Godzilla II : Roi des monstres
Titre original : Godzilla: King of the Monsters
- 2019
- Tous publics
- 2h 12min
L'agence crypto-zoologique Monarch affronte des monstres de la taille surhumaine, y compris le puissant Godzilla, qui entre en collision avec Mothra, Rodan et son ennemi ultime, le roi Ghido... Tout lireL'agence crypto-zoologique Monarch affronte des monstres de la taille surhumaine, y compris le puissant Godzilla, qui entre en collision avec Mothra, Rodan et son ennemi ultime, le roi Ghidorah à trois têtes.L'agence crypto-zoologique Monarch affronte des monstres de la taille surhumaine, y compris le puissant Godzilla, qui entre en collision avec Mothra, Rodan et son ennemi ultime, le roi Ghidorah à trois têtes.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 5 victoires et 14 nominations au total
Elizabeth Faith Ludlow
- First Lieutenant Griffin
- (as Elizabeth Ludlow)
Randy Havens
- Dr. Tim Mancini
- (as Randall P. Havens)
Avis à la une
Next Movie they do they need to let the monsters fight more rather than letting us listen or watch the people story. I like Godzilla, but this movie was pretty bad only Bec of the lack of screen time for the monsters fighting. I want to see a Godzilla movie with humans not humans with Godzilla. The main character, which is in the damn title, Godzilla has barely any screen time. I don't know why they keep doing this, they have been focusing to much on the humans since the 60s. Someone please change this aspect of all Godzilla movies.
Ever since the perfection of CGI, Hollywood has come to the conclusion that if the special effects are good, then then movie is good. Thus, my 5 star rating. Half of the movie involved the monster battles and that gets 10 stars. The half of the movie where there is no monster presence gets 0. That averages out to a 5. Perhaps some day Hollywood will re-discover the lost art of screen writing and combine it with CGI to create a truly fantastic movie. But don't look for it to change soon. A lot of people came out of the theater visually dazzled by the special effects knowing that the story was awful but still thought it was a great movie. So they will continue make a lot of money creating these kind of movies and save on time & expense by not having to pay top dollar for a writer.
The movie was average, and the movie contains many great fighting scenes between the monsters in the movie. The human side in the movie was bad, unlike the monsters side, the CGI in the movie was excellent, and the monsters in the movie were great.
The whole dramatic family story wasn't able to catch me. It isn't annoying, but allways kind of irrelevant. Every scene including monsters on the other hand is stuning. In General the monster design, the CGI, the fights and the whole cinematography aswell are beyond beautiful. I recommand the movie because of those monster scenes. Everything what happens around that is more like a 3/10
This is the second Godzilla film in the MonsterVerse series, a story about the crypto-zoological agency Monarch finding themselves facing titan monsters Rodan, Mothra, and King Ghidorah, and their ultimate solution is letting Godzilla battle them all to save mankind.
The film is a little reminiscing to Toho Studio's classic 1964 movie, Ghidorah, the Three-Headed Monster, but this time featuring the monsters in the 21st century, with some neat special effects. You get to see each of the monsters' unyielding powers and characteristics, and them battling each other is nothing short of edge-of-your-seat monster excitement. However, the CGI on the creatures were too dark at times, making the monster battles hard to see. It is also difficult to see the creatures' faces and reactions - just a whole lot of head-spinning movements and swift actions.
The human drama was average at best, and the good guys vs. bad guys subplot was a major distraction from the film, I thought. Much of the evil doers' actions were overkill, and our protagonists were too preachy, save for Ziyi Zhang's duo doctor roles, which is a great nod to Mothra's tiny twin priestesses in the classic films. I also liked that the filmmakers incorporated Mothra's Song in this movie.
But, as with much of today's films, there is forced comedy to lighten up the mood, courtesy of Bradley Whitford's St. Stanton character. His humor was extremely annoying and distracting, very out-of-place for the movie.
With all the hard-to-see monster action to the distracting human drama, there is too much in the film to digest and makes it hard to appreciate the main point, which are clearly the monsters. It leaves little room to sympathize with the human characters and leaves you craving for more of the monsters.
Grade D+
The film is a little reminiscing to Toho Studio's classic 1964 movie, Ghidorah, the Three-Headed Monster, but this time featuring the monsters in the 21st century, with some neat special effects. You get to see each of the monsters' unyielding powers and characteristics, and them battling each other is nothing short of edge-of-your-seat monster excitement. However, the CGI on the creatures were too dark at times, making the monster battles hard to see. It is also difficult to see the creatures' faces and reactions - just a whole lot of head-spinning movements and swift actions.
The human drama was average at best, and the good guys vs. bad guys subplot was a major distraction from the film, I thought. Much of the evil doers' actions were overkill, and our protagonists were too preachy, save for Ziyi Zhang's duo doctor roles, which is a great nod to Mothra's tiny twin priestesses in the classic films. I also liked that the filmmakers incorporated Mothra's Song in this movie.
But, as with much of today's films, there is forced comedy to lighten up the mood, courtesy of Bradley Whitford's St. Stanton character. His humor was extremely annoying and distracting, very out-of-place for the movie.
With all the hard-to-see monster action to the distracting human drama, there is too much in the film to digest and makes it hard to appreciate the main point, which are clearly the monsters. It leaves little room to sympathize with the human characters and leaves you craving for more of the monsters.
Grade D+
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesA skeleton can be seen outside of Godzilla's underwater temple. This skeleton bears a body shape resembling Anguirus, a dinosaur who served as Godzilla's ally in a few films; the filmmakers have confirmed that it is in fact Anguirus.
- GaffesSubmarines cannot use GPS for deep water navigation.
- Citations
Dr. Ishiro Serizawa: Sometimes... the only way to heal our wounds is to make peace with the demons who created them.
- Crédits fousGodzilla, Ghidorah, Mothra and Rodan are credited as themselves.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Half in the Bag: Comic Con 2018 Trailers (2018)
- Bandes originalesWave of Mutilation
Written by Frank Black (as Black Francis)
Performed by Pixies
Courtesy of 4AD Records
By arrangement with Beggars Group Media Limited
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- How long is Godzilla: King of the Monsters?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Sites officiels
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Godzilla II: El rey de los monstruos
- Lieux de tournage
- México City, Mexique(Zócalo)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 170 000 000 $US (estimé)
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 110 500 138 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 47 776 293 $US
- 2 juin 2019
- Montant brut mondial
- 387 300 138 $US
- Durée2 heures 12 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39 : 1
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