by HannibalBarca » Sat Jul 05, 2014 8:25 pm
Another possibility, and one that I'm more inclined to believe, is that while Edwards at least probably understands what Godzilla means, or is supposed to mean (he had said Gojira was one of his favorite movies, and most of his interviews seem to indicate he at least has a basic grasp of what's going on), the opportunity to make an actual Godzilla film in the Gojira tradition simply wasn't there. If I were an exec at WB or Legendary, I would be much more likely to go for a safe, but relatively empty, Godzilla movie that mostly uses the monsters for action setpieces, as opposed to some sort of dark allegorical movie where the monsters have a deeper, nuanced meaning. The former seems like a much easier sell. But, I mean, hell, even G'98 dealt with the nuclear thing more than G'14, even if it was a cursory examination at best. And while King of the Monsters may have scaled back the allegory a bit from Gojira, it was still there. G'14 is really the LEAST willing of any major American Godzilla release to address Godzilla's nuclear origins. Godzilla's entire backstory in this movie strikes me as one big blank slate.
This is all just my guess anyway; marketing considerations would also explain why the movie was so skittish about showing the monsters fighting the military, or making all of the death and destruction implied instead of putting it front and center; or in the case of the tsunami scene, isolating it so thoroughly from the rest of narrative that it could just as easily have happened in another movie.