He's a great actor. If he was unimpressive, it's almost certainly because he was given a garbage script.I found Chandler deeply unimpressive in Godzilla: King of the Monsters, and I'm not eager to see him return.
He's a great actor. If he was unimpressive, it's almost certainly because he was given a garbage script.I found Chandler deeply unimpressive in Godzilla: King of the Monsters, and I'm not eager to see him return.
He's a great actor. If he was unimpressive, it's almost certainly because he was given a garbage script.
Yeah, I'm glad they put that line in the trailer, just before that part I was getting confused because Godzilla is supposed to be a good guy.The previous movies in this series established that Godzilla's role in the Monsterverse continuity is as a protector of the Earth, a benevolent kaiju who maintains the natural balance -- much like Gamera's role in the 1990s trilogy. So it's consistent that something must be wrong if he's suddenly turned villainous.
I'm glad Millie Bobbie Brown is back, I liked her character.
I was thinking Mark Russell wasn't that bad
, but then I realized the only things interesting about his character were Vera Fermiga and Millie Bobby Brown's characters.
Also disappointed Bradley Whitford's not coming back, he was hilarious.
I assume then that you haven't watched many classic Kaiju movies then?
This year, one will fall.
Well, given what happens in the previous movies I fully expect him to die halfway through.It still doesn't make me eager to see his character return.
How about Gamera 3 where Gamera was barely in it and most of the movie focused on a few teens? Don't get me wrong, it's a great movie, but Gamera had like five minutes of screentime.The Heisei Gamera film trilogy is excellent, even with having a teen girl being connected to Gamera. This was because she had a significant role, but the movie wasn't about her the way Godzilla KotM was about Stranger Things girl. The Gamera film movie was still about Gamera and the events around it, the teen was just a part of the story.
The axe is one of Godzilla's dorsal plates which are part of the whole atomic breath process so I'm pretty sure it can resist a direct hit.First they had to make him a lot bigger, then they turned him into an ape from Planet of the Apes based on his building a fucking axe. He can't build fucking hand axes, and even if he did they couldn't block/absorb Godzilla's beam.
This year, one will fall.
It looks like they're taking inspiration from Godzilla: The Series, with these cobra-like creatures being lifted almost unchanged from the episode that sees Godzilla go up against a MechaniKong-type robot.
They did something similar with the Skull Crawlers being based on that one lizard creature that appears very briefly in the original King Kong. Although the legal situation there I'm sure would be different. I don't know who owns the rights to the other monsters in that movie.Surprising if true, since that series was produced by Tri-Star. I wouldn't think that Legendary would have the rights to original monsters from that series.
They did something similar with the Skull Crawlers being based on that one lizard creature that appears very briefly in the original King Kong. Although the legal situation there I'm sure would be different. I don't know who owns the rights to the other monsters in that movie.
You sure? The rights related to the original movie are extremely complicated and have been the subject of multiple court cases. My understanding is that the movie and the character are owned by separate entities. But if there's someone who understands better then please speak up.That's different. If they have the rights to Kong himself, then it follows that they have the rights to all characters from the original movie.
Didn't Toho buy back all the rights from TriStar (hence Zilla appearing in Final Wars)? Or was that only for the film and not the series?So other Godzilla licensees wouldn't necessarily have the right to use TriStar's creations.
You sure? The rights related to the original movie are extremely complicated and have been the subject of multiple court cases. My understanding is that the movie and the character are owned by separate entities.
Didn't Toho buy back all the rights from TriStar (hence Zilla appearing in Final Wars)? Or was that only for the film and not the series?
Several versions of Mechagodzilla were created by humans in the Japanese movies. I think the one in the Heisei movies was created by the military as a weapon to use against Godzilla.So this Mechagodzilla, who built him ? Humans ?
I think the one in the Heisei movies was created by the military as a weapon to use against Godzilla.
According to promotional material from when Skull Island first came out, he was just an adolescent in that one, so he has simply continued to grow since the '70s. The article also says that there was a line from John C. Reilly's character about how Kong was going to continue to grow.
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