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Film

Film review: Godzilla: King of the Monsters

This monster movie is a monumental flop, says our critic Linda Marric

June 2, 2019 12:40
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1 min read

The sequel to Gareth Edward’s 2014 reboot of the ubiquitous Godzilla franchise could well be the first truly abysmal big budget production of the summer. Directed and co-written by Michael Dougherty (Krampus), Godzilla: King Of The Monsters presents such a preposterous and idiotic plot, that even those with expert knowledge of the franchise might find it impossible to follow.

Set five years after the end of the first instalment and starring Vera Farmiga (The Departed, Up In The Air) and Kyle Chandler (Friday Night Lights, Manchester By The Sea), the story follows the crypto-zoological agency Monarch as its scientists face off against more giant monsters. As well as reacquainting audiences with the mighty lizard king Godzilla, this new chapter introduces some new adversaries, including the powerful three-headed behemoth Ghidorah.

After suffering a great loss five years earlier in the first attacks, Dr Emma Russell (Farmiga) has dedicated her life to attempting to understand the nature of the monster who killed her son. On the other side of the world, her husband Mark (Chandler) is finding it equally impossible to come to terms with the events which went on to destroy his marriage and kept him away from the couple’s teenage daughter Madison (played beautifully by Stranger Things teen star Millie Bobby Brown).

When both Emma and Madison are taken hostage by a group of eco-terrorists headed by Jonah Alan (a suitably sinister Charles Dance), Mark must locate his family and retrieve the Orca, a scientific gadget created by Emma and which could help stop Armageddon.