The multiverse concept is a hot item for cinema's now.
I wonder why they decided to release so much promotional material at once after being secretive for so long.
I believe it's fully standalone.
That would make more sense, it always bugs when they suddenly throw a prequel into a franchise and have to come up with some, often ridiculous, excuse for why nobody mentioned it in the original.Godzilla movies have occupied many different continuities over the decades. The first seven Toho continuities (the original Showa-era series from 1954-75, the Heisei series from 1984-95, and the six films in five different continuities from 1999-2004) all count the 1954 original as part of their history while otherwise being separate realities, but everything since then (Shin Godzilla, the anime Earth Trilogy, the Singular Point anime series, and of course the Legendary MonsterVerse) has been in continuities where the 1954 film never happened. Presumably Minus One is yet another reboot universe.
Forget Barbenheimer, that's the double feature I want.They should advertise this before Oppenheimer. Say this is the aftermath of that movie
Watched Shin Godzilla for the first time, definitely an interesting take on the formula. The part that really stuck with me is that first form that beaches gave me the biggest uncanny valley feeling I may have experienced which made it pretty memorable.
Watched Final Wars as well which is something else. It's like a late Fast and Furious entry that just throws everything to the wind and is so ridiculous even for a kaiju film. The shade on the American film zilla was hilarious.
I hadn't realized how much I had been stuck in that Showa era with my Godzilla. The Millenium era is especially spotty. Do these benefit from going in order or is it OK to pick and choose?
The Millenium era is especially spotty. Do these benefit from going in order or is it OK to pick and choose?
We've seen Godzilla attack modern, prosperous cities in Japan. We haven't seen Godzilla attack Japan in the specific context of the immediate aftermath of WWII, when the nation was already in ruins before Godzilla even got there. That context changes everything, and I'm intrigued to see how they intend to utilize it.
Well, given the Yamato was sunk during World War II, it wouldn't be around to face Godzilla. The Space Battleship Yamato however with its Wave Motion Gun...Has the Yamato ever faced ‘Zilla in fiction?
Has the Yamato ever faced ‘Zilla in fiction?
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