T
2016    2hAction, Adventure
6.987%79%7.2
Guarda su Prime Video
Su Prime Video
Acquista per $13.99pubblicità
In Giappone è una giornata tranquilla quando uno strano incidente in una baia diffonde il panico tra i funzionari governativi. In un primo momento, si sospetta che si tratti solo di normale attività vulcanica ma un giovane dirigente crede che vi sia dietro qualcos'altro. I suoi incubi peggiori prendono vita quando un enorme mostro emerge dalle profondità marine e inizia a distruggere tutto ciò che incontra lungo il suo cammino. Mentre il governo tenta di tutto per salvare le persone, una squadra di volontari cerca di capire i punti deboli della creatura e i suoi misteriosi legami con una superpotenza straniera.
Diretto da Shinji Higuchi, Hideaki Anno
  • Hiroki HasegawaRando Yaguchi : Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary
  • Yutaka TakenouchiHideki Akasaka : Special Advisor to the Prime Minister
  • Satomi IshiharaKayoko Ann Patterson : US special envoy
  • Kengo KoraYusuke Shimura : Secretary of Rando
  • Satoru MatsuoSyuichi Izumi : Policy Research Council Vice Chairman
  • Mikako IchikawaHiromi Ogashira : Ministry of the Environment Nature
  • Issey TakahashiRyu Yasuda : Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, Research / Promotion Bureau Director
  • Kanji TsudaFumiya Mori : Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare / Research and Development Division Director
  • Shinya TsukamotoKunio Hazama : Jouhoku University Associate professor
  • Toru NomaguchiTachikawa : Agency for Natural Resources and Energy / Electricity and Gas Industry Department Director
  • Daisuke KurodaTatsuya Negisi : Nuclear Regulatory Agency / Monitoring information Division Director
  • Ren OsugiSeiji Ookouchi : Prime minister
  • Kimiko YoReiko Hanamori : Minister of Defense
  • Akira EmotoRyuta Azuma : Chief Cabinet Secretary
  • Sei HiraizumiYusuke Satomi : Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries
  • Toru TezukaSekiguchi : Minister of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology
  • Kenichi YajimaYanagihara : Minister of land, infrastructure and transportation
  • Akira HamadaKouno : Minister of Internal Affairs and Communications
  • Ikuji NakamuraKanai : Minister of State for Special Missions
  • Tetsu WatanabeKooriyama : Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary for Crisis Management
  • Shaydeknight8 giugno 2026
    Shin Godzilla is, on the surface, a giant monster film. There is a new incarnation of Godzilla, stranger and more unsettling than many of its predecessors, and the creature's destructive path provides the film's central conflict. Yet to describe Shin Godzilla merely as a monster movie is to miss what makes it so unusual. At its heart, the film is a sprawling procedural. Rather than focusing primarily on military action or individual heroics, it examines how institutions respond to an unprecedented crisis. The real subject of the film isn't Godzilla, it's how human systems are forced to react to the monster's existence. The film moves at a remarkable pace. Characters are introduced in rapid succession, often accompanied by brief title cards identifying their positions and responsibilities. At first this can feel overwhelming, but it quickly becomes clear why the filmmakers made this choice. The story isn't about a handful of protagonists, it's about a network of people, agencies, ministries, scientists, civil servants, and military personnel working together under extraordinary pressure. One of the film's greatest strengths is its fascination with process. Meetings lead to more meetings. Decisions require consultation. New information forces revisions. Authority shifts from one group to another. Far from being tedious, these details become engrossing because they demonstrate how complex societies function when confronted by disaster. Every solution requires cooperation, expertise, and compromise. The political dimension is equally compelling. As the crisis escalates, international actors become involved, bringing their own priorities, concerns, and demands. The problem ceases to belong solely to Japan. Questions of sovereignty, diplomacy, and global security become intertwined with the immediate challenge of stopping the creature. The film treats politics as an essential part of the drama. This places Shin Godzilla in a category of its own. It's not a traditional Toho kaiju flick built around monster brawls. It's not a slick Matthew Broderick Hollywood-style attempt to make Godzilla feel conventionally realistic. It's not a mass-market blockbuster in the mould of the modern Godzilla and Kong films. Nor is it the emotionally driven historical allegory of Godzilla Minus One. Instead, Shin Godzilla is something far stranger and more distinctive. It's a film about competence under pressure. It is about people with different skills, agendas, and personalities finding ways to work together in the face of a common threat. The drama emerges from organization, sacrifice, ingenuity, and perseverance. For that reason, I found it as fascinating as films such as Contagion or Thirteen Days. The monster may dominate the screen, but the true spectacle is watching human beings struggle, adapt, and ultimately cooperate when confronted with the impossible. Shin Godzilla is one of the most unusual entries in the franchise and one of the most mesmerizing. It's the compelling portrait of a society refusing to stop functioning, even when faced with a nightmare beyond comprehension.
  • Jonathan Grindstaff27 aprile 2026
    Godzilla from a fresh perspective. This is probably my favorite entry since Tokyo SOS. If you like Godzilla you will love shin Godzilla.
  • Rick12 febbraio 2025
    Googly eyes Godzilla got me at the start. I honestly stopped to make sure I wasn’t watching a parody version. Loved how the governments ineffectiveness was just as much of a villain as Godzilla.
  • paullywise24 marzo 2026
    Excellent and hilarious send up of absurdities of beauracratic systems and global politics. Awesome monster too.
  • Seabee4uu21 marzo 2026
    One of the best of the franchise. Do not watch this dubbed in english, it totally sucks. You need to watch it in original japanese with subs.
  • Sylmand19 marzo 2026
    Badly dubbed into English (with an American accent)... Seriously???
  • WiseGuySaidSo17 marzo 2026
    This is the best Godzilla movie I had ever seen. The evolution stages had him looking kinda goofy through most of it, but it didn't take away from how good this movie is. Pure destruction and chaos. Godzilla was as a metaphor and punishment for nuclear weapons and testing. Not some lovable lizard here to bring balance and natural order.
  • PapaHamzeh6 marzo 2025
    Tied for the best Godzilla movie ever made.
  • NewFilmsAnonymous19 giugno 2025
    Not as catered to the masses as "Godzilla Minus One", resulting in a superior film.
  • CatcherNTheRyan26 gennaio 2026
    This is the scary Godzilla and maybe the best one.
  • MechaJayZilla30 agosto 2025
    One of the top films in the franchise. A fantastic reimagining of the King of Monsters. And great social commentary - scathing even - of Japan's government gridlock during/following the 2011 Japan earthquake and tsunami.
  • Strects17 dicembre 2025
    A movie best appreciated as Japanese political satire rather than an action-focused entry to the 'Godzilla' series, the constant bureaucracy in the face of imminent danger of the titular character and its evolutions drives home the inadequacy of the government's response to the 2011 Fukushima nuclear accident.
  • Richard12 ottobre 2025
    This one’s a slow burn with sharp teeth. Shin Godzilla isn’t about monster mayhem, it’s about paralysis, bureaucracy and the terrifying speed of evolution. The creature’s early form is almost laughable, googly eyed and awkward, but it quickly becomes something horrifying, unstoppable and eerily symbolic. The real monster, though, might be the government’s response: endless meetings, indecision and red tape while Tokyo burns. There’s no central hero here, just a swarm of officials trying to adapt. And that’s the point. It’s a scathing allegory for Japan’s handling of the 2011 Fukushima disaster, but it resonates far beyond. It’s not flashy, but it’s bold, biting and deeply relevant. A modern Godzilla film that dares to ask: what if the real horror isn’t the monster, but our inability to act?
  • cultfilmliker25 agosto 2025
    “‘Post-war’ extends forever” Couldn’t help but think of the opening of Jackass Forever for the first 15 that Godzilla was on screen. The monster really grows on you
  • jishswood10 aprile 2025
    Excellent movie. The pacing and depiction of government reactions seemed quite realistic. I will say, though, that the monster initially appeared beyond ridiculous. It looked like they asked an 8 year old to draw godizilla, and then they animated that drawing. I highly recommend watching though.

Guarda video Shin Godzilla

  • Shin Godzilla (US)
    Shin Godzilla (US)Trailer
  • Shin Godzilla (4K Trailer)
    Shin Godzilla (4K Trailer)Trailer
  • Shin Godzilla (Orthochromatic Teaser Trailer)
    Shin Godzilla (Orthochromatic Teaser Trailer)Trailer

Ottenere Plex sui dispositivi

Gratuito su oltre 20 piattaforme. Scegliete la vostra.
Vedere tutti i dispositivi supportati →

Shin Godzilla Trivia