The Return of Ultraman: Episodes 9-12

Some quick thoughts from watching through this Ultraman TV series from 1971.

09. Monster Island S.O.S

As we get into the double digits of Return of Ultraman episodes, the show is settling into a comfortable formula. I know there are changes to come, but for now the stories are coasting by, without a great deal to distinguish one from another. The kind of thing I recall after watching an episode such as “Monster Island S.O.S.” is MAT’s ongoing problem with discipline, and how somebody is always disobeying regulations and orders putting missions at risk for personal issues. I’m beginning to wonder if MAT, rather than being an elite squad of the best-of-best, with a vital role in the defense of humanity, is actually a minor department in the Terrestrial Defense bureaucracy, where they send troublemakers and oddballs who do not fit in anywhere else.

The monster plot itself in episodes such as this is barely memorable, even Ishiro Honda himself doing the directing.

I am though impressed by how developed the miniature work is getting to be. The hanger bay sequence with the various MAT aircraft undergoing maintenance worked particular well and was something we hadn’t really seen before. At about this same time, over in Great Britain, Gerry Anderson was starting to branch out from puppets shows to doing special effects for live action films such as Journey to the Far Side of the Sun and his TV series UFO. It’s interesting to watch the parallel development of tokusatsu from these two sources.

10. Dinosaur Detonation Order

One thing I find fascinating about the Ultraman franchise as whole is its creation of a “hyperreality.” It is not a depiction or representation of the “real” world. It is its own reality that follows its own laws and logic. Sometimes it is dreamlike, or like the stream-of-consciousness of children playing. Sometimes it drifts into metatext, almost incorporating an acknowledgement of its being a tokusatsu TV series. In “Dinosaur Detonation Order” we have children mentioning kaiju from Ultraman, such as Red King, as well as Godzilla. Are these monsters that exist within this show’s world? Or is do the Ultraman TV series and the Godzilla movie series exist there as media texts?

This episode has another great example of the unique, internal logic of this series: schoolchildren are on an archaeological field trip when an important dinosaur fossil is found. It’ll be so educational to let the kids excavate the fossil! And then there’s the question of whether a construction crew could so blithely decide to demolish such a find, particularly when it goes against the orders of a official organization such as MAT. But then maybe in the world of this show, so full of monsters, the remains of a dinosaur are trivial — though you’d think the possibility of such fossils coming alive, as they do here, to be a reasonable concern, given all the others kinds of things that go on.

Some interesting camera work in this episode as well, such as the top down view of the MAT’s meeting table as they discuss the situation. After Go and Minami object to the plan of destroying Stegon and are removed from the mission, the room goes dark except for the spot lights both highlighting and isolating the two objectors, in a very theatrically designed tableau.

11. Poison Gas Monster Appears

It would be interesting to survey how the events of World War II are examined in the Ultraman franchise, which often extols military power and values. The war does not come up often, but that it is ever a story element at all is a little surprising. Here the legacy of Kishida’s family’s as manufacturers of poison gas is part of both plot and character motivation.

A look at the backstory of one of the characters is a nice touch, though often these end up being one-offs that are never referred to again. I know this series is from a different era of television. Unlike today where everything is a serial drama and characters are expected to have “arcs,” in Ultraman’s day, shows were written without thought to narrative continuity or the order in which they were seen. Still, in both Return and Ultraseven, character details are just handed out at random, without contributing to the personal portrait of who these people are. I’d contrast this with the original Ultraman, where the supporting cast of Arashi, Ide, Fuji, and even the stoic “Cap,” had memorable, consistent personalities. I know I am only a dozen episodes in, so perhaps I am judging Return too quickly, and it will do more with its cast than Ultraseven did.

At least in some of these recent episodes Yuriko gets to go into the field, piloting MAT aircraft and engaging in monster combat. The female characters in Ultraman series have not exactly been given much to do. Poor Anne from Ultraseven only had the job of occasionally wearing a doctor’s coat and shouting “Dan!” a lot. Akiko Fuji from Ultraman’s SSSP with her wit, attitude, and charm has been greatly missed.

12. Monster Shugaron’s Revenge

The name of the “Science Patrol” in this series is MAT: Monster Attack Squad. And they do take that name seriously. If there is any sign of a monster, they go after it, with extermination as their goal. Investigation, examination, or alternative means of dealing with the situation never come up. Maybe afterwards there is some reflection on “Hmm… that monster had been threatened by humans moving into its territory” or a thoughts towards “too bad we had to violently attack it, thus leading to destruction, the death of a young girl, and the loss of priceless works of art. Oh, well…” It is true that these monsters do tend to be dangerous — Mognezun did kill a lot of people in “Poison Gas Monster Appears.” Yet even then, it seems the kaiju’s natural behavior was disrupted by the human-created poison it encountered.

This series does leaving me pondering what kind of world this is, fundamentally, with monsters being such a constant threat. The original Ultraman was a direct continuation of Ultra Q, with its theme of unbalance, and a planet where the forces of nature and reality were spinning out of control — and thus monsters. Ultraseven was all about extraterrestrial invasion. What is up with the why and how of monsters in Return of Ultraman? But then with issues such as climate change and pandemics in our world, we don’t seem too interested in dealing with them a core level, and just do the equivalent of running around shooting laser pistols at the symptoms.

 

 

One thought on “The Return of Ultraman: Episodes 9-12”

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s

%d bloggers like this: