From relatively humble beginnings in a King Kong-inspired Japanese studio picture, the kaiju eiga has developed into a global genre. While the origins of giant kaiju - the term often preferred to 'monster' - remain firmly rooted in Japan, the figure has become a transnational spectacle. This book explores how kaiju went global, from the adoption of Godzilla movies in translation to the appropriation of cultural material across borders. With reference to the genre's global development, its exploitative Western circulation and the labour of fans, the book examines how genres with deep national roots can become transnational phenomena.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
Across six chapters, [Rawle] provides in-depth analyses of the first Godzilla movie and the subsequent monster-movie boom in Japan; kaiju film in the two Koreas; the Western localization of Japanese kaiju films and production of domestic variants; kaiju as cult and exploitation cinema; and kaiju in Hollywood. [Rawle] does a good job of detailing the complex relationships-economic, industrial, and semiotic-between national cinema and transnational culture. Its study of international film distribution networks is particularly strong. -- C. Brienza * CHOICE * Across six chapters, [Rawle] provides in-depth analyses of the first Godzilla movie and the subsequent monster-movie boom in Japan; kaiju film in the two Koreas; the Western localization of Japanese kaiju films and production of domestic variants; kaiju as cult and exploitation cinema; and kaiju in Hollywood. [Rawle] does a good job of detailing the complex relationships-economic, industrial, and semiotic-between national cinema and transnational culture. Its study of international film distribution networks is particularly strong. -- C. Brienza * CHOICE * Since its 1954 debut, Godzilla's heritage has undergone numerous makeovers. Steve Rawle has written an indispensable book on the many inspirations and transitions of the Kaiju. Detailing dozens of Kaiju films, Rawle gives an exquisite outline of the conditions of global connectivity and cultural appropriation that have coloured the cult phenomenon's national and international travels, and of the themes that travel spawned, making Transnational Kaiju's essential reading for fans, critics and scholars of what is still the best monster ever. -- Ernest Mathijs, University of British Columbia In a break from previous literature on the subject, Steven Rawles provides readers with what could be considered the authoritative work on how a niche genre of film tapped into a central mythos and transcended national borders to become a global phenomenon. Well-researched, it has enough information about kaiju-eiga films to remain interesting and accessible to recently joined fans of the genre, while at the same time giving veterans fresh subject matter to explore. -- Joe McIntee * UK Kaiju * In Transnational Kaiju, Steve Rawle charts, with authority and rigour, the provenance and global development of this most culturally rich of popular genres. Attuned to both its local specificity and cultural elasticity, Rawle's analysis is far-reaching in its assessment of the kaiju eiga as a truly transnational phenomenon. -- Kate Egan, Northumbria University
Sprache
Verlagsort
Zielgruppe
Produkt-Hinweis
Fadenheftung
Gewebe-Einband
Illustrationen
38 black and white illustrations
Maße
Höhe: 234 mm
Breite: 156 mm
Dicke: 18 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-1-4744-7580-8 (9781474475808)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Dr Steven Rawle is Associate Professor in Media Production at York St John's University.
Autor*in
Associate ProfessorYork St John's University
Introduction: 'Every Country has a Monster'
What is the kaiju eiga?
Cult Movies
Transnational Cinema
Transnational Kaiju
Chapter 1: National Films, Transnational Monsters
Kaiju and the Japanese National Imaginary
Carl Denham's Giant Monster
The Lost World and The Beast
Kaiju emerge
Chapter 2: The First Monster Boom
Kaiju at Toho
Kaiju at Daiei
Kaiju at Shochiku, Nikkatsu and Toei
Chapter 3: Exchanging monsters: Korean Kaiju
The kaiju meme
Kaiju head west
Kaiju on the Korean Peninsula
Kim Jong-Il's kaiju
Kaiju in new Korean Cinema
Chapter 4: Distributing Kaiju: Localisation and Exploitation
National Cinema: Quality and Trash
Popular Cinema to Exploitation Film
Long Live the King
Cozzilla
The Return of Steve Martin
Chapter 5: 'Paul Bunyan never fought Rodan'
Appropriation, Borrowing, Exchange
European Kaiju
Hollywood Kaiju
Kaiju Mockbusters
Kongsploitation
Chapter 6: Legendary Monsters
Legendary Entertainment
Marked/Unmarked Transnational Cinema
Pacific Rim
The Great Wall
Pacific Rim: Uprising
Into the MonsterVerse
Conclusion: The Limiting Imagination of Transnational Monsters
National Kaiju
Nostalgia and fandom