emigration to the entire ship. And this matches how especially pre Trost in Attack on Titan season one, Eren was very charismatic, setting a standard for grit and determination that inspired the other cadets…notably before he had to watch some of them die too. Eren ends up questioning himself a lot after that, but the point that I am making here is that we are entirely replacing the other cadets seeing Eren barely manage to balance in a training ODM gear rig and then realizing that it was busted, and he actually did something more impressive than any of them, we’re replacing that with broadcasts and an anonymous battle plan.

 

Still, this is when the film actually begins to introduce us to more characters. Uh, Colonel Leland, Dr. Martin Lazzari and Adam Bindewald are all white blonde humans with the major design differences being their hair style. Leland we’ll put a pin in since he’s actually my favorite character in this whole trilogy, Adam winds up in Metphies’ religion though in this introductory scene he is very cynical about how quote “the ship leaders turn to the gods, as usual,” and Martin will give exposition about nature but also becomes anti religion once Gen Urobuchi decides Adam isn’t I guess. We have had several shots of Yuko Tani reacting to things, and Metphies has a conversation with one of the Bilusaludo Mulu-elu Galu-gu, which reveals they are on the same page about using Haruo’s research paper to undermine the committee and return to Earth. As the flashback briefly showed, Galu-gu was behind the failed Mechagodzilla project, and Metphies speculates that, had it worked, Mechagodzilla would have then subjugated humanity after Galu-gu insinuates that that was the purpose and aim of the Exif’s cult.

 

Adam’s friend Marco sits with some other characters, who voice an earnest wish to see the real Earth and see the ocean, and if you have experienced Attack on Titan, particularly season 3, you will have in your head how this story would be able to leverage so efficiently two characters talking about wanting to experience the sea. It is the dream that Eren and Armin share but gradually begins to take on a different meaning for each of them. Here, a bunch of nameless extras gather around and instantly see the blue ocean, gazing at how beautiful and blue it is when the ship that was their hell is the same dull blue. Haruo even has his moment of angrily staring at the sea and only seeing their enemy when Attack on Titan used these same pieces to paint a much more poignant picture. 

 

But again this is not about Attack on Titan; it is about how this trilogy’s immaturity seems to manifest as a diluted Attack on Titan. The focus of the scene is on scout drones scanning the new Earth and finding Godzilla. Earlier, Eren’s charisma was replaced by Haruo utilizing technology, and his strategy for defeating Godzilla hinges on details he can only find out through Metphies’ technology and the Gematron calculator, so it is official, that as a motif, this trilogy is diverting from more personal human connection and ingenuity into using technology, so let us put a pin in that.

 

The Captain of the vessel, Unberto Mori realizes with horror that although thousands of years have passed and the terrain has changed, Godzilla still remains on the planet in some form. Haruo also realizes this somehow, but he does not have the benefit of Martin Lazzari’s dissertation to the council on how Godzilla cannot be considered a normal living creature and thus any number of explanations could explain why at least one remains. Metphies pushes for the extermination of Godzilla and negotiates dropping the charges on Haruo, and now Haruo is in front of the committee explaining his plan as good diegetic exposition…until it dips into literal “As You Know” dialogue and I am reminded of my feelings for the trilogy. Mori opposes the plan because it will cost lives, and he does not want to risk the 600 people Haruo needs (Deputy Director Hamamoto also declares it out of the question). Somehow, Haruo gets his way anyway, and I really am not sure of the cause and effect that got us to this point from one scene ago. The council members were discussing how it would drastically affect public perception of them if they were unable to land on Earth, and we never saw Mori too torn up about sacrificing the elderly to Tau-e (even if he did not think that would happen, the calculations given in the film still revealed it was not an optimally safe planet). Unless the Exif and Bilusaludo came together to strongarm the literal captain of their ship, there is really not sufficient justification for Mori to immediately reverse his stance, but we know that isn’t true because somehow human Colonel Elliot Leland becomes commander of the Earth Landing Brigade and not Metphies or Galu-gu.

 

 

Leland is a very different character than Commander Erwin Smith from Attack on Titan, but they share a voice actor, hair color, insubordination to the government and willingness to put their own life on the line in these risky military maneuvers, so the inspiration is evident. Leland’s selfishness is on display sooner, as he claims that defeating Godzilla will appoint a new era for him as a pampered hero, a much more shallow and stock secret motivation than wanting proof that more is outside the walls in order to vindicate your father’s secret theory that you feel a lot of guilt for outing to the government as a child. That contained some spoilers for Erwin, I am sorry, but we are already exposing both the official and hidden motivations for Leland in his first scene, a hallmark of great writing. Where Leland comes into his own as the most dynamic character of the movie though is his past with Haruo. They are childhood friends, and, since Haruo is the criminal on bail that they are technically following in this mission, Leland has to weigh following chain of command against listening to his friend.

 

I am not sure if this is from lack of subtlety in the storytelling, inability to read finer emotions in the art style or to further show Metphies’ manipulation of Haruo’s emotions, but he feels the need to say outright that Haruo is still angry even though he is getting his goal. Haruo responds that he is unsure if everything will go to plan, and Metphies repeats a line from Leland about trusting in a hero, but Metphies says that the hero he trusts in is Haruo. Now, again I mentioned how Eren was singularly confident in himself before he faced any real opposition from the Titans. Haruo said earlier that kindness and pride are dead, so this would almost further that except that his ego clearly informed his terrorism attempt and his confidence in writing, updating regularly and presenting his paper to the leaders of the ship. Heck, forget all that, Leland is Haruo’s childhood friend and is as proud as ever. True, we are only seeing him now after they are within Earth’s orbit, but he had to have this belief to choose to be commander of this mission, and if he was a child same as Haruo when they entered this ship but became his superior, he needed his same motivation to achieve his rank. In any case, it is just strange that Metphies has to elicit in Haruo what his archetype already bore from the beginning, and Metphies’s AOT analog and actual role in this story is a foil to Haruo/Eren.

 

When the party lands, they unload their mechs, traps and command centers to begin their plan. I do not think it productive to give an exact play by play of the conversation between the characters, but Martin slots into the Zoe Hange role from AOT, and Yuko Tani becomes Haruo’s official handler 38 minutes into the film as a scout team goes out, at which point they realize how different the flora/fauna have become. Leaves are sharper than razors, and a masked humanoid watches the operation from the razor bushes. Yuko now explains her motivation; she joined this operation because Haruo was here. She always wanted to meet him and is curious if the central committee used his bombs to destroy the Tau-e shuttle. Haruo shuts this down, stating that he does not want to be so judgmental of humans, but this is against his own philosophy expressed through the opening scene and then the narration of the committee sacrificing them and kindness being dead. Yuko’s grandfather is who saved Haruo as a child and talked him down from his terrorism attempt, so maybe there was a double meaning to his “kindness is dead” remark that he could rediscover in Yuko, but that would be if the trilogy cared about Yuko outside of her obsession with Haruo, which is not likely because instead Haruo blames Godzilla for taking away justice, pride and faith. He says that fighting Godzilla again can take back that dignity, but clearly they never lost pride or faith through Leland and Metphies but also they have a working justice system as he got court martialed for terrorism. This primes us for a story where he realizes they still have humanity, exemplified through Yuko, but she will entirely orbit his character and eventually get fridged to make room for other characters.

 

 

Okay so the three leads of Attack On Titan are Eren Jaeger, Armin Arlert and Mikasa Ackerman. Mikasa is another childhood friend of Eren who the Jaegers took in after human traffickers killed her parents, and the moment when Eren saved her by killing one of the traffickers and then wrapped his scarf around her awoke something in her that indebted her to Eren. This also manifests as romantic feelings as the cast goes from ten years old to mid teens to young adults over the show. Mikasa bears a strength that Eren never gets though, and she has to save him as often as he saves her. Mikasa is the least developed of the three main characters, but she still grows a lot in her outlook, and she winds up the deciding factor of many of the action scenes in the show. Eren, Mikasa and Armin balance each other, and this trilogy took Armin out entirely and relegated Mikasa to a weak damsel that completely loses agency midway through the story. I feel the need to reiterate that Attack On Titan is not the only way to tell a story of this scale, but legitimately, as I think you will come to see, this trilogy is the kind of story where failing the Bechdel test legitimately does make it is somewhat misogynistic, and Mikasa is an example of a well written character that is still obsessed with the main hero that they chose to deviate from because their inspiration was clearly AOT.

 

The party stumbles upon the ruins of some buildings that have almost transformed into the Earth. As Martin explains, lichen attached itself to the buildings’ rubble and fossilized, with further flora growing on top of that. Haruo loses his balance, a symptom of PCP addiction, nah kidding he intentionally drops to his knees, and declares, as the music swells that “Although we’ve forgotten, this planet has always remembered us,” and that they must take it back. This is a very effective emotional moment, but we have to actually examine what happened here because Haruo is wrong and that is part of the point of this whole trilogy. As we learn in scenes before and after this one, the florafauna of the Earth changed while they were gone. 

 

Leaves are stronger than steel, and the native animals are just as strong but seem like offshoots of Godzilla; these Servum as they are called attack the base camp, and this batch is winged but there are also terrestrial ones later. The metallic and magnetic properties of the Servum and the plants are in common with Godzilla, and the trilogy later confirms it is not Godzilla’s doing but natural mimicry across nature. So nature has absorbed the humans’ buildings, yes, but did so to become Godzilla. There is an old poster that came out before we knew much about what the 2014 film would entail, I believe it was a Comic Con exclusive, and it showed building rubble coalescing into an effigy of Godzilla. It equates Godzilla with destruction and dominion over what he has destroyed. A Monster-Planet (now you can see why I said that title made more sense) growing over the remains of humanity is a win condition for Godzilla not an inspiring moment for humanity. Haruo is of course allowed to be wrong, he’ll be wrong a lot, it just is important to note that as often as it happens.


 

Leland listens to Martin’s explanation of the florafauna and comes to the reasonable conclusion that they need to retreat, saying it would be the height of stupidity to fight Godzilla for a planet like this. Haruo has an emotional attachment obviously to staying but he gets so angry at this that he literally attacks his good friend Leland, pinning him up against the wall. Haruo confronts Leland on abandoning his goal of being humanity’s hero by taking down Godzilla, and Leland, again correctly, explains that they have already taken heavy losses, their manpower is not trained in fighting, and he frankly underestimated the mission. Now, since Leland is now abdicating the “hero of humanity” title, and Metphies applied it to Haruo’s holy mission, we can fairly expect it to be Haruo that this journey immortalizes into some kind of legend (we’ll get there) and not Leland. Now notably, Metphies followed these two when they ran off, so he is able to manipulate Leland by saying he agrees with him, but the Servum damaged their equipment so they cannot leave. Metphies keeps going, explaining that the only plan for retreat they even have is pretty much verbatim the choreography of Haruo’s attack plan. Later, Metphies tells Haruo that he knows that Godzilla will not let them escape and will seek them out.

 

There’re certainly things to appraise as well or poorly written in this trilogy, and that’s not my focus here. The movie has been functionally speaking good so far. Haruo is not going to have an arc until the next film, the side characters are more of a Greek chorus than individuals, and the specific details built up in this movie are going to destroy some plot points of the later films, but, so far, nothing has contradicted itself, and I think Leland’s arc ground this film pretty well. Still, now Godzilla shows up, and we have another point of comparison to AOT.

 

Eren Jaeger winds up in military custody after his actions in the Battle of Trost, and, after a trial, Captain Levi becomes Eren’s official handler, Levi being humanity’s strongest soldier, a very dynamic role that toes the line between mentor and main cast member. Levi’s deal is that he is so strong and skilled that eventually he has to watch everyone around him die. His “Levi Squad” consists of very skilled handpicked soldiers, and, on a mission outside of the walls midway through season one, they are responsible for protecting Eren. Now, at that point, an intelligent 15 meter Titan starts hunting after Eren, and Levi Squad races through a wooded area as this huge Titan follows them. Levi Squad begs Eren to trust them and not go off and fight the Titan by himself. Eventually, Levi Squad has to fight this Titan because the plan did not work, and Eren chooses to believe in them. Levi tells him that, after all of these missions, he does not know which is the correct option, if he should trust in his comrades or in himself. Levi tells Eren to “do as his conscious dictates,” and then Eren watches this intelligent Titan systematically kill the other soldiers in Levi Squad, and then Eren fights the Titan himself. That scene is so crucial to the entire show and Eren’s development, and Planet of the Monsters has a scene so similar I think the inspiration is clear. (Just so you know that the reference is possible, you should know this movie came out in 2017, and season one dropped in 2013, so yeah they had time to copy this part.)

 

When Godzilla appears, it is in a wooded area where he poses a big danger to their convoy. Even though by all accounts, Yuko is Haruo’s official handler, Metphies has control over Hauro’s handcuffs and releases him. Specifically, Metphies says the words, “Do as your soul is crying out to do,” and Haruo races off on a speeder to fight Godzilla. In this case, he wants to record Godzilla’s force field pattern, which is crucial to his annihilation strategy, but all of the speeder’s attacks are too light so he preps a kamikaze run. This is at the beginning of Haruo’s journey, and it would be rather embarrassing if this exact visual becomes the wrap-around to the end of his arc, but I digress. Delusions of grandeur and inflated strength as well as violent suicidal actions are side effects of PCP use. Taking a scene that was so complex and driven by the strong personalities of a large cast and turning it into Haruo distracting Godzilla to selfishly advance his plan while killing himself is just so weird to see as a consumer of both pieces of media.

 

The only reason Haruo does not go through with it is because Leland commandeers some heavier artillery to get Godzilla’s attention, and Godzilla returns fire, killing Leland. As I am rewatching and reviewing this, I am realizing that this film is rather light on Leland, and this is not a case where he has a top 10 or even top 20 character arc in this franchise, but I gravitated toward him because his is the only character arc in the film, he is a well-intentioned and level headed character, and the conflict between his ideals and Haruo’s is actually very interesting in a movie where the only other main character is Metphies, who just agrees with Haruo. I like Leland because he had a simple arc of choosing between his military role or his childhood friend, that is to say choosing between what is best for humanity and his childish goal of being the ultimate hero, and it always felt to me watching this movie that there was a complexity to his choices instead of just vague confused writing that I see in the trilogy as a whole. He died to save another soldier, but that soldier was specifically Haruo, and, in so doing, he helped Haruo get the data he needed for the plan Leland at least professionally opposed (but Leland must have been on board enough to initially take the mission).

 

Metphies immediately defers leadership to Haruo, which confirms they will do his plan. Despite there being an entire chain of command composed of a coalition of three humanoid species, Haruo’s acceptance speech is enough to convince everybody there not to mutiny and instead follow him to their certain death fighting Godzilla. Again, AOT being a good show is not really relevant to this point, but this specific plot point made a lot more sense when it was cadet Eren Jaeger who finished top 10 of his training year inspiring other cadets, one of which was Armin, in the lead-up to the Battle of Trost. There is no reason that Adam Bindewald, Belu-be, Galu-gu and Martin should all listen to Haruo, and we cannot argue that the earlier scenes of Haruo not being confident in this mission means he had an arc because he was willing to ask the entire ship to implement this plan anonymously and then also presented it to the central committee. Nothing changed in Haruo from the beginning even though his friend died saving him from recklessly carrying out this plan. The Servum swarm also poses a major roadbloack in operational security.

 

Godzilla’s part of the battle is looking around and firing his beam. Throughout the entire trilogy, Godzilla will be very sluggish and lethargic, another symptom of PCP we haven’t covered yet, and believe me it is actually very notable how lethargic this Godzilla is. During Leland’s death, Haruo’s attacks were not hard enough to register on Godzilla’s force field, and yet after sustaining those, a volley of shots from Leland that did register on the force field and shooting one atomic breath at Leland, Godzilla was spent and retreated instead of finishing off the people Metphies was so sure he would not let escape. This is not even a case like in Minus One where using the beam hurts him. He got so tired from doing nothing that he had to retreat. And Godzilla will spend most of film 2 and like half of film 3 sleeping, actually Godzilla has spent most of this film sleeping, and you’ll find out soon enough how I can say that so confidently.

 

After a battle where Godzilla can barely register how fast (comparatively) the machinery around him is moving, Godzilla explodes. Now this still required Haruo risking his life, but it kind of screwed with the stakes because no one saved Haruo, he just managed to survive the guns shooting on his power suit like there was no tomorrow. Okay so Godzilla just died, and we’ve got 14 more minutes and then two more movies. Martin starts talking to Haruo, because Martin is the exposition guy as I am sure you remember, about how biologically the Godzilla they just killed is unlikely to be the real capital G Godzilla let’s say because nature always changes. And yeah that wasn’t the Godzilla this trilogy bears in its title. That 50 meter creature was Godzilla Filius, and the original Godzilla now wakes up, demolishing the mountain he was sleeping under because he is 300 meters tall and has a beard. Okay so anyway he issues a super oscillatory wave out of his mouth and creates a huge shockwave from whipping his tail, and that destroys at least the vehicle Haruo was in, knocking him out. 

 

 

It is difficult to actually use the built in stopping points of these films for one thing because it is meant as one big story but also because the novel adaptations literally chopped the second film in half in order to make the whole story just two books.

Even so, we will stop here for now. The video upload (Godzilla's Anime Trilogy: Attack On Titan On PCP) of this still wound up at an hour and thirty seven minutes (the whole thing was 15,000 words), and I invite you to watch the video while you wait for the next part of the transcript. Also, watch Attack on Titan in the meantime, as the next parts will significantly spoil several plot points.

Friday, March 20, 2026

Andy Milligan film The Degenerates fascinates as dysfunctional, chaotic science fiction cult

 



Review by Doug Gibson


If you're an Andy Milligan fan, or just a fan of the exploitation film genre of the 60s and early 70s, the "holy grail" arrived last year when two long-lost Andy Milligan films turned up. "The Degenerates" and "Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me!" Both premiered at Tribeca and have screened a few times since.


Most of us had to wait until this month when Severin shipped the Blu-Ray set, packed with lots of extras, including a new Milligan documentary, "The Degenerate: The Life and Films of Andy Milligan," and versions of the existing but obscure "Compass Rose" and "House of the Seven Belles." In a few days I have devoured this set and will fill this year with posts on Plan9Crunch.


THE DEGENERATES, 1967


Let's get right to the first review. This is one of the lost Milligan films I most wanted to see. A science fiction adult exploitation flick, "The Degenerates" was filmed in the future New York Woodstock area. I think in spirit this film is close to Milligan's "Seeds." The raw family dysfunction bleeds on the screen and gets more chaotic and violent with a strong finale. And "The Degenerates" provides a stronger backstory to its drama than "Seeds" did. This version is 64 minutes. It omits 10 minutes of nudity and soft-core sexual situations. Those scenes are still lost.


The film begins with three soldiers on patrol in the eastern United States. Nuclear wars have killed most of civilization. The soldiers discover a woman frolicking in the wilds. Surprised to see any humans, they chase her to a dilapidated, large farmhouse with battered sheds and a junked vehicle.


The soldiers encounter five sisters, Violet, (Bryarly Lee), Daisy, (Anne Linden), Lily, (Laura Cunningham, as Laura Weiss), Iris, (Marcia Haufrecht, as Marcia Howard), and Rose (Susan Howard). Later the soldiers will discover a sixth sister, Ivy, (Hope Stansbury), who is traumatized and lives a near-feral existence outside. 





Violet, the leader of the sisters, is very hostile to the soldiers but allows them to stay. One soldier is nursing a broken foot. Initially, all three soldiers appear accommodating. However, one will reveal himself to be violent and a rapist. However, even before that escalation Violet's hostility toward her sisters will lead to vicious attacks on two of her siblings and eventually violent deaths to some of the characters.


Lee was an accomplished stage actor and gives the best performance in the film. Her Violet is an authority figure who quickly loses her self-control and sanity when the soldiers and three of her sisters initiate intimate relationships. Something has triggered Violet into acts of sadism. She savagely beats Daisy and burns Lily's hand on a stove. Watching Lee reminds viewers of family matriarch Maggie Rogers' savage, screaming performance in the later Milligan film "Seeds." Lee's Violet seems a younger version of Rogers' character but not yet the hard shell.


There's a suffering vulnerability in Violet. She's clearly been traumatized and wants to be relieved of it. She's closest to her sibling Rose (Susan Howard). Clearly triggered by the men and the ensuing intimacy she can't snuff out, Violet attempts incest with Rose. In what is a patented compelling but deeply uncomfortable Milligan sequence, Rose is repulsed by her seduction attempt, and screaming ensues.


Lee is superb. She may soon become a favored Milligan actress if "The Naked Witch," another lost Milligan film, is discovered. According to a commentary from Milligan historian Alex DiSanto, Lee was notable for her extreme focus on her work during the shoot.


In one scene involving Lee, she commits a Milligan-esque killing with what seems deliberate religious symbolism. Or maybe I'm overanalyzing? Readers can let me know.


Hope Stansbury is iconic within the Milligan genre for her willowy beauty. She gives the second-best performance as the mentally ill Ivy. She and Violet have a savage hatred for each other, which is revealed in the climax. A strong scene for Stansbury is when Ivy shows her soft heart by visiting the beaten Daisy, laying in pain in a shed. Ivy feeds her and tries to tend to her wounds. She also helps further Daisy's romance.




Linden as Daisy gives a good performance as a vulnerable, scared sibling wanting love. She's in several Milligan films, including "The Ghastly Ones." Haurfrecht as Ivy is still active in films today, with an impressive career. She's perhaps the strongest weaker sibling, standing up to Violet's violent control tactics. She's romanced by actor Robert Burgos, who plays the soldier, Jim. He's the best actor of the three men cast and has enjoyed a distinguished acting career. The other soldiers were Vernon Newman and David Blaine.


Laura Weiss as Lily was 18 and plucked off a college campus by a Milligan talent scout (Hal Sherwood?). It's her only film and she does herself proud. Weiss is interviewed on the Blu-Ray set. She's written a couple of memoirs including one on the film's shoot. Not much is known about Susan Howard as Rose but she's effective on screen. Her expressive eyes when she realizes Violet wants to make love to her is a highlight.


The film is photographed in pure Milligan Auricon 16-MM style. Closely framed shots, the actors usually bunched together to hide small sets. Despite the battered print, you can see the dirt, the tired faces, the tattered burlap Milligan-sown tank top-like middies worn by the women, the sweat and blemishes on the faces. The dialogue sound is loud, you can hear the Auricon whirring. The house is more than rustic. It must have been a chore for the actors to survive the shoot. DiSanto in his commentary says it was reputedly haunted. DiSanto recalls a love scene shot inside a filthy outside building having to be re-shot the next day due to a lighting mishap. 


In interviews though, actors recollect the experience fondly. Even Milligan seems to have been even-tempered overall. The only remembrance of frustrations for Milligan was with the novice Weiss.


The film cost $11,000. It was shot in about a week. It was not produced by William Mishkin but was part of an ill-fated three-film effort with three investors who went bankrupt, distributor Jerry Balsam, and Milligan. Sam Sherman was lightly involved. He apparently came up with the title. It was shot as Sin Sisters. The film was profitable, but Milligan was squeezed out. He later sued and collected a few thousand dollars for all three films, a poor return for him.


Weiss recalls standing much later outside a building where Milligan was inside shouting for the $200 she had been promised. It worked. She was paid. In 1966, $200 was slightly more than $2,000 today.


I love this film. It met my expectations as a Milligan cult fan. It has the "Gutter Auteur"'s signature uniqueness that is splashed all over the 20-plus films he directed in his most-active several years. We're not done with the Blu-Ray set. Next, we'll review and provide observations on the re-discovered "Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me!"


One more tidbit. Yes, the swirl camera and pitchfork are in "The Degenerates."

Tuesday, February 10, 2026

Lugosi is magnificent in the oft overlooked Murders in the Rue Morgue

 


---


As the reader can note above, Plan9Crunch recently received a PDF copy of Angels and Ministers of Grace Defend Us! More Dark Alleys of Classic Horror Cinema, McFarland, 2024, by genre author Gregory William Mank. It's an excellent read. Mank's style of blending history, film news, drama, gossip -- and impromptu profiles of film principals -- is on display.  However, there's too much information to write a simple book review. Over the next couple of years, I'll review a chapter on a film, with links to purchase the book. Here's the McFarland link.


Mank can surprise us with gathered facts. Take Murders in the Rue Morgue, 1932, the first chapter of the book. I always thought it failed at the box office. But I'm wrong. It nabbed a modest profit, $63,000, for Universal after the big hits of Dracula and Frankenstein. But nevertheless, it caused professional decay to Bela's career. His inability to get a major role in Frankenstein, followed by the major success of Frankenstein and subsequently Boris Karloff replacing Bela as Universal's top horror star, was the embryo of his troubled screen career.


Mank notes that in post-Dracula Hollywood a serial assaulter/killer of women called "The Ape Man" terrified Los Angeles. The killer was never caught. The author compares this historical anecdote with the emergence of Charles Gemora's creepy gorilla in Murders in the Rue Morgue. Lugosi, after James Whale froze him out of Frankenstein, was assigned the title role of Doctor Mirakle. Robert Florey, edged out of Frankenstein, directed. He replaced the Spanish Dracula's director George Melford, also edged out of a plum directing assignment.


In the essay, Mank relates that Murders in the Rue Morgue caught the attention of the Hollywood code police and state censors. I had always thought that it seemed a tamer film but Mank notes that in its release form it is very pre-code. At the Grand Guignol opening scene, Lady Fatima and her Arab Angels perform a revealing "strip dance" that focuses on the middle front portion of the dancers' bodies. Men leer openly. Various censors scissored this scene.


Also, more provocative is Arlene Francis' short performance. After Mirakle snatches her streetwalker character from the dark streets, we quickly cut to Francis, terrified, screaming, in agony and dying, on an X-shaped cross. A crazed Mirakle is hoping that her blood will match with the blood of Erik, his gorilla. Although it's never specifically mentioned, it's clear today -- and I'm sure in 1932 -- to audiences that Mirakle plans to mate the gorilla with the woman. It doesn't happen, as a furious Mirakle accuses the streetwalker's blood of being "rotten." The death then occurs and Lugosi tells his black servant Janos (Noble Johnson) to drop her into the Seine, which flows below. This scene was scissored by some censors too in 1932.


One more pre-code scene later is when Erik attacks the mother of the film's heroine in her home. The gorilla kills her brutally in a manner that suggests a rape, as Mank notes. The gorilla then stuffs her corpse face first up the chimney and escapes with her daughter, Camille (Sidney Fox), back to Mirakle's lair to possibly "match" her blood with Erik's.


According to Mank's research, Lugosi was withdrawn and mostly silent during film production. Mank surmises that Lugosi may have sensed that Florey didn't like directing him. The director, we learn, would have preferred less Doctor Mirakle in the finished product. Another reason may be that Bela resented Sydney Fox being the nominal star of the film. Fox was alleged to be the current mistress of Universal honcho Carl Laemmle Jr. She's pleasant to look at, but her acting is poor in the film, in my opinion.





Readers may note that I have not mentioned most other principal actors. The reason is nearly all are mediocre and offer virtually no quality to the film. Leon Waycoff (later Leon Ames) is the romantic lead and he is just terrible. He makes David Manners look like an Oscar-quality actor. He giggles and preens with his love, Camille, which is appropriate since Fox's acting trends the same. Later in the film he whines when Camille is in mortal danger.


Ames did enjoy a long career in film. He was an established character actor. I once noticed him in a 1967 The Andy Griffith Show episode, playing a prudish high school principal.


Sidney Fox, as Mank relates, had an unhappy future. She was out of films by 1935 and spent her personal life in an unhappy, on-again-off-again marriage. In 1942 she was discovered dead in her bed with an empty prescription bottle.


Some actors with small parts who are good are D'Arcy Corrigan as the morgue keeper, Noble Johnson as Janos, Lugosi's strong man, and Arlene Francis in her small role as the streetwalker. Gemora is effective as the gorilla, but Florey made the post-filming error of using shots of a real gorilla in facial closeups. It's a big mistake. It looks forced and lessens the screen impact of Erik.


Lugosi, as mentioned, is magnificent in the film. In the opening scene, viewers can't help cheering the crazed doctor as he defends "science" against the religious intolerants in the audience that boo his Darwin theories. As a mad doctor, he is implacable, full of mad righteous fury in his desire to grab the comely virgin Camille to experiment with. He delivers his dialogue, not just vocally but with strong facial expressions and body movement. Lugosi is the reason this film, which suffers when Bela is not on film, earned a profit.


Florey, as Mank notes, showed off his skill at creating scenarios that matched the plot. He writes: "Cinematically, the film is still a dazzler. Florey and Freund (Karl Freund is the cinematographer) make Paris so Caligari-esque that one almost expects Conrad Veidt's Cesare to step out of the myriad of shadows and join Erik during the rooftop chase. While the film is set in Paris, it as the scent -- perhaps more than any other 1932 Hollywood movie -- of depraved and decadent Weimar Berlin."


Even with the colorless Fox and Waycoff, Florey's scene of Sidney being pushed on a swing is an act of cinema elegance and beauty. Even the scene with Francis, dying in a skimpy garment and tattered boots, crucified on an X-shaped cross, has a dark beauty.


To avoid the stretches of needless comedy and poor acting, I've thought that Murders in the Rue Morgue might have been improved -- and perhaps retain a better legacy -- had Florey began the film with the streetwalker scene and profane crucifixion. It's a well-shot, fascinating horror scene. Its early inclusion would not have hurt the pace too much as the Grand Guignol sequence is very impressive.


Murders in the Rue Morgue is easy to find and buy inexpensively. It occasionally pops up on Turner Classic Movies. Mank did a fine job of telling its history in Angels and Ministers of Grace Defend Us ... and we will explore more films in the book in the future.


-- Doug Gibson


Thursday, January 15, 2026

More Mini Reviews of Ultraman Omega; Episodes 10 to 17

 

By Joe Gibson

 

In case you missed it, this is the follow-up to a previous blog post giving some brief (eh, I tried) thoughts on the first nine episodes of the latest Ultraman show (https://planninecrunch.blogspot.com/2025/08/some-truncated-thoughts-on-ultraman.html). I have not watched many Ultraman shows in full, but I still enjoyed those early episodes as well as any of the tokusatsu shows I have seen and even more than many of them. Starting off very strong, dipping only a little bit in quality and returning with very strong episodes, where we left off, this show had a strong fighting chance of going down as one of my favorites. But can it keep that trajectory going or will the persistent issues with side characters and keeping Ayumu in the dark of Omega’s true nature turn into systemic flaws in the story? Find out after a brief disclaimer. 

 

Now, quite obviously, as this is going up now of all times when the show is literally about to end on the 16th, I have taken quite a large break in my coverage on this show. Frankly, I fell behind due to schoolwork and then still had to balance other projects in the off month. The finale of the show is about to debut, and it seems there will be no movie this time. I will try to keep the content coming pertaining to Ultraman Omega though I may need some time, and I hope you all will bear with me.

 

Episode 10 - 715 words

 

 

In this episode, a documentarian friend of Ayumu's films Sorato and Kosei, trying to understand what their secret is. Despite the conflict inherent to this setup, she is not an antagonist, and it is Sorato and Kosei who bicker over the course of the episode. The documentarian, by her own account, hopes her footage will help people because those not named Sorato or Kosei are unable to deal with the kaiju when they show up. She also either already has or develops in this episode an obsession with the Red Giant Omega and might not even be a documentarian but still does demonstrate journalistic efforts that frame the entire episode. 

 

It just gets more baffling how poorly the show portrayed Wolfy every time an episode cuts a new angle on how the media influences public thought about the kaiju. Rather than keep harping on Wolfy though, I think I should reframe how I have been thinking about those subplots. This is a television show, not a series of movies, and part of me realizes that because I'm not reviewing these episodes individually (except that one time for episode 9: https://planninecrunch.blogspot.com/2025/09/a-marxist-analysis-of-ultraman-omega.html). Though it is still absolutely fair to expect an episode to function on its own, the themes emerge not from individual episodes but how they flow together. 

 

The show is about Sorato, Kosei, Ayumu, and the three or four Meteokaiju, but we met these characters one by one. Similarly, the media's reporting on Omega and the kaiju is clearly a notable motif building to a theme, but it seems they were starting out vapid and overly simplified with Wolfy to build from there with the radio hosts feeding Nariaki's obsession and then those same hosts indirectly supporting Kanenari’s harebrained scheme to now this and beyond. (Here, the character Mak makes strong rhetorical appeals justifying her documentary uncovering Sorato’s secret, but it still ends silly so we have more of whatever arc this is to go before it finishes. I will officially predict an Imitation Ultraman episode at this point, but we will see if that comes to pass.) Though I brought up soundtrack, suit construction and closed captions gaffes as the systemic trends to watch, I think it is actually probably more productive to take note of the progression of common tropes in these episodes. (There was a memorable musical composition toward the end of the episode though.)

 

It seemed like the conflict between Sorato and Kosei was going to be resolved in the space of a single monologue from Mak, but, luckily, they held off on the resolution of that until the climactic fight against Demaaga, in such a way that actually kind of redeemed that childish plotline for me. As quick gag during the final battle, we see that Rekiness and Trigaron are also bickering to mirror our two leads (this could mean that, since Kosei is psychically linked to them, their feud could actually be fueling his part of the fight, but more likely, it is just a joke). This dispute ends with the long awaited return of Rekiness to the battlefield and as armor because Rekiness can more effectively counter the projectiles Demaaga can launch from his back. Also, to show off how well Kosei and Sorato work together even during a fight, the Sorato armor uses Rekiness’ powers.

 

But uh I should probably explain the MOTW. Demaaga is evidently one of the “Not Godzilla” monsters in Ultraman, possessing jagged dorsal spines, an overall reptilian build and a heat beam. Funnily enough, the Not Godzillas I am used to from this IP are Gomess and Jirass, both of whom were made from a Godzilla suit. In this episode, Demaaga seems to be burning hot pretty much the entire time and constantly spewing projectiles in the final fight to where, even though he is not necessarily stronger than previous monsters, the fight is harder.

 

If you’re still wondering whether or not Sorato will tell his secret to Mak or Ayumu, he reveals he certainly intends to, just when the moment is right so if you want to guess how many more episodes it will take, I now know. Just keep your guess in mind and keep reading, let us know in a comment if you got it right.

 

Episode 11 - 766 words

 

 

Episode 11 Graim Returns has a lot to juggle. This episode is the first obligatory two-parter (an Ultra show is liable to have up to five of these) that usually occurs because the MOTW is just that strong or the internal stakes just that important or emblematic of the whole show to have just one episode one. As the actual midpoint of the show is nearing, this two-parter will help to ease us into that transition, hinting at the developing attack team and a new series regular to lead it, Ayumu’s mentor Sayuki Uta. 

 

At the same time, Kosei feeling left out of Sorato’s heroic antics that was important at least in episodes 4 and 5 comes back to drive the interpersonal conflict here, and the radio hosts’ input now confirms that Omega is not polling well among the public. (Kosei starts getting upset about the former and then vents to Sorato about the latter.) With 14 percent undecided and 37 percent of responses against Omega, the remaining positive 49 percent is the textbook “plurality not majority” that could lead us to an episode wherein the attack team hunts Omega too. (I am holding out hope for an Alien Zarab Imit-Omega type scenario so that it doesn’t come out of nowhere if they do.)

 

The main criticisms for the episode I have seen have to do with Kosei and Sorato themselves. Kosei, already feeling left out and doubly on edge for the public’s growing disdain for his illegal alien friend, insists on tagging along with Sorato the fight scene and even pulls out a meteokaiju prematurely despite Sorato’s objections. Sorato saves Kosei twice, but the MOTW is too powerful, and a finisher evocative of Galactron’s against Ultraman Orb plays out to close out the episode. The criticisms are that Kosei is too reckless (to an out of character degree) and that Sorato is far too weak as he takes more damage protecting Kosei than usual. For that second point, ever since Ultraseven established that Ultras can take on human forms, they have always been vulnerable in that human form, so that is actually not an issue in the slightest. Kosei, well, for one thing, he has always been very frenetic because his role in the trio is of a peacekeeper trying to keep Sorato’s secret while including Ayumu no matter how weird that makes him look. 

 

In the past, Kosei stood up for Omega publicly and then activated a meteokaiju in full view of a crowd, so when the pressure reaches enough, he will certainly act irresponsibly for a good cause. From Kosei’s perspective, Sorato going out fighting Leodo without him and then losing public trust activates Kosei’s own insecurities while actually removing the crucial layer of protection to Sorato that Kosei represents. Now is the best time for Kosei to learn this lesson (so that he can be smarter going into the second half), so I have no issue with him in this episode, but I will ask you to draw your own conclusions.

 

While I predicted Graim’s return, I did not expect it to be a second specimen of the species or that it would not be the sole MOTW. Leodo, from Ultraman Arc returns here, and the reason why Leodo and Graim II are even rampaging is because of yet another kaiju, the actual one to beat in these episodes, is agitating them from deep below the Earth. This means that after an Omega v Leodo fight with an excellent finisher and a Graim II v Trigaron fight, the actual final battle is the Mexican Standoff of Omega, Graim II, and the true threat Eldeghimera. I already really liked Graim but this more amoral turn just increases his cool factor to me. Unfortunately, Eldeghimera defeats him and assimilates him because his gimmick is being a gluttonous chimera, evident through his drooping tongue sticking out during most scenes.

 

Graim’s showing here genuinely raises his place in the kaiju ranking for me. He’s such a cool kaiju mechanically to go up against an Ultra or another kaiju with his horn beam and sharp claws in his stance somewhere between bipedal and quadrupedal. Tsuburaya, please bring this guy back for a third episode if not here, then in the next show. If you can give both Alien Baltan and Alien Barossa three episodes each in a show, you can do it for Graim. (When asked incredulously that another Graim exists, Sorato responds that multiple humans exist, so that implies there are a lot of these guys.) I will save my thoughts on Eldeghimera for the next episode’s review.

 

Episode 12 - 855 words

 

 

Following up on last episode, Sorato, having functionally sacrificed himself for Kosei (and incidentally survived) very calmly and contentedly eats Kosei’s yakisoba (the first meal he ever got from Kosei), then, just as calmly, declares he is going to leave Kosei. Kosei, lacking the emotional maturity to resolve this without guidance from a wiser character like his boss or Ayumu (this is technically an annoying trait, but if Kosei grows from it, that will make it cathartic instead) storms off to leave the situation. This brings him into the orbit of Sayuki Uta, Ayumu’s mentor, who bosses Kosei around and chides him but also genuinely isolates his positive qualities and inspires him, a sort of motherly influence.

 

What watching this episode made me realize about this show is that the reason why I have such a difficult time deciding Sorato to be the protagonist over Kosei is because even Sorato is the one with the amnesia with the need to find himself in the world, the forming group is a found family for Kosei and not Sorato. Kosei claims Sorato as a cousin, even providing that identity but calls Ayumu a big sister like influence for him (where Sorato and Ayumu interact more like equals), Kosei’s boss is a father figure letting him stay in the warehouse while he figures out what he wants to do with his life, Sayuki is a motherly figure and a mentor to Ayumu, and their other friend Nariaki is Kosei’s neighbor not Sorato’s. 

 

Sorato often learns the episode’s lesson through being an outsider looking in at Kosei’s life or, as was the case in episode 5, through leaving Kosei’s environment entirely to watch another family’s conflicts. Sorato probably does not have a family he can call his own right now (hence why he feels like an intrusion that has forced Kosei into the superheroics), and, so even though I know Kosei and Sorato need to stay together for the runtime of the show at least, I do understand why Sorato thinks he needs to leave. And the show built up to this point organically (though it did require the circumstance of an especially strong monster and especially frazzled Kosei).

 

Speaking of the monster, Ayumu struggles to identify any base animal that can inspire it, settling on the Chimera though since the name becomes Eldeghimera, it would probably be spelled as something closer to Kimera (キメラ), because the K can become G in Japanese through adding Dakuon marks (since the Vagsect incident last time, I have learned a little bit more about Japanese writing and sounds). Anyway, Eldeghimera continues its rampage, coming across another Dugrid and assimilating it. Kosei found a sample of the so-called Ghimera cells at one of the rampage sites, and Ayumu is able to study it, drafting a plan that involves shocking the cells with energy and implementing the Graim tranquilizer they previously developed.

 

After the use of some Mechagodzilla esque-shock anchors (that fail to do anything but charge up Eldeghimera’s Graim beam), Omega rises again, to shield the researchers and military presence. The battle includes wrestling, Grain’s beam and even Dugrid’s poison gas. Ayumu witnesses Kosei running up to the battle dramatically and activating Rekiness to help Omega by telekinetically hooking up the shock anchors into Eldeghimera. 

 

In these last few episodes, it seems like Kosei generally prefers Trigaron, only pulling out Rekiness when there is a tactical advantage, and, while the telekinesis was crucial here, it also seemed like Rekiness himself wanted to be chosen here. This is probably meant to be as redemption for Rekiness being unable to come out last episode due to Kosei’s exhaustion, but I think the show is rather vague about where Kosei begins and the Meteokaiju end (his eyes light up when they do something special, when he is bickering with Sorato they bicker with each other, and he literally tells them what to do). So we shall see if the show develops more into these themes. (One of the biggest fan theories for this show is that Ayumu will end up in control of Trigaron because she always wears yellow and Kosei wears blue, and that is a distinct possibility now that she has seen Kosei activate Rekiness.)

 

After the shock anchors cleanse Eldeghimera of Graim and Dugrid and the Rekiness sword chops up the monster, Ayumu confronts Kosei about what she just saw, and he runs off. Sorato and Kosei reconcile, with Kosei confirming that his arc has been more about fitting in and seeking approval than Sorato’s has been. Still, they bond over their shared desire to help people, and Sorato comments that he needs Kosei. Ultimately, this is an Ultraman two parter at its best, using the two episodes to effectively set up and pay off character arcs that make sense in the context of a truly beastly monster. This two parter does a great job fleshing out Kosei and Sorato while finally letting Ayumu find out at least part of their secret and serving as an effective introduction for Sayuki and reminding us how cool Graim and Dugrid were. Eldeghimera himself seems to be a new suit.

 

Episode 13 - 615 words

 

 

Alright, this is another recap episode, but this one actually is a canon mainline numbered episode and actually justifies its existence pretty well. As YouTube user JR201049 pointed out in the comment section, “It’s a compilation, but it’s a drama that’s mostly just about two or three people,” and, yes, this episode is about the fallout of Ayumu witnessing Sorato doing three impossible things in the time she has known him and Kosei blatantly controlling a Meteokaiju in front of her. It is genuinely an important episode to progress these characters in the story as we head into the second half of the show with a different status quo.

 

The basic setup here is that Kosei has invited Ayumu over to explain what she saw, and Kosei and Sorato put their heads together in retrospect to make a “cheat sheet” to explain in detail the events surrounding the Meteokaiju and maybe Omega in general as well. Just as has been established, Kosei tries to keep them on track when Sorato starts remembering just the meals they have had and the kaijus’ names. However, a Pigmon is lurking in the warehouse as the MOTW on a technicality.

 

When Ayumu gets there, they start to explain but Pigmon comes out, and the gentle way they deal with the human sized kaiju prompts her to have memories of the two of them being sweet goofballs. She drops a nugget of information that could wildly change the worldbuilding of the show or be a throwaway line: kaiju are starting to awaken all over the world just not with any incidents worse than what they have dealt with in Japan. In any case, Sorato goes to fly Pigmon home, and Ayumu and Kosei talk one on one.

 

Within the NDF that has been stepping up in these last few episodes to defend the public, Mr. Taira is the lead officer, and Ayumu reflects on how, in the last episode, Taira seemed to understand that Omega was trying to help them, even adding that positive opinion on Omega in the NDF is increasing. This is also another example of a minor moment spent on Omega’s reputation that should pay off eventually (episode 12 was a better exploration of Kosei and Sorato than I expected, so I have high hopes for the payoff of other motifs and themes throughout the end).

 

Ayumu adds that she believes Omega is fighting for humanity and that, on her way over to learn the truth, she was wondering if she really should. Her memories convinced her that she wants to remain friends with the pair keeping things the same they have always been. The conversation is coded as if Ayumu realizes Sorato is likely Omega but does not want to think about it. This is not really relevant to the recap, but on the dining room table, you can see that they still have bananas but also have Pringles right next to them (so Kosei’s money troubles are seemingly resolved).

 

I liked this episode a lot even though the only kaiju in it was Pigmon (and he didn’t even die), and I respect the behind the scenes efficiency to have this episode be the recap episode and thus draw from all of the previous episodes to tie together this plot line. That said, outside of meta reasons, this was pretty late for Ayumu to learn the identities (especially when Wolfy and a crowd of people saw Kosei activating Trigaron in episode 7). Also, the Pigmon randomly leaving its island to come to this apartment in particular is a contrivance, so I am hoping a later episode clarifies how it got there.

 

Episode 14 - 801 words

 

 

This episode functions as our introduction to Sayuki Uta, as she has not had the opportunity for as much development as the main trio. She makes a house call to Sorato very spontaneously and abruptly, almost too much so for Ayumu to show up and smooth things out. Sayuki closely examines the boys and their living quarters as they recite some Googleable diegetic exposition about her. Interestingly, she shares her assessments of the place and boys only after she has contrived a reason to leave with Ayumu.

 

Now, up until this point, Sayuki has been a positive character, a sort of motherly influence for Kosei and Ayumu, but here we see hints of what could amount to further conflict. She is very sly and careful with her questions, buttering Sorato up so that she can get the answers she wants from him. More importantly, she has created the K-Monitor, a device that can locate kaiju. Sorato's nose and general senses are supposed to fill this role narratively, so we will have to see if or when this K-Monitor fails and if that ties into Sayuki's arc. Most importantly, she does not even necessarily trust or believe in Omega and voices a more cavalier attitude for her work against the kaiju than we have seen from any of our other three leads.

 

All that said, the titular “Omega Elimination Order” is not her edict to the emerging attack and research teams but the directive of the new enemy Zovaras, a mysterious seijin. Its giant form somewhat resembles a cross between Zetton and Greeza (with how many fusions there are in this franchise, that probably already exists actually), but there are a lot more unique sci-fi considerations to its motivation and personality. As we learn over this two parter, it is a created being that serves the Geness seijin, and his directive is to eliminate Omega as it seems Omega has done to them.

 

In a similar manner to Gamera vs Barugon, the most impressive fight scene in this episode is human hand to hand between Sorato and a human form of Zovaras. Though Zovaras only repeats stock dialogue, the manner in which its human form seeks out Sorato and then facilitates the return of his memories reminds me of Shin Ultraman’s take on Alien Mefilas, and thus, for multiple reasons, I am more captivated by the human scenes than their inevitable giant showdown. The only other reference I could think of for Zovaras in his human guise was the Terminator, and I feel vindicated for that comparison because a Japanese commenter on the YouTube upload also made that comparison.

 

In looking around online for people’s thoughts on the episode’s reveals, I found that many were unsure at the time what all this meant. Since this is a two parter, the reveals of the context all kind of flow together, and I watched these straight into the next, so what I say in these next two entries may be paced arbitrarily.



We now have some context surrounding Omega's destruction of the planet of the Vagsects as Omega remembers that episode one opener. It seems the show is implying these are the Geness, but in any case, Zovaras is responsible for Omega losing his memories and falling to Earth, and he used the third meteokaiju Valgeness to do this. 

 

In the both fights, Omega and Zovaras are relatively evenly matched, and Valgeness is the deciding factor that puts the scales in Zovaras’ favor. Even when Kosei brings out Trigaron, Zovaras seems able to affect their connection in some way, and it takes a sudden weakness to bird sounds for Zovaras to short circuit, meaning this fight will need further resolution in another episode.

 

There is usually at least a vestigial trace of a Christ allegory in Ultraman (though most crucifixions in Japanese media are more likely to be references to Ultraman than the Son of Man), but Omega has not struck me as especially Christ inspired up until this point. That said, Zovaras borrowing the imagery of Omega, an angel of light, falling from heaven and commanding the meterokaiju beasts, could put him in the running for a Satan figure in the show (or a Legion if there is more than one Zovaras trying to restore a hive mind of lordly flies). Even so, I suspect this episode is borrowing more from popular Japanese science fiction and fantasy tropes than anything too Western.

 

I also want to note that both Sorato and Kosei got letters, the former’s from the family he helped in episode 5 and Kosei from his mother, which is especially interesting because the show seems to be giving him a found family in spite of the supportive mother he evidently has. Also, the ending song changed.

 

Episode 15 - 445 words

 

 

Again, this and the other episode meld together a fair bit, and it is difficult to pace what information I reveal at what point because a recap review is fundamentally a different storytelling medium from television. I also just have a lot less to say about this one because it is coming off a previous two parter that was also slightly better, and there will also be more two parters later. If I were doing this for Ultraman Orb, you would see that I would not maintain the same word count going from Maga Orochi two parter to Galactron two parter to Zeppandon two parter.

 

Opening with a dream wherein Sorato sees himself examining him, it transitions into the fight scene that serves as prologue for all of this. (If this turns out to be of any more importance than just a segue to his missing memories, I will be surprised.) On some celestial body that may be Geness or the moon, the meteokaiju arrived to help Omega, but their most powerful member, Valgeness, fell under Zovaras’ sway. That is what almost happened to Trigaron last episode.

 

On the Earthling side of things, noticing the abrupt end to the previous fight, they form a plan to use speakers against Zovaras, and, though it ultimately does not stop him, it facilitates the end of the battle. At this point, the show is playing very coy about who the Geness seijin are, so even though the implication exists that they are the Vagsects, I will still point out that Valgeness literally contains the word and thus might be more representative of them. 

 

In any case, Valgeness joins the heroic team after Kosei uses a double meteokaiju maneuver to fly up and tame him. Valgeness is very very very strong and will facilitate the finishing move of every episode for the foreseeable future. With power over all the elements, he makes the other meteokaiju redundant even though he is much harder for Kosei to wield. With the new Valgeness armor involving a flaming Halberd axe, Zovaras stands no chance. It is interesting though that two episodes in a row, Zovaras’ downfall was related to birds

 

At one point, Sorato reveals that what he wants to do is watch all of the other characters, that he feels most at home being a kind of within yet without. And this explains why the “found family” motif applies really only to Kosei thus far even though Sorato is the protagonist. Sorato, for whatever reason, feels most comfortable just watching the other characters, and that makes his role in Episode 9 all the more interesting if you view it through a Marxist lens.

 

Episode 16 - 366 words

 

 

In this episode, the newly formed Kaiju Special Countermeasure Team (KSCT) faces off with semi new kaiju King Alligatortoise (they modified the King Guesura costume into this, but apparently the first King Guesuera was a modified tiny Alligatortoise suit, so this is a full circle moment for the series). Again, the KSCT is the research team that has been forming, with the NDF being the attack team (often these are the same, but sometimes they are separate), and our main trio and Sayuki comprise a specific unit in this KSCT.

 

I think this episode is brilliant. It manages to balance the personalities of our main cast with an engaging first official mission wherein they investigate the smaller of two Alligatortoise, fish looking monsters terrorizing the city. It is also really funny.

 

There is a lot that I could say about the specifics of the comedy in this episode (I contemplated selecting this episode for its own review and still might), but the way that I want to pitch it to you today is as almost as a live action Scooby Doo scenario. Ayumu is obviously the Velma of this group, and Kosei is Shaggy, running into the smaller Alligatortoise, and engaging in a goofy chase. Surprisingly or perhaps unsurprisingly given his history with the kaiju, Sorato winds up as the leader in some moments, Fred in this comparison. Scooby Doo is, of course, Kosei’s favorite meteokaiju Trigaron, and this episode places a lot of emphasis on Trigaron’s reactions and clumsiness that enhance the comedy. (Does this make Valgeness Scrappy Doo or Daphne?)

 

Like any good Scooby Doo episode, there is a twist, and it turns out that King Alligatortoise can change his size, so both the large and small versions of this character were the same. King Alligatortoise is also just a really cool and fun monster the way the fight realizes him. If you watch any episode of this show, watch this one. And maybe stay tuned for a review of this episode. I am still undecided if I will be able to get to that soon. Alright, on to the Nariaki Akaji recap episode. There is a lot to regroup with this man on.

 

Episode 16.5 - 546 words

 

 

It will never cease to entertain me that this special episode is called “An Unusual Day In The Life Of Nariaki Akaji,” and yet nothing unusual happens to him. He is actually strangely detached from the kaiju action compared to last time, but the episode has a smart way of getting around to that. Even though Nariaki is still basically a child in personality, the show has matured a lot in the second half, and that extends to how he exists in this status quo.

 

After hearing a little bit from Nariaki on his thoughts about the KSCT moving in downstairs, we see him wonder aloud how Kosei was possibly allowed to join. I thought from the previous special episode that Kosei was the closest thing to a best friend Nariaki had, but that doesn't stop him from emphasizing how strange it is that someone like Kosei was allowed to join. 

 

However, Nariaki knows the answer even as he seems hesitant to acknowledge it. During the numbered recap episode 13, when Kosei was explaining his mastery over the meteokaiju to Ayumu, Nariaki was also there, wanting to impress Ayumu but secretly bearing witness to the day's confession. Keeping this secret seems to weigh on Nariaki a little bit, but he gets back to his normal antics after a moment.

 

In a fun little meta gag, right after Nariaki finishes explaining/roleplaying Rekiness and Trigaron, the upload cuts to commercial advertising the Valgeness transforming toy. He still gets around to speculating on Valgeness, but I enjoy the sense of humor in the ad space. As might be clear, Nariaki is asking a lot of questions this time but is also less enthusiastic than last time. He still jumps excitedly listening to the radio, but it gets him thinking about the meteokaiju, and he glances at the floor nervously, rinse, repeat, and recap.

 

The reason for this is that Nariaki, despite his respect for Omega and friendship with Kosei, both feels alienated from the downstairs crew and is very worried about having three kaiju beneath him at any given moment. The newscasters again discuss Omega’s approval rating, and, though Nariaki in flashback shouted very passionately that he believed in the giant, he hesitates in the modern day. Ultimately, he resolves this conflict by remembering his trust in Kosei and Omega, and Kosei phones, telling Nariaki that Sorato invited him to a hotpot Ayumu is making, and that gets Nariaki excited enough for a costume change. We will learn in approximately 8 episodes (if pattern holds) whether or not he can impress her.

 

Koshi Tomonobu (I guess they were involved with the return of Pagos), to drum up hype for Episode 17, released a social media post priming us for a mystery involving some substance attached to Pagos with two Soratos running around, promising that Omega’s mystery starts to become clear with Episode 17. So leave your thoughts and predictions below for where the show is going from here. I’ll cover episode 17 in this blog entry. I personally have suspected that the ghost child from episode 8 might have something to do with Omega’s past heroics or memory, and the conflict with Zovaras explained Omega’s helpers and amnesia, so hopefully all becomes clear soon.

 

Episode 17 - 687 words

 

 

This episode opens with the NDF taking down a kaiju by themselves for once. The kaiju in question is Pagos, a series mainstay that debuted as early as Ultra Q, the very first Ultra show, and was originally modified from Baragon, a suit from the Godzilla series. As passionate as this show is about modifying old suits into new kaiju, one member of the Baragon lineage (that includes Pagos and then Neronga, Magular and Gabora) had to show up eventually (Shin Ultraman basically designed its kaiju lineup around that cost cutting gag).

 

The cooperation within the KSCT and between them and the NDF is on full display here; all of our main and supporting characters are working hard to honestly aid each other in the effort to save the world. Specifically, if episode 16 showed us the Scooby Doo team of Sorato, Kosei, Ayumu and Trigaron in the field, then this episode shows how Sayuki plays off of her underlings and how Mr. Taira serves as a middleman with the NDF. Even though she secretly knows Sorato is Omega, and that Kosei controls the meteokaiju, she is a wise, fair and knowledgeable captain that knows how to get the best work out of her team. Taira is a very cooperative and penitent man who feels great responsibility for the general public and actions taken to protect them.

 

After the NDF kill Pagos with an experimental new weapon derived from ancient kaiju teeth, it suddenly sprouts a yellow slime and reanimates. The enemy this week is not Pagos but this infection that puppets around his body seeking to spread: Edomaphila. Think the Cordyceps from The Last Of Us. I am glossing past the scenes where Sayuki guides discussion to figure this all out, but those are great scenes. As the episode unveils its stakes, Edomaphila becomes a singularly frightening concept of a monster.

 

The Graim corpse from episode one comes back as the target of the Edomaphila-infected Pagos, and, truly with how efficiently the slime is able to control Pagos, an Edomaphila-Graim would be very difficult to beat. An army of these things would be the greatest stakes this series could muster. And actually, the episode insinuates that Edomaphila once conquered much of the world, only stopped by the Ice Age. But as the North Pole is melting and humans mess with kaiju bones they do not understand, Edomaphila may return. This is a very fresh way to tell an environmentalist story in the kaiju genre, and any future versions of Hedorah could take note of how this episode positions Edomaphila (albeit on a TV budget).

 

Now, some creatives promised some answers with this episode and uh we now know that Omega’s knowledge of the kaiju goes back an absurdly long amount of time, over ten million. That is assuming that it is solely a database and not that he himself is that old. Tthat much still is not clear…

 

While this did not definitively answer anything, I feel rather confident that the show is trying to insinuate that the propagation of the Edomaphila is what decreased the activity of the monsters and basically removed them from recorded human history. Before, it was unclear why humanity was not familiar with the naturally occurring kaiju and why Omega was sometimes sympathetic to Graim’s species despite the individual Graim being an enemy. The idea that Edomaphila dominated the Earth with its parasitic control over dead kaiju starts painting a picture of the backstory Omega witnessed but forgot. Mons Ahgar’s pocket universe trap may also have saved him from a far worse fate.

 

That other Sorato is also very interesting. It brings to mind Ultraseven’s visits from his Chief toward the end of that series. In that case, we saw why Ultraseven chose his human form’s design, but we still know so little about why Omega chose that human form and what it means for there to be another of him watching. I still wonder about that child spirit from Mons Ahgar’s episode, because he seems to function similarly to this other Sorato. Is this an abrupt stopping point? Ye–

 

Conclusion

 

This batch of episodes definitely deepened my investment in the show. Introducing a new status quo, it took on some features of more traditional Ultra shows including a dedicated research/attack team and more returning monsters/suits while also continuing the aspects that makes this show unique in the Ultra series: a close knit group of characters that understand the Ultra’s secret. So far, the good outweighs the bad by a lot. I like seeing the development of the team over the course of the show. It is a nice little spin on the formula while allowing for good character work early on. At the same time, the monsters became a little more hit or miss for me, with some cementing themselves as favorites for me and others not necessarily justifying their existence.

I will do one more blog post covering the final episodes of this show, and, given how much I have enjoyed these first two thirds, the stakes are very high as to if this show will stick the landing: will we get satisfactory answers and payoffs to everything these episodes have revealed or further hinted toward?

 

It is also worth mentioning that the stage shows are really having a blast with Omega’s unique idiosyncrasies and personality. Apparently, a major developing plot point on that side of the franchise is that Omega can understand Ultraman Blazar, a very intelligent and polite Ultra that nonetheless can only really act and speak in the manner of a caveman. This is really funny because it creates the scenario where Omega can translate for Blazar but has no idea why, when he learned how to do that or what that means about his home culture. 

 

Here are some screengrabs I found entertaining and wanted to share: