Gamera vs. Guiron (1969) Poster

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3/10
When Good Kids Make Bad Choices
slokes25 October 2004
A flying saucer has just landed near your backyard. Do you:

A) Contact the police?

B) Grab a camera and sell a photo to the local tabloid?

C) Climb into the craft with your best Occidental buddy and fly off into space, counting on a giant space turtle to save your biscuits?

Answer: C.

"Attack Of The Monsters" as a title is a bit of a misnomer. From it, one might expect a film that features whole slew of monsters charging en masse either on a defenseless Japanese city or else each other, but this typical cheapo offering from the "Gamera" folks presents only three monsters, Gamera and two outer-space creatures, one of who looks like a silver Rodan and the other which has a giant blade for a forehead. The three never have a grand battle, either; it's just a series of one-on-one match-ups.

All this meant something to me back in the day, when "Attack of the Monsters" was on the local "4:30 Movie" and it was a welcome alternative to bad old Godzilla. Sure, Godzilla would save your occasional child, but he'd destroy three city blocks doing so. Gamera cared about kids, too, only he had more respect for property values in the process.

Plus this film had special appeal for me because it featured two boys going off on a strange adventure. I could imagine my buddy Stephen and I doing the same thing, except he'd have to be the one to get his head shaved.

After walking into a UFO and being whisked onto the planet Terra, Akio and Tom find themselves in a planet devoid of life, except for two comely ladies with antennae heads and the occasional wandering monster. The boys are happy with their new friends, but the women, being women, have ulterior motives. They want the boys' brains for something to munch on during the long flight to Earth. After all, why take a chance on airplane food?

Back in my middle school days, I enjoyed the battle sequences where Gamera fought his alien adversaries while the kids avoided the sexy cannibals and explored an expansive Star Trek set with blinking console lights. Now I see special effects that make the Beastie Boys' "Intergalactic" video look like a George Lucas production, dialogue as halting as a Berlitz beginners' course, and a storyline that sags at every turn.

But you know something? It's still a joy watching it. Most times, the pleasures of youth turn lame in adulthood. "Attack Of The Monsters" is just as much fun to watch now as it was then, especially if you have enough alcohol around.

Definitely try to get the Sandy Frank version; which has the zaniest dubbing. Better yet, find the old Mystery Science Theater 3000 version, where little Tom is basted with numerous Richard Burton riffs and Mike Nelson as Michael Feinstein brings it all home with a Cole Porter-ized version of the "Gamera" theme.
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3/10
"Oh boy, science has advanced here much more than on Earth."
classicsoncall2 May 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Reliving my youth with collections of movies from the Fifties and Sixties has generally been a blast. However I was never really a fan of the Japanese monster genre other than Godzilla, and perhaps "Attack of the Monsters" plays a big part of the reason. For this one, you'll have to leave all common sense at the door. It will also help to try and view it with the mind of a nine year old, since that seems to have been the intended audience.

That good old boy Gamera is the monster hero in this one, the retro rocket flying turtle that blasts through space with those flame jets out his leg holes. There's an upright version of Rodan named Gyaos with an oddly shaped flat head and wings seemingly fashioned from aluminum foil. But my favorite has to be that goofy Guiron, whose appearance is anything but menacing. Seeing him for the first time reminded me of the candy gram shark on those early "Saturday Night Live" bits. For sheer lunacy, there's nothing better than Gamera's defeat of Guiron as he lands nose down in the dirt.

Most of the action takes place on 'Terra', a planet directly opposite the Earth on the other side of the sun. Terra's inhabitants have been reduced to a pair of space babes who for some reason aren't even listed in the film credits. One of their names sounded very similar to Barbarella, while the other came across as something like Ploda. At some point when I can compose myself, I might try going back to confirm those names, but it's not a high priority right now.

The human heroes are Japanese boy Akio and his American friend Tom. Unfortunately, Akio's sister Tomoko was left behind as the boys commandeered the alien space ship, knowing just which buttons to push and how to maneuver their way to Terra. Of course Gamera helped them out owing to his reputation for helping children in distress.

Somehow, "Attack of the Monsters" conjures up a much larger mental picture of havoc and destruction than actually presented here, with the film's feature creatures going at it one on one instead of en masse. Don't let that worry you though, in it's own way it's a fun film that attempts to, but never does answer the question, "What were they thinking?"
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3/10
Hilarious FX
trixtium31 July 2003
Gamera vs Guiron is the most raucous example of bad FX since Turkish Star Wars! The hilarious dubbing alone makes the price worthwhile! Rejoice as a knife-monster turns his enemy into cold cuts! Revel in the ridiculous plotholes and nonsensical dialogue! Hum to an extremely cheesy (yet catchy) tune! Snicker at the horrendous and omnipresent special effects!

Though Gamera vs Guiron is hilarious with or without MST3K protection, I would recommend the latter to B-movie newcomers.
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The Japanese sure do have an imagination....
giantdevilfish18 July 2003
Basically Gamera fights a giant knife with an attitude! Alot of people put the Gamera series down for being cheap, but you know what? They were fun! At least Gamera fought a different monster (mostly outlandish ones at that) every movie. Unlike the Godzilla movies where Mothra, Ghidorah, and MechaGodzilla seem to pop up in every other flick. Anyway this movie follows Gamera VS Viras. It has the same concept. Two kids (one American, one Japanese) are the stars. And there is plenty of stock footage flashbacks too. Then things get bizarre. Gurion (the knife with the attitude) slices up a silver painted Gyoas. Shoots ninja stars at Gamera. Gamera sprays out blue blood. Swings around on parallel bars. And does a "la cucaracha" dance to remove some ninja stars stuck in his arms! He then finishes off Gurion by slamming his knife head into the ground, so Gurion is upside down with his legs kicking! Bizarre stuff. Throw in two Japanese women in funky space suits that drug the kids with tainted powdered donuts so they can eat thier brains and you can see what my one line summary means....
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1/10
The Famous Five Conquer the Universe (except there were only three of them and they didn't)
junk-monkey19 July 2007
Warning: Spoilers
This film is dreadful even by the standards of the genre (sweaty Japanese guys in rubber monster suits belting seven kinds excrement out of each other) The only redeeming aspects of it were the Brain Eating Space Bimbos who were a nice piece of eye candy, kitted out as they were in clingy shiny stuff, stupid hats, and regulation Twentieth century Space Capes.

Incidentally. When did capes stop being part of the regulation wear for Science Fiction Movies? From Flash Gordon onward almost everyone wore capes in the future. Thinking about it, we are now in the future I saw being portrayed in the movies I watched as a kid. When I was a kid I genuinely expected the future to be wonderful. I was going to be flying to school in an auto-gyro, eating my meals in tablet form, and be wearing a cape. Instead I am a middle-aged man sat in front of a machine with more processing power than NASA had at its disposal for the moon landings, writing a review of a crappy Japanese Rubber Monster movie.

I miss the future. It was fun.

The only other moment of note was when one of the laser firing monsters beams reflected off Gamera's shell and chopped its own leg off. The sight of the monster hopping around like the Black Knight from Monty Python and the Holy Grail was one of the most sublimely hilarious things I have seen in ages.

At one point during the movie one of the two kidnapped kids* says "Don't Die Gamera!"

I had never thought of this before but isn't that the stupidest line? It crops up all the time in the movies. "Don't die, Lassie", "Don't die, Gramps.", "Don't die, kid. Help will soon be here..." All the time, Don't die, Don't die. What is the person who is supposedly dying supposed to say at this point? "Well... I was thinking of dying.... but since you asked so nicely I think I'll do it later. So how about some milk and cookies?"

Best Line of the movie: "You're right, We'll eat their brains after we've fixed the ship."

*There are two kidnapped kids (one a pudgy European in a captain Scarlet costume and the other a Japanese with his arms glued to his sides) There are two of them so they can tell each other what they are going to do before they do it - the movie is full of pointless "Let's go this way". "Yes let's." dialogue, and they spend a lot of time telling each other what is supposedly happening off screen too, because the movie makers couldn't be bothered to make it coherent enough to follow without them telling us.
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2/10
They keep getting worse!
Jared G.15 October 1999
Apparantly, the writers thought that not enough monster fights had taken place in previous Gamera movies. So in this one, we get not one, not two, but THREE fights! Wow! By now Gamera has completely transformed into the friend of all children and his basic role in life is to save little brats. This one also has really bad dubbing. Why do all the women have weird accents?

Oh yeah, Guiron. He's a big knife. This leads to some of the most bizarre Gamera fights ever.
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2/10
Even for a children's' film, this is incredibly sloppy
lemon_magic19 November 2006
Warning: Spoilers
OK, by this point Gamera had been demoted from a terrifying symbol of man's inability to withstand the forces of Nature to "Friend to all children", which is what happens when Godzilla's already taken the "King Of Monster Island" slot and producers are desperate to crank out yet another sequel in the franchise. I'm OK with that, since Gamera was never more than "B" list anyway.

Even the hallucinatory plot,which involves children being kidnapped by a flying saucer, twin alien sisters who eat brains (!) and the young Richard Burton learning the price of loving a monster too well, doesn't annoy me too much. It's obviously for the kiddies, so why not have a "space Gaos" and a monster with a pocketknife for a forehead and Gamera swinging like a gymnast from a pole? What does irritate me about this movie is that the version I saw (I understand there are others) contains the worst English dubbing IN THE HISTORY OF MANKIND. I'm serious. Normally,one makes allowances for Japanese "ESL" trained actors trying to emote in a foreign language, but this is ridiculous. Every line sounds as if the dubbing actors are reading the English lines phonetically (like an "Abba" song), with no idea of what they are actually saying. The voice work here made "Time Of The Apes" (previous champion of the "Inappropriate Vocal Emphasis" title) sound like a Pixar film.

I kept trying to focus on the silliness of the proceedings, so I could find a few (if any) of the film's redeeming features. But the dubbing kept making me bleed from the ears, and so I had to blank out huge portions of it, until I noticed the closing music credits, followed by blessed, blessed silence.

I won't watch this one again without audio protection - like a boiler factor in the background, drowning out the voices. Sheesh!
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1/10
Easily one of the funniest movies I've ever seen!
DarkMog17 February 2000
Warning: Spoilers
This is one of the most unintentionally funny films that I have had the pleasure of watching. Gamera fights a monster that has a big knife for a snout, while two strange little boys cheer for him. The dubbing is atrocious, but supposedly played with a straight face; at one point, about ten seconds of mouth movement is dubbed with, probably, two or three seconds of English dialogue placed somewhere in the middle! Making things even funnier is the voices of the two boys; one of them sounds like a woman, and the other keeps saying the word "groovy" a lot, to hilarious effect. The opening sequence is incomprehensible and could have been, like the rest of the movie, scripted by a 1st grader (some nonsense about galactic space and nebulas, and a "star" being in trouble, whatever that means). The production values make the Godzilla films look like an Akira Kurosawa movie; the scene with the Gaos and Guiron is the best (possible spoiler up ahead, although I don't think anyone cares), with the cheap-looking beam bouncing off of Guiron's scalpel head and cutting off the leg of the Gaos. The knife guy then proceeds to slice the big bird up into little steaks; when he cuts off his head, it magically goes flying through the air! Regarding that scene, it looks really fake, but it is startling considering that it was a big time children's series in Japan when it came out. Add this to "groovy" aliens and a great scene with a meteor, and you have a perfect film for watching when you feel like a good laugh.
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2/10
ATTACK OF THE MONSTERS (1969) a lame entry in The Gamera series
hoskinsmike13 April 2024
I've never seen this film before. I've seen a lot of the previous entries but not this one. I found it mostly boring and dull. The kids in this film weren't as irritating at first as the kids from the previous Gamera entry, DESTROY ALL PLANETS, but over time this film became worse than the previous entry.

Two boys enter a spaceship which takes them to another planet. The inhabitants of said planet are two women with the traditional B movie space outfits. The 2 boys discover a silver copy pf the monster Gyaos and a new monster Guiron. Guiron kills the silver Gyaos by cutting it up with his knifelike head.

Gamera finally arrives. A lot of times I have to suspend disbelief when it comes to sci-fi, but the idea of Gamera traveling all the way from Earth through space with his head outside his shell is just too much. Even Gamera is a living breathing creature that needs oxygen, or maybe not. Maybe this movie is Gamera's "Jumping The Shark" moment. I think director Noriaki Yuasa and his crew over at Daiei Motion Picture Company had simply run out of ideas at this point.

2 STARS.
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7/10
Tremendous Fun For Anyone Young at Heart.
Space_Mafune13 September 2006
A trio of children (2 boys and a girl), intrigued by news reports of mysterious sound waves sent to Earth from outer space, star gazing spot a flying saucer! They later find it in a wooded area. The two boys decide to investigate while the girl being more wary decides to wait outside. After entering the spaceship however, the two boys suddenly find themselves being whisked off into space. Along the way they spot and greet Gamera who tries to prevent the ship from leaving our galaxy but even he cannot keep up with its incredible speed. After the ship lands, the two boys find themselves on a strange new planet and suddenly spot another version of Gaos in battle with the planet's guardian, a knife-headed monster with a mean streak named Guiron. Gamera all this time has still been on the trail of the boys' spaceship. Meanwhile aliens are watching all of this with possible evil intentions?

This was tremendous fun. The little kid in me loved every minute of it. Sure the child stars are a bit annoying at times (but more so I suspect to adult ears than to a child's) and the effects aren't always up to par but man do the monster battles ever deliver the goods in this one. They are knock-down drag-out affairs especially those featuring Gamera and Guiron and surprisingly graphic in terms of their brutality yet the film never loses sight of making clear just who is evil and who is good. Like the best pro wrestling of yesteryear, it manages to make the hero Gamera incredibly sympathetic while the villain Guiron comes across as little more than a nasty-tempered brute and a bully who needs to be taught a lesson in manners.
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2/10
Great fun provided you like rotten Japanese monster flicks
planktonrules19 July 2007
Aliens begin sending radio messages to Earth. One day, two kids are having a sleepover and they just happen to glance through a small telescope through the sky and see a UFO coming. When it lands nearby, it conveniently opens for the two precocious brats and spirits them back to another world in an orbit opposite the Earth's. Unfortunately, while this world seems high-tech, it's almost without people--having just two ladies in weird costumes and a giant monster that looks like Godzilla morphed with a kitchen knife (I am NOT exaggerating). Also unfortunate is that the monster is evil and the two ladies are intent on eating the two boys' brains (wow, that's a LONG way to go just to get takeout)! But have no fear, the boys (who appear about 10 years-old) are able to outsmart the high-tech ladies at practically every turn(?)--often understanding their machinery as well as the ladies even though they never saw it before!! Additionally, Gamera (a giant turtle-like monster who can fly from planet to planet) is able to foil the evil steak knife and make a getaway--taking the two lovable ragamuffins back home. When the Earth needs to be saved, you know you can always count on two average boys and a flying monster!

I have seen far more movies in my lifetime than any normal person and have learned to appreciate most genres. However, while I love such diverse offerings as silent film, art films, musicals, film noir, foreign films and the like, I never have been been able to understand the appeal of the crappy 1960s monster films featuring people in giant rubber dinosaur suits. They just seem very cheesy, dumb and could only be appreciated by children (okay, rabid fans, start sending me your hate mail and "not helpful" votes).

Unfortunately for me, this film is no exception to my assumption that practically all of these Japanese giant monster films stink (except perhaps the original GODZILLA). Sure, it's got the giant flame-shooting, giant-fanged flying turtle (among others), but it's also got one of the worst elements of some of these style films--"lovable kids" who love the monster and who are protected and loved back by the rubber-suited guy! Yecch! How incredibly saccharine and stupid. If you ARE going to have a giant monster, at least let him eat people and stomp on the rest! Making him good is just stupid and mushy and something that might cause indigestion!!
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10/10
Classic
cthulhu1119 June 2005
I saw this flick decades ago as a kid, and it's one that stuck in my memory, though as an adult I couldn't figure out what the title was, remembering it as the monster movie with the xacto-blade bad guy. Every time I see powdered donuts, I think of this flick. The dubbing, of course, is simply atrocious, but the alien babes are foxes of the highest order.

I just bought the SciFi Classics box set of 50 movies for $19.99, and was pleased to find Attack of the Monsters among the selection, along with Destroy All Planets, clips of which are included here as flashbacks. How Queen of the Amazons qualifies for inclusion as well isn't clear, but hey, for 40 cents a pop you can't go wrong.
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6/10
Classic Giant Monster Flick for Kids
mstomaso26 May 2007
Two boys who are apparently prone to various kinds of mischief find a spaceship in the woods and climb aboard only to find that the ship has autopilot and is programmed to return to the hostile planet of its origin. The film starts off with an astronomy lesson and the hostile planet turns out to be a hidden planet on the other side of the sun. Awaiting them there are two caped and antennaed young female cannibals and an enormous slow moving knife-headed creature named Guiron. Old favorite Gaos - or something that looks like him - makes a cameo but is defeated so quickly by Guiron that you will hardly notice him. Gamera to the rescue! Back home, the younger sister of one of the boys tries to convince her somewhat dour mother of what has happened, but she is told to stop making up stories and go study.

Indeed, this story is the sort of wandering, somewhat silly, and entirely fantastic thing that kids do make up. But that's exactly why it works. It's a kid film. It doesn't require expensive and fancy special effects, just a fun story, kids doing amazing things, and giant monsters.

I enjoyed this as a kid and enjoyed it again as an adult. The acting is passable for what it is - the younger sister is actually very convincing and sympathetic and the two boys do OK. The adults are presented entirely from a kid perspective (as was done in The Peanuts) - and are stereotypic and often over-dramatic). The cinematography is pretty good - again, for its purpose (this is not an art film nor even an adult action film). And the dubbing in the version I saw (Sandy Frank's name did not appear anywhere) was actually very good.

Fun little film - recommended!
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3/10
One of my favorite Gamera movies.
sfstendebach24 October 2010
Gamera 3: Awakening of Iris is by far the best Gamera movie. I also loved the original, but the most memorable Gamera movie has to be this one. It is the ultimate bad movie. Two kids board a space ship that flys them to another planet. Once there they see Guiron fight a Gyaos painted silver. We learn that Guiron is a watchdog that defends the aliens from Gyaos. The aliens are Asian girls that (this is so original) eat human BRAINS!!! Basically Guiron gets on the lose and GAMERA comes to save them. This is where the movie goes crazy. Did i mention that Guiron is a knife that shoots Shurikens out of his head?? It's awesome. So Gamers fights it, does some gymnastics, then brings the kids home. The kids are really annoying, but arnt the humans in kaiju movies always? It would actually be a decent kaiju without them, but the end fight is definitely worth it. I HIGHLY recommend to kaiju and bad movie fans.
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Very cute!!!
Rabbit Dreamer24 August 2000
I think I first saw this film when I was about 10 or so - and I took it quite seriously the first time I saw it. That was the dubbed version I saw then. I remember being quite worried about poor Gamera being chopped to pieces by Guiron - boy, Guiron was a nasty piece of work!!! I just recently saw it again - this time subtitled (subtitles provided by the Australian multicultural channel, SBS TV) - and I think the subtitled version probably is better. It was so much fun to see it again after so long! And only now do I realise just how cute all the beasties in the flick are! Especially the Children's Friend himself!
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4/10
Very Strange
kennymacdonald4 April 2003
I watched this film for the first time and it surprised me.The version that i watched was from the mst3k t.v. show and i can tell you that you don't need Joel and his robot pals to laugh at this film.I don't know who dubbed this film but it was pretty bad,also what was Akio's concern about traffic accidents anyway? You would think he be more worried about what the two alien girls were going to do to him and his friend.The monster Guiron was different,having a knife-like head that could cut up just about anything. This was the first Gamera film i ever saw and if the other films are like this i hope to see them.
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1/10
Bad Gamera bad!
jerome_horwitz16 January 2006
Warning: Spoilers
I remember watching Japanese monster movies as a kid, and I really don't recall seeing this one. I could swear that there were actually a couple of Gamera movies that were decent. But maybe not? This story begins with reports of alien waves being received by Earth scientist. Soon afterwards, a child and his friends discover through a telescope a spaceship approaching Earth. They decide to investigate, and two boys are whisked away in the spaceship to another "star". Yes, I said "star", because that's apparently the translation comes across. For some reason, one of the boys is obsessed with "traffic accidents"

Here we quickly meet Guiron which I guess is the "bad" monster in this movie. He's a monster that walks on 4 legs, and has a big knife blade for a head. Gamera is of course a turtle shaped monster, that breathes fire and is propelled by shooting fire out of it's leg holes. Who knows where the fuel for Gamera comes from? Again, one of they boys is obsessed with "traffic accidents".

It's the typical formula, in the end Gamera defeats his foe, and helps return the boys safely to Earth. The effects in this movie are really poor and laughable. The props make Star Trek the original series shows look like something along the lines of Star Wars 3 or something. The English translation is laughable on it's own, at a point it almost sounds like the Japanese translators are spoofing themselves!

If you insist on watching this movie, at least do yourself a favor and see the MSTed version. They do quite a number with it, after all there's plenty of material to work with. So you can watch the MST version or just avoid it. 1/10
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1/10
Giron: A Ginsu knife with a bad attitude. *SPOILERS*
icehole426 October 2001
Warning: Spoilers
This one is almost too silly to be believed. Gamera flies through space (Somehow being able not to explode in the partial vacuum, and able to breathe with no problems.) to follow some kids who were kidnapped and taken to an alien planet. Gamera then fights Giron, a lizard with a ginsu knife stuck to its face, that can shoot shurikens from its head. Cheesy special effects and bad acting shoot this one down.
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2/10
Gamera In Space
AaronCapenBanner3 May 2014
Fifth Gamera film continued the astonishing decline in quality, as three children are abducted from their neighborhood by a spaceship piloted by two alien women who claim to be friendly, but in reality are anything but, as they plot to kill the children before turning their attentions to Earth. Meanwhile, Gamera flies into outer space to rescue the children, and save the Earth, but first must do battle with a strange monster called Guiron who has a giant knife for a head, which it uses on another Gyaos, then turns on Gamera... Childish entry(with gruesome elements) has a memorable monster in Guiron, but is otherwise idiotic.
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5/10
Gamera vs. Guiron (1969) **
JoeKarlosi1 October 2010
Pretty outrageous chapter in the GAMERA series. Two boys stumble upon an actual flying saucer and step inside, only to get whisked away to a planet inhabited by another ludicrous-looking monster. This one's named Guiron, and he crawls about on all fours but has a head which is constructed like a huge, long butcher knife with eyeballs. This comes in handy for nodding on his monster opponents (like Gyaos, who makes a cameo appearance) and slicing them to ribbons. The boys are also met by two lovely Japanese alien women who pretend to be all kind and accommodating, but who in reality are spicing them up so they can eat the kids' brains. Pretty disturbing stuff for a very child-friendly movie! Gamera the protector must fly to the rescue to fight Guiron and rescue the children. The special effects got more and more fake looking as this series progressed, and the plastic monsters make the ones from the rivaling Toho Studios look positively dazzling in comparison. ** out of ****
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6/10
So Bad you will love it
manicgecko12 December 2005
"Listening to children is neither psychologically or educationally important" This and other bits of tidbits are what is at stake if you dare to watch this Japanese trash. After scientists discover mysterious irregular waves from outer space, 2 boys hi-jack a spaceship to another star -(Earth is a star by the way) - only to watch hilarious monster fights complete with ninja stars from a walking knife, and become trapped by female aliens who want to eat their brains with dremel tools. And the boys thought that these aliens will prevent wars and traffic accidents. Listen to some bad jack-in-the-box music and enter Gamara, a giant go-go dancing turtle who must have had some bad Mexican food and comes to kids rescue after a few turns on the high bar. Boy are these kids going to get a scolding when they get home. I have watched this both with and without MST3K's help and it is roll on the floor hilarious either way. We should all figure out how to live without wars and accidents or we will repent and get our heads shaved.
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2/10
Gamera and Guiron battle it out in another Japanese creature feature
Red-Barracuda30 June 2014
Two young boys discover an alien spaceship, which they board and are then whisked away to a planet on the other side of the Sun where they encounter two female aliens who ultimately plan to eat their brains. Fortunately, Gamera, the children-loving, fire-breathing, flying giant turtle monster comes to the rescue.

Attack of the Monsters is another in the mad series of Japanese monster movies from yesteryear. This one is a starring vehicle of the aforementioned Gamera. In this one he gets to battle a couple of other monsters, one of which is Guiron, a giant knife-headed evil creature. He is the servant of the two aliens and he makes for a fairly distinctive baddie. The fights between the monsters make up a fair bit of the run-time and they are basically more of the same you will have seen before if you've seen any other Japanese monster flicks. There is some recycled footage too from other entries in the Gamera series. It all gets a bit wearisome after a while, made considerably worse by the presence of the two rather annoying children at the centre of the story. Fun up to a point but mainly hard going.
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10/10
Hilarious movie, fun for all ages!
cornjob-218 April 1999
This is a truly fantastic movie! It has to be seen to be believed! Especially the God-like Kondo/Kon-Chan/Cornjob! This movie is so hilarious, that you may just crack a rib. Fun for everybody, definetly a movie to see with friends. It's the feel good smash sensation of the year.
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7/10
This must be what mescaline is like...
I_saw_it_happen19 June 2007
Warning: Spoilers
It's a kid's movie about a giant flying turtle. You can't expect depth, here. But it's great as a 'bad movie', actually succeeding far better at being a laughable 'bad movie' than almost anything else I've ever seen. Watching it as a 'bad movie' is probably the only way to enjoy it.

The scenes without Gamera are certainly less interesting. The policeman is annoying. Child acting is almost always atrocious. The plot is ridiculous. The special effects are oddly psychedelic. Was there a soundtrack? I don't know. But wow. Just wow. It's great stupid fun.

It's also the best Gamera movie out there. the others are somehow far more 'childish', even though they feature more adults. In the lexicon of rubber-monster-suit movies, it'd be hard to top this one. Definitely recommended.
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3/10
Isn't a color film usually better than a black and white film?
non_sportcardandy14 September 2005
Not when the black and white film is "gamera the invincible" and the one in color is "attack of the monsters".Both star Gamera but the black and white film is far superior to this movie in color.Yes,it does have a cheesy look and there is another reason to label it as limburger.GTI got a score of 8 from me,2 points knocked off for the annoying child.In "attack of the monsters" the annoying child has a much bigger part so it only gets a three.How annoying is the child(Io?)?Along with acting like a know-it-all he likes to remind his best friend and little sister of his superior science knowledge.He does this often throughout the movie when he refers to one or the other as.."IDIOT!"He talks that way to them even though he goes through the whole movie wearing shrunken shorts that show 90% of his legs.Anyway...1 point for the monster fight and 1 point each for the evil alien foxes=3 points.
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