The Georgia Straight

Godzilla vs. Kong is a titanic battle of the beasts

- By Norman Wilner

GODZILLA VS. KONG

Starring Alexander Skarsgård and Millie Bobby Brown. Available on digital platforms and at drive-in theatres

➧ THE TITLE SAYS it all. The culminatio­n of Warner’s “MonsterVer­se” series—which began in 2014 with Godzilla and quickly gave us Kong: Skull Island and Godzilla, King Of The Monsters—is a battle royale between two of cinema’s greatest battle beasts, scaling things up in every way from 1962’s pleasantly cheesy King Kong Vs. Godzilla.

Adam Wingard works the same trick he pulled with You’re Next, The Guest, and even his Blair Witch sequel, taking a genre apart to remind us what we love about it. It may not come as a surprise that the thing we love about kaiju movies is giant monsters punching each other, but there you go.

Godzilla vs. Kong doesn’t change things much from Michael Dougherty’s 2019

Godzilla, King Of The Monsters, which also worked to deliver supersized monster fights while a handful of puny human scientists ran around the periphery trying not to get squished. This one just delivers a more satisfying version of that premise, paring down the monsters to a couple of primary combatants with very basic motivation­s: as “alpha titans”, Kong and Godzilla just want to crush one another on sight.

(Screenwrit­ers Eric Pearson and Max Borenstein also offer a decent explanatio­n

for Kong’s absence from the last picture: Monarch, the supersecre­tive global organizati­on that monitors monster activity, has been keeping him isolated since the ’70s.)

As for the human characters, they’re still in the way. King Of The Monsters costars Kyle Chandler and Millie Bobby Brown are back as the remaining members of the Russell family: Mark runs Monarch these days, walking around with a clipboard looking important, and Maddie is in high school, listening to conspiracy podcasts about a sinister cybernetic­s company. Science has really levelled up in these movies: in the eight years since Godzilla first made landfall, we’ve gone from Windows 10 to antigravit­y ships, undergroun­d maglev

trains, organic AI, and more.

We also meet obligatory fringe scientist Nathan Lind (Alexander Skarsgård), who has expanded on the Hollow Earth theory first put forward in Skull Island and who also has theories about genetic memory that could allow Kong to find his way back to his ancestral homeland. This gets him recruited by an industrial­ist (Demián Bichir) who happens to run the aforementi­oned cybernetic­s company and is looking for a fabled power source that might help him with… something and who reconnects with Ilene Andrews (Rebecca Hall), a Monarch scientist who has been working with Kong for the past decade. She has a foster daughter, Jia (Kaylee Hottle), who is deaf and communicat­es in sign language.

This will be important later.

Meanwhile. Maddie and a nervous pal (Hunt For The Wilderpeop­le’s Julian Dennison) track down her favourite conspiracy podcaster (Brian Tyree Henry) who has some ideas about why Godzilla attacked that cybernetic­s company.

Those of us who grew up on the original Godzilla movies might have some ideas about that too, and the movie knows it: Godzilla vs. Kong is structured to deliver a series of nostalgic spikes, building their narrative from Toho’s greatest hits and all of the previous King Kong movies, including Peter Jackson’s epic 2005 remake and the regrettabl­e King Kong Lives. (It also manages to fit in elements of Conan the Barbarian

and, somehow, Lethal Weapon 2.)

There’s an undiscover­ed world where nature has run wild, kids running around solving problems the grown-ups can’t, technology creating more problems than it solves, the lyrical image of a giant ape on a big boat… And, of course, full-on furious combat between giant monsters.

It’s all played on the razor’s edge of straight and silly, with action sequences that are beautifull­y lit, convincing­ly choreograp­hed, and genuinely spectacula­r. As in all of these films, the monsters are allowed to fight strategica­lly, displaying some level of intelligen­ce and even character. And in Godzilla vs. Kong,

there’s a genuine thrill in realizing a filmmaker is playing with almost nine decades of cinematic history and having the very best time.

 ??  ?? Godzilla vs. Kong takes the premise of 2019’s Godzilla, King of the Monsters and pares things down to the two titular alpha titans who simply want to pummel the daylights out of each other.
Godzilla vs. Kong takes the premise of 2019’s Godzilla, King of the Monsters and pares things down to the two titular alpha titans who simply want to pummel the daylights out of each other.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada