by Benjamin Haines » Tue Nov 26, 2024 2:17 am
^ That would be cool! Based on the official synopsis of next year's Jurassic World: Rebirth, though, Gareth Edwards is about to beat Takashi Yamazaki to the punch on that premise!
Speaking of sagas spanning different decades in which Godzilla's solo debut is followed by a jungle adventure featuring another monster during a historical war, that also reminds me of IDW's comic book miniseries Godzilla: The Half-Century War. Have you read that one? The first issue is Godzilla attacking Tokyo in 1954 and then the second issue takes place during the Vietnam War in 1967 with Godzilla battling Anguirus.
Yamazaki attended New York Comic-Con last month and, according to the Kaiju United report, his panel concluded with a short audience Q&A. Although this was before he announced that he would direct Toho's next Godzilla film, one of his answers seemed to reveal where his mind is at:
https://kaijuunited.com/2024/10/20/takashi-yamazaki-attends-godzilla-70th-anniversary-panel-at-new-york-comic-con/
Q: “If you can remake or see any previous Godzilla movie be remade, which would it be and why?”
Yamazaki: “Godzilla vs. Hedorah. I think that for its time, Hedorah was a very cutting-edge kaiju, and thinking about the type of visual expression we can do with technology and how far it’s come today – I’m imagining how it would move, and I think that would be a really cool remake.”
I do think that this sequel will take on the horrors of radioactive fallout in the same way that Minus One examined the ramifications of war. If Yamazaki does end up utilizing Hedorah, I think it would be in that context rather than as a smog monster born from pollution.
The ending of Minus One hinted at Noriko having some kind of infection or lingering effect from surviving her encounter with Godzilla, with that black mark on her neck that was visibly spreading. Whether or not she and Shikishima reappear in the sequel, I think we'll see Japan dealing with the fallout of Godzilla's attack, as the survivors find their bodies being slowly overtaken by those skin disfigurements that spread and grow and gradually morph each of them into a Hedorah. I'm picturing a visual effect like in the Singular Point anime when the swarm of Kumongas are able to regenerate their missing appendages with bodily growths that resemble Hedorah, although I think it would be more like how the people in Matango slowly transform into mushrooms.
I suppose that premise could lead to all of the transformed Hedorah people merging into one giant monster for a big showdown with Godzilla but I'm kind of not expecting Yamazaki to make this a kaiju slugfest at all. Any sort of "Godzilla vs." scenario would invariably compel viewers to root for Godzilla, and I don't see this sequel deviating from Minus One's depiction of Godzilla as a terrifying nightmare of a monster. Whether Hedorah or any other kaiju appears in this sequel, I think they'll be depicted as an extension of Godzilla's horror, not as a designated opponent and certainly not as the greater of two evils.