Director Gareth Edwards
Staring Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Elizabeth Olsen, Bryan Cranston
Rated M
Score 0/6
The world’s most famous monster is pitted against malevolent creatures who, bolstered by humanity’s scientific arrogance, threaten our very existence.
To all of the Hollywood directors, producers and everybody else involved in the filmmaking process out there who have the goal of being involved a franchise movie one day, I have a message for you. Even though a US PG-13 rating ensures the highest amount of people have a chance of seeing your movie that does not mean that you should actual set out to make a PG-13 movie because there are occasions when the source material that you are working from is a tad darker then what a PG-13 rating would suggest. This is something that Director Gareth Edwards and all the producers who worked on Godzilla should have realised and to the stooges who wrote this screenplay next time you might not want to wait so goddam long before introducing the title character of the movie.
If you have not paid any attention to the release of Godzilla you might interested to know that some Japanese film fans have criticised Godzilla as being too fat. Personally I can see that especially if you compare this version of Godzilla to the monster featured in the 1998 movie directed by Roland Emmerich.
I found myself unable to invest emotionally in this movie and I actually found myself falling asleep about half way through the move. The 2014 Godzilla is not the movie that you lead your Friday movie marathon off with, in fact it’s the movie that you considering leaving on the shelf at the friendly neighbourhood DVD store.