by Kailem » Sun May 18, 2014 9:26 am
If the nuking of Godzilla in the opening sequence had been successful, the world would have ended up covered in Mutos and humanity would likely have been wiped out, or forced to nuke the entire planet to stop them, because he wouldn't have been around to beat them. The male Muto effectively turned a large part of Japan into a wasteland (even though it wasn't actually radioactive, the effect was still the same) because it was drawn to the nuke plant to feed, and the female Muto grew stronger by feeding on all the nuclear waste that was locked up in Nevada. The military didn't listen to Serizawa's pleas to find a way to stop the Mutos that didn't involve the use of nuclear weapons, and about the terrible effects they inevitably have on humanity, and they nearly wiped out San Francisco as a result, with Godzilla's intervention proving to be the key to that not ultimately happening.
I do agree with some of the points he makes there, but I also agree with Gman in that the anti-nuclear themes are clearly there, they're just not as overt/'the entire point of the film in the first place' as they were with the original, because six decades on, not only are those themes just not as current anymore as they were back then (though they're certainly still relevant), but Godzilla as a character and the way we think of him has evolved since then as well.
To go back to a couple of points made earlier on, Jelly put it that this film is almost like a combination of the multiple eras of Godzilla, and I definitely agree with that. And there's been mention of the way Godzilla was portrayed in the movie itself being different to how the marketing alluded he would be portrayed. I was certainly surprised by how much of an outright hero he was shown to be as that's not what I was expecting at all from the trailers and interviews and stuff, but that's not a bad thing.
At this point, after nearly 30 Toho movies over many decades, there are multiple different versions of Godzilla, and I find them all valid parts of his overall legacy. A heroic Showa Godzilla is just as valid to me as the original's spectre of nuclear holocaust, so I didn't at all dislike that they simply went a different route to the one I was expecting, because to me the heroic Godzilla they went with here is still Godzilla just as much as his anti-hero or 'ambivalent force of nature' or any of the other incarnations we've seen before, and I certainly don't hold anything against the movie because of that.
"Absorb what is useful, discard what is not, add what is uniquely your own"
- Bruce Lee