Godzilla2000
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Well, I was thinking of this because I'd recently watched Godzilla vs. Destoroyah (Pronounced Destroyer, as in the monster came from the Oxygen Destroyer weapon that killed the original Godzilla.) which is pretty much your standard Kaiju movie with monsters fighting each other and landmarks crumbling. But it's the end of the movie that really stands out. This 1996 movie was going to be the last Toho Godzilla movie because Tristar was supposed to have taken the baton from them to make their American Godzilla movies, and failed miserably. So Toho planned this to be the official last movie and it was decided that Godzilla would die at the end. Well, indeed Godzilla does melt down and to diehard Godzilla fans it is an emotional moment, but what really drives home the moment is Akira Ifukube's score. He was the master of Godzilla scoring and he does not disappoint with his Requiem for the Japanese cinema legend. It makes me cry every time because of that score, and I'm not ashamed to say that. If you'll forgive the awful dub just listen and watch this scene:
Another scene that Akira Ifukube scored with a mournful melody that makes me tear up is the choral tribute to the victims of Godzilla's rampage in the original Gojira. The man was a master Japanese composer.
Another scene that Akira Ifukube scored with a mournful melody that makes me tear up is the choral tribute to the victims of Godzilla's rampage in the original Gojira. The man was a master Japanese composer.