Sunday, June 2, 2019

Godzilla: King of the Monsters

I'll be honest and admit that I don't really know much about the Godzilla mythology and I didn't see the 2014 movie Godzilla but Godzilla: King of the Monsters looked like a fun summer blockbuster so I went to see it last night.  Dr. Emma Russell (Vera Farmiga), a paleobiologist with an organization called Monarch which studies creatures like Godzilla who once dominated the Earth, has created a device, nicknamed Orca, which will communicate with these Titans.  She joins forces with Alan Jonah (Charles Dance), an eco-terrorist, because she believes that these Titans can reverse the effects of overpopulation, pollution, and destructive mining to bring balance back to nature.  She brings her unsuspecting daughter Madison (Millie Bobby Brown) with her as she and Jonah use the Orca to awaken a Titan which becomes known as Ghidorah.  Scientists from Monarch, believing that Emma and Madison have been kidnapped by Jonah, contact Dr. Mark Russell (Kyle Chandler) to help rescue his ex-wife and daughter.  When Monarch realizes what Emma has done, they begin tracking Ghidorah and discover that it is an ancient alien and that it is activating all of the other Titans to attack the Earth.  The only Titan impervious to Ghidorah's control is Godzilla.   This leads to an epic battle where the scientists of Monarch attempt to help Godzilla defeat Ghidorah as well as rescue Madison, who ran away with the Orca when she realized what her mother had done.  Again, I don't know much about Godzilla and his origins but I found this story to be incredibly convoluted and I thought the triangle between Madison and her parents to be completely unnecessary.  There are so many characters, including Monarch scientists (Bradley Whitford, Ken Watanabe, Sally Hawkins, Thomas Middleditch, and Zhang Ziyi) and military personnel (Aisha Hinds, O'Shea Jackson, Jr., David Strathairn, Anthony Ramos, and Elizabeth Ludlow), many of whom seem to be there only to provide exposition, that it was sometimes hard to keep track of who was who.  However, the creature design is incredible, especially Godzilla's dorsal plates which light up when he feels threatened and Mothra's wings which are beautiful, and the visuals on the screen are amazing, particularly in the action sequences when the monsters fight each other!  I was actually more interested in the monsters than the humans in the story!  The sound design and the bombastic score are also outstanding and really add to the sense of dread when the monsters fight each other.  It is an exciting and entertaining summer blockbuster and I recommend it to fans who are expecting that and nothing more.

Note:  There is an end credits scene setting up the next installment in the MonsterVerse, which reportedly pits Godzilla against King Kong.

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