by Diablojira » Sat Feb 08, 2014 2:54 am
Okay, Snowdenzilla, to go back to ideas from Godzilla 1984. Godzilla's first landing has him seek out a nuclear plant, pulling the reactor into an embrace and absorbing the energy. Later, after being apparently defeated, the high atmospheric burst of a Soviet nuclear warhead intercepted by an American missile causes some form of irradiated energy to revive Godzilla as he lies comatose in the wreckage of a large building. You've mentioned that in this draft an aspect of both Godzilla and the MUTOs is their natural need for radioactive energy. Godzilla's motivation for appearing at this film's beginning in 1954 was a nuclear bomb test, and he subsequently sought out ships from the US and Soviet fleets with nuclear capabilities, apparently to "feed." And if I recall, he was directly nuked again and then remained deep in the ocean until "called" by the revived MUTOs.
So, the draft also mentions that the MUTOs (perhaps just the female?) can apparently drain Godzilla of his energy (as did Megaguiras) upsetting his normal functioning thus preventing his "heat release" which could precipitate a meltdown. In this climactic San Francisco battle, it seems dramatically appropriate that Godzilla first fights the winged version of the male MUTO with their grappling moving to the Transamerica Pyramid. It would be exciting to see that building employed as a perch for the MUTO—perhaps Godzilla has wounded the male and it tries to escape from him by climbing up the structure which he then tears down to get at the beastie. However it is stage-managed in this draft and in the film, it should be spectacular (I trust the SPFX guys here). The nearby nesting female comes to her wounded mate's aid and in tandem they drain Godzilla, seemingly defeating him, perhaps having his limp body resting in the damaged structure (like G 84), or trapped under a collapsed part of it. But Godzilla must somehow use the energy from the warhead to revive, possibly preventing it from detonating or absorbing the blast (as happened with Godzilla Jr. at the end of Godzilla vs. Destoroyah). Thus by his very existence and nature he saves soldier Ford from sacrificing himself, and so empowered Godzilla destroys the MUTOs. He saves the city from a nuclear blast, destroys the threatening massive insects, and perhaps in a state of near meltdown after this battle, he must head back to the deep ocean to cool off and regain his equilibrium. He is a part of nature and in his proper environment can exist peacefully, poised as a threat. As done in several Toho films, he would remain a peril to our species' use of nuclear energy since this attracts him at times.
My copies of the Ciencin (and Cerasini) Godzilla books are in storage, so I can't check your reference.
I wonder how this script has conceived Godzilla's biology, since during the years he remained unseen in the ocean depths, before summoned by the MUTOs, does he somehow need to replenish his energy from nuclear sources that are natural? If he was attracted in the 1950s to human generated nuclear activity (bomb tests, nuclear fleet) after being nuked more than once did he have his "fill" so he remained in the deepest parts of the sea? That the MUTOs can drain his energy would seem to be a condition that would prevent any sort of meltdown overload, rather than lead to it, but that would depend on how Godzilla functions. Is any of that addressed in the draft?
Last edited by
Diablojira on Sat Feb 08, 2014 3:21 am, edited 2 times in total.