The Mysterians | |||||
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![]() Theatrical release poster | |||||
Japanese name | |||||
Kanji | 地球防衛軍 | ||||
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Directed by | Ishirō Honda | ||||
Screenplay by | Takeshi Kimura[1] | ||||
Story by | Jōjirō Okami[1] | ||||
Based on | An adaptation byShigeru Kayama [ja][1] | ||||
Produced by | Tomoyuki Tanaka[1] | ||||
Starring | |||||
Cinematography | Hajime Koizumi[1] | ||||
Edited by | Hiroichi Iwashita[1] | ||||
Music by | Akira Ifukube[1] | ||||
Production company | |||||
Distributed by | Toho | ||||
Release date |
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Running time | 89 minutes[2] | ||||
Country | Japan | ||||
Languages | Japanese English | ||||
Budget | ¥200 million[3] | ||||
Box office | ¥193 million (Japan)[4] $975,000 (U.S.)[5] |
The Mysterians (Japanese:地球防衛軍,Hepburn:Chikyū Bōeigun,lit. 'Earth Defense Force') is a 1957 Japaneseepicscience fiction film directed byIshirō Honda, with special effects byEiji Tsuburaya. Produced and distributed byToho Co., Ltd., it is the first Honda-Tsuburaya collaboration filmed in both color andTohoScope, and starsKenji Sahara,Yumi Shirakawa,Momoko Kōchi,Akihiko Hirata,Yoshio Tsuchiya,Susumu Fujita, andTakashi Shimura, withHaruo Nakajima andKatsumi Tezuka as Moguera. In the film, Earth's defense forces unite to combat an extraterrestrial race that desires to intermarry with human women and settle on the planet.
Inspired by the success of big-budget science fiction films in Japan and the United States, Toho executives became keen on producing a science fiction epic of their own. ProducerTomoyuki Tanaka recruited science fiction writer Jōjirō Okami to develop the story, whichShigeru Kayama [ja] later adapted forTakeshi Kimura's screenplay. Honda stated that three companies were involved in the film's production, which was the most in anytokusatsu production that he directed.
The Mysterians was released theatrically in Japan on December 28, 1957, as adouble feature withSazae's Youth. It was a box office success in Japan upon its release, earning¥193 million against its¥200 million budget during its original theatrical run, making it the tenth highest-grossing Japanese film of 1957, and leading Toho to produce two further space-themed science fiction epics:Battle in Outer Space (1959) andGorath (1962). An English dub of the film was produced byRKO Radio Pictures and distributed in the United States byMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer on May 27, 1959, where it grossed$975,000 and reportedly received mostly positive reviews. Western film critics praised Tsuburaya's special effects, but some criticized the plot as confusing and juvenile.
Astrophysicist Ryoichi Shiraishi, his fiancée Hiroko Iwamoto, his sister Etsuko, and his friend Joji Atsumi attend abon festival in a village at the foot ofMount Fuji. During the festival, Shiraishi rushes out to investigate a sudden forest fire that has flared up nearby and he disappears during the confusion. The next day, Atsumi meets his mentor, Dr. Tanjiro Adachi, the headastronomer at the local observatory. Adachi hands him an incomplete report written by Shiraishi regarding a newly discovered asteroid he believed was once a planet between Mars and Jupiter, dubbed "Mysteroid". However, Adachi repudiates his radical theory.
Meanwhile, the village where the festival was held is completely wiped out by a massiveearthquake. While investigating the area, Atsumi and a group of police officers stumble upon a giantrobot, Moguera, which bursts from the side of a hill. It emits rays that destroy most of the investigation team; only Atsumi and the lead policeman survive. The robot then advances to a town near Koyama Bridge and met by heavy resistance from theJapan Self-Defense Forces. However, their artillery has no effect on Moguera, and the robot continues its rampage until it is destroyed by explosives detonated by the military near the Koyama Bridge.
After Atsumi briefs officials on what has been learned about the robot at theNational Diet Building, astronomers witness activity in outer space around the Moon. They alert the world to this discovery, and an alien gigantic dome aliens emerges shortly from the ground near Mt. Fuji. Dr. Adachi and five other scientists agree to hold a conference in the dome after a mysterious voice asks them to do so during an observation of the dome by a military and scientific entourage. The men are formally ushered into the dome, where a scientifically advanced humanoid alien race known as the "Mysterians", reveal their demands from the people of Earth: a two-mile-radius strip of land and the right to marry women of Earth. The Mysterian Leader reveals that thousands of years ago their planet—Mysteroid, once thefifth planet from the sun—was destroyed by anuclear war. Although some Mysterians were able to escape to Mars before their planet was rendered uninhabitable,strontium-90 left the aliens' population deformed and they thus desire to interbreed with women on Earth to produce healthier offspring and keep their race alive.
Japan quickly dismisses their requests and begins themobilization of its armed forces around Mount Fuji. Shiraishi—who vanished during the forest fire—reveals that he has sided with the Mysterians for their technological achievements. Without hesitation, Japan quickly launches a full-scale attack against the Mysterians' dome, but their modern weaponry is no match for the Mysterians' technology. This setback causes Japan to plead with other nations to join forces in eradicating the Mysterians threat. The nations around the world respond and issue another raid on the Mysterians' dome, which also fail despite deploying newly developed airships.
The Mysterians then increase their demand, asking for a 75-mile-radius of land. The humans develop a new weapon, the Markalite FAHP (Flying Atomic Heat Projector), a gigantic lens that can reflect the Mysterians' weaponry. Meanwhile, the Mysterians kidnap Etsuko and Hiroko, causing Atsumi to search for them and locate a cave entrance to a tunnel under the Mysterians' dome.
In the meantime, several Markalite FAHPs are deployed, and the final battle against the Mysterians' base of operations commences. Atsumi enters the dome and finds the women kidnapped by the Mysterians, alive and unharmed in an unguarded room. He takes them back to the tunnel, where he finds Shiraishi, who admits the Mysterians deceived him and truly have no good intentions. In a final attack on the base from the inside, Shiraishi sacrifices himself while the Markalite FAHP continue their assault. In the midst of the battle, a second Moguera deployed by the Mysterians is disabled after one of the FAHPs falls on top of it. As Adachi and the women reach safety in the hills above the Mysterians' occupied land, the dome collapses and explodes. While some of the surviving Mysterians flee into space in their spaceships, Dr. Adachi comments on the need for continued vigilance.
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Director Ishiro Honda described the film, saying it was "larger in scale compared toGodzilla orRodan and is aimed to be more of a true science fiction film ... I would like to wipe away the [Cold War-era] notion of East versus West and convey a simple, universal aspiration for peace, the coming together of all humankind as one to create a peaceful society."[6] Reflecting on the period of developing the film, Honda stated that he respected scientists, but "feared the danger of science, that whoever controlled it could take over the entire Earth."[7]
Inspired by the success of big-budget science fiction films in Japan and the United States (such as theByron Haskin-directed 1953 epicThe War of the Worlds and Fred F. Sears' 1956 filmEarth vs. the Flying Saucers),Toho executives became keen on producing a science fiction epic of their own.[8][9]
ProducerTomoyuki Tanaka hired sci-fi writer Jōjirō Okami to write the story after reading Okami's novelA Small Box of Lead.[10] Even though Tanaka requested that his story be written as a novel, assuming it would later be published in a magazine,[10] Okami's story treatment for the film was never published.[11] Okami's treatment did not include Moguera, Shiraishi betraying humanity or the Mysterians seeking marriage with human women.[11] Okami was reportedly told by Shigeru Kayama—who adapted it forTakeshi Kimura's screenplay—to the treatment "make it more romantic."[11]
Seven Samurai (1954) costarYoshio Tsuchiya notably played the Mysterian Leader in the film. Tsuchiya was unconcerned by the fact that he would be covered in a helmet, glasses, and a skin-chafing costume made of flameproof fiberglass fabric. In his attempt to compensate, Tsuchiya created his own staccato gestures - "space acting". In an interview, Tsuchiya stated: "Toho said no [to casting me in this role], because my face would be covered. I disagreed, saying that being an actor isn’t all about just showing our faces. This impressed Honda-san very much, and we formed a relationship, both at work and outside of work" According to directorIshirō Honda, "It was [Tsuchiya’s] wish [to play the role], but I also knew him very well, so I thought he would be well cast".[12]
The Mysterians wasTakashi Shimura's third supporting role in a Toho-producedtokusatsu film, following his role as a paleontologist in Honda'sGodzilla (1954) andMotoyoshi Oda'sGodzilla Raids Again (1955).[13] Likewise,Godzilla starsMomoko Kōchi andAkihiko Hirata andRodan (1956) starsKenji Sahara andYumi Shirakawa have major roles in the film as Hiroko Iwamoto, Ryōichi Shiraishi, Jōji Atsumi, and Etsuko Shiraishi respectively.[14]
A large amount of foreign actors were cast in minor roles in the film, indicating Toho's overseas ambitions for the Honda-Tsuburaya films. Among the actors cast asUnited Nations scientists in the film were George Furness, a British lawyer who represented formerEmpire of Japan defendants at theTokyo War Crimes Tribunal, and Harold S. Conway, aTokyo businessman. Their interpreter wasHeihachiro Okawa, an actor with a prolific eclectic career in Japan and overseas,[4] who played a bit part in the film as the Defense Headquarters External Relations Director.[15]
The Mysterians marks the first collaboration between Honda and special effects directorEiji Tsuburaya that was shot in anamorphicTohoScope, which the studio had just recently introduced.[7]
The Mysterians was released in Japan byToho on December 28, 1957.[2] The film earned¥193 million during its theatrical run, making it Toho's second highest-grossing film of the year, only behindHiroshi Inagaki'sRickshaw Man, and was the tenth highest-grossing film in Japan overall.[4] The film was reissued theatrically in Japan on March 18, 1978.[16]
In the United States,The Mysterians was originally purchased byRKO Radio Pictures, which provided the dubbing, but was sold toLoew's Inc. for release due to RKO's failing fortunes.[2] The film was first released in the USA byMetro Goldwyn Mayer in 50 Los Angeles theaters on May 27, 1959, the first half of a double bill withFirst Man Into Space, the publicity campaign being supervised by Terry Turner.[17] It grossed$975,000 during at the American box office[5] but only made MGM a profit of$58,000.[18]
In 2005,The Mysterians was released on Region 1 DVD byMedia Blasters under their Tokyo Shock label. It contained the Japanese version with English Subtitles and a brand new unedited English Dub courtesy ofBang Zoom! Entertainment as Toho did not have the original masters for the RKO Dub. As of 2019, their DVD is out of print. In 2006, theBFI released the Japanese version ofThe Mysterians on DVD.[19] The film is available onThe Criterion Channel.[20]
According toBoxoffice,The Mysterians garnered generally positive reviews in the United States.[21]Variety called it "well-produced", noting "special effects involving sliding land, quaking earth and melting mortars are realistically accomplished proving the facility with the Japanese filmmakers deal in miniatures."[22] but found the film "As corny as it is furious" noting that "While Junior may be moved by the arrival of outer-space gremlins, big brother and all like him will laugh their heads off."[22] The review commented on the English dub, stating that it was "understandable enough, but one might easily believe something was lost in translation."[22]Harrison's Reports felt it was "far better than most American-made pictures of its type" and "although the story idea offers little that is novel [sic], the action holds one's interest well mainly because of the imaginative settings, the elaborate space ship used by the invaders along with its many electronic gadgets, and the very good special effects by which catastrophic scenes of destruction are depicted while the invaders and the Earthians battle each other with all sorts of weapons."[23]Motion Picture Daily praised the film's effects, writing that "even the most jaded action fan will have to admit that some of the scenes of mass catastrophes, the seemingly endless sky and ground skirmishes and the ultra-modern 'Buck Rogers' settings have seldom, if ever, been equalled."[24]
Some critics panned Peter Riethof and Carlos Montalban's English dub version of the film, including "H. H. T." ofThe New York Times and an uncredited writer forThe Monthly Film Bulletin.[25][26] The latter said that its "main weaknesses are a slight and confused plot, under-developed characterisation and artless acting" but praised the film's art direction and staging, calling them "possibly the most dazzling display of pyrotechnics in thegenre to date."[26]
During its theatrical run in the United States, some theatergoers accused the film of beingcommunist propaganda.[27]
In a retrospective on Soviet science fiction film, British directorAlex Cox comparedThe Mysterians toFirst Spaceship on Venus but described the latter as "more complex and morally ambiguous."[28]AllMovie praises the film for its special effects.[29] In a retrospective review,Sight & Sound found its "space-age visuals and colourful design anticipate the spectacular fantasies Honda would go on to make for Toho in the [1960s], includingMothra,Godzilla vs. The Thing,Ghidrah The Three-Headed Monster andInvasion of the Astro-Monsters [sic]."[30]
The Mysterians is now considered among the most renowned and spectacular Honda-Tsuburaya films and has gained acult following from robot and science fiction film fans.[19]Japan Society called the film one of Japan’s most celebrated "sci-fi classics".[31] The film inspired the famed garage rock band? and the Mysterians[32] and the 1968 made-for-television filmMars Needs Women.[33] The film's robotkaiju Moguera would later become a recurring character in Toho'sGodzilla franchise, notably appearing in the 1988 video gameGodzilla: Monster of Monsters, the 1994 filmGodzilla vs. SpaceGodzilla,[34] the television seriesGodzilla Island (1997–1998)[35] as well as numerous comics.