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Born from the shockwaves of the atomic age, Godzilla first stomped onto Japanese screens as a creature of terror and trauma—a living metaphor for nuclear destruction in a country still reeling from war. Inspired by the 1954 exposure of a Japanese fishing boat to an American hydrogen-bomb test, producer Tanaka Tomoyuki imagined the monster as nature’s revenge, awakened by human hubris. In this episode, we explore how Godzilla evolved from a singular expression of postwar fear into a global cinematic icon, endlessly reshaped to reflect changing anxieties about pollution, politics, and power. More than just a monster, Godzilla’s long reign reveals how popular culture absorbs collective dread—and keeps finding new ways to give it form.
https://www.economist.com/christmas-specials/2024/12/19/what-a-70-year-old-firebreathing-lizard-reveals-about-humanity
By HSBorn from the shockwaves of the atomic age, Godzilla first stomped onto Japanese screens as a creature of terror and trauma—a living metaphor for nuclear destruction in a country still reeling from war. Inspired by the 1954 exposure of a Japanese fishing boat to an American hydrogen-bomb test, producer Tanaka Tomoyuki imagined the monster as nature’s revenge, awakened by human hubris. In this episode, we explore how Godzilla evolved from a singular expression of postwar fear into a global cinematic icon, endlessly reshaped to reflect changing anxieties about pollution, politics, and power. More than just a monster, Godzilla’s long reign reveals how popular culture absorbs collective dread—and keeps finding new ways to give it form.
https://www.economist.com/christmas-specials/2024/12/19/what-a-70-year-old-firebreathing-lizard-reveals-about-humanity