Zilla
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- For other uses see Zilla (disambiguation)
Zilla (ジラ Jira?) is Toho Studios' official name for the title creature of the 1998 TriStar Pictures film Godzilla.
Before Toho officially dubbed the creature "Zilla" it was referred to by many nicknames to differentiate it from the original Godzilla. These nicknames included "American Godzilla", "Fraudzilla", "Deanzilla" (because of writer/producer Dean Devlin), and "G.I.N.O.", an acronym for "Godzilla In Name Only.".
Film appearances: Godzilla, Godzilla: Final Wars(2004) , mentioned in gmk (godzilla mothra king ghidorah)
French nuclear testing in the Polynesian islands mutated an marine iguana hybrid, which grew to megaproportions. The beast first attacked a Japanese fishing ship and was dubbed "Gojira" by the sole survivor (later mistranslated as "Godzilla" by the U.S. media). The creature then travelled across Panama, leaving footprints that would cover a whole bus. After travelling to New York City, the reptile laid several hundred eggs in Madison Square Garden. (a trivia book released in time for the movie claims that 229, and not the 200 that Tatapolous claims in the film, hatched and were destroyed, meaning that, counting Zilla and the surviving hatchling who appeared in the animated series, there were 231 of these creatures grand total.) A trio of F-18s bombed the Garden, slaying the newborn zillas. When an enraged Zilla appeared at the Garden's remains, it began chasing a taxi occupied by the protagonists. They lured it to the Brooklyn Bridge, where it became entangled and immobilized by the suspension cables. Zilla was then killed by the same F-18s that had destroyed its offspring. One egg, however, deep within the subway, had survived the earlier bombing, and hatched
Zilla is mentioned briefly in the prologue of Godzilla, Mothra and King Ghidorah: Giant Monsters All-Out Attack (2001), where it is suggested that American scientists had mistaken it for the real Godzilla.
Zilla did not appear in film again until five years later then in 2004, Zilla appeared in Godzilla: Final Wars (2004), finally taking an official place in the ranks of Toho's kaiju and being given the official name "Zilla". (According to Ryuhei Kitamura, the monster was given this name because the American movie had taken the "God" out of "Godzilla".) Under Xilian control, Zilla attacks Sydney, Australia, and is later defeated by the real Godzilla. There was another reason for the fight according to Toho besides showing their Godzilla was a better monster. Toho created Zilla in Final Wars exclusively using CGI to prove their suitmation superior (in Japan, Godzilla is always portrayed by an actor wearing a suit). Surprisingly, Zilla was seen apparently chasing two people in Final Wars, something few other Toho Kaiju have done. Zilla himself, despite the destruction of Apache helicopters in Godzilla, was not shown to have a taste for human flesh and actually seemed almost curious about humans, or at the very least Nick Tatopolous, with whom the creature came virtually eye-to-eye with, so to speak. The creature only attacked humans when it was attacked in the TriStar film, although it attempted to swallow the cab containing the main characters, whom had killed its offspring.
Though disputed, it appears as if the Final Wars Zilla possessed a breath weapon as the film shows a crowd of people running until they are blown away by a wall of fire which precedes the appearance of the monster walking into camera view.
Also in Godzilla: Final Wars was a reference to the TriStar Godzilla Movie. When Godzilla defeats Zilla, the Controller of Planet X says "I knew that tuna-eating monster was useless." - a reference to the fish Zilla ate in the TriStar movie, in the American dubbed version, the Controller simply referred to him as a "tuna-head".
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[edit] Godzilla: The Series
In 1999, Godzilla: The Series, a Saturday morning cartoon, continued the story of Zilla's surviving baby from the 1998 film in a role reminiscent of the Japanese films of the late Shōwa era. A human team of researchers, known as H.E.A.T., composed out of most of the movie's protagonists, follow "Zilla" and investigate various new monsters around the world. The Zilla in this series was a lot closer to the original Godzilla in terms of strength and durability, and also had the atomic fire Godzilla is known for (albeit a green blast instead of blue), but still resembled its predecessor. This series was received extremely well by the mainstream Godzilla fandom. Since he was the offspring of the original creature, this version of Zilla is sometimes unofficially referred to as "Zilla Jr."
The original Zilla returns as a creature called "Cyber Godzilla" in the three-part Monster Wars saga. An alien race called the "Leviathans" resurrect the original Zilla using cybernetic components. Confronting the current Zilla, his son, this 'Cyber-Godzilla' is able to confuse him, allowing the Leviathans to gain control of him as they have controlled several other monsters. Eventually, Nick Tatopulous, the scientist whom Zilla Jr. has 'imprinted' on as a parent, is able to break the Leviathans' hold on the creatures, but Cyber-Godzilla remains on their side as he was never actually under their control. When faced with a choice between Nick and Cyber-Godzilla, however, Zilla Jr. sides with Nick, and after a prolonged battle defeats his cyborg 'parent'.
[edit] Other Appearances
Zilla made an appearance in a 2006 Doritos commercial, in which he picks up a truck of Doritos and shakes chips into his mouth. In another Doritos commercial, Zilla devours a spicy variant of Doritos, roars in pain, and dives into the ocean. Both were meant to parody the bait scene in the 1998 movie. It is also believed he will appear in future chapters of the fan comic Powerpuff Girls Doujinshi, seen in a character lineup with NIGEL. At the time of the release of the 1998 movie Zilla made several commercials for Taco Bell, crossing paths with the Taco Bell chihuahua..
Zilla was also a playble character in Godzilla Generations for the Sega Dreamcast. Unlocked after finishing the game with Godzilla 1954, Zilla is the fastest of the playable characters. His roar restores less health than the other Godzillas', but he is a bit tougher to compensate. Zilla's breath weapon is a powerful blast of air; while the shortest-ranged, it has the longest duration, able to take down the Super X in one blast and the Super X-II and Super X-III with two blasts if timed right. Zilla's special attack is a fast run that crushes and smashes everything he runs over and into. He doesn't take damage while charging and it lasts a fair amount of time.
[edit] Trivia
- In Godzilla Final Wars, Zilla attacks Sydney. Final Wars director Ryuhei Kitamura studied film in Sydney and having it featured in his film was his way of paying tribute to what he calls his "second home".
- In Godzilla, it is disputed if Zilla has a breath weapon. Twice when the monster roars and sends cars flying into the air, the explosions and flames from the vehicles crashing together seem to ignite Zilla's breath into a maelstrom of flame. Other times Zilla's roar only causes a hurricane-force rush of air. Whether Zilla's breath is flammable or has other properties is a mystery. The cartoon series Zilla has a true flame/nuclear ray. In Godzilla: Final Wars a group of people fleeing from Zilla are killed by a huge rush of flame moments before the monster walks into view, most likely a reference to the Tri-Star film's flame breath scenes. It was latter confirmed that Zilla lacks a fire breath and he is actually firing explosive gas from his stomach. The flame breath was taken out because it was considered unrealistic.
- Some people believe that Roland Emmerich hates the Japanese Godzilla, but this is not true; in an interview, Emmerich actually said that he was a Godzilla fan and understood why some fans dislike his creation.
- The old cook from the ship refers to the monster as "Gojira" when he is in a semi-conscious state. Gojira is and always has been the proper name of Godzilla in his native Japan, but was somehow mangled (intentionally or otherwise) in the process of translating the original film into the American Godzilla, King of the Monsters (It is possible that he was a survivor in the original Godzilla.); in the film, Audrey Timmonds comments on this in the cantina.
- The characters of the mayor (Lerner) and his advisor are clearly caricatures of Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel. Reportedly, the less-than-flattering portrayal was because both had given negative reviews of Dean Devlin and Roland Emmerich's earlier film, Independence Day. When the actual Siskel and Ebert reviewed Emmerich's Godzilla on their show, it received two thumbs down and Siskel commented on being spoofed in the film, saying it was "petty."
- Zilla is shown in a 2006 Doritos commercial, which parodies the bait scene from the film, replacing the tons of fish with a Doritos trailer.
- In the film Godzilla, Mothra and King Ghidorah: Giant Monsters All-Out Attack, it is mentioned that a creature had attacked New York City and that American officials thought it was Godzilla but the Japanese knew it was not the monster; it is obvious that they are referring to TriStar's remake of Godzilla.
- The extra killed in his car when Godzilla first arrives in Manhattan was cast as a look-alike for J.D. Lees, editor of G-Fan Magazine, because he said disparaging remarks about the information that leaked out about the film prior to its release.
- The music that plays on an elevator in a scene with Matthew Broderick is "Danke Schoen", which Broderick lip-synchs in a memorable scene from Ferris Bueller's Day Off.
- The first sequence of the AH64-Apache gunships chasing after Godzilla through the streets references both Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back with the line, "Echo 4 to Echo Base", and Star Wars with "He's right on my tail! I can't shake him!" Both lines were spoken by Luke Skywalker.
- In the Tri Star Movie Matthew Broderick's character's last name is "Tatopoulos." Godzilla's designer and supervisor is Patrick Tatopoulos.
- The Tri Star film is dedicated to Tomoyuki Tanaka, who produced all of the Japanese Godzilla movies and died only a month before this film began actual production.
- The Tri Star film's first teaser trailer began appearing in theaters a full year before the movie was released. The trailer featured a shot of Godzilla's foot coming through the roof of a museum and crushing a T-Rex skeleton.
- Dean Devlin maintains that the tagline for this movie, "Size Does Matter", was meant simply to differentiate the movie from Jurassic Park, hence the original "museum" trailer, but that the advertisers for the studio took it too far with their overzealous campaign (e.g. "His foot is as long as this bus"). The ads became the biggest focus of the backlash against the movie, especially considering that Zilla is actually smaller then the Japanese Godzilla.
- The web site The Screamsheet features a battle between Godzilla and Zilla, written several years before Godzilla: Final Wars. In this comical adaptation, Godzilla utterly destroys Zilla and his eggs in three rounds. Charlie Martin, the writer of the Screamsheet, refers to Zilla as "The Big Lizard" and the American movie as It Came from Beneath the Sea. Zilla also appeared in one round of The Screamsheet's "The Biggest Damn Fight Ever," in which he was easily defeated by Bruce Campbell.
[edit] External links
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| Technology: | Oxygen Destroyer · Markalite · Gotengo · Moonlight SY3 . Super X |
| Other: | Fictional locations · Alien races · Monsterland and Monster Island |



