I agree, and the best thing that Criterion does is release a range of material. As much as I joke about Armageddon (mostly because When Worlds Collide would be a better disaster movie [-( ), I kind of love The Rock as the epitome of the mid 90s Bruckheimer-Bay blockbuster, and both deserve their place in the collection. If the quality of some of the Godzilla films may be questionable, we have seen a number of Criterion sets where 'lesser' films have been bundled in because they are contextually important more than particularly significant as an individual work (some of the films in the Paul Robeson set, arguably a couple of the films in the Bergman set too), and sometimes that overall picture is just as important to be able to create. And if that might be the only way to release a couple of the films (how else would Sanders of the River ever have received a release otherwise?) then I'm all for that practice. I don't think that you can discuss Godzilla without tracing the mutation of the character from city destroying nuclear mutated monster; through Earth based monster vaguely on our side battling other monsters often from outer space; to being a slightly aloof and distant father figure to his son(!); and so on. The films might be 'low culture' and 'children's films' but that should not prevent them from being properly celebrated for their impact on culture. The various films have also encompassed a number of interesting subjects and, like Bond say, looking beyond the particular plots you can trace cultural shifts through the approaches that different films take to their material, such as the environmental one with our hero(?) battling a monster created by industrial pollution in Godzilla vs Hedora.Brian C wrote: Wed Jul 17, 2019 1:07 amI think it's funny that releases like the Godzilla set are assumed to be Criterion just doing what they have to do to pay the bills, as if the films occupy such a low place in culture that they have to be rationalized somehow.
That does make a set like this more important to get right too, because whilst the original film has already been rightly celebrated with a standalone release this might be the only release of the rest of the films so different versions, dubbed and subtitled tracks (because audiences in the West now have history with both types) and any extras produced have the potential to be the final word (or at least the touchstone for future discussion of the series) for some time.
(Plus now we can finally put the Beastie Boy's Intergalactic video, previously released by Criterion, into its proper context
