Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

SpaceGodzilla

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Portrayed by
  
Ryō Haritani

Played by
  
Ryo Hariya

Designed by
  
Shinji Nishikawa

SpaceGodzilla spacegodzilla DeviantArt

Species
  
Godzilla/Crystaline organism hybrid

First appearance
  
Godzilla vs. SpaceGodzilla (1994)

Movie
  
Godzilla vs. SpaceGodzilla

Created by
  
Kensho Yamashita, Hiroshi Kashiwabara

Similar
  
Destoroyah, Mechagodzilla, King Ghidorah, Gigan, Biollante

Godzilla vs spacegodzilla first fight


SpaceGodzilla (スペースゴジラ, Supēsugojira) is a kaiju that first appeared in Toho's 1994 film Godzilla vs. SpaceGodzilla.

Contents

Godzilla and godzilla vs spacegodzilla kaiju moments 30


Overview

SpaceGodzilla 17 Best images about SPACEGODZILLA on Pinterest Black holes

The character was designed as a homage to the monster's hinted progenitor Biollante by incorporating tusks and a hissing roar reminiscent of the latter monster. Creature designer Shinji Nishikawa had initially envisioned SpaceGodzilla as a much more western dragon-like creature with large fin-like wings on the back. Other early designs for the proposed "Astrogodzilla" included it being an albino Godzilla with expansive wings, two tails, and the ability to fire an ice ray. Another design for SpaceGodzilla had the character be a quadruped or a much more Biollante-like monster commanding a horde of cosmic dragonflies. The final design bore greater resemblance to Godzilla's final form from the video game Super Godzilla, itself also designed by Nishikawa. Special effects artist Koichi Kawakita decided to incorporate crystals onto the SpaceGodzilla design, and added a prominent horn on the creature's head in order to hint at its power and imply it had radar abilities.

In its debut film, SpaceGodzilla's origins are left ambiguous, but it is theorized that it was born through Godzilla cells (transported into space either by Mothra or Biollante's spores) being exposed to the radiation of a black hole. SpaceGodzilla heads for Earth and traps Little Godzilla in a crystalline prison, before travelling to Fukuoka and forming a crystal fortress which drains the city of power, channels it through Fukuoka Tower and transfers it to SpaceGodzilla. It is ultimately stopped through the combined efforts of Godzilla and M.O.G.U.E.R.A..

Film

  • Godzilla vs. SpaceGodzilla (1994)
  • Video games

  • Godzilla Trading Battle (PlayStation - 1998)
  • Godzilla: Save the Earth (Xbox, PS2 - 2004)
  • Godzilla: Unleashed (Wii, PS2 - 2007)
  • Godzilla Unleashed: Double Smash as Boss (NDS - 2007)
  • Godzilla: Daikaiju Battle Royale (Online game - 2012)
  • Godzilla: The Game (PS4 - 2015)
  • Literature

  • Godzilla vs. SpaceGodzilla (Manga - 1994)
  • Godzilla (Comic - 2012/2013)
  • Godzilla: The Half-Century War (Comic - 2012/2013)
  • Godzilla: Rulers of Earth (Comic - 2013/2014)
  • Godzilla in Hell (Comic - 2015/2016)
  • Reception

    While the film received mixed reactions, SpaceGodzilla was generally well received. DVD Cult said, "The monster SpaceGodzilla is excellently designed, and is certainly far more menacing than anything Dean Devlin and Roland Emmerich ever dreamed up." Toho Kingdom praised his theme music, and said "SpaceGodzilla has a nice, hectic, theme that suits him and works well when used through out the movie," while Complex listed the character as #11 on its "The 15 Most Badass Kaiju Monsters of All Time" list, calling him "probably the most powerful thing Godzilla has ever faced". However, the character's design was criticized by Godzilla historian Steve Ryfle, who stated that, although evil-looking, it was too evocative of the haphazardly designed monsters of the generally low-quality Godzilla films of the 1970s like Hedorah and Gigan.

    References

    SpaceGodzilla Wikipedia