Monterey Herald

Director Adam Wingard took performanc­e notes from his cat

- By Tracy Brown Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES >> Since making his MonsterVer­se debut in 2017's “Kong: Skull Island,” the title character has battled a sneaky squid, deadly lizard-like predators, the mighty Godzilla and even a high-tech mecha designed to take all these creatures out.

But in “Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire,” the giant ape must face his most challengin­g foe yet: a toothache.

“These movies are always about taking things that are relatable and then scaling them up,” says director Adam Wingard, 41. “You're looking for those things [that] would be fun to see on this wildly big scale that we've never seen” — like Kong scratching his butt while taking a shower in 2021's “Godzilla vs. Kong.”

Kong's struggle with debilitati­ng tooth pain was inspired by Wingard's own dental woes. While making his 2011 horror breakout “You're Next,” the filmmaker was afflicted with a terrible pain that left dentists stumped for more than a year.

“I was looking for some catharsis of what I was dealing with,” says Wingard. “Having a scene where Kong is getting some dental work done felt like closure to me.”

The fifth film in Legendary's MonsterVer­se franchise, “Godzilla x Kong” marks Wingard's second romp in this cinematic universe. The director, who cut his teeth making genre indies, had long dreamed of helming a big tentpole movie.“There's nothing as a filmmaker that can prepare you for doing a movie with characters of 6-foot scale and 300-foot scale working together and all the insane mechanics that go along with making a kaiju movie,” he says. “I knew that I wasn't done with the series because I knew there were untapped reservoirs of potential in terms of what could be done with monsters.”

Drawing him back was not merely the opportunit­y to do bigger battles, but a chance to focus on what these monsters are doing between those bigger battles. (“Godzilla x Kong” has been teased as a team-up from the start, though audiences can be sure that it's not all smooth sailing between the former adversarie­s.)

“What I wanted to do with this film more than anything was to put you in the perspectiv­e of the monsters,” says Wingard. “I wanted to do a film that was driven by nonverbal visual sequences.”

It's also a bonus for Wingard that he finally gets to experience the fanfare that comes with releasing a big-budget behemoth. Wingard's initial “Godzilla vs. Kong” arrived in 2021 when most theater chains had yet to reopen. Although the film bowed to record numbers for that time, there wasn't a traditiona­l red-carpet premiere, much of the press tour was virtual and the film was released simultaneo­usly on the streaming service formerly known as HBO Max, a circumstan­ce less than ideal to Wingard.

“These characters are literally the biggest characters in cinema history,” says the Tennessee-born director. “So the best way to experience them is going to be on the biggest screen possible.”

Surrounded during our interview by MonsterVer­se parapherna­lia, concept art, posters for Showa-era Godzilla films like 1968's “Destroy All Monsters” and even album covers from bands like Judas Priest and Megadeth, Wingard appears to be savoring every moment. Gracious and engaging, he reveals that he was nearly robbed of all of it. In 2021, while in the early stages of production on the film, Wingard was hit by a car running a red light as he was crossing the street.

“It was really one of those eye-opening things where, for the first time ever, I really understood that I was mortal,” says the director. “I really knew I might not get another chance to make another movie, period. So my approach to this movie, more than ever, [was] to go all out. I tried to make a micdrop monster movie that encompasse­d all my influences, interests, down to the color palettes and all those kinds of things.”

The result is a movie that expands the mythos of the various kaiju creatures — called Titans in the MonsterVer­se — and introduces a new, sinister villain. The visuals are impressive, as are the plentiful needle drops.

“Godzilla x Kong” arrives at a time when Godzilla is experienci­ng a bit of a renaissanc­e. He's stomped his way onto television with the Apple TV+ series “Monarch: Legacy of Monsters,” while Japan's “Godzilla Minus One” earned the long-running franchise its first Academy Award last month.

“It's a great time to be a Godzilla fan, for sure,” says Wingard.

This year also marks the 70th anniversar­y of Godzilla's debut and Wingard is sensitive to that sociopolit­ical legacy born of realworld nuclear anxiety.

“You don't want to lose the roots of where these characters are created,” says Wingard. “I love how [recent] Japanese films [like `Shin Godzilla' and `Minus One'] really focused on the reality of Godzilla — the metaphoric­al qualities of Godzilla and what he means to Japan.”

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