Gyaos
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Daiei's Gamera Series | |
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Gyaos | |
Species | Vampiric Avian |
Alias | Space Gyaos Shadow of Evil Super Gyaos Hyper Gyaos |
Form(s) | Super Gyaos Hyper Gyaos (evolved form) |
Height | 85-88 metres |
Weight | 75-78 tons |
Wingspan | 185-190 metres |
Air speed | Mach 3.5 |
Relationships | Atlanteans (creators in the Heisei series) numerous Gyaos offspring Irys (subspecies) |
Major enemies | Gamera Guiron |
First appearance | Gamera vs. Gyaos |
Created by | Masao Yagi |
Portrayed by: | Heisei series Yuhmi Kaneyama |
Gyaos (ギャオス Gyaosu?), (pronounced Gao-ss) is the name of several daikaiju from Daiei's Gamera film series, introduced in their 1967 production Gamera vs. Gyaos and one of Gamera's most famous opponents. It is the only Gamera foe to appear in the Showa, Heisei, and Millennium Gamera films.
Gyaos resembles a giant Pterosaur/Bat creature, with a flattened, arrow shaped head, leathery wings with three claws on each, taloned feet and a flat tail. It is reddish brown in both incarnations. The Gyaos in Gamera: Guardian of the Universe had a more streamlined appearance, with larger wings and a longer neck, as well as red eyes after its evolution in Tokyo.
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[edit] Appearances
[edit] Showa era
In Gamera vs. Gyaos, Gyaos appeared in Japan from a large cavern, and feasted on blood (principally that of livestock and human beings). Soon, Gamera confronted Gyaos, and after a battle, Gyaos was forced to flee and Gamera was forced into the ocean to recover. It is soon learned that light causes Gyaos' skin to shrink, so the light of the city stadium of Nagoya kept Gyaos at bay. Gamera soon returned to finish Gyaos off and, after a battle in the air, Gyaos cut off his own foot to escape from the sun. The protagonists developed a plan to place artificial blood on a rooftop in Nagoya. The plan was to keep Gyaos drinking the blood for so long that the sun would come up and kill him. But Gyaos proved more cunning than originally thought and used a strange fog attack to protect himself from the sun. The next plan was to lure Gamera to Gyaos' lair in the forest by setting the forest on fire. Gyaos used his fog attack to put out the flames, but Gamera arrived and eventually defeated Gyaos by throwing the beast into a volcano.
Space Gyaos appeared briefly in Gamera vs. Guiron, a victim of Gamera's titular opponent. In reality, Space Gyaos is simply the Gyaos props from Gamera vs. Gyaos painted silver. The crew of the film didn't have enough time or money to spend the time creating a new monster.
Stock footage of Gyaos was later featured in the Shōwa series recap Gamera: Super Monster among others.
[edit] Heisei era
In 1995, Gyaos was revived with Gamera for the first Heisei era Gamera film, Gamera: Guardian of the Universe, which follows a story similar to the one above. In this, the Gyaos were reimagined as creations of the ancient Atlantis civilization designed to control pollution. However, the asexual Gyaos reproduced out of control and destroyed their creators. As a last ditch defense, they created the Gameras, who eliminated the Gyaos, although not in time to save the Atlanteans. However, clutches of Gyaos eggs survived and one clutch hatched in the modern world. After killing and eating all the inhabitants of Himigami Island and attacking the mainland, the Gyaos were lured to the Fukuoka Dome stadium in Fukuoka. The last Gamera, sensing his ancient foe, awoke as well and made his way to Fukuoka. Gamera attempted to stop the Gyaos, killing two, but was hindered by the misguided military, who considered him to be the greater threat. Eventually Gamera killed the last Gyaos, which had nested in Tokyo and had grown into Super Gyaos. Super Gyaos would also appear in flashback scenes in G3, and would eventually be revealed as the real killer of Ayana's parents.
The Gyaos do not appear in G2, but they are mentioned and are the subject of a book.
The Gyaos returned in a new, evolved form known as the Hyper Gyaos in G3, after Gamera used his plasma cannon to destroy Legion in G2, which drained the earth's mana, creating the right conditions for more Gyaos to hatch. Early in the film, Gamera battles a pair of Hyper Gyaos in the Shibuya district of Tokyo, killing them but also killing and injuring as many as fifteen to twenty thousand civilians. After Gamera defeated Iris (a mutant Gyaos) in Kyoto, thousands of Hyper Gyaos swarmed towards Japan, intent on killing Gamera once and for all.
[edit] Millennium era
The Gyaos make a cameo appearance in the newest Gamera film Gamera the Brave, as Gamera dies while fighting several Gyaos in a small village. This makes them the only monster in the Gamera series apart from Gamera himself to have appeared in the Showa, Heisei and Millennium series in some shape or form.
[edit] Other appearances
- The Heisei Gyaos also appeared in the short-lived Gamera comic series by Dark Horse. It was the initial foe faced by Gamera, and from whose DNA helped create the Kaiju Viras.
[edit] Powers and abilities
In all incarnations the Gyaos have been shown to be astonishingly capable flyers, able to fly incredibly fast and perform agile aerial maneuvers with ease. Also, Gyaos has the ability to fire oral sonic beams. Although they are nocturnal, the Gyaos can overcome the sun: emitting a fog-like gas to obscure the sun and douse flames, while the Heisei version simply evolves into Super Gyaos and grows protective plates over its eyes. Interestingly, the Space Gyaos in Gamera vs. Guiron seems to have no such aversion to sunlight. The Showa version also has a regenerative ability, as it was able to regrow its severed foot after only an hour. The Heisei version showed several evolutions: it was asexual and could reproduce on its own. While not shown to be regenerative, the Super Gyaos is immensely physically tough, able to easily shrug off missile attacks, and even survive orbital re-entry.
[edit] External links
- Gyaos bios Toho Kingdom
- Gyaos stats Shrine of Gamera
- Gyaos bios Kaiju HeadQuarters
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