“Icons of Sci-Fi: Toho Collection,” Mothra! on dvd!
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- Jet_Jaguar
- Shugyosha<Student Warrior>
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I hadn't seen this review of this set. Thanks for the link. I have a copy of this DVD set coming from Amazon sometime soon, and I'm really looking forward to it since I've never seen any of these movies before (It seems kind of strange that I'm a huge kaijyu eiga fan but I've never actually seen the first Mothra movie).
"It doesn't matter whom you are paired against;
your opponent is always yourself."
-Nakamura (via Joe R. Lansdale's Mucho Mojo)
your opponent is always yourself."
-Nakamura (via Joe R. Lansdale's Mucho Mojo)
- Jet_Jaguar
- Shugyosha<Student Warrior>
- Posts: 1281
- Joined: Tue Sep 11, 2007 21:37 -0700
- Location: TX, United States
Yeah, stuff like that is annoying. The recent Astonishing Work of Tezuka Osamu DVD has one really bad subtitle glitch: One of the short films on the disc, "Mermaid," has intertitles in Japanese, and the subtitles that translate them don't show up until about 30 seconds later! "Mermaid," like most Tezuka short films, is dialogue-free, and you don't really need the intertitles to understand what's going on, but it's still annoying.khyron82 wrote:My copy arrived from Amazon last Thursday. Seeing the uncut Japanese versions was great, but the English subtitles were way out of synch at times (often preceding the Japanese dialogue, which was annoying).
"It doesn't matter whom you are paired against;
your opponent is always yourself."
-Nakamura (via Joe R. Lansdale's Mucho Mojo)
your opponent is always yourself."
-Nakamura (via Joe R. Lansdale's Mucho Mojo)
- SakuradaKaoru
- Shugyosha<Student Warrior>
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- Shugyosha<Student Warrior>
- Posts: 12
- Joined: Mon Mar 10, 2008 15:44 -0700
- Location: Northampton, PA.
I have a copy of the DVD, and while I like it -- it's good to own copies of The H-Man and Mothra -- I wish they'd done as much with them as has been done with the Tokyo Shock Toho flicks like The Mysterians or the recent Showa Godzilla film set, where they included mini-documentaries about the films, their creators (Ishiro Honda, Eiji Tsubaraya), and commentaries on the films' impact in Japan and abroad.
The Icons of Sci-Fi collection just feels rather bare-bones to me.
The Icons of Sci-Fi collection just feels rather bare-bones to me.