Daimajin, Vol. 3: Return of Daimajin

Daimajin, Vol. 3: Return of Daimajin


Starring:Kojiro Hongo, Shiho Fujimura, Taro Marui, Takashi Kanda, Jutaro Hojo, Riki Hashimoto
Director: Kenji Misumi
Studio: Adv Films
Product Type: DVD

Editorial Review:
Amazon.com
The second of the Majin films is as much a loose remake as a sequel. Four kids from a peaceful mountain village trek over the forbidden Majin Mountain to reach the land of the tyrant king who has kidnapped and enslaved the men of their village, including their own fathers. This "boys own" adventure takes the film out of the studio environs of the first film and into impressive mountain locations, but once again the meandering human adventure is merely a prelude to the wrath of Majin and his unstoppable march of vengeance. Despite the addition of these cute kids, director Issei Mori maintains the serious tone set in the first film; this really isn't kid stuff despite a few moments of juvenile humor. After almost a decade of Godzilla films the Japanese film industry had perfected the use of scale and camera speed to turn the man in a monster suit into a towering threat on a grand scale. With the addition of the thundering echoes of his earthshaking steps and composer Akira Ifubuke's booming theme, Mori creates a truly impressive figure of Majin, the green-faced god who rises to administer his own brand of grim justice. --Sean Axmaker
Description
Once again, evil has come to plague the peasants of Japan. As a vicious overlord brutally crushes the life from a tiny village, only one group of young warriors remain to seek salvation for their people. Stalked and hunted like animals, the youngsters make a desperate trek across a blood-stained landscape of ice and stone seeking the legendary God of Vengeance, Daimajin. The hand of vengeance is coming… and the children shall guide it.
Daimajin, Vol. 3: Return of Daimajin
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • Return's Review
  • WOW! Good movie.
  • Return of Daimajin
  • The weakest entry in the series, but still worth a look.
  • not the best in the series, but still worthwhile
Daimajin, Vol. 3: Return of Daimajin
Starring: Kojiro Hongo , Shiho Fujimura , Taro Marui , Takashi Kanda , and Jutaro Hojo
Director: Kenji Misumi
Manufacturer: Adv Films
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD

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  3. Wrath of Daimajin
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ASIN: B000929VC2
Release Date: 2005-05-03

Amazon.com

The second of the Majin films is as much a loose remake as a sequel. Four kids from a peaceful mountain village trek over the forbidden Majin Mountain to reach the land of the tyrant king who has kidnapped and enslaved the men of their village, including their own fathers. This "boys own" adventure takes the film out of the studio environs of the first film and into impressive mountain locations, but once again the meandering human adventure is merely a prelude to the wrath of Majin and his unstoppable march of vengeance. Despite the addition of these cute kids, director Issei Mori maintains the serious tone set in the first film; this really isn't kid stuff despite a few moments of juvenile humor. After almost a decade of Godzilla films the Japanese film industry had perfected the use of scale and camera speed to turn the man in a monster suit into a towering threat on a grand scale. With the addition of the thundering echoes of his earthshaking steps and composer Akira Ifubuke's booming theme, Mori creates a truly impressive figure of Majin, the green-faced god who rises to administer his own brand of grim justice. --Sean Axmaker

Description

Once again, evil has come to plague the peasants of Japan. As a vicious overlord brutally crushes the life from a tiny village, only one group of young warriors remain to seek salvation for their people. Stalked and hunted like animals, the youngsters make a desperate trek across a blood-stained landscape of ice and stone seeking the legendary God of Vengeance, Daimajin. The hand of vengeance is coming… and the children shall guide it.

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Return's Review.......2002-01-16

I must agree with everyone who has said that of the three, this was not the best in the series, although still good. This second installment takes a different style however. Instead of lots of samurai action, it follows four young boys who seek to free their fathers and brothers from a forced labor camp. Along the way they must evade the samurai of the evil lord responsible and furthermore, do that which is forbidden......Cross over Majin's Mountain. They find the statue god on the summit and stop to pay respects. Things do not go smoothly for them however and they wonder if his curse is on them. Just as all seems hopeless for both them and the slaves, the Majin emerges and "set's things right". The effects were once again good and the music also good. It has more of a classic horror movie sound to it. The visual effects of Majin's wrath in the beginning is eyecatching. The pace in this movie is slower with much less action but still very entertaining. You just need to put your mind frame in a position to follow four young children as the stars of this movie...........as they face many trials and dangers along their way to rescue the slaves. A good movie.

5 out of 5 stars WOW! Good movie........2002-01-06

The 2nd (or 3nd) of the Majin movies is good and never flaws, yet something about it is not as good as the first DAIMAJIN film. It is the same story as part 1 but with some new twists. Good film, get it.

Nots: This film is UNRATED and contains Some Violence and Horror.
May get a PG-13 if rated by MPAA.

5 out of 5 stars Return of Daimajin.......2000-08-18

Possibly the worst(still worth 5 stars)in the trilogy.I dont remember this film from my "Creature Feature" days as a kid but I still got a nostalgic feeling from it.Majin is once again imprisoned in his mountain(completely different from the first film but really cool)& another evil warlord is forcing his people into slavery.Four children cross the forbidden mountain to ask the god for aid in destroying the warlord & freeing their fathers from his oppresion.The god sends Majin & the warlord gets crushed of course.This film,released the same year,(1966)has even more spectacular FX than "Daimajin".The story moves a little slower at times but it still is a great video.I wish it was dubbed,I prefer even a bad job(most are,can we ever forget Kenny from "Gamera"?)to sub-titles

3 out of 5 stars The weakest entry in the series, but still worth a look........1999-06-23

Not bad, but not quite as good as either _Daimajin_ or _Wrath of Daimajin_.

Four young boys journey to a distant valley to rescue relatives who have been enslaved by an Evil Warlord bent on conquering the region (boo, hiss). En route they strive to placate the warrior god Majin, whose mountain they must traverse. This the children do, but without avail: winter storms and the warlord's henchmen stop them just short of their destination. Is all lost for our diminutive heroes? Fear not: it's Majin to the rescue!

_Return of Daimajin_ is technically superb: the sets are meticulously crafted; the special effects require little suspension of disbelief to convince; the cinematography is breathtakingly lovely; Akira Ifukube's score--his best of the series--is alternately haunting and rousing.

To their credit, the filmmakers have the guts to put the plucky little tykes in truly dangerous situations. Soon after they discover the children trekking to their valley, a trio of the despots thugs unshoulder their rifles and start shooting! Later, one of the boys drowns in a boating accident. (This scene, plus others of brief but fierce violence, would likely earn the film a PG rating.)

The film has its share of weak points. The camerawork is too brightly pretty to capture the magic and menace of Majin's mountain, something _Daimajin_ conveyed so elegantly. Worse, the four leads have too little dialog to develop any degree of individuality, much less depth, as characters.

Still, the giant Majin effects look great, and that's all were really interested in, isn't it?

A good, but not great, kaiju eiga (giant monster movie).

4 out of 5 stars not the best in the series, but still worthwhile.......1999-03-16

Probably the weakest of the Daimajin trilogy, this is still pretty good. Shifting the focus to a group of children travelling through the mountain of the god to resuce their fathers could have been much more cloying and irritating than it actually is.The kids themselves are nowhere near as annoying as, say, Kenny of Gamera fame, and the fact that the film puts them in very serious peril instead of treating everything with a Speilbergian sense of hollow awe. One of the children does die actually. Clearly this is still far from kids' stuff, and the presentation in the original Japanese helps considerably (think how loathsome these kids would be with high pitched, dubbed English voices). Of course, everything in this film becomes irrelevant once Daimajin is resurrected. These scenes, as always, are excellent and nicely comparable with the other two, superior, films. Here Daimajin's revival is heralded by the death of a bird, which seems to be an extension of his spirit, and the willing self sacrifice of one of the children. From this point, the film is wonderful, as Daimajin embarks on his snow swept rampage, with little regard for anything in his path. There's a great scene in which the villain tries to stop Daimajin by cutting loose several bundles of logs. Just as he thinks he has succeeded, the smoke clears, and Daimajin stands undeafeted. He then proceeds to use the logs as weapons against those who would stop him. Amazing.

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