Godzilla: King Of The Monsters Director On Turning Kaiju Into Characters

Sometimes when you’re making movies, dealing with the “big personalities” of your actors is just par for the course–but when you’re making a movie populated by giant monsters, it can become a very literal task, very fast. Not only did Michael Doughtery, director of Godzilla: King Of The Monsters, have to juggle four different massive kaiju as they rampaged around the world, he had to figure out how to make them each come across with their own individuality and character.

Thankfully, Doughtery had plenty of source material to build from. “Their personalities all came from the classic movies,” he explained to GameSpot in during the Godzilla: King Of The Monsters press junket in Los Angeles. “They all really came through to me as a kid–specifically in Ghidorah, The Three Headed Monster. That was the first time I remember feeling like I got a glimpse of their inner worlds.”

The movie, released in 1964, introduced King Ghidorah to the Toho Kaiju pantheon as a major threat. “There’s this really amazing scene where Larval Mothra goes to Rodan and Godzilla and says, “Hey. This King Ghidorah guy just showed up. We need to team up to fight against him,” Doughtery continued. “The creatures are literally having a conversation with each other while off to the side, Mothra’s priestesses, the twins, are translating for the humans. There’s so much going on in this scene and I’ll never forget the subtitles basically explaining that Mothra wanted to do the right thing because she believes in protecting the planet at all costs. And Rodan and Godzilla were like, “Why should we care? Why should we care about humans? All they do is bully us.” And that blew my mind as a kid because suddenly you had a glimpse into the point of view of these monsters. [It made me realize] the way that they saw us as monsters while they’re just trying to live their lives. And that’s what they’re fully entitled to do. So I just wanted to make sure that the personality traits that existed in all the past films came through in this one.”

So what, exactly, are those personalities? Doughtery laughed. “Ghidorah is an absolute monstrous bully who seeks the throne, seeks the crown. He wants to be the alpha predator. And Mothra is a much more maternal and divine presence. Very protective and nurturing but she can still throw down with the big boys. And that Rodan is kind of this rogue in that he’s unpredictable. You don’t know who he’s going to follow or fight. But he’s willing to fight at the drop of a hat.”

Ghidorah, specifically, was a challenge given his status as the film’s main villain. The giant, alien, three-headed dragon has the unique ability to regenerate heads that have been severed–but that doesn’t mean his personalities get to change every time a new limb is regrown. “I’m fascinated with how cephalopods, octopi especially, all of their neurons and brain cells aren’t concentrated in the brain. Theoretically, if you chopped off Ghidorah’s head the new head would regenerate using the DNA and brain cells that exist elsewhere in the body. […] So new Ghidorah heads have the same personality as the old ones.”

Every part of Ghidorah’s modern design process was built around the idea of making him look and feel like the “playground bully” he is. “His sound is so unique,” Doughtery explained, “His very particular trill, his cackle, I wanted to make sure we got that right. Because even the old movies, it’s simple but very unnerving–it’s got a dash of nails-on-a-chalkboard, it’s so atypical of what you’d think a dragon would sound like. It’s almost mocking. It’s kind of like mocking laughter.”

Godzilla: King Of The Monsters hits theaters on May 31.

Godzilla: King Of The Monsters Review Roundup: Here’s What The Critics Are Saying

Godzilla: King of the Monsters is the sequel to 2014’s Godzilla, and the latest film in the “Monsterverse,” following 2017’s Kong: Skull Island. It hits theaters tomorrow, May 30.

As the title suggests, the movie features several other classic giant monsters, including Mothra, Rodan, and the terrifying King Gidorah. In terms of the human cast, it stars Vera Farmiga (The Conjuring), Kyle Chandler (Game Night), Millie Bobbie Brown (Stranger Things), Sally Hawkins (The Shape of Water), Ken Watanabe (Inception), and O’Shea Jackson Jr (Straight Outta Compton). It’s directed by Michael Dougherty.

Ahead of the movie’s release, reviews have been published online. We’re collecting excerpts here to help you get an idea for if the movie is worth your time and money. For more on the critical reaction to the film, head to GameSpot sister site Metacritic.

  • Godzilla: King of the Monsters
  • Directed By: Michael Dougherty
  • Written By: Michael Dougherty, Zach Shields
  • Starring: Vera Farmiga, Kyle Chandler, Millie Bobbie Brown, Sally Hawkins.
  • Release Date: May 30
  • Runtime: 132 minutes

GameSpot

“Simply put: It’s fun. It’s fun to sit around and root for Godzilla to come save us, even if he’s completely obliterating whole cities in the process. King Of The Monsters knows this in its bones, and that’s what it wants to deliver. It’s a kaiju movie where the kaiju themselves are the stars and that’s what makes it such a great ride.” — Meg Downey [Full review]

The Wrap

“Whereas 2014’s Godzilla made us wait too long for the monster-movie money shots, this one offers a family story made all the more heartfelt thanks to committed performances by Millie Bobbie Brown, Vera Farmiga and Kyle Chandler, not to mention a constant stream of the kind of rock-em-sock-em action that makes you want to see a film like this in the first place.”– Alonso Duralde [Full review]

AV Club

“When they fight each other, or scream in triumph over the smoking ruins of various world capitals, it’s difficult not to fist-pump a little. However, to Dougherty’s presumed disappointment–and to this movie’s ultimate detriment–you can’t just have two hours of kaiju slapping each other around like a gargantuan WWE highlights reel.” — Katie Rife [Full review]

Empire

“What you’re left with is a catastrophically dumb, thunderously boring blockbuster as numbing and unsatisfying as the worst Transformers movies–even one hilariously nutty sub-aquatic development can’t liven things up.” — Ben Travis [Full review]

The Hollywood Reporter

“The old monster has a grand time in Michael Dougherty’s Godzilla: King of the Monsters. Easily the most satisfying of his Hollywood-produced adventures and a respectable cousin to the long string of Japanese ones, the sequel to Gareth Edwards’ admirably serious but dullish 2014 film is the first to suggest any promise for what Legendary is calling its ‘MonsterVerse'” — John DeFore [Full review]

Indiewire

“Godzilla: King of the Monsters never met a sci-fi film it didn’t want to rip off–brace yourself for a dramatic sequence that pulls so liberally from “Armageddon” that we can only assume Michael Bay is readying a lawsuit–and the result is a sloppy, stitched-together offering with no sense of self.” — Kate Erbland [Full review]

Variety

“[Dougherty] gets the job done, staging a movie that, at its best, makes for a giddy and satisfying clash of the titans. You won’t feel cheated; at stray moments, you’ll feel the wonder. But for every high point, there’s a moment when the thrill threatens to leak away.” — Owen Gleiberman [Full review]

Screencrush

“I’m not sure what happened here, but something went very wrong along the way to the multiplex. The characters–particularly poor Vera Farmiga’s monster scientist–behave so irrationally that Godzilla and his simple, clear motivations feel downright human in comparison. The last movie this big saddled with a story and characters this bad was Independence Day: Resurgence. Not that it matters. Legendary’s “Monsterverse” will roll on anyway.” — Matt Singer [Full review]

Hundreds Of PS4 Games Going Cheap In New PlayStation Store Sale (EU)

After launching a double discount sale last week in the US, Sony has now started a similar campaign in Europe and Australia. The promotion discounts hundreds of PS4 games by up to 30% for everyone, or up to 60% if you’re a PS Plus member.

Titles on offer include Assassin’s Creed Origins, which is down to £17 for PS Plus members, and Far Cry 5 for £20. If you’re after something a little cheaper, Battlefield 1 is £5.39, while Fallout 4 is just £6.

Hitman 2 is one of the newer games to be discounted, with its gold edition slashed from £80 to £32 for PS Plus subscribers. There’s plenty more on offer, too, and you can browse the full offering of deals at the PlayStation Store.

Those who pay for Sony’s premium service can still grab May’s free PS Plus games. The two games available this month are indie darling What Remains of Edith Finch and frenzied co-op game Overcooked.

Batman’s Final Adventure Is Fascinating and Weird

DC’s Black Label imprint has had a more sluggish start than readers were probably hoping. Between the silly “Batpenis” controversy last fall and the lack of new books since, Black Label has yet to live up to its promise as a haven for mature, accessible superhero stories. Luckily, the imprint is getting a major boost with the arrival of its second Batman-focused comic. Batman: Last Knight on Earth is shaping up to be both a worthy addition to the line and a fitting conclusion to Scott Snyder and Greg Capullo’s long-running Batman saga.

Snyder has said this series was inspired by a conversation with fellow Batman veteran Grant Morrison, who told him that every great Batman story should feature both a birth and a death for the Dark Knight. Having already chronicled Batman’s birth in Zero Year, Snyder and Capullo are now handling the death in Last Knight on Earth. This new miniseries has clear ties to their past work (referencing plot points from “Superheavy” and the current Justice league comic), but its post-apocalyptic future setting also ensure the series stands on its own two legs. Not only do readers not need to have read the New 52 comic to appreciate Last Knight on Earth, the bizarre setting ensures readers will be caught off guard regardless of their familiarity with previous stories.

Continue reading…