---
product_id: 1721086
title: "The Godzilla Collection (Vol 1 and 2)"
price: "€ 326.84"
currency: EUR
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 13
url: https://www.desertcart.be/products/1721086-the-godzilla-collection-vol-1-and-2
store_origin: BE
region: Belgium
---

# The Godzilla Collection (Vol 1 and 2)

**Price:** € 326.84
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** The Godzilla Collection (Vol 1 and 2)
- **How much does it cost?** € 326.84 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.be](https://www.desertcart.be/products/1721086-the-godzilla-collection-vol-1-and-2)

## Best For

- Customers looking for quality international products

## Why This Product

- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
- 15-day hassle-free returns

## Description

Gojira / Godzilla, King of the Monsters The first of the Godzilla movies, and the most somber and serious in tone, Gojiro was originally a 98-minute Japanese horror film, until a U.S. company bought the rights and reissued the film at 79 minutes, replacing sequences involving a Japanese reporter with new inserts of a dour, pipe-smoking Raymond Burr. Both versions appear together for the first time in this release from Sony Wonder. Godzilla Raids Again Godzilla is back, and this time he’s not alone! Godzilla and the spiny monster Anguirus are in a heated battle on a small Japanese island. As the threat of destruction mounts, two Japanese heroes muster their courage for the final showdown with Godzilla. Mothra vs. Godzilla After a fierce typhoon, Mothra’s gigantic egg washes ashore Japan. Meanwhile Godzilla reawakens and tramples across the land, heading straight for the big egg. Can Mothra save her offspring from Godzilla? Will Japan survive this epic monster battle? Ghidorah: The Three-Headed Monster Ghidorah, the Three-Headed Monster -- A prophetess from Venus foretells cataclysmic disasters! Godzilla, Mothra and Rodan reappear in Japan, wreaking havoc! A giant meteor crashes into the mountains and the three-headed, fire-spitting space dragon King Ghidorah emerges! As the Venusian's prophecies come true, assassins from a tiny Asian kingdom hunt her down, while the Earth monsters must decide whether to settle their petty differences and join forces against the extraterrestrial enemy! Invasion of Astro-Monster Invasion of Astro-Monster/Godzilla vs. Monster Zero -- Aliens from Planet X borrow our monsters for a little extermination project, but they've got something else up their sleeves: world domination! Using mind-control technology, these vinyl-and-sunglasses wearing spacemen turn Godzilla, Rodan and King Ghidorah loose in Japan, demanding Earth's surrender! It's up to American astronaut F. Glenn, his galaxy-trotting buddy Fuji, and nerdy inventor Tetsuo to break the aliens' hold on the monsters and save our planet from certain doom. Terror of Mechagodzilla Evil spacemen from the Black Hole are plotting to flatten Tokyo and build their own utopian city. Aided by deranged scientist Dr. Mafune, the aliens unleash a rebuilt Mechagodzilla and the monster Titanosaurus to do their evil bidding, until Godzilla surfaces to defend his homeland and the earth-shattering destruction begins. Mothra vs. Godzilla More visually splendid and imaginatively written than the other Godzilla sequels, this (the fourth in the series) starts when Mothra's gigantic egg washes ashore in Japan, having been dislodged from Mothra Island by a hurricane. Two tiny twin girls (sometimes singing like dual-diminutive Dorothy Lamours) from the island come to plead for the return of the egg by the greedy business guys who bought it for a tourist attraction, but to no avail. Radiation from nuclear testing revives Godzilla from the earth, who proceeds to threaten the egg and the cities, unless Mothra and his larvae hatched from the egg can stop him. The battle sequences between Mothra and Godzilla, and between Godzilla and the larvae, are spectacularly vivid and colorful. -- Jim Gay Terror of Mechagodzilla In 1974, Inoshiro Honda, the original and best Godzilla director, returned after a five-year absence to direct this 20th-anniversary commemoration to Gojira (the original Japanese name for Godzilla, before the West Anglicized it). This is the fifteenth film in the Godzilla series, and the eleventh by director Honda. Yet again the aliens (from the third planet of the black hole, whatever that means; they don't really provide directions) stage a takeover of Earth, this time with the aid of Mechagodzilla and Titanosaurus (they're just what they sound like). They owe the mad scientist Mafuni for the use of Titanosaurus, who in turn owes the aliens for resurrecting his daughter, Katsura, badly hurt in an accident, albeit now as a cyborg with the ability to control their two mecha-monsters. It shapes up as the fight of the century when Godzilla is pressed into service for our side. The battling behemoths afford the most dramatic and vivid fight scenes in all of Godzilladom in this one. Let's hope the aliens don't win; they're so smug. -- Jim Gay

Review: Quite a nice package of Showa-era films - I'd have to say this is probably the nicest collection of G films that is currently available. Classic Media really outdid themselves here given the lack of care with other Godzilla releases. The physical outer case is embarrassingly well-built and attractive. The photos in the product description can't do it justice. The cases for the individual films are just as aesthetically pleasing. Unfortunately, I found these to function rather poorly (excluding the Gojira/Godzilla 2-disc set). The spines are TOO thick/strong and prevent the front flap from staying closed on its own since there is no locking mechanism. Opening them makes an extremely unhealthy sound of dried glue being ripped off cardboard, although no harm is ever done to the case. It was pretty alarming the first time I opened them. My biggest complaint with the cases are the ridiculous death grip they have on discs. I became so fearful of disc damage that eventually I took a little nail file ever-so-slightly to the plastic tabs in order to round them off a little bit. It did the trick but I got a little careless and rounded one off too much so now the disc easily falls out. If these weren't in a bigger case it would be terrible to deal with these individually. I bought my set a while ago so they may have fixed these quirks since then. Maybe someone else can comment? But my minor gripes with the cases are by far the biggest drawback to this set. The DVD production is really top-notch on them all. Beautiful menus and navigation genuinely reflect the film and it's time. The prints used for all the Japanese versions were in extremely good, clean condition. Vibrant colors, sharp detail, etc. A couple of the films' Americanized versions are comparatively poor being dark with considerable scratches. I certainly wouldn't consider any of them "unwatchable." Its my understanding that as these DVDs were being released individually Classic Media eventually started using the already-restored footage from the Japanese versions to reconstruct the English ones. Kind of disappointing this wasn't the case for Mothra vs. Godzilla because the English dub of this film is what sparked my interest in Godzilla as a kid. I realize that most people would rather watch the original Japanese cuts anyways. Not really a big deal I suppose. I also find it ironic that arguably the worst Godzilla film ever made, All Monsters Attack aka Godzilla's Revenge, is arguably the best overall quality here. It's kind of hard to grade the audio track to films that are 35-60 years old. None of them have a strong hiss or contain pops and crackles so I'd call them adequate. The special features are a mixed bag. Trailers are always fun to watch and they are in decent shape. Those classic posters are great to see too. There is nothing real profound in the way of featurettes. It's quite understandable considering the severe lack of media surrounding the production of these films. I'd imagine producing a brand new full-length documentary would probably be far too costly. Instead we get some extremely detailed commentaries by very well-informed experts. Combining the commentaries with the featurettes gives you an excellent overview in the same way a documentary would. In terms of the extras, Classic Media probably did the most effective job they could based on what they were given. I'd say this set is a must-have for even casual G fans. The excellent DVD presentation more than makes up for the superficial packaging flaws. It's not enough to justify knocking off a whole star. I bought this nearly 2 years ago and since then the price has dropped to nearly half that. At the current price of $19 this is a steal. ***EDIT*** May 6, 2012 It appears Classic Media now has a re-designed case with flimsy standard-sized DVD cases (divided in 2 volumes). Sadly many companies are re-packaging older box sets and labeling them as "slim packaging." In reality they should just be calling these "corner-cutting cheapie cases." While I complained about the functionality of the first version at least it was very solid, pretty unique, and aesthetically pleasing. These new cases appear mediocre on all levels. However I don't see it as being a deal breaker. The set is still a good value based on disc content alone (even with a price hike to now $25) but it loses some pizazz with this case downgrade.
Review: The Best Respect Godzilla Has Gotten!! - Just wanted to say if you have any thought in your mind about purchasing this, BUY IT NOW! I bought this when it was around thirty-five dollars and it was worth every penny. The main-menus are very well done and they really tried give the fans what they wanted. I'm so glad they included the Japanese uncut version with excellent special features. I hated the fact that I missed out on minutes of footage on my 15 year old VHS tapes. Godzilla King of Monsters- Godzilla doesn't fight any monsters in this one, but this film is incredible. It was the first time I saw it, which was only months ago, it went way past my expectations. It was creepy, cool and loved seeing Godzilla as the bad guy. Probably the best Godzilla storyline out of all the movies. I mean the human scenes were interesting to watch! I couldn't believe this was possible in a godzilla film. The heavily edited dubbed American version isn't horrible, but there's no positive reason to watch it, unless you hate reading subtitles. 10/10 (for original) 5/10 (for American) Godzilla Raids Again- The sequel to King of Monsters! Now this godzilla film is pretty good. Godzilla is still heel which is nice, and we get to see the first appearnce of Anguirus, which is one of my favorite monsters. The black and white film is still here keeping it more dark and evil. The human scenes are not near as good as the first one's, but I liked the military discussion scenes. The biggest problem about the film is the fight between Godzill and Angurius... it's in fast motion and it was a stupid idea for the film-makers to do this. I still like it though. The iceberg conflict, godzilla's crazy teeth and roars make this a good one. Except the American version which switches Godzilla and Angurius' roar... which detracts from the film immensely. The iceberg scenes are some of the most exciting and intense as well. 7.5/10 or 8/10 if fight scene wasn't in fast motion. Godzilla vs. Mothra- Godzilla makes an awesome entrance and is still a heel, but is shown more as a destructive force of nature, which is how it should be. The big-due breaks a lot of buildings, destroys a lot of tanks and kills Mothra. Human scenes are watchable and actually interesting. The American version actually adds a military scene where the shoot missles at Godzilla which is really awesome, which gives a slight advantage in the version to watch, but the American version does have weaker quality than Japanese version. Also, out of every Godzilla film, this has the best suit-acting in my opinion, also the first time you get to here the amazing Godzilla theme, it's very powerful and gives me goosebumps. 9.5/10 Ghidorah the three-headed Monster- Really good godzilla film. Godzilla, Rodan, Mothra and King-Ghidorah cause some hell. Lot of action, in the last half anyway. Watch Japenese version, for American editing issues. Godzilla and Rodan fighting is probably the highlight of the film and it's the last time Godzilla has his smoke breath. The final battle is decent, great team-work moments. Godzilla throws a bit too many rocks though. The human scenes also get in the way of the battle sometimes. Also the Godzilla theme is also present in this one, making it even more awesome. 9/10 Godzilla vs. Monster Zero- Basically, the sequel to Ghidorah!! Pretty similair to first (monsters fight ghidorah), excpet there's two excellent fight scenes that are more impressive than the first, without the addition of Mothra (thank goodness). Excellent action and fight scenes, that are very memorable. American version is fine since almost nothing is edited out. Just avoid human scenes though... they're very dull. The Godzilla suit, has an improved look as well. Also, look for the Godzilla jump!! 9/10 Godzilla's Revenge- Basically a collection of Godzilla's battles on monster-island, since all the fights are just repeats from other films. Great film, if you just watch the fights. But Minilla and the boy are horrible to watch. Lots of action and Godzilla kicking butt, this one isn't really worth watching if you've seen all the other one's though. I would watch Japenese to avoid the bad dubbing. 5.0 (I can't decide if the American Gojira is worse or better than this.) Terror of MechaGodzilla- The sequel to Godzilla vs. Mecha. Not as good as the first one, but still delivers some good action. Godzilla is outnumbered and both his entrances are cool, especially the first one. Godzilla's roar doesn't sound right, it seems like they're recordings of old recordings of Godzilla's roar. Titanosaurus isn't that great, but it's nice to see a new monster. I like how Mechagodzilla was taken down and the human involvment. American and Japenese version seemed pretty similiar to me. The camera angles and shots are arguably the best in the series. Last Godzilla film of the Showa series. 8/10 I'm glad that Classic Media released this. You should definetely invest your money in this if your Godzilla fan. The commentary tracks on the American versions, make this set even more recommended, as they point out things, ask questions, have past interview recordings and let you learn so much more about the films and Godzilla overall. Overall the rating of all the films on average is an 8, which is really impressive. Awesome set that is 100% mandatory for fans. I wish Classic Media had the rights to all the Godzilla films. Overall, 9.5/10.

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Contributor | Hoshi, Yuriko, Shimura, Takashi |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 out of 5 stars 1,291 Reviews |
| Format | Box set, Closed-captioned, Color, Full Screen, Multiple Formats, NTSC, Widescreen |
| Genre | Science Fiction |
| Language | English, Japanese |
| Runtime | 9 hours and 43 minutes |

## Product Details

- **Genre:** Science Fiction
- **Format:** Multiple Formats, Box set, Full Screen, Closed-captioned, Color, NTSC, Widescreen
- **Contributor:** Shimura, Takashi, Hoshi, Yuriko
- **Language:** English, Japanese
- **Runtime:** 9 hours and 43 minutes

## Images

![The Godzilla Collection (Vol 1 and 2) - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81KvupukyaL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Quite a nice package of Showa-era films
*by A***D on March 31, 2011*

I'd have to say this is probably the nicest collection of G films that is currently available. Classic Media really outdid themselves here given the lack of care with other Godzilla releases. The physical outer case is embarrassingly well-built and attractive. The photos in the product description can't do it justice. The cases for the individual films are just as aesthetically pleasing. Unfortunately, I found these to function rather poorly (excluding the Gojira/Godzilla 2-disc set). The spines are TOO thick/strong and prevent the front flap from staying closed on its own since there is no locking mechanism. Opening them makes an extremely unhealthy sound of dried glue being ripped off cardboard, although no harm is ever done to the case. It was pretty alarming the first time I opened them. My biggest complaint with the cases are the ridiculous death grip they have on discs. I became so fearful of disc damage that eventually I took a little nail file ever-so-slightly to the plastic tabs in order to round them off a little bit. It did the trick but I got a little careless and rounded one off too much so now the disc easily falls out. If these weren't in a bigger case it would be terrible to deal with these individually. I bought my set a while ago so they may have fixed these quirks since then. Maybe someone else can comment? But my minor gripes with the cases are by far the biggest drawback to this set. The DVD production is really top-notch on them all. Beautiful menus and navigation genuinely reflect the film and it's time. The prints used for all the Japanese versions were in extremely good, clean condition. Vibrant colors, sharp detail, etc. A couple of the films' Americanized versions are comparatively poor being dark with considerable scratches. I certainly wouldn't consider any of them "unwatchable." Its my understanding that as these DVDs were being released individually Classic Media eventually started using the already-restored footage from the Japanese versions to reconstruct the English ones. Kind of disappointing this wasn't the case for Mothra vs. Godzilla because the English dub of this film is what sparked my interest in Godzilla as a kid. I realize that most people would rather watch the original Japanese cuts anyways. Not really a big deal I suppose. I also find it ironic that arguably the worst Godzilla film ever made, All Monsters Attack aka Godzilla's Revenge, is arguably the best overall quality here. It's kind of hard to grade the audio track to films that are 35-60 years old. None of them have a strong hiss or contain pops and crackles so I'd call them adequate. The special features are a mixed bag. Trailers are always fun to watch and they are in decent shape. Those classic posters are great to see too. There is nothing real profound in the way of featurettes. It's quite understandable considering the severe lack of media surrounding the production of these films. I'd imagine producing a brand new full-length documentary would probably be far too costly. Instead we get some extremely detailed commentaries by very well-informed experts. Combining the commentaries with the featurettes gives you an excellent overview in the same way a documentary would. In terms of the extras, Classic Media probably did the most effective job they could based on what they were given. I'd say this set is a must-have for even casual G fans. The excellent DVD presentation more than makes up for the superficial packaging flaws. It's not enough to justify knocking off a whole star. I bought this nearly 2 years ago and since then the price has dropped to nearly half that. At the current price of $19 this is a steal. ***EDIT*** May 6, 2012 It appears Classic Media now has a re-designed case with flimsy standard-sized DVD cases (divided in 2 volumes). Sadly many companies are re-packaging older box sets and labeling them as "slim packaging." In reality they should just be calling these "corner-cutting cheapie cases." While I complained about the functionality of the first version at least it was very solid, pretty unique, and aesthetically pleasing. These new cases appear mediocre on all levels. However I don't see it as being a deal breaker. The set is still a good value based on disc content alone (even with a price hike to now $25) but it loses some pizazz with this case downgrade.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ The Best Respect Godzilla Has Gotten!!
*by D***Y on May 18, 2010*

Just wanted to say if you have any thought in your mind about purchasing this, BUY IT NOW! I bought this when it was around thirty-five dollars and it was worth every penny. The main-menus are very well done and they really tried give the fans what they wanted. I'm so glad they included the Japanese uncut version with excellent special features. I hated the fact that I missed out on minutes of footage on my 15 year old VHS tapes. Godzilla King of Monsters- Godzilla doesn't fight any monsters in this one, but this film is incredible. It was the first time I saw it, which was only months ago, it went way past my expectations. It was creepy, cool and loved seeing Godzilla as the bad guy. Probably the best Godzilla storyline out of all the movies. I mean the human scenes were interesting to watch! I couldn't believe this was possible in a godzilla film. The heavily edited dubbed American version isn't horrible, but there's no positive reason to watch it, unless you hate reading subtitles. 10/10 (for original) 5/10 (for American) Godzilla Raids Again- The sequel to King of Monsters! Now this godzilla film is pretty good. Godzilla is still heel which is nice, and we get to see the first appearnce of Anguirus, which is one of my favorite monsters. The black and white film is still here keeping it more dark and evil. The human scenes are not near as good as the first one's, but I liked the military discussion scenes. The biggest problem about the film is the fight between Godzill and Angurius... it's in fast motion and it was a stupid idea for the film-makers to do this. I still like it though. The iceberg conflict, godzilla's crazy teeth and roars make this a good one. Except the American version which switches Godzilla and Angurius' roar... which detracts from the film immensely. The iceberg scenes are some of the most exciting and intense as well. 7.5/10 or 8/10 if fight scene wasn't in fast motion. Godzilla vs. Mothra- Godzilla makes an awesome entrance and is still a heel, but is shown more as a destructive force of nature, which is how it should be. The big-due breaks a lot of buildings, destroys a lot of tanks and kills Mothra. Human scenes are watchable and actually interesting. The American version actually adds a military scene where the shoot missles at Godzilla which is really awesome, which gives a slight advantage in the version to watch, but the American version does have weaker quality than Japanese version. Also, out of every Godzilla film, this has the best suit-acting in my opinion, also the first time you get to here the amazing Godzilla theme, it's very powerful and gives me goosebumps. 9.5/10 Ghidorah the three-headed Monster- Really good godzilla film. Godzilla, Rodan, Mothra and King-Ghidorah cause some hell. Lot of action, in the last half anyway. Watch Japenese version, for American editing issues. Godzilla and Rodan fighting is probably the highlight of the film and it's the last time Godzilla has his smoke breath. The final battle is decent, great team-work moments. Godzilla throws a bit too many rocks though. The human scenes also get in the way of the battle sometimes. Also the Godzilla theme is also present in this one, making it even more awesome. 9/10 Godzilla vs. Monster Zero- Basically, the sequel to Ghidorah!! Pretty similair to first (monsters fight ghidorah), excpet there's two excellent fight scenes that are more impressive than the first, without the addition of Mothra (thank goodness). Excellent action and fight scenes, that are very memorable. American version is fine since almost nothing is edited out. Just avoid human scenes though... they're very dull. The Godzilla suit, has an improved look as well. Also, look for the Godzilla jump!! 9/10 Godzilla's Revenge- Basically a collection of Godzilla's battles on monster-island, since all the fights are just repeats from other films. Great film, if you just watch the fights. But Minilla and the boy are horrible to watch. Lots of action and Godzilla kicking butt, this one isn't really worth watching if you've seen all the other one's though. I would watch Japenese to avoid the bad dubbing. 5.0 (I can't decide if the American Gojira is worse or better than this.) Terror of MechaGodzilla- The sequel to Godzilla vs. Mecha. Not as good as the first one, but still delivers some good action. Godzilla is outnumbered and both his entrances are cool, especially the first one. Godzilla's roar doesn't sound right, it seems like they're recordings of old recordings of Godzilla's roar. Titanosaurus isn't that great, but it's nice to see a new monster. I like how Mechagodzilla was taken down and the human involvment. American and Japenese version seemed pretty similiar to me. The camera angles and shots are arguably the best in the series. Last Godzilla film of the Showa series. 8/10 I'm glad that Classic Media released this. You should definetely invest your money in this if your Godzilla fan. The commentary tracks on the American versions, make this set even more recommended, as they point out things, ask questions, have past interview recordings and let you learn so much more about the films and Godzilla overall. Overall the rating of all the films on average is an 8, which is really impressive. Awesome set that is 100% mandatory for fans. I wish Classic Media had the rights to all the Godzilla films. Overall, 9.5/10.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Great Godzilla collection
*by T***D on June 24, 2012*

This collection is an excellent deal if you like the original Godzilla Sho'wa series.You can buy all of these films separately at a much higher cost some are $14.99 alone so you might as well buy this set for $20.00.The DVDs are fairly good quality nothing overly fancy they all come with the original Japanese version and English dubbed version which is interesting as each film is slightly different in dialogue and usually a few things are taken out of the US versions so if you are like me a viewed the films on TNT back in the early 90's you will really enjoy this set.Most of the DVDs come with a short documentary about an aspect of making the films one called "The Art of Suit Acting" is very interesting and worth viewing. Of all the films in this set "Godzilla Raids Again" is easily the weakest film it just seems a bit sloppy it was released in 1955 just after "Godzilla King of Monsters" and I suspect that it might have been rushed through production to capitalize on the success of the first film the fight scenes between Godzilla and Anguirus are actually well done from a choreographed stand point they just filmed them at too low a speed and it makes the monsters seem to have no mass usually they filmed at a high speed and the actors in the suits moved very fast then they played the film at a regular speed and this made the suits seem to have more mass I think they forgot to turn up the camera speed when they filmed or maybe they had no time to perfect acting out of two monsters fighting."Raids" is much better in the Japanese version in the American version they do not even call him Godzilla.Compare "Godzilla Raids Again" to the next Toho monster film "Rodan" and you can see that "Raids" was just a bit poorly done. Some dislike "All Monsters Attack" but I personally enjoy it yes it is a little cheesy but you have to keep in mind that it was supposed to target children when you view the film with this in mind you will find it more enjoyable. The set includes: Godzilla King of Monsters( 1st film 2 DVDs) Godzilla Raids Again(2nd film) Mothra vs. Godzilla(4th film) Ghidorah, The Three Headed Monster(5th film) Invasion of Astro Monster(6th film) All Monsters Attack(10th film) Terror of Mechagodzilla(15th film) The set lacks: Godzilla vs. King Kong (3rd film) Godzilla vs. The Sea Monster(7th film) Son of Godzilla(8th film) Destroy All Monsters(9th film) Godzilla vs. Hedorah(11th film) Godzilla vs. Gigan(12th film) Godzilla vs. Megalon(13thfilm) Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla(14th film) ClassicMedia does not own the rights to the omitted films of the Sho'wa series they are all owned by different companies which is why they are not included in the set which is a bit of a let down as the other companies DVDs are not nearly as good of quality as ClassicMedia and many are only the US dubbed version but this can not be blamed on ClassicMedia. All things considered The Godzilla Collection is an excellent deal you get several good Godzilla films for a mere 20 dollars not bad at all you really can not go wrong. If you like the Sh'wa series Godzilla films I also suggest the double feature ClassicMedia DVD "Rodan" / "War of the Gargantuans" both films are good and worth adding to your monster/sci-fi collection.

---

## Why Shop on Desertcart?

- 🛒 **Trusted by 1.3+ Million Shoppers** — Serving international shoppers since 2016
- 🌍 **Shop Globally** — Access 737+ million products across 21 categories
- 💰 **No Hidden Fees** — All customs, duties, and taxes included in the price
- 🔄 **15-Day Free Returns** — Hassle-free returns (30 days for PRO members)
- 🔒 **Secure Payments** — Trusted payment options with buyer protection
- ⭐ **TrustPilot Rated 4.5/5** — Based on 8,000+ happy customer reviews

**Shop now:** [https://www.desertcart.be/products/1721086-the-godzilla-collection-vol-1-and-2](https://www.desertcart.be/products/1721086-the-godzilla-collection-vol-1-and-2)

---

*Product available on Desertcart Belgium*
*Store origin: BE*
*Last updated: 2026-06-21*