The sixth movie in the Monsterverse, тιтled Godzilla X Kong: Supernova, could be shifting its structure a bit by taking some notes from the most critically-acclaimed Godzilla movie of all time. The first five movies in Legendary’s ever-expanding connected universe of mᴀssive monsters are not short on action, but are famously thin on quality human stories.
The human characters in the Monsterverse have historically acted as comic relief or as exposition machines, serving an important function in the greater context of each тιтan-centric tale but lacking in overall development. On top of that, the human cast has changed with each movie, leaving little opportunity for any character to grow or change over time.
However, Supernova star Delroy Lindo provided some insight into how his character has been developed for the upcoming sequel. If his comments reflect a greater overall focus on the human characters in the Monsterverse, then it seems clear that director Grant Sputore and the Legendary team could be taking a cue from one of the most celebrated movies of the last decade.
Godzilla X Kong: Supernova Could Be Borrowing From Godzilla Minus One
Godzilla Minus One Sets A Great Human Story Against A Godzilla Backdrop
If Godzilla X Kong: Supernova places an emphasis on a meaningful human storyline, then it would skew farther from the over-the-top тιтan action of Godzilla X Kong: The New Empire and closer towards the real human drama of Toho’s Academy Award-winning Godzilla Minus One.
The acclaimed Godzilla movie shocked audiences and critics alike with its powerful and moving human story, which placed Japan’s post-war trauma at the forefront, accented by themes of guilt, shame, hope, and redemption. That did nothing to dull the ferocity of the movie’s iteration of Godzilla, which was considered by many to be the scariest version since the 1954 original movie.
It would be inappropriate to claim that Grant Sputore and his team are “copying” what director Takashi Yamazaki and his team did for Godzilla Minus One. However, it makes a ton of sense that they would at least take note of how Yamazaki was able to balance intense monster/disaster action with a gripping human story.
A Well-Developed Human Story Could Take Supernova From Good To Great
The Monsterverse Has No Shortage Of Monster Fun, But Stakes Are Lacking
The Monsterverse has expanded in both scope and scale since its origins in 2014 with Gareth Edwards’ Godzilla. In comparison to that movie’s family drama that accented Godzilla’s ground-based one-on-two battle with some overgrown bugs, Godzilla X Kong: The New Empire featured Godzilla and Kong in a zero-gravity tag-team battle against dark reflections of themselves.
Legendary’s MonsterVerse – Key Details |
|||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Movie/TV Show |
Release Date |
Budget |
Box Office Gross |
RT Tomatometer Score |
RT Popcornmeter Score |
Godzilla |
2014 |
$160 million |
$529.1 million |
76% |
66% |
Kong: Skull Island |
2017 |
$185 million |
$568 million |
76% |
70% |
Godzilla: King of the Monsters |
2019 |
$200 million |
$387.3 million |
42% |
83% |
Godzilla vs. Kong |
2021 |
$200 million |
$470.1 million |
76% |
91% |
Monarch: Legacy of Monsters |
2023 |
N/A |
N/A |
86% |
77% |
Godzilla X Kong: The New Empire |
2024 |
$150 million |
$572.3 million |
54% |
89% |
As exciting and fun as that final battle was, there was still a shortage of coherent story and character development, which is what has historically kept the Monsterverse movies from ever crossing into “great” territory. Several of the movies have solid enough scores from critics, but none of them have ever even approached universal praise–there is always plenty to nitpick.
Obviously, the intention of the Monsterverse is not the same as Godzilla Minus One. They show two completely different sides of the ultra-adaptable character of Godzilla, so a direct comparison doesn’t even make any sense. However, Godzilla Minus One‘s greatest strength–its human drama–is something that the Monsterverse should look to for the next step in its evolution.
Godzilla X Kong: Supernova’s Cast Confirms That The Human Story Is Important
There Are Several Heavy-Hitters In The Supernova Cast
The already-announced cast for Godzilla X Kong: Supernova lends even more credibility to the notion that a shift in character development could be in store. Virtually all the biggest names have science fiction experience, but most of them also have legitimate dramatic acting experience as well.
Kaitlyn Dever (The Last of Us), Sam Neill (Jurᴀssic Park), Matthew Modine (Stranger Things), Delroy Lindo (Da 5 Bloods), Jack O’Connell (Sinners), and Alycia Debnam-Carney (Fear the Walking ᴅᴇᴀᴅ) are all set to join the returning Dan Stevens for Supernova. Each has legitimate dramatic experience in their filmography, and frankly seem perfect to bring a grounded perspective to a fantastical movie universe.
On top of that, these are some of the H๏τtest names in Hollywood. It seems extremely unlikely that Legendary would cast such heavy-hitters only to have them play background roles or get a few sparse lines or jokes. This caliber of cast points to Godzilla X Kong: Supernova giving more time, and potentially more weight, to the human story that accompanies the inevitable тιтan clash.