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Paperback Essential Godzilla: King of the Monsters Book

ISBN: 0785121536

ISBN13: 9780785121534

Essential Godzilla: King of the Monsters

(Part of the Essential Marvel Series)

For two years, Japan's greatest export was one of Marvel's biggest stars, and the King of the Monsters upheld his title against some of the best and worst the House of Ideas had to offer - including the Fantastic Four, the Avengers, and Nick Fury and the Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. This title presents a collection of Godzilla, numbered 1-24.

Recommended

Format: Paperback

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Wonderful (another one!)

Fantastic reprint of all 24 issues. Worth the small price! Very good value! I highly recommend this complete collection, even if you are just a fan of older comics... a good read. 5 stars, highly recommended....

Essential Godzilla Comic Books

This is a thick book of most of the Godzilla comics that were published, essential for collectors, but if looked at too much the binding comes away from the book, must be careful, but good reading for the Godzilla collector.

Marvel Foresight!

Being a Daikaijuologist (Studies Giant mysterious beasts) I remembered this series of comics fondly as a boy but did not have them all, Now I do. Something I found interesting, TOHO (the company resonsible for the Godzilla Movies) didn't reveal that Big-G was a vegitarian until 1993, But Marvel Knew he was back in 78! (See the cowboy issues in the book) all trivia aside though, even a Non-Comic reading Godzilla fan will enjoy this Book! It's fun to watch the Shodai (Original)Dark,evil, mean, Godzilla thrust into the weird & almost funny 70's godzilla situations! Goofy aliens, time travel, saving kids what have you. Buy it, Love it! that fact that it's black & white? who cares? So were the first TWO Movies!

Something big is coming your way, Essential fans!

Marvel has done a number of comic series of independently licensed characters in the past, like Doctor Who; Rom the Spaceknight; and Doc Savage, Man of Bronze. Last year, the brass at Marvel set out to court many of these other companies and get their permission to reprint their licensed material, in anticipation of the large quantity of Essentials and Masterworks for 2006 that they wanted. The only taker was Japan's Toho Studios, hence the arrival of the Essential Godzilla, King of Monsters. I wasn't really into Godzilla or the "kaiju" scene (the last Godzilla movie I saw had a guy and two robots in the lower right-hand corner making fun of it) but I just had to witness the fruits of Marvel's labor. That's why the Terror of Tokyo recently stomped onto my bookshelf, standing and roaring defiantly right between Ghost Rider and Howard the Duck. The 1977-79 twenty-four issue series allowed the big G to cut a swath of destruction across America's fruited plains, just as his fans have always wanted. The saga begins with `Zilla's emergence after a two decade hiatus off the coast of Alaska. He then picks his teeth with the Space Needle in Seattle before causing some tremors in San Fran. He becomes the ultimate high roller in Vegas, wades into the Grand Canyon, flattens Salt Lake City, and even draws the ire of cattle rustlers in the Great Plains. There's an entire issue devoted to burly cowpokes trying to lasso and corral Godzilla (A deliberate symbol of the tension between two different national cultures: possibly. Hysterical: yes). Finally, our U.S tour via gigantic lizard concludes in the Marvel Universe's most happenin' hot spot, New York City. Like I said, I wasn't really a fan, but if wanting Godzilla to lay waste to the Big Apple is wrong, then perhaps I don't want to be right. One thing I really must mention to the true Godzillophiles out there is that Toho always licensed each of their creations separately, and Marvel only footed the bill for the big Kahuna. That means no Mothra, no Rodan, no ... uh, the three-headed one, King Gur-something; so the House of Ideas came up with some new giant monsters. Firstly, a bat-dragon and a huge centipede are among the creatures unleashed from a crazed scientist's island lair (there's always some of those scattered around comic books and Bond movies). An 80-foot tall shaggy yeti opposes Godzilla in Arizona, and then two warring alien races with a predilection toward sicking gargantuan beasts on each other stop by (What are the odds?). My favorite of the new colossi is Red Ronin, a towering robot piloted by a twelve-year old boy (no other image defines "Japan" more to me than that). Of course, this is an in-continuity Marvel title, so naturally plenty of superheroes are called in to try their luck against the big G. The Champions are there to defend `Frisco, and the Fantastic Four banish our title character to the stone age where he runs into the little-known Kirby creation called the De

A worthy comic series of the king of the monsters himself done by none other then the great marvel c

I must say, marvel did an excellent jop of showing godzilla. godzilla proves himself no matter the size,place,time,or opponent, he is still the king of the monsters. Even when he was shrank down the size of a rat, a rat was still no match for him. When he grows to human size, he meets up with his friend Rob, who thinks that godzilla should not be killed, and as rob gets godzilla some clothes to disguise him (its funny to see godzilla in a hat and a trench coat) two street guys try to mug both of them. Needless to say, godzilla does not take too kindly to threats and as strongbad would put it, "BURNATED". Anyways, any kaiju fan or marvel comics fan should check this out as he fights plenty of marvel classics (including the fantastic four,thor,ironman,iceman,and others.)
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