Godzilla and Godzilla Raids Again
Godzilla and Godzilla Raids Again is a 1955 young adult kaiju novel by. It is a novelization of the first two films in the Godzilla franchise produced by Toho, Godzilla and Godzilla Raids Again, both of which were based on story outlines by Kayama.
Background
In March 1954, a fishing vessel named the Lucky Dragon No. 5 accidentally found itself near Bikini Atoll in the Marshall Islands, where the U.S. military was testing hydrogen bombs as part of a project known as Castle Bravo. All of the twenty-three crew members came down with acute radiation poisoning, and one, Aikichi Kuboyama, died within the year. Subsequent investigations showed that the tuna that their boat and others had brought to Japan showed signs of radioactivity, and this sparked panic about radiation throughout Japan.Wanting to capitalize on the wave of radiation-related anxiety sweeping Japan, in early 1954, the producer Tomoyuki Tanaka from Toho Studios approached the popular science-fiction writer Shigeru Kayama to come up with a screenplay about a radioactive kaiju monster.
When Kayama wrote the scenario that would become the basis for the screenplay for Godzilla, he conceived of the film as a means to express his concern about nuclear weapons. At the beginning of the scenario, Kayama included an extended voice-over commentary about the dangers of nuclear weapons, but in subsequent edits, the director Ishirō Honda and his co-writer removed much of Kayama's direct, heavy-handed language condemning nuclear proliferation. In a round table after the film's release, Kayama indicated that he did not mind these changes. He said, "As the one responsible for the creation of the story, I was really worried about what kind of film it would become; however, the film exceeded all my expectations."
After the great success of Godzilla, Toho Studios approached Kayama about writing a screenplay for the sequel, Godzilla Raids Again, which would be directed by Motoyoshi Oda and released in 1955. Because Kayama had killed off Godzilla with a fictitious device called the Oxygen Destroyer at the end of the 1954 film, he found writing a screenplay a challenge but drafted the sequel Godzilla Raids Again in a short period of time.