Saturday, September 13, 2025

REBIRTH OF MOTHRA III (1998)

 

PHENOMENALITY: *marvelous*
MYTHICITY: *fair*
FRYEAN MYTHOS: *drama*
CAMPBELLIAN FUNCTION: *cosmological,metaphysical*


After REBIRTH II scored high in the mythicity department, the third and final nineties Mothra movie returns more or less to the level seen in the first film-- though, to be sure, the script for REBIRTH III is more venturesome than that of the first film in the series. But again, the disparate elements of the script don't quite cohere well enough to make a pleasing whole.

REBIRTH III makes abundantly clear that the series doesn't take place in the Toho Studios Godzilla-verse. Though the first film had the crusading moth contend with a critter with a name that sounded like "Ghidorah," this time Mothra must fight King Ghidorah himself-- sort of. In the Toho-verse, King Ghidorah is a rampage-happy dragon, unleashing destruction for no particular reason. But when this multiversal version of Ghidorah comes to Earth, the big three-headed hydra suddenly has a new mission in life. While it's not entirely clear whether or not this incarnation is intelligent, this monster now captures and drains the souls of both humans and fairies to gain its sustenance, imprisoning his intended victims (many of them kids) within a membranous dome. Further, Ghidorah possesses enough sentience to exert mind-control when it encounters Moll and Lora. Ghidorah causes Lora to choke her sister, though Moll is able to escape while Lora falls into the confinement dome. This development reduces Moll's ability to send power to Mothra.

Belvera, oddly, isn't the evil provocateur this time. There's an early scene in which the three fairies seem to contend over some special fairy-tech upgrades to their respective daggers. But once Lora gets enslaved, the other two sisters are forced to bond to defeat the mutual threat of Ghidorah to both humans and fairies.

The most unusual element in REBIRTH III, though, is that there's just one youthful protagonist, a kid named Shota, and he's a preteen rather than a grade-schooler. He has a reasonably happy family-- two parents and two siblings, none of whom play important roles in the story-- but he has some vague conflict about going to school. Possibly the English dub left out something that the translators didn't think would play outside of Japan? As the dub has it, there's just one scene where Moll tells Shota that he's overly "sensitive" to the rigors of school life, but that this isn't anything to be ashamed about. The sentiment is admirable but the character of Shota remains unfocused. Shota does have one good moment where Moll needs his help and as a good kid, he has to gird his loins and grow some courage.

There's not really any reason for Moll to involve Shota, except that his siblings are inside the Ghidorah-dome and he wants to help rescue them. The kid's sent into the dome to deprogram Lora but this doesn't entirely work out, so Moll also comes up with a complicated plan to beat Ghidorah back in the prehistoric past, with a Mothra of the past-- I think. I didn't follow the plot's contortions very well, but the actors said their lines nicely, the two big monsters bashed each other about a lot, and the three fairy sisters enjoyed a reconciliation. So the series ends with more closure than kaiju movies usually get, and the writers wisely don't mention the issue of world pollution for a third time. So III is probably the weakest of the three Mothra-flicks, but it's still watchable.             

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