Cozzilla is the arthouse Italian Godzilla movie you never knew existed
Image: Toho/Everett CollectionOf the 38 Godzilla films produced over the 72 years since the iconic oversized lizard was first introduced, none match the acid-fueled absurdity of Cozzilla. The 1977 Italian re-edit of Godzilla, King of the Monsters! (itself derived from 1954’s Godzilla) was "directed" by Luigi Cozzi and is still widely considered one of (if not the) strangest Godzilla releases ever put to film. Fortunately, it’s finally getting the long-overdue Showa-era Blu-ray treatment after being largely confined to VHS bootlegs and being notably absent from the Criterion Collection's 2019 box set.
Cozzilla stands at odds with almost every Godzilla movie before and since. More fever dream than reinterpretation, the film was marketed as a “Spectorama” edition of the original, splicing in authentic (and often graphic) World War II footage between scenes and layering it all under one of the most aggressive Godzilla soundscapes ever assembled.
Composer Vince Tempera retained Akira Ifukube’s iconic score but fused it with new synth-driven medleys to modernize the film and heighten the horror. The result is intentionally abrasive: sharp audio cuts, boosted low-end, and a harsher mix that reportedly varied from print to print, turning each screening into its own kind of sonic assault. At times, Cozzilla feels like a sensory overload, and that’s the point.
Some reports suggest that Cozzilla was positioned as a response to Sensurround, the specialized audio system used in films like Earthquake (1974) that generated low-frequency rumbles powerful enough to shake theater seats. It was essentially the IMAX of the 1970s theatrical exhibition, and Cozzilla was the outlier, opting instead for an 8-track magnetic sound process that mimicked the effect without the same technical muscle. Cozzi even reportedly outfitted select theaters with oversized speakers to push Godzilla’s stomp and roar to new extremes.
But if the added sound effects, remixed score, and early 1970s 4D effects weren’t enough, Cozzilla stands out most for its extreme psychedelic visual treatment. While the film still relies on the original black-and-white footage and the inserted war imagery, certain sequences feature heavy color tinting with bold washes of red, green, and blue that give the film an unruly, almost hallucinatory edge. At times, it feels like staring into a chaotic kaleidoscope, with fragments of the king of the monsters slipping in and out of focus. It’s another layer of unease, presenting Godzilla in a way rarely seen before or since.
Image: Toho/Yamato Video/Luigi CozziFor all its faults, Cozzilla is a fascinating case study in how drastically a film can be reshaped. It takes the very first Godzilla project and retools it into a grindhouse horror experience, one that’s since become one of the franchise’s most bizarre and unforgettable cult curiosities.
With Toho reportedly working on a new Godzilla cinematic universe, maybe there’s room for something this strange again. Perhaps even a Cozzilla 2, though that might be out of the question. If you’re looking to add this rare oddity to your collection, it’s set to be included in an eight-disc Godzilla Showa Collection releasing exclusively in Italy on May 17. The Blu-ray set is reportedly priced around €299 and covers 15 films from 1954 to 1975.
It’s a fittingly extravagant home for one of the franchise’s most unconventional releases, and the perfect way to cap off your budding Godzilla collection — even if it’s not the most celebrated of the bunch.
And if you're not in Italy, don't worry, you can always watch Cozzilla on the Internet Archive.
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