Dogora, the giant radiation eating jellyfish like kaiju from the film of the same name.
Very cool, unique take on a monster instead of the more physical body we usually see from kaiju.
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Dogora
¿Altura y/o longitud?: 2880 metros
Peso: 50,000 toneladas
Primer Avistamiento: Atmosfera de la tierra [Teratoverso]
Guarida: Atmosfera de la tierra [Teratoverso] Bahía Camaleón [Avatarverso]
Aspecto: Dogora showa
Controles: Aire control [Vuelo] Agua Control [Baba corrosiva]
Aliados:
Kaijus y otras bestias: King Ghidorah, Gigan, Megalon
Enemigos:
Humanos: Aang, Katara, Soka, Iroh, Zuko, Ozai y Azula
Kaijus y otras bestias: Godzilla, Anguirus, King Kong, Mothra, Rodan, Baragon y Gorosaurus
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Dogora (1964)
SOS FROM EARTH. IT DEVOURS BUILDINGS AND PEOPLE.
An floating amorphous life-form descends from the atmosphere to consume carbon in the form of diamonds.
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DOGORA: IL MOSTRO DELLA GRANDE PALUDE (translated: Dogora: The Monster of the Great Swamp)
Whoever came up with this Italian film poster obviously never watched Dogora (aka Giant Space Monster Dogora).
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DOGORA: IL MOSTRO DELLA GRANDE PALUDE (translated: Dogora: The Monster of the Great Swamp)
Whoever came up with this Italian film poster obviously never watched Dogora (aka Giant Space Monster Dogora).
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Dogora (宇宙大怪獣ドゴラ, Uchū Daikaijū Dogora), 1964
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I liked the part with the coal.
More of a crime thriller than a monster movie, Dogora was far more concerned with the exploits of a gang of diamond thieves, and their conflict with international man of mystery Mark Jackson, than the creature it was named for. Occasionally during this non-monster movie, something would randomly glow and/or levitate, but you could pretty much ignore it completely and have the same experience.
The human part of the story was mildly entertaining most of the time, and incredible any time Mark Jackson was on screen. However, everything to do with the thing the movie was actually ostensibly about, was dull and uninteresting. They didn't even show most of the major events that involved the creature, instead just spinning in a few newspaper headlines.
When Dogora finally arrived, it was a space jellyfish of unexplained origin that ate carbon and was pretty easily dispatched by spraying it with a shitload of wasp venom. Personally I'd have loved to have seen how they obtained all that venom, as there must have been thousands of litres of the stuff in the barrels they showed being stacked up.
A decent crime drama, poorly disguised as a monster movie. Not bad though.
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Dogora Gallery - Italian Poster Featuring Godzilla
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