
Rebirth of Mothra I & II
1 of 1 people found this review helpful.
These movies are somewhat geared toward little kids, but as an adult I found them enjoyable as well. They're not quite as fun as the Godzilla movies, however, and they have a strong "Be good to the Earth" message that can come off as cheesy.
The first movie stars the twin faeries from Mothra vs. Godzilla, the Shobijin (but they call themselves the Elias in this movie). They have more distinct personalities than in any Godzilla movie, and I don't recall them speaking in unison once during the film, excluding the Mosura song. They also have an older sister, Belvera, who is the antagonist of the Rebirth films. She comes off as amusing and is my favorite character in the series, she's kind of a cross between Queen Beryl from sailor moon and Team Rocket from Pokemon, it's great. The monster Mothra fights is Desghidorah, or "Death Ghidorah," and boy does he look awesome. Additionally, he is actually kind of frightening in this one because he's fighting Mothra, not the invincible Godzilla. Mothra looks like crap, and I have a few issues with certain special effects, but overall this movie is fun.
Rebirth of Mothra II is a direct sequel of Rebirth of Mothra, and stars the twin Elias and their evil sister who once again is trying to control a dangerous and evil monster to destroy human civilization. It begins more or less with the discovery of a furby-ish creature that cures injuries with its pee. No joke. It eventually turns out to be the key to unlocking a lost civilization not unlike Atlantis, but with a really long name. Throughout the movie the kids are plagued by two dimwitted bad guys, swarms of mutant starfish, and of course Belvera as they try to find some sort of magical wish-granting treasure. The monster in this one is called Dagarha, and he looks kind of generic--just a big green dinosaur-dragon thing with holes in his shoulders (that look like rocket launchers) that shoot out energy and mutant starfish. Mothra of course takes a huge beating, but eventually TRANSFORMS into a more powerful and streamlined form. You'll either think that part is cool or really lame, but either way it leads to a CGI scene where Mothra splits into ten smaller Mothras and blasts away at thousands of mutant starfish.
Depending on your attitude, you'll either love or hate these movies. Personally, I thought they were kind of juvenile, but still pretty enjoyable despite the overuse of CGI.
Review ID: 10000000009187639

Thank you for voting. If your vote meets our
guidelines, it will be posted within 24 hours.
You cannot vote on the helpfulness of a review you wrote.
Your request cannot be processed at this time. Please try again later.