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1[[quoteright:312:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/atragon.jpg]]
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3''Atragon'' (aka ''Kaitei Gunkan'', or ''Undersea Warship'') is a 1963 [[{{Toku}} Tokusatsu]] film from the producers and crew of ''Franchise/{{Godzilla}}''.
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5The lost kingdom of Mu, which sank beneath the sea over twelve thousand years ago, launches an assault to make the upper world their domain again. With an array of super-weaponry, the Mu Kingdom wages a war against which the surface dwellers seemed powerless to resist.
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7Human civilization's only hope soon lie with the super-scientific battleship Atragon, built in secret by Captain Jinguji of the former Imperial Japanese Navy after the war as a means of restoring his defeated country's honour. While at first he refuses to use it for any other purposes, his daughter's kidnapping by the Mu to prevent Atragon from being used against them would lead to him putting aside his pride and bring his super-battleship into battle against the forces of Mu.
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9As the Atragon attempts to defeat the Mu Kingdom in their own underwater domain, a defiant Mu empress unleashes the legendary sea dragon Manda against the Humanity. The fate of the world hangs in the balance as only one or the other - Atragon or Manda, Earth or the Mu - will emerge victorious.
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11This movie introduces Manda to the Creator/{{Toho}} universe, who was later incorporated into the Godzilla universe. It also marks the first appearance of the Gotengo[=/=]Atragon, which became one of Toho's signature military battle vehicles. The Atragon appears 2004's ''Film/GodzillaFinalWars'', which recreates the battle between the Atragon and Manda from this film.
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13See also ''Anime/SuperAtragon''.
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15!!Tropes that apply to ''Atragon'' include:
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17* ArtifactTitle: Later releases have kept the ''Atragon'' title despite the fact that the original name of the Gotengo was restored and the DubNameChange was undone.
18* CallingTheOldManOut: Captain Jinguji is so fixated in restoring Japan's honor after the nation's defeat in World War II that everyone, including his own daughter, calls him out on this. Granted that Nationalism and Patriotism is the basic themes of this film, but he actually took it too far.
19* CentralTheme: Blind nationalism is a self-destructive behavior, and both Captain Jinguji and the Empress of Mu are perfect examples of this. Captain Jinguji wants to use the Gotengo to restore Japan's honor after the country's defeat in World War II that he's willing to strike back against the Allied Forces even though Japan adopted the United States' Constitution. It took his daughter's kidnapping by Mu agents that he personally pushes his national pride aside to save her. The Empress of Mu however refuses to surrender to Captain Jinguji, and chooses to die with her country.
20* CoolShip:
21** The Gotengo/Atragon.
22** Subverted with the Red Satan, supposed to be a super-advanced submarine but is destroyed after one encounter when it pursues a Mu submarine past crush depth.
23* CurbStompBattle: The entire war, once the Gotengo/Atragon gets involved
24* DoomsdayDevice: Mu's seismic generator.
25* DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu: The Atragon froze Manda to death.
26* DubNameChange: Gotengo to Atragon.
27** The film itself was renamed by Toho for greater appeal in overseas distribution, Atragon being a portmanteau of the English words ''Atlantis Dragon'', a clear reference to Manda. The net result of this ExecutiveMeddling is that the movie's native-language title refers to the protagonist supership, and its overseas title does the same, but said overseas title was actually created in reference to the kaiju antagonist... a dragon that technically isn't even from Atlantis!
28* TheDragon: Manda literally is one, but he's also a guardian monster
29* GenreBusting: Toho's war films were very popular during the 1960s, so writer Sekizawa came up with the idea of combining Toho's popular war films with their fantasy/kaiju films and voila! You end up with a movie that, on paper, sounds like a wacky pulp TwoFistedTales type adventure, but is actually a surprisingly somber meditation on the postwar world order and Japan's place in it.
30* InferredHolocaust: The ending implies that not only has Mu's military been destroyed, but that the entire empire may have drowned in a mass genocide.
31* IntrepidReporter: Played with. Umino seems to take his job seriously in an odd matter. Later defied when he was [[TheMole a Mu Agent all along]].
32* NoNameGiven: The Mu Agents and the Empress. As well as her Chancellor.
33* PapaWolf: It took Captain Jinuji a long ass time to see he should use the Atragon to save his daughter. And he ''does''.
34* RentAZilla: Manda is a big {{kaiju}} who has even [[Film/DestroyAllMonsters met Godzilla]], but his role in this movie is actually fairly minimal. You could cut his scenes completely and the movie would still work. For proof, see the book, which [[CanonForeigner doesn't have Manda in it]].
35* SeaSerpents: Manda's design is a mix of this and an Asian-style dragon
36* SceneryPorn: The panoramic shots of the kingdom of Mu are breathtaking. Tsuburaya-sama outdid himself on this film.
37* TheStoic: Captain Jinguji, played by the master of stoics, Jun Tazaki.
38* SubStory: Most of the movie's third act
39* UnderwaterCity: An entire underwater empire!
40* YamatoNadeshiko: The Empress of Mu.

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