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MyMovieMonsters.com > DVDs/Blu-ray > Godzilla And Gamera > Godzilla Ghidorah The Three-Headed Monster Toho Master Collection DVD New Sealed

$74.99

Godzilla Ghidorah The Three-Headed Monster Toho Master Collection DVD New Sealed

The Toho Master Collection presents Ghidorah The Three-Headed Monster. Two remastered films on one disc includes the Japanese (1964) and U.S. (1965) versions presented in Cinemascope.

Price: $79.99  Sale Price: $74.99  You Save: $5.00 (6%)

A prophetess from Venus foretells cataclysmic disasters! Godzilla, Mothra and Rodan reappear in Japan, wreaking havoc! A giant meteor crashes into the mountains and the three-headed, fire-spitting space dragon King Ghidorah emerges! As the prophecies come true, assassins from a tiny Asian kingdom hunt her down, while the Earth monsters must decide whether to settle their petty differences and join forces against the extraterrestrial enemy!

Special Features include English subtitles for Japanese version, Audio Commentary by David Kalat, Image Gallery, Original Japanese Trailer and more.

"Ghidorah, The Three-Headed Monster was the first Japanese monster movie that this reviewer ever got to see previewed in theaters, though we never did get to see the movie theatrically -- (our mother wouldn't take us to see such as picture). So this movie is sort of "special" in our memory, in an odd way. And it has arrived, at last, in a first-rate DVD edition from Classic Media and Genius Entertainment -- the virtues of this release are many, including a good (if not great) letterboxed (2.35-to-1) transfer of both the 85 minute US version and, with subtitles, the 93 minute Japanese version. And on that basis alone, it would be worth owning. But the bonus features push it right off the scale -- the biography of special effect designer Eiji Tsuburaya is a long overdue acknowledgement of a fine and influential film designer; but the real treat is the commentary by David Kalat. This reviewer has done his share of such film commentaries (more than two dozen), and it must be said that Kalat has done an incomparable job of weaving explanations and accounts, of both the American edition and its Japanese original, and the alterations between them. Kalat's is an award-caliber performance, and one that this reviewer has consistently returned to, as an entertaining creation in its own right. The disc opens with one of the very few preview sequences that this reviewer does not find objectionable or annoying, highlighting as it does other releases, current and upcoming, in this genre, before jumping to a multi-layer menu that's as much fun as it is easy to use. The dozen chapters are adequate for the film involved, and both editions of the movie get the same number of chapters. Neither transfer is perfect -- neither version of the movie has quite the sharpness one would hope for, though the Japanese edition does seem to have a slight edge over the US edition, and both can be enjoyed in the form in which they're presented."

Collectors Note: This DVD is packaged in the sturdy digipack "storybook" format which is thinner and more conveniently stored compared to regular clam shell cases.

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