The Golden Bat (1966) Poster

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6/10
Golden Bat saves the earth - Fast paced nonsense
ChungMo21 February 2007
Kiddie matinée, Japanese style. There were quite a number of kid oriented sci-fi adventure films with costumed super-heroes made for the movie theaters before the success of Ultraman and Kamen Rider on TV. Others that have made it to the US are Starman, Prince of Space and another Sonny Chiba film, Attack of the Neptune Men. Most of these films feature heroes that never really caught on the way the TV super heroes did. Filmed in glorious black and white, the effects were sometimes better then the color films from the same time.

A teenage boy discovers that the planet Icarus is on a collision course with Earth by gazing through his telescope. Scoffed at by the scientific establishment, the boy is kidnapped and brought to a secret UN base in the Japan alps. He is immediately inducted into the secret program whose mission is to finish the Super-Destruction Beam cannon and destroy Icarus. The cannon is missing a special mineral for the lens. The team heads for a mysterious island in the middle of the Pacific. There they find ancient ruins of Atlantis but they are suddenly attacked by a strange drill shaped metal squid spaceship. It's commanded by the evil being Nazu who has engineered the collision with Icarus! He doesn't want to share the universe with humans and he really doesn't want the cannon finished. The action is on and the team discovers the Golden Bat who has been asleep for over 10,000 years awaiting this very moment to save the earth!

It's very hard to describe the silliness of the film. If you've seen other early Japanese super hero films you'll be prepared for the outlandish wardrobe on display here. The villain Nazu is absolutely unscary, a four eyed cloth bear with a robot claw hand and no nose or mouth. The Golden Bat is a strange design for a hero as he resembles the Red Skull of Marvel comics fame. The character is apparently an Osamu Tesuka creation.

The film is well paced and actually photographed better then it needed. At 73 minutes it a good laugh.
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6/10
The Golden Bat!
BandSAboutMovies10 January 2021
Warning: Spoilers
While many of us would consider the first superheroes to be Superman or Batman, the truth is that The Golden Bat (Ogon Batto) predates both of them by nearly a decade and is considered the world's first comic book superhero.

The character was created by sixteen-year-old Takeo Nagamatsu and twenty-five year-old Suzuki Ichiro in 1931. They were inspired by, of all things, Golden Bat cigarettes and the mythology department of Tokyo's Ueno Royal Museum. However, they sought to create a hero based on science rather than magic.

The Golden Bat made his debut in a traveling storytelling show known as kamishibai, which means paper play. He was so popular that after World War II, his adventures continued in both manga comics (including work by Osamu "The Father of Maga" Tezuka), anime and film.

I know you didn't crack open this issue of DIA to read about obscure comics. So let me get to the reason why I've picked Ogon Batto to spotlight. The first live-action film starring this character was made by Toei - yes, the same studio that brought you The Green Slime, Female Prisoner 701: Scorpion and Message from Space - in 1966.

While made in the same year that the Batmania craze was spreading like wildfire, this film is a strange mix of movie serial and Eurospy with a watchful eye toward the sentai shows that would dominate Japanese kids TV by the late 70's.

Professor Yamatone (Sonny Chiba, eight years before he'd make The Street Fighter for this very same studio) and his family have taken a visit to Egypt. While exploring the tomb of a legendary god of justice - you guessed it, Ogon Bat - the agents of Dr. Erich Nazo take Yamatone captive. This has something to do with Nazo's home planet Icarus being drawn toward Earth to destroy it and a giant robot that he keeps under the sea.

As his daughter Mari begins to wail and plead for her father's life, her tears fall into the Golden Bat's tomb and bring him 10,000 years forward into our time from his native land of Atlantis.

This would be a strange origin story to start with, but it's the design of Golden Bat that makes it sublime. He's literally an aurum-armored warrior with a face like, well, a skull. He looks like the villain of the piece, more Kriminal than Superman. He pretty much invented the bat-signal, casting a giant gold bat and his laughter before each battle, before a large golden skull appears as he does. Most fights between Golden Bat and his adversaries end with most of them dead, which is strange for a hero who fights for small children.

He's also incredibly similar to Fantomas, a fact not lost on Italian and Brazilian audiences, which renamed him as Fantaman and Fantomas respectively. Even cooler, this movie was released in Italy as Il ritorno di Diavolik or The Return of Diavolik. Deep deep down, indeed.

This is probably the point in which I should explain that the insidious Dr. Nazo looks like a giant stuffed bear with four eyes and a giant mechanical claw for a hand. His agents all have burned up faces, deploy tricks like gigantic hypno-wheels and have no compunctions menacing young children and old people.

Director Hajime Satô was also behind the senses-shattering Goke, Body Snatcher from Hell. Just imagine the weirdness of that movie, but instead harnessing it to create a superhero movie for kids. Now you have a good idea of what to expect here.

Keep an eye out for Andrew Hughes, a Turkish-born import/export businessman who inexplicably became a Japanese movie star. He was on speed dial - yes, Japanese directors had that way before we knew what it was - for anyone who wanted a Western-looking face in their film, showing up in everything from King Kong Escapes and Destroy All Monsters to Crazy Adventure, where he played Adolf Hitler.

Sure, Golden Bat has every superpower ever - and then some - but this movie flies, making you never even realize that seventy-plus minutes of aliens, lighting-blasting staffs and skullman versus robot fisticuffs have battered your brain into jelly.

Of course, Golden Bat's story - not in this film, mind you - ends like every Japanese hero story ever, with both the protagonist and his arch-nemesis dead. There's something in the Japanese culture that demands that each of its monster heroes must pay the price for their daring-do in blood.

But The Golden Bat will return. Even death can't hold him in her grasp when a young girl's tears call from beyond, after all.
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7/10
Kind of fun!
RodrigAndrisan23 September 2023
I guess the teenagers of the '60s liked it a lot.

Discovered by me on YouTube by chance with the title "Fantomas", the original title being "Ogon Batto", spoken in Japanese with subtitles in Portuguese (I am not fluent in any of the languages). But I managed with my own intuition, guessing the meaning of the words in Portuguese. Ogon Batto or The Golden Bat, is a kind of Superman with a dead head, which... it remains for you to discover what he can do. Funny to see Nazo, a four-eyed monster, not at all creepy, who laughs all the time and orders his soldiers dressed all in black, to destroy the earthlings dressed as astronauts, who want to save Earth from the collision with comet Icarus. The little girl Emily is nice, and Keiko Kuni, who plays the Piranha character, is sexy.
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8/10
Excellent (for what it is) and great fun
jamesrupert20141 March 2021
Golden Bat, a 10000-year old skull-headed, flying superhero is released from an Egyptian sarcophagus somewhere in the lost continent of Atlantis and flies to our rescue when Earth is threatened by a rogue planet under the control of the dreaded four-eyed furry Dr. Nazo. Also fighting for our continued existence is Captain Yamatone (chop-socky star Sonny Chiba), Dr. Pearl, and their team, including Emily (Emiri Takam), whose bat-pin gives the young girl the power to summon the 'Golden Bat' (a child with this kind of responsibility is common trope in these types of stories). Earth's only hope lies in Dr. Pearl's awesome "Super Destruction Beam Cannon", which the chortling super-villain tasks his nefarious hench-people (the feral Jackal, the scarred Keloid, and the sexy Piranha) to steal. Giddy stuff from start to finish! This film version of a kamishibai character created by Suzuki Ichiro and Takeo Nagamatsu in 1931 (thus predating the similarly super-powered 'Superman' by almost a decade) contains all the expected elements of a kid-oriented tokusatsu adventure (heroic youngsters, secret organisations, bizarre villains, mysterious gadgets, super weapons, last minute rescues, and lots of over-the-top action) and is great fun. The miniatures and special effects are imaginative and quite well-done (for the era and genre), the characters (both good and evil) are fun, and the story moves along quickly to a predictable but satisfying conclusion. I have seen a lot of kaiju, kaijin and tokusatsu films and 'Golden Bat', for all its silliness, is one of the most entertaining. (watched on-line with English subtitles)
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8/10
You NEED to watch this!
harybobjoebob20 October 2020
This is a film about a skeleton mummy vampire superhero, who fights a giant 4 eyed space mouse, that rides around in a drill that looks like a squid, and if that's not the most entertaining thing you've ever heard there is something wrong with you. This is the craziest super hero I have ever heard of and I love him. This film opens with a killer theme song and the golden bat character is really cool, he has this wicked cool laugh whenever he enters the scene and when he fight I love how he flails his cane around. This movie isn't perfect, whenever anyone jumps or flys the whole background goes with them, but I think its charming, and this may have been better suited for color instead of black and white, I would have loved to see golden bat actually the color gold, but the black and white doesn't hurt the film at all. This is on YouTube for free so you need to watch it right now, it's only an hour and 12 minutes or something like that so it's not like a big time investment. I need more of this character!!!
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