5 Reasons Why The 'Godzilla' Reboot Will Succeed
It’s a risky business, taking a legendary franchise and telling the same story with fancy technology, popular actors and a sky-high budget, and Godzilla’s remake is no different. But there are a number of things working for the 2014 reboot, and here are just 5 of them. Cynics, beware, this article is ?? with buoyant, unspoilt optimism.
1 - Bryan Cranston
The second, more revealing trailer contains a desperate Bryan Cranston – playing scientist Joe Brody of course – attempting to relay the gravity of the situation and extract the truth from an unknown, presumably governmental body. The timbre of his voice brings back Breaking Bad memories, and with them a reminder of just how powerful an actor Cranston can be. If he can replicate even half of the energy he brought to Walter White, then Godzilla will have a remarkable central performance to complement the well-known story.
2 - Godzilla looks like Godzilla
Roland Emerich’s 1998 Godzilla was too lizard-like for audiences, who didn’t take the bait once Sony had spent most of their marketing campaign hiding the creature all those 16 years ago, only to reveal an oversized house pet; an iguana of epic proportions, treating New York like a toy. Flash forward to the present day, and Godzilla is much more fleshed out. A veritable monolith with craggy spinal protrusions and a terrifying wail sending reverberations through a decrepit city. The titular creature looks, for want of a better word, cooler.
Watch the full trailer for Godzilla
3 - Godzilla 1998 was a flop, but a lucrative one
While many consider the 1998 reboot of Godzilla to have been a flop, it still performed well at the box office. It grabbed $379 million worldwide on a $125 million budget from the global market, which today would grant most films a sequel should a plot lend itself to one. Of course, we don’t want a vapid money guzzling blockbuster without any soul as an audience – we don’t see any of that money ourselves, quite the opposite in fact – but with a pre-established market, and the mistakes of 1998’s movie to go on, 2014 could see a deeper, more rounded attempt at the Japanese legend.
4 - Legendary Pictures and Warner Bros. did it with Batman
The Batman franchise was such a hot potato back before The Dark Knight trilogy came along. Such an important character in comic-book folklore, destined to lay dormant on the big screen - in a cesspit of other failed page-to-screen re-imaginings? No. This wasn’t to be. Legendary Pictures and Warner Bros, alongside Christopher Nolan and Christian Bale reinvigorated the franchise for cinemas, offering up three of the finest action films you’ll ever see. Bale has since departed the DC enterprise, but that trilogy – especially the middle film, The Dark Knight – will always be remembered as the rebirth of Batman on the big screen. Now it’s up to them to give Godzilla the same treatment.