Godzilla 1989 comes from the movie "Godzilla vs. Biollante", and is the largest S.H. MonsterArts Godzilla that has been released to this point. BioGoji stands about 8" tall, and you'll get nearly 14" out of him from nose to tail-tip. The sculpt is fantastic, from the snout on down, with varied textures across the upper torso, arms and legs. There's very little of the gapping that has plagued previous releases, as there is a floating sleeve at the hip joint. He moves as well as I'd expect him to, in the sense that this is Godzilla, and he mostly walks, stomps, and waves his arms slightly in front of him. My biggest complaint with the NECA Godzillas is that they can't hold their arms and hands in a pose that matches the movie looks. This guy absolutely can.
The paint on my figure is perfect. The eyes are awesome, as are the tiny teeth. I've seen some reviews complain about the paint on the outer, smaller dorsal spines, but I'm happy with the way mine look, all the way down to the tail tip. Speaking of the tail, it's really long and nicely flexible. I can get it to look just like I want it to, without any difficulty.
The "Kou Kyou Kyouku" label refers to another MonsterArts first: lights, sound and music. This Godzilla has flashing dorsal spines and the interior of his mouth lights up (with one of the roars), various roaring/stomping sounds and plays two different theme songs. The volume of everything is adequate and the roars come in several different versions, with differing lengths, as well. The theme songs are long, but sound pretty good. I've seen other reviews complaining about the light effects being too muted, or the mouth not being bright enough, but I'm fine with their quality overall. It's not as loud as NECA's Godzilla 2014, but that's ok. The light gimmick does restrict the articulation (there's none really in the torso, which houses the electronics, and the neck/head articulation is much restricted).
For the Batteries, which are housed in the upper torso... |
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