I came across this neat little theory that his dad could be Daisuke Serizawa from the original movie. But since this is a reboot, it's entirely possible that since 1954's events played differently, that either Daisuke lived long enough to sire a son and/or was uninvolved with the original hunts for Godzilla as seen in the credits (among other possibilities). It was more important to the writers that the Serizawa name continue as a link to the original movie, but Watanabe's character's first name is Ishiro, so it's possible that this isn't a direct recasting of a previous role, but rather that of a descendant. For one thing, Watanabe's Serizawa plays a different role in the movie than the 1954 counterpart.
I'd like to think that Daisuke Serizawa as played by Akihiko Hirata exists in both versions in some fashion, in any regard. Not a split timeline like nuTrek or anything unnecessary like that, but just that he was around in the 50s.
Well, even before now, the Toho films break down into seven distinct continuities, all of which (except possibly
Godzilla 2000) include the 1954 attack on Tokyo, but which often portray it, or Godzilla's origins, in distinct and incompatible ways. So it's not exactly a case of a timeline splitting, and more a case of multiple alternative realities that have certain characters, creatures, and events in common. Presumably Daisuke Serizawa is a part of all those prior realities (except maybe
2000 and
Godzilla vs. Megaguirus, since that one's ambiguous on whether the Oxygen Destroyer was ever used), so he could be a part of this one too.
I too thought Godzilla could have done with more screen time; but the screentime he did have was executed spectacularly.
I think it was handled just right. They gave us just enough to build anticipation, and then paid it off marvelously in the third act. Audiences today are just too impatient.
I also like the new take that the H Bomb tests didn't create Godzilla per se; more that 'deep exploration' of the oceans 'awakened' him, and once the U.S. and U.S.S.R. were both sure it wasn't 'the other side' -- all the various atomic bomb tests of the 1950ies and 1960ies (with progressively bigger yields) were attempts to kill him, that failed.
Actually that was pretty much the take of the original 1954 film -- that Godzilla was simply a surviving prehistoric creature living undiscovered in the depths, like the coelacanth, and that the Marshall Island nuclear tests had simply driven him from his normal feeding grounds, as well as turning him radioactive. It wasn't until 1991 that he was given the retconned origin of actually being mutated to giant size by nuclear irradiation.
And the allusion to the US and USSR both thinking Godzilla was the enemy reminds me of the plot of the 1984
Return of Godzilla, in which Godzilla's destruction of a Soviet nuclear sub is blamed on the US and almost precipitates nuclear war until the Japanese Prime Minister reveals the secret that Godzilla has returned.
I liked all the 'Easter Eggs' too - like the atomic plant having 'Jira' in it's name and being referred to as 'the Jira plant' (Godzilla in the original 1954 Japanese version - sans Raymond Burr - was actually first named 'Gojira'.)
Well, "Godzilla" and "Gojira" are really just different romanizations of the same syllables, the former using a scheme common in the 1950s and the latter using the scheme preferred today. Like Mao Tse-tung vs. Mao Zedong. And "Godzilla" is the official English spelling and pronunciation used even in the Toho films, whenever you see English signage or characters speaking English. (Although the romanization in the old scheme would've been "Godzila" -- I assume the second L was added for clarity or aesthetics, or perhaps because the name's derived partly from "gorilla.")
Massively Unidentified Terrestrial Object aka MUTO
Just Massive Unidentified Terrestrial Object. Something can't be massively unidentified; either it's identified or it isn't. But the creatures were very massive.
I can understand why some people may not like it; but for me, it worked overall as it was a Godzilla film in the mold of the Japanese Godzilla film template;
Sort of a hybrid template, actually, since it has the seriousness of the early and later films where Godzilla was the villain, and yet it presents the big guy pretty unambiguously as the hero, to an extent we've hardly seen since the goofy kids' movies of the '60s and '70s. Honestly I found Godzilla a bit tame and unthreatening here, although there were moments where the visuals made him and the MUTOs intensely imposing and threatening, especially in 3D.
and I was disappointed that with all the other nods to the previous Godzilla films they had, they never once worked something of the original/iconic 'Godzilla' theme music into any of the new film's score.
Agreed. At least they could've quoted it in the end titles, if nothing else.
hell it's not even entirely clear why he's so estranged from his father beyond his dad obsessing over the details surrounding the mother's death.
Isn't that enough? Joe's become a conspiracy nut, as far as anyone could tell, and it sounded like this wasn't the first time he got himself arrested. Evidently Ford just got tired of dealing with his nonsense.
It was a *bit* frustrating how the movie kept cock-teasing us with the battles. It seemed like every time one would start it'd cut away, or the doors would close, or we'd kinda get to see it on a TV. But maybe all of those teases is what made the full penetration of the final battle all the more great and what we got to see.
Yes, and also it helped keep the perspective on a human scale. That's something we haven't had that much of in a Godzilla film before (since of course the '98 film wasn't about the actual Godzilla) -- usually we cut to more of a monster-eye level for the big fights and they're somewhat detached from the human-level stuff, aside from the occasional cutaway. Here, we were seeing it all fully integrated, as if shot live. We were shown the Honolulu battle, we just saw it the way spectators on TV would be seeing it. It's the sort of verite quality that's favored in a lot of films today.
Just one question, the atomic breath obvious was very, very, effective in defeating the MUTOs, why didn't you do that in the first place, Godzilla?!
I imagine it takes a lot out of him, so it's a last-resort kind of thing. Besides, it was good that they saved it for the right moment. Seeing that blue light coming from inside the smoke, realizing what it meant, was one of the coolest moments in the film.
Hey, was anyone else playing "Spot the ubiquitous Vancouver actor" as they watched? Hey, there's Garry Chalk! There's Hiro Kanagawa! There's Ty Olsson! There's Brian Markinson! Even Jill Teed is here! The only one I missed was Terry Chen. I wish it hadn't been so obvious that the "Japan" scenes were filmed in Canada.