Dogora
Dogora, released in Japan as Uchū Daikaijū Dogora (宇宙大怪獣ドゴラ, lit. "Giant Space Monster Dogora"), is a 1964 Japanese science fiction film directed by Ishirō Honda, written by Jojiro Okami and Shinichi Sekizawa, and produced by Yasuyoshi Tajitsu and Tomoyuki Tanaka, with special effects by Eiji Tsuburaya. Produced and distributed by Toho Studios, the film stars Yosuke Natsuki, Nobuo Nakamura, Hiroshi Koizumi, and Akiko Wakabayashi, along with American actor Robert Dunham. The film tells the story of a huge jellyfish-like creature from space that attacks Japan.
Dogora | |
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Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Ishirō Honda[1] |
Produced by | Yasuyoshi Tajitsu Tomoyuki Tanaka[1] |
Written by | Jojiro Okami (story)[1] Shinichi Sekizawa[1] |
Starring | Yosuke Natsuki Yōko Fujiyama Hiroshi Koizumi Nobuo Nakamura Robert Dunham Akiko Wakabayashi Jun Tazaki Susumu Fujita Seizaburô Kawazu Hideyo Amamoto |
Music by | Akira Ifukube[1] |
Cinematography | Hajime Koizumi[1] |
Edited by | Ryohei Fujii[1] |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Toho |
Release date |
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Running time | 83 minutes |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
Dogora was released theatrically in Japan on 11 August 1964. It was released directly to television in the United States in 1966 by American International Television, under the title Dagora, the Space Monster.
Plot
When several TV satellites launched by the Electric Wave Laboratory go missing above Japan in Earth's orbit, it is found out that they have inadvertently collided with unidentified protoplasmic "space cells" of unknown origin. A similar creature suddenly thwarted the efforts of a local branch of the International Diamond Robbery Ring. The diamonds they sought vanished, and similar unexplained events continued to occur across the globe.
Meanwhile, Inspector Komai's (Yosuke Natsuki) investigation of these strange events led him to the crystallographer Dr. Munakata (Nobuo Nakamura). In the process of tracking down the self-proclaimed diamond broker Mark Jackson (Robert Dunham). He finds him in Dr. Munakata's home but knocks him out and escapes from Komai. He is then picked up by the gangsters for questioning. Komai wakes up and is greeted by Dr. Munakata and his lab assistant Masayo Kirino (Yoko Fujiyama). He tells them about the case he is working on and shows them pictures of the melted safe the gangsters were at that night. Komai then learns that the diamonds the Mark stole were synthetic and worth nothing.
The gangsters bring Mark Jackson to their boss and find a bag containing the stolen diamonds. However, they too find out that they are fake and keep him as a prisoner but outwits them and escapes. The gangsters are then given word of a shipment of raw diamonds that will arrive in Yokohama. Meanwhile, Inspector Komai escorts Masayo to her home. Along the way, they meet Kirino (Hiroshi Koizumi), Masayo's brother who works at the Electric Wave Laboratory. They witness a strange invisible force suck up coal into the sky from a nearby factory as well as flaming sparks from the clouds. They meet back with Dr. Munakata who tells them that the flaming sparks might be from some form of carbon.
Later, the professional thieves took advantage of this ripe opportunity and attempted a heist on an armored car carrying the raw diamonds. But a nearby coal truck passing by is lifted off the ground by some unknown force and disappears into the atmosphere and is dropped back down to the ground. Unfortunately for them, they were fooled and escaped with nothing but candy.
The police came to learn of the mysterious events of the armored car heist. Inspector Komai tells them of the possibility of a creature that caused the coal truck to list up in the air, but no one believes him. He is then called by Masayo that Mark Jackson is at Dr. Munakata's house. Komai and the police surround the house to catch him. But he reveals himself that he is an investigator dispatched from the World Diamond Insurgence association to find out what has been stealing diamonds worldwide. Just then Masayo's brother comes in and tells them that the identity of the monster was reported from the Space Planning Committee at the U.N. that the monster is a space cell that has been mutated by massive amounts of radiation from the satellites. Suddenly, Dogora appears and eats its way through Dr. Muanakata's safe to eat the diamonds inside.
The creature from outer space is deemed to be the culprit, an alien beast that draws its energy from carbon-based minerals. Dr. Munakata, confident in a remarkable scientific discovery, left for the coal mines near northern Kyushu, where it was proposed that the strange being would make its next appearance. Mark Jackson also took leave for Kyushu, as the realization was finally made that the candy recovered at the heist was likely his doing. It was probable that he had, in truth, absconded with the true gems. Hamako (Akiko Wakabayashi), one of the gangsters responsible for the failed heist, prepared to double-cross her comrades and retrieve the diamonds for herself.
As Dr. Munakata arrived at Dogora's next likely target, unidentified objects began to show on radar. A swarm of wasps was attacking Dogora in retaliation for the disturbance of their hives in the mines, and as they attacked, solid crystal sections of the monster began to fall to the city below.
Over Dokaiwan Bay, as night fell, evacuation orders were put into effect as the jellyfish-like monster began to descend from the sky. The self-defense force fired, to no avail. The monster continued to absorb carbon-based materials wherever they could be located, and the abomination even destroyed the Waikato Bridge in the process. The military continued to unleash their artillery at the alien creature and succeeded in momentarily silencing their foe. Unfortunately, the creature was only undergoing mitosis.
It is later found out that when Dogora is stung by the wasps, the venom causes a chemical reaction that crystallizes the space cell. Analysis of the crystallizing effects of the wasp venom on Dogora at the Medical Substance Laboratory proves successful, and mass production was soon ordered all around the world for the creation of a similar toxin.
The gangsters, still desperate for a successful heist, tracked Mark Jackson and Inspector Komai and almost immediately jumped to the conclusion that Mark had hidden the real diamonds in a safe-deposit box. Hamako left to retrieve the stash but instead fled solo with the stolen goods. The thieves left Jackson and Komai tied and doomed to death-by-dynamite, but the two men joined forces and only barely managed to escape.
Meanwhile, Dogora attacked once again, but this time, powerful artificial wasp venom quickly ate away at the creature. The robbers and the police clashed at the beach, and in the heat of a vicious gunfight, the gang was completely wiped out by a falling crystal boulder, once a section of Dogora's extraterrestrial flesh.
The wasp venom finally took full effect, and Dogora was no more. It was soon discovered that the diamonds Hamako had retrieved from the safe-deposit box were, in fact, synthetic. As this truth came to light, Dr. Munakata and his secretary left for the UN to discuss the peaceful potential of the Dogora incident with the world.
Cast
- Yosuke Natsuki – Inspector Komai[1]
- Robert Dunham – Mark Jackson (as Dan Yuma)[1]
- Nobuo Nakamura – Dr. Munakata[1]
- Hiroshi Koizumi – Kirino[1]
- Yoko Fujiyama – Masayo Kirino[1]
- Akiko Wakabayashi – Gangster Natsui Hamako[1]
- Susumu Fujita – General Iwasa[1]
- Seizaburou Kawazu – Gangster Boss
- Yoshifumi Tajima – Gangster Zenichi Tada[1]
- Hideyo Amamoto – Gangster Joe Maki Safecracker [1]
- Haruya Katou – Short Gangster Sabu
- Jun Tazaki – Chief Inspector[1]
- Jun Funado – Inspector Nitta
- Nadao Kirino – Gangster Gen
- Akira Wakamatsu – Gangster Pine
Production
The film is unusual for Toho's giant monster series in that the creature is non-anthropomorphic and not portrayed by an actor in a costume. For scenes of it in its full form, the Dogora prop was placed in a small vat of water and puppeteered by people holding wires. This gave it the impression of it floating like an airborne jellyfish.
Originally, Dogora was titled (スペース・モンス Supēsu Monsu, lit. Space Monster) and was meant to be released in 1962. The monster's name was changed to "Dagora" in the English-dubbed prints.
Dogora's roar was reused for the Tsuburaya Production's TV show Ultraman, as the monster Bullton in episode 17, "Passport to Infinity".
There were originally plans to feature Robert Dunham in a series of films based on the "Mark Jackson" secret agent character he played in this film. However, they never came to fruition.
References
- Stuart Galbraith IV (16 May 2008). The Toho Studios Story: A History and Complete Filmography. Scarecrow Press. pp. 212–213. ISBN 978-1-4616-7374-3.
- Ragone, August (2007, 2014). Eiji Tsuburaya: Master of Monsters San Francisco, California: Chronicle Books. ISBN 978-0-8118-6078-9
- Variety Weekly. August 4, 1965.
- Sanford and Son. 1973. In the episode "Home Sweet Home for the Aged" Fred laments about missing this movie while out on a Sunday drive.
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Dogora |
- Dogora at AllMovie
- Dogora on IMDb
- Dogora at Rotten Tomatoes
- Gojiman's World
- "宇宙大怪獣ドゴラ (Uchū Daikaijū Dogora)" (in Japanese). Japanese Movie Database. Retrieved 2007-07-16.