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Yôsei Gorasu

  • 1962
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 28m
IMDb RATING
5.7/10
967
YOUR RATING
Yôsei Gorasu (1962)
DisasterEpicSci-Fi EpicSpace Sci-FiSci-FiThriller

A Tokyo scientist and his colleagues shift Earth to avoid a red-hot planet on a collision course.A Tokyo scientist and his colleagues shift Earth to avoid a red-hot planet on a collision course.A Tokyo scientist and his colleagues shift Earth to avoid a red-hot planet on a collision course.

  • Director
    • Ishirô Honda
  • Writers
    • Takeshi Kimura
    • Jôjirô Okami
    • John Meredyth Lucas
  • Stars
    • Ryô Ikebe
    • Yumi Shirakawa
    • Akira Kubo
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.7/10
    967
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ishirô Honda
    • Writers
      • Takeshi Kimura
      • Jôjirô Okami
      • John Meredyth Lucas
    • Stars
      • Ryô Ikebe
      • Yumi Shirakawa
      • Akira Kubo
    • 22User reviews
    • 29Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos53

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    Top cast99

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    Ryô Ikebe
    Ryô Ikebe
    • Dr. Tazawa - Astrophysicist
    Yumi Shirakawa
    • Tomoko Sonoda
    Akira Kubo
    Akira Kubo
    • Tatsuma Kanai - Cadet Astronaut
    Kumi Mizuno
    Kumi Mizuno
    • Takiko Nomura
    Hiroshi Tachikawa
    • Wakabayashi - Pilot of Ôtori
    Akihiko Hirata
    Akihiko Hirata
    • Endô - Captain of Ôtori
    Kenji Sahara
    Kenji Sahara
    • Saiki - Vice Captain of Ôtori
    Jun Tazaki
    Jun Tazaki
    • Raizô Sonoda - Tomoko's Father
    Ken Uehara
    Ken Uehara
    • Dr. Kôno - Astrophysicist
    Takashi Shimura
    Takashi Shimura
    • Kensuke Sonoda - Paleontologist
    Seizaburô Kawazu
    Seizaburô Kawazu
    • Tada - Minister of Finance
    Kô Mishima
    • Sanada - Engineer
    Sachio Sakai
    • Physician
    Takamaru Sasaki
    • Prime Minister Seki
    Kô Nishimura
    Kô Nishimura
    • Murata - Secretary of Space
    Eitarô Ozawa
    Eitarô Ozawa
    • Kinami - Minister of Justice
    Masaya Nihei
    • Itô - Astronaut of Ôtori
    Kôzô Nomura
    • Observer of Ôtori
    • Director
      • Ishirô Honda
    • Writers
      • Takeshi Kimura
      • Jôjirô Okami
      • John Meredyth Lucas
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews22

    5.7967
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    Featured reviews

    6OllieSuave-007

    If this story was real, we would have no moon.

    An "End of Days" sort epic from Japan's Toho studios, bring together Godzilla's founding father-team of Tanaka, Honda, and Tsuburaya to work on this film, minus a musical score by Akira Ifukube. Another good story-line, where a meteor is on its course to Earth and is predicted to destroy the entire planet completely. Therefore, it's up to the Japanese eggheads to dodge the flying fireball. As always, Toho sci-fi films are very imaginative, but this one takes the cake: move the Earth with huge rockets to dodge the meteor, with the Moon being destroyed in the process. Very far-fetched, but yet, pure sci-fi action.

    Veteran actresses Kumi Mizuno and Yumi Shirakawa shine. Akira Kubo, known for his type-casted hero portrayals, is very annoying in this film though. Aside from that, an average film that could have used more monster scenes and action, instead of the usual scientist concoctions to save the world. I have got to say that even though Takeshi Kimura, known for his more somber stories, wrote the screenplay, there are a few funny scenes, including the part where Shirakawa's character bangs the door on her brother's head after he was caught eavesdropping on a meeting with the lead scientist.

    If you choose to watch this film, I recommend watching the original Japanese version, as the American version cuts out scenes that include Magma, the gigantic walrus.

    Grade C+
    boris-26

    One of the better Japanese sci-fi films.

    GORATH (1962) begins with a Japanese Space Exploration ship fatally encountering a run-away planet smaller than Earth, but much greater in mass. It is now up to Earth scientists to build rocket boosters at the South Pole in order to move the Earth out of it's orbit. For logic, GORATH is a scientific mess (One scientist watches Gorath suck up the moon "The moon's gone. But it gives us the boost we need!") Huh? However, GORATH is a charming sci-fi film. Akira Kubo (A Japanese actor who resembles Speed Racer) is the astronaut who takes on a suicidal space mission to observe Gorath when his relationship with a young woman is at it's lowest ebb. His return to Earth, as a shell-shocked wreck is quite touching. Tsuburaya's minatures are also at a low here. The space scenes a re quite beautiful and haunting despite that. Basically, GORATH, for all it's screenwriting and cinematograhic faults, has an entertaining charm.
    7henri sauvage

    Spaceship Earth

    "Gorath" is the last, and by some standards the best, of Ishiro Honda's "space trilogy" of the late 50s/early 60s.

    Once again, Honda explores the theme of humankind forced to work together against an extraterrestrial adversary. Only this time we're not facing aliens, but something far more deadly, and utterly implacable: a runaway stellar remnant which for some unexplained reason the authorities name "Gorath". Composed of collapsed matter -- which gives it a mass and gravitational pull far out of proportion to its relatively small size -- even a near-miss (in cosmic terms) would render the Earth uninhabitable.

    It can't be blown up, and there's no way to change its orbit. Obviously, there's nothing left to do but build a bunch of enormous hydrogen fusion rocket engines at the South Pole and move our planet out of its way. (If there's one thing you could never fault Honda for, it's a lack of imagination, even if the physics of the thing are completely impossible.)

    This is definitely a more somber and slower-paced outing than those two earlier films. Instead of the almost non-stop skirmishing between the Earth forces and dastardly aliens which typified the previous films in the trilogy, the drama lies in humanity's desperate race against time, to save itself with the biggest, most complex feat of engineering ever attempted. So, despite its typically energetic Akira Ifukube score, this one naturally lacks some of the naive charm and relentless drive which distinguished the colorfully juvenile "The Mysterians" and "Battle in Outer Space".

    What makes this film a standout in its own right, though, is that it contains what might just be the Tsuburaya team's most impressive miniature work ever. You must see this in letterbox, in the original Japanese version, to fully appreciate its scope and grandeur, specially the extended montage depicting the rocket motors' construction at the South Pole. (I believe Honda must have been heavily influenced here by the "remaking of Everytown" sequence in 1937's "Things to Come", even down to the musical theme Ifukube composed for it.)

    Plus there are nicely executed spaceship and space station models and effects, not to mention some fairly imaginative visuals as Gorath careens through the solar system. (The original version comes with a bonus: the totally unnecessary -- to the plot, anyway -- giant prehistoric walrus.) The earthquake and tsunami sequence which takes place as Gorath makes its closest approach to Earth is, in fact, rather eerie to watch in the light of recent events.

    Unfortunately, though, the tsunami -- along with a few seconds of recycled footage of a landslide from "The Mysterians" -- are about the only glimpses we're ever given of Gorath's devastating effects. So even with what must have been a substantially bigger budget than either of the two preceding films in the trilogy, the ending feels rushed, and a bit of a letdown.

    Regardless of my nit-picking, "Gorath" is still well worth watching, a truly unique movie both for this director, and in its own apocalyptic genre.
    PetPost

    A Classic From The Golden Age of Toho

    This film is one of my favorites from Toho's "Golden Age" and one of the three "space operas" directed by Ishiro Honda. A giant asteroid with a huge magnetic field is growing by absorbing everything in its path...a path which puts it on a course to Earth. How will man survive? Easy---through the conviction and determination of Japanese will-power and ingenuity, the Earth is pushed out of orbit after giant engines are built at the South Pole. But is it enough to get the Earth out of the path of Gorath?

    One scene that most Americans have never seen is the appearance of MAGMA, a giant prehistoric walrus which was awakened by the heat generated at the South Pole by the massive engines. After some initial destruction, the monster is killed by beams fired from a VTOL vehicle (which would see a new life in the TV series, "Ultraman" as the "Jet Beetle.")

    Kumi Mizuno shines as one of the female leads with a great bathtub scene when Akira Kubo comes knocking on her door.
    5unbrokenmetal

    Collision course

    Quite hilarious to watch. So many miniatures were used in the production that it feels a bit like revisiting the toy shop where you used to go as a child. "Yosei Gorasu" tells a variation of a familiar storyline "planet on collision course with Earth" insofar as its logical conclusion is not "blow up the invader" but "try and move the Earth out of the way", and for that purpose, an assembly of huge rocket engines is built in the Antarctic region which normally should take 20 years, but they manage the calculation, transport and construction work in a week or so. While any scientist will cringe, the producers openly admit the end of the world is not so serious after all by adding a giant walrus = a guy in a suit who appears without any reason and attacks a power station. The most impressive scenes are those of the flood sweeping Tokyo: a lot of miniatures again with attention to detail, the best you could do in 1962. Mixed bag, but it has memorable moments.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Originally, the film wasn't going to include the giant walrus Magma. However, producer Tomoyuki Tanaka insisted that the monster be put into the film and forced director Ishirô Honda to include it despite him being against it.
    • Goofs
      When Gorath approaches Saturn, the rings are torn from the planet's orbit due to Gorath's gravity. However, the atmosphere should have also been torn away as well.
    • Quotes

      News Anchor: If we could come together and cooperate to overcome the danger that threatened us, can't we take this opportunity to work together for all eternity?

    • Alternate versions
      The American version eliminates a sequence wherein a giant walrus, known as Magma or Maguma, is released from the arctic ice and threatens the polar construction site before being killed by the military (however a brief shot showing its corpse is still kept in the American edit). Magma was not in the original script and was included at the insistence of producer Tomoyuki Tanaka. The American version re-arranges the loss of the moon as Gorath makes it's approach to Earth. In the Japanese version the Moon is lost at the beginning of the sequence; the American version re-edits this and makes this the final action before Gorath sweeps past the planet.
    • Connections
      Edited into Doomsday Machine (1976)

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 21, 1962 (Japan)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Languages
      • Japanese
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Gorath
    • Production company
      • Toho
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 28 minutes
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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