Shinkaijû Reigô (2005) Poster

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4/10
Quality, Plot and Acting Lost at Sea
kluseba9 January 2022
Shinkaijû Reigô, also known as Reigo, the Deep-Sea Monster vs. The Battleship Yamato or Reigo: King of the Sea Monsters to cash in on the recent success of Godzilla: King of the Monsters is a cheap below average monster film from Japan that is only interesting for the most adamant genre fans and faithful collectors. This is the kind of movie you can watch once you have watched all the films involving Gamera, Godzilla, Mothra, Rodan and Varan and are still craving for more. This means that you have roughly a hundred films to watch before this one should even interest you remotely.

The plot is extremely thin. The movie takes place during the Second World War on Japanese battleship Yamato, the most impressive of its kind. Instead of battling against American ships in the Pacific, the fleet gets attacked by unusually big fish. The crew defends itself, killing the offspring of a sea dragon in the process. The gigantic mother creature is triggered by those events and destroys all ships of the fleet while the final battle occurs between the desperate crew of the Yamato and the legendary monster.

There aren't too many positive elements to mention, so let's start on a generous note. The film has decent pace and mostly entertains in its eighty miunutes, especially in its swift second half. Most scenes of the film take place on the battleship at night or in small rooms of the crew which give the film a gloomy claustrophobic atmosphere. The few landscape shots serve as a welcome contrast, especially the scenes at the beginning of the film that provide some background information on some of its characters. The soundtrack is serviceable as it blends in very well with the sinister atmosphere of this movie.

Everything else is however a complete the disaster. The most serious offenders are the horrible special effects that look artificial, blurry, cheap, dark and grainy. Their quality reminds me of video games from the mid-nineties at best. Up next, the misplaced, shaky and unfocused camera work doesn't help improving things. The sound effects are repetitive, simplistic and unimaginative as viewers can hear roughly two different monstrous screams on endless repetition. The acting performances are also dreadful as almost all male characters are overacting since the actors seem to confound loud screams with authentic emotions. Only the side story involving a young soldier and his childish childhood friend and potential love interest is remotely interesting. A special shoutout goes to the terrible Japanese actor who is supposed to play a stranded American soldier who doesn't look like an American, can barely speak two sentences of English, communicates in fluent Japanese and oddly becomes the saviour on battleship Yamato when shooting the sea dragon.

At the end of the day, Reigo, the Deep-Sea Monster is only interesting for adamant kaiju fans who might watch this below-average production once with their friends and a few beers to approach this flick from a humoristic perspective.
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3/10
Acting is good, but the PS1 graphics hurt this one
jorgito200118 April 2021
No, not PS2, PSOne special effects! The actors are playing it serious, so doesn't seem they were trying to go "The Asylum" route , but why oh why didn't they go with suitmation/model ships? As is, there's no way to take this movie seriously.
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5/10
Fun
BandSAboutMovies23 November 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Directed and written by Shinpei Hayashiya, this is the story of the real-life Japanese battleship, the Yamato, which fights giant monsters in the Pacific Ocean. Yes, the same battleship from Space Cruiser Yamamoto AKA Star Blazers.

The crew doesn't believe when they hear that the oceans they've docked in are protected by the man-sized, carnivorous Bonefishes and the Hell King of the Seas, Reigo. Well, they try and shoot what they think is Reigo and discover they've only murdered its child. Now filled with rage, the crew of the largest battleship in the Japanese Navy must battle the largest creature in the world.

There was also a 2009 sequel, Raiga: God Of The Monsters. This movie was retitled Reigo: King of the Sea Monsters and re-released to take advantage of the 2019 release of Godzilla: King of the Monsters.

Hayashiya also made the Gamera fan movie, Gamera 4: Truth, and the cast includes Susumo Kurobe, the original Ultraman, and Yukijiro Hotaru from the 1990s Gamera trilogy.
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2/10
For hard-core kaiju fans only
jamesrupert20141 November 2020
In this low-budget daikaiju adventure, ships of the Japanese Imperial Navy, including the battleship Yamato, face off against a number of monstrous sea-beasts including the titular aquatic 'dragon'. At this level of production, the old suit-mation techniques and miniatures look better than CGI. Most of the images of the Reigo and its entourage are blurry or supersaturated (when clear, the creature usually looks like a toy although the 'eye shots' are quite effective), and the animation of the ocean surface and of the various ships in the flotilla is not much better. There are couple effective images of the Yamato but for the most part the rendering of the ships looks more like a videogame than a 'feature film'. The scenes onboard the Yamato are generally unconvincing (you get the impression that a crew of three men can fire the battleship's 18 inch guns) and the actor playing the young 'Captain' needed a hair-cut before donning a navel uniform (as did the lead actor, Taiyo Sugiura). The cryptic and overly-long kabuki-themed epilogue was lost on me. Made by independent filmmaker (and kaiju fan) Shinpei Hayashiya, the cast includes Susumu Kurobe and Yukijiro Hotaru, both of whom have appeared in Godzilla films (Kurobe as far back as the first Ghidorah film in 1964). All in all, Reigo is one step below 'The Asylum' direct to cable sci-fi/monster films, but if you are willing to sit through one of those, you may enjoy this bargain-bin tribute to classic daikaiju films.
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2/10
Would have been better if it were trashier.
siggirules20 January 2021
It's hard to hate this movie, yet it's difficult to sit through it. This might have worked as a super campy low budget Godzilla rip-off, but the movie plays it completely straight and tries to be a dramatic war movie. It can't keep up with this pretense with it's ultra-cheap sets and abysmal CGI effects. The plot is actually not bad, neither is the pacing and the performances, but it feels like an amateur movie pretending to be a blockbuster. This works great for the Asylum Mockbusters, but these have one vital ingredient, they are self-aware. Can't really recommend this to anyone.
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7/10
Kaiju Lite
ralphv120 March 2020
While the special effects are not ILM quality, they are better than in many similar indie films. It is not, however, the special effects that drive the film, but the characters. Stylistically, most of the film is straightforward in its presentation, but the the film rides above a standard kaiju effort when it draws upon the conventions of kabuki theater.
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7/10
Tried but got so far
booktheprodigy27 March 2022
First off this film has a lot of heart and you could tell they tried as best as they could with what little they were offered on this budget. I think the best part of the film is the script. The design of Reigo is awesome. The CGI is definitely my least favorite part though. Overall I didn't think this movie was bad but it's not going to be the talk of the town. I decided not to take points away for the CGI because I feel like this film did the best they could with what little money they had for the CGI. The other things about this film exceeded my expectations. If you're a dedicated Kaiju fan then check this film out but if you're just a casual fan this might not be the film for you. Overall I enjoyed my time watching this movie.
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