The Chinese zodiac has it wrong 2021 isn t the year of the bull, it s the year of the lizard, and a very specific one at that. Dive into the history of animated Godzillas both big and small!
It s Mechagodzilla! Godzilla s robotic counterpart appears in
Godzilla vs. Kong a twist that was teased in international trailers and it s revealed that the King of the Monsters was going on a rampage in the first place because Apex Cybernetics was building a monstrous machine that would rival his power. It takes the combined might of Godzilla and Kong (but mostly Kong, to be honest) to defeat Mechagodzilla. Mechagodzilla has appeared in five previous live-action Godzilla movies and, briefly, in an anime movie, too. His first appearance was in 1974 s
Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla. six years after the film debut of Mechani-Kong.
Everything You Need to Know About Mechagodzilla But Were Afraid to Ask
WARNING!!!: This piece contains potential SPOILERS for King Kong vs. Godzilla
! Proceed with caution!
The hype surrounding a “spectacular battle for the ages” has been exacerbated by the involvement a red-eye robot. Word has more than gotten out that Mechagodzilla appears in
King Kong vs. Godzilla. Fear not, general audiences know next to nothing about the mechanical Kaiju you are not alone. The most important thing to know is this: (aside from King Ghidorah) Mechagodzilla is the biggest and baddest enemy Godzilla has ever faced.
King Kong vs. Godzilla is the first American production to ever feature the mechanical Titan. Here’s everything else you need to know about Mechagodzilla’s past, present, and future but were too afraid to ask.
Posted on Tuesday, March 9th, 2021 by Evan Saathoff
Later this month, the earth is going to quake as cinema’s two biggest (and oldest) titans starting punching each other’s lights out in Adam Wingard’s
Godzilla vs. Kong. Like other “vs” movies of this stature, this represents not one epic cinematic event but two. Though these particular versions of these characters are relatively new, both have decades (almost a century in Kong’s case) of iconography behind them that can be intimidating to viewers who don’t know their history, but don’t want to feel lost as they pummel each other.