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What is a Bucket Movie? Overlooked, weird and rare films, that for one reason or another fell through the cracks and failed to get a mainstream audience. Cult classics, unknown oddities and the extremely hard to find, finally get the press they deserve here!
In America one thing we got a lot of is land, land enough for whatever we need. Especially the movie industry. You need a desert? We got those, a forest? No problem, city streets? New York, Chicago, LA, take your pick. We have tons of abandoned buildings, malls, even old jails for film makers
shaw scope
When you saw this, you knew you were in for somthing good.
to ply their trade. Hong Kong however, is a different story. While the island has a large population, a vibrant economy and a rich culture, one thing it lacks (through no fault of it's own) is places to film movies. Hong Kong is only 461 square miles in area, compare that to the 551 square miles of my home country of Wayne county Ohio, and you'll realize it's a tiny tiny island. Outside the vast downtown area, most of the wilderness areas is either private estates, or wildlife preserves, both of which are difficult to get permission to film on. To make matters worse, Hong Kong films are almost always period pieces, usually taking place around the Ching Dynasty, requiring no factories or hotels looming in the background of the shot. To avoid the difficulty of exterior shots, most Hong Kong films were shot off the island (usually in Australia) or more often on a sound stage. After “The One Armed Swordsman” got people craving more and more marital arts action films, the studio realized that the restrictions of indoor sets and the expenses of filming off-island wouldn't allow them to make the martial arts show-stoppers that they wanted to.


While based in Singapore, Run Run Shaw, and his brother Runme Shaw realized that the best pool of talent was in Hong Kong, so they worked hard to found a spot of land nestled between the mountains and the sea, where they could film in a relatively pristine environment with the sea on one side, and the undeveloped mountains on the other. Using this tiny stretch of wilderness, they films over a thousand movies between 1970 and 1997
Need to have a character walk from the mountains to the sea? It was as easy as turning the camera 180 degrees! Need a temple, A martial arts school, or a restaurant? All the bits and pieces of any building you'd need were already available, and the efficient staff of Shaw Brother studios were able to whip up almost any set in a matter of hours, then tear it down and get it out of the way of the next movie just as quick. This back lot has been used in over 1000 of the Shaw brothers films, and thanks to ingenious use of camera angles and extensive sets, you can never tell that almost all of the Shaw Brother exterior shots are filmed on the same two or three acres


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Monster or “Kaiju” films have been a staple of Japanese cinema since the 1940's. Gigantic city crushing monsters were as popular and numerous as westerns were in American cinema. While these were somewhat expensive to make, they made cash hand over fist and every Japanese studios worked to top one another, with larger and more impressive monstrosities. The nearly undisputed king of the pack was Toho studios, creators of such kaiju legends as Mothra, Varan, and international Sensation Godzilla (So popular he's apparently in my spell check). Perhaps one of Toho's most unappreciated Stars, was it's most massive set piece, a legend that would appear in hundreds of films and TV shows. It was the Toho “Big Water Tank” one of the largest movie pools ever constructed.
Godzilla
I certainly hope that suit's waterproof

Originally built in 1960 for the war film “I Bombed Pearl Harbor” the Big tank was enormous, 288 feet wide and 236 feet long. While it was built for a naval battle, it would become famous as the ocean set from where Godzilla would emerge in many of the big lizard's most memorable films. It was deep enough for the man in the Godzilla costume to start totally underwater, meaning the pool's deepest point was over seven feet deep. Almost every time a Japanese film needed a miniature shot that involved water, Toho was nice enough to rent out their gigantic tank, even to rival studios. It's 2-D sky backdrops has been seen in countless films, that I won't even attempt to list. When Ultraman battled giant Monsters in the water, he battled them in this tank. When Richard Chamberlain stood proudly on the bow of his ship and shouted “Turn, You whore from hell!” as wind and rain battered him in the popular American mini-series “Shogun” he did it in the Toho Tank. When Dragonzord emerged from the waves in popular children's show “Mighty Morphin' Power rangers” the footage used (from an unrelated Japanese TV series) was a shot shot in the Toho tank. When Shuya and Noriko escaped the island in “Battle Royale” the miniature shot of the tugboat? You guessed it: the Toho tank.
As with all good things, the Tank couldn't last forever. As computer generated effects got better and better, the need for a gigantic miniatures dwindled. The Tank was very expensive to maintain, and around the beginning of 2002 it sat mostly unused, a monument to an era that was quickly passing into history. The last time the Toho Big Water tank was used, was for the 2004 film “Godzilla Final Wars”. The last scene ever filmed in the tank was, appropriately enough, Godzilla and his son Minilla, descending into the waves in the final shot of the film. In October 2003, due to the enormous expense of maintaining the tank combined with the diminishing need for such a set, it was demolished. Many considered this the end of an age. An age of brave stuntmen in rubber costumes, massive miniature sets blown up with primacord, and epic naval battles filmed with tiny ships built with the loving care of model makers, who are now sadly out of work. Since it's appeared in more movies than Samuel L Jackson, I believe the Toho tank deserves a spot here on the Bucket Movies hall of fame.
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