"One and done" equals "one-dimensional"? Really? To bring in Shakespeare, as you did, does that make Romeo and Juliet or MacBeth "one-dimensional"? The title folk were all dead in the end of their "one and done" storylines. BEAST was about a badass dinosaur who woke up, killed a lot of people, and died himself at the climax. I certainly don't feel that equals "one-dimensional."
BEAST wasn't about the Bomb. That was only a -- very powerful -- plot device to get him out of the deep freeze and back into behind-kickin' action. Big G's connection with nuclear terror is much stronger and much more pervasive due to the nation in which he was created, of course. To the best of my memory, the BEAST didn't even carry about any residual radiation from his encounter with the Bomb; it was the exotic lifeforms in his blood that made him so dangerous beyond his size and ferocity. I don't see how he can be judged as being "second class" to Godzilla for something that wasn't even a part of his cinematic mythology. He was a resurrected, very hungry dino, not an atomic dino.
On the other hand, the Behemoth probably was strongly influenced by Big G's super breath in the way that he was able to "project" his own radioactivity the way electric eels "project" their charges (actually, I'm no naturalist, but I don't think this is even a real talent that eels have, just something the scripters introduced to explain their version of "atomic breath" in their Behemoth). But who's better and more fondly remembered today, more than half a century later, BEAST or Behemoth? Behemoth had some great scenes -- terrific panicking crowds, the swift but agonizing deaths of those caught in the "projected radiation," the radio reports of "dead fish washing up along the East Coast of America from Maine to Florida" at the end (which I co-opted/parodied in the closing lines of THE HYDE EFFECT) -- but, overall, even with its concentration of nuclear menace, it remains only a footnote to the classic BEAST.
And in the end, it remains a perhaps uncomfortable but undeniable fact that Big G never would have roasted his first modern city or tail-whipped another gigantic rampaging monster if there had never been an earlier and, for some of us, clearly superior antecedent known as THE BEAST FROM 20,000 FATHOMS. Steve V.
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