Yeah. I would say that the dimension Tide is actually the bigger threat of the movie to Godzilla.eabaker wrote:Essentially, Megaguirus is the b-plot of the movie. Godzilla vs. Megaguirus is one of the few Godzilla movies that's really driven by the actions/choices of its human protagonists (Son of Godzilla, Godzilla vs. Gigan and Godzilla vs. Biollante also leap to mind). When the humans are really the ones instigating the plot, sometimes the enemy monsters get reduced to plot complications is more of a Godzilla vs. people story. Megaguirus just didn't make its monster central enough to the action, so she got short-changed.LSD Jellyfish wrote:Yeah, barring Mothra, easily the coolest insect Kaiju.Major sssspielberg! wrote:Megaguiris is mad underrated!
I also liked how they brought back the Meganulon. I wish they did something similar with Matango.
One thing that always bothered me though is how Megaguirus only has one big scene on screen, and then the final fight. I get that the Meganulon turn into Megaguirus, but I wish the creature had more screentime independent of Godzilla in order to develop more. Also it sortve bothers me how Megaguirus just leaves, only to randomly come back when Godzilla shows up. I guess the easy implication is that Megaguirus sensed the energy in Godzilla?
The first “fight” with the Meganula is actually interrupted by the dimension tide.
Also, the Japanese title makes more sense because it includes the dimension tide. It makes the film seem more about then Godzilla fighting Megaguirus.