You may be looking for the original 1954 film, Godzilla (1954), the 1984 film, The Return of Godzilla, or the first American remake, Godzilla (1998)
Godzilla is a 2014 Kaiju Action Adventure film which also serves as Legendary Pictures' and Warner Bros. Continuity Reboot to the Godzilla franchise, and the second Godzilla movie produced in America, following the 1998 remake. It is also the first Godzilla film to be made since Godzilla: Final Wars 10 years earlier, as well as the first Godzilla movie to receive an American theatrical release since Godzilla 2000.
Directed by Gareth Edwards (Monsters), it takes a great deal of inspiration from the original 1954 film over the Camp Toku movies of the late Showa era that most Western audiences are familiar with. The film also shares several similarities with the unused 1994 script for the first American Godzilla movie to a lesser degree.
The story starts off with the opening credits in 1954 where humans accidentally awaken a prehistoric creature that gets sustenance from nuclear energy. To keep the beast from becoming a threat to people, nuclear strikes are directed at it in the Pacific Ocean under the cover of weapons testing, and when that fails to kill it, the creature's existence is concealed from the public.
The narrative picks up in 1999, when the Brody family, Americans contracted to work at the Janjira nuclear plant in Japan, drop off their son at school and head to work, only to be torn apart when a sudden earthquake causes the plant to collapse. Fifteen years later, Joe Brody convinces his son Ford, now a US Navy lieutenant, to help him investigate the Janjira collapse more closely, which brings them into the middle of a conspiracy involving the organisation known as MONARCH and the rekindling of an ancient conflict between giants that could threaten the safety of the world.
It stars Aaron Taylor-Johnson as Lieutenant Ford Brody, Elizabeth Olsen as Elle Brody, Bryan Cranston as Joe Brody, Juliette Binoche as Sandra Brody, David Strathairn as Admiral Stenz, Sally Hawkins as Dr. Graham, and Ken Watanabe as Dr. Ishiro Serizawa, inspired by the character from the 1954 film.
A 72-page graphic novel prequel called Godzilla: Awakening was released on May 7, nine days before the movie itself came out, and a novelization has also been released. App game stores get Godzilla: Smash3, a Match-Three Game with RPG Elements produced by the makers of Godzilla: Destroy All Monsters Melee and its sequels.
Legendary had since decided to expand Godzilla into a trilogy, having announced plans at Comic-Con to incorporate classic Toho characters Mothra, Rodan and King Ghidorah into Godzilla: King of the Monsters, which released in 2019. Furthermore, Legendary confirmed that the prequel film Kong: Skull Island, released at March 10, 2017, is in the same universe as this movie and Godzilla: King of the Monsters lead up to a climactic confrontation in Godzilla vs. Kong. This Cinematic Universe is being called the MonsterVerse. Taking note of the renewed interest in the long-dormant property, Toho followed up on the film's success by initiating a new era of Japanese-made Godzilla movies, starting with the release of Shin Godzilla in July 2016 and continuing with an anime movie trilogy with Polygon Pictures titled Godzilla: Planet of the Monsters Released in November 2017 and May 2018 on Netflix. Meanwhile, the MonsterVerse is set to continue in 2024 with the film Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire, and the events of this film are more directly followed up in the series Monarch: Legacy of Monsters.
The film is followed by the prequel, Kong: Skull Island, and its immediate sequel, Godzilla: King of the Monsters.
Some spoilers below are left unmarked, given that the movie borrows from the formula of other monster movies. Read at your own risk.
"I would not be asking any one of you to add tropes to this page if I did not have complete faith in your ability to succeed. Your courage will never be more needed than it is today."
- 1-Dimensional Thinking: Except for Zoe's parents, the crowd running from the tsunami doesn't flee into the buildings to gain height. Averted with the soldiers on the railway bridge, as there's only one direction to run. Then double subverted when Ford jumps off the bridge into the river... the fall might kill him, but being hit by a burning runaway train will kill him.
- The '50s: The prologue, where humans first try to kill Godzilla, takes place in 1954.
- The '90s: The Janjira incident takes place in 1999.
- Acoustic License:
- Subverted in the bridge scene. A police officer tries to say something to one of the bus drivers, but the driver cannot hear him from where he's sitting. The shouting of kids on the bus doesn't help.
- Played straight in helicopter scenes, where for some reason people can often hear others without using headsets even though they're in a military helicopter.
- Action Film, Quiet Drama Scene: The film has many of these, with the main focus being the relationship between Lieutenant Ford and his father Joe Brody. Director Gareth Edwards has stated that it was very vital for such scenes to be present and well-done, as the intimate moments between the human characters serve to contrast with and emphasize the enormity of Godzilla himself and the other kaiju he battles.Gareth Edwards: It makes the big things look bigger when you've just had a quiet moment. If everything is whizz-bang constantly throughout the whole movie it just becomes nothing. So you have to carefully go to quiet and restrain things so that the other things hit you hard.
- There is also a moment in San Francisco where, amid all the chaos and panic, Elle looks up to watch something falling to Earth like a dandelion seed. It's the parachute of a fighter pilot... and after a few moments his plane crashes into a building, breaking the spell and returning to the action.
- Action Survivor:
- Joe Brody survives the first incident in the nuclear plant. He dies when the male MUTO awakens.
- Ford Brody. With the MUTOs and Godzilla, the best you can do is stay out of the way and hope for the best.
- Adaptational Explanation: There's quite a bit in the novelization.
- The reason the soldiers sent to the Yucca Nuclear Waste Depository don't know exactly which vault contains the MUTO egg is because it's buried under layers of secrecy, plausible deniability, misdirection and redacted text.
- To a passive viewer who doesn't really consider all the horrific implications of the military's plan to nuke all three Kaiju going wrong, Serizawa and Graham invoking the Nuclear Weapons Taboo can seem somewhat heavy-handed. In the novelization, Graham explicitly spells out the core problem of the military's plan for the reader: what if the nuke blasts these monsters (which grow strong by eating radiation), and the concussive force fails to kill even one of the three before they devour the radiation?
- In the film, the three kaiju arriving at San Francisco Bay before the military are anywhere near ready merely seems like incompetence on the military's part. The novelization explains the reason why the military aren't ready for Godzilla and the MUTOs' arrival is because the female MUTO's unexpected train attack forced them to expend precious time retrieving a viable nuke from the wreckage and navigating around the female MUTO's sphere of influence.
- In the film, it seems like a plot hole or a case of Fridge Horror when you realize that there's no believable way Ford got the nuke anywhere near a safe distance from San Francisco that would prevent radioactive fallout contaminating the city before it went off (with both how much time the countdown had left and the speed the boat transporting the nuke was going at). According to the novelization, the wind direction was on San Fran's side and prevented the radiation fallout from being carried towards the city.
- Adaptation Inspiration: It tells a markedly different story than previous Godzilla movies; by having the titular beast be an ancient creature, older than the earliest dinosaurs, the theme shifts from a direct allegory of nuclear destruction to primal, unstoppable forces of nature keeping the world in check, with the MUTO being the threat to humanity and Godzilla himself the inevitable response. The bombing of Hiroshima is mentioned, and gives context to Dr. Serizawa's concern over a nuclear strike (his father experienced the bombing first-hand), but the continuous American atomic testing in the Pacific, then current in 1954, is also quantified in-story — it was a cover for the Navy's repeated efforts to kill Godzilla. The plot and ending, in turn, reflect the modern conception of Godzilla and his Character Development into a heroic figure; rather than being killed and crumbling into dust before he can destroy again, he defeats his ancient enemies and walks triumphantly back into the ocean, with press outlets contemplatively asking if his actions make him the city's savior.
- Adaptation Name Change: The first name of Boyd (the man who meets Serizawa and Graham at the dig site) is changed from Jerry to Oscar in the novelization.
- Adaptational Job Change: In the novelization, Mr. Boyd is explicitly an executive of the mining company that accidentally disturbed Adam/Dagon's skeleton, and he's bewildered by what's going on. In the movie, his dialogue indicates he's a member of Monarch.
- Admiring the Abomination: Doctors Ishirō Serizawa and Vivienne Graham have a quasi-religious attitude toward Godzilla, with Dr. Graham even calling him "a god, for all intents and purposes." Serizawa believes that Godzilla is essentially the personification of the balance of nature and the only hope humanity has of neutralizing the MUTOs, even if he has to be a Destructive Saviour to save the world at large. Admiral Stenz understandably thinks them naïve for this.
- All There in the Manual: The novelization gives the characters more development and provides insight into them, as well as additional backstories and some Adaptational Explanation.
- Alternate History: Subtle example. While the Pacific nuke tests being covert attempts to kill Godzilla falls under Beethoven Was an Alien Spy, the 1999 collapse of the Janjira NPP and the subsequent quarantine of a sizable Japanese metropolitan area is a much bigger divergence.
- Always a Bigger Fish: The main dynamic between Godzilla and the MUTOs; Godzilla happens to be the apex predator of eons-old radioactive giants, and is pursuing the MUTOs like a predator hunts its prey.
- Androcles' Lion: It's hinted that Godzilla stopped the female MUTO just before it could kill Ford to repay him for saving him earlier.
- Animalistic Abomination: Strictly speaking, Godzilla and the MUTOs. While not as actively malicious or sanity-rending toward humanity as some other examples, they are gigantic, unfathomably ancient creatures with their own motivations that take no account of human presence.
- Animal Jingoism: The reptilian-looking Titan Godzilla has a strong enmity with the insectoid-looking MUTOs. In Real Life, insects are one of the primary food sources of reptiles, and Monarch describe Godzilla as an apex predator of the MUTOs (although, paradoxically, Godzilla and his kind are also a source of incubators for the MUTOs' offspring, explaining why the MUTOs are so ready and willing to fight back against him).
- Apocalypse How:
- Being a Kaiju movie where The Unmasqued World first occurs, naturally a Class 0 occurs with Hawaii, San Francisco and other U.S. cities devastated at the end of the film (to say nothing of the Chernobyl-style disaster that occurs in Japan in the Distant Prologue); with the MUTOs' EMP apparently causing even more national disruption than would otherwise occur.
- It's unclear specifically how bad things would get if the MUTOs succeed in their goals of reproducing beyond "human civilization would be FUBAR", but based on the sheer devastation that just two grown MUTOs inflict on San Francisco to build themselves a nest (not to mention the devastation the female does to Las Vegas just by strolling through) combined with how they can cripple the electronic technology on which our society is dependent, it's safe to assume it will be at least a Class 1, more than likely a Class 2, for humanity. The Godzilla: Aftershock tie-in graphic novel suggests that a successful MUTO repopulation could potentially cause a Class 4 on par with Earth's worst mass extinctions due to the species causing massive environmental and tectonic upheaval while destructively terraforming away entire ecosystems to suit themselves, although the scientist who claims this is quoting what appears to be the Late Bronze Age's widespread societal collapse as an example of a mass extinction, when the last minor global extinction event in Real Life history passed thousands of years before the Bronze Age and the last mass extinction was the one which killed the dinosaurs 65 million years prior.
- Apocalypse Wow: One of Godzilla's themes is him being nuclear apocalypse in the form of a giant creature. Just look at Honolulu and San Francisco in the wake of the monster. This also ties into Gareth Edwards' "delayed gratification" approach to showing the monsters; Godzilla and the MUTOs don't fill the screen as often as the CGI stars of other summer blockbusters do, but the aftermath of their rampages can still be used to imply their recent presence. In fact, that's the major indicator of their presence.
- Apocalyptic Gag Order: Downplayed. After Hokmuto escapes, Admiral Stenz explicitly says in his introductory scene he considers it "preferable" (nothing more and nothing less) that the Masquerade remain intact whilst the world believes the event's fallout was an earthquake. Once Hokmuto makes landfall next to Hawaii's capital city, Stenz decides there's no more point in maintaining the Masquerade if ending it means saving the island's population.
- Art Evolution: Godzilla has once again had his design updated. The most noticeable changes are gills on his neck, round, sauropod-like feet, and a much longer tail. The film crew also spent quite a while tweaking his face:Edwards: Trying to get the face right was the main thing... I guess he's got more of a bear's face, or a dog's. We also used eagle. There's a lot of nobility in an eagle. It made him feel very majestic and noble.
- Artistic License – Biology:
- The square cube limit on size as usual puts a crimp in giant monster viability in our universe, so we can breathe a sigh of relief and enjoy the movie.
- It's amusing to consider what possible need a creature from millions of years ago would have had to evolve an EMP as a defense mechanism, or how it would know to use it against attacking helicopters. Especially since this weapon seems to be completely useless against their only known predator, Godzilla.
- The film's novelization and an earlier script suggest that the MUTO's EMP interferes with Godzilla's atomic breath.
- Possibly just a side-effect of eating a ton of nuclear material, seeing as it produces EMP just by moving about, then it learns that the assholes hurting it fall out of the sky when it stomps.
- The HALO drop has the men sitting in the cargo hold of the aircraft waiting, then strapping on air masks and hopping out of the back of the plane. In truth, they would have needed to be pre-breathing a particular gas mix for at least an hour to get the nitrogen out of their blood or they'd wind up with the bends, and the plane would need to ascend gradually.
- Artistic License – Geography:
- There are plenty of radiation sources in China and Japan far closer to the Philippines than the Kanto region (bonus content on the DVD suggested that the MUTO just went there by swimming around in the ocean), Yucca mountain was never operational nor that close to Las Vegas (it is actually 100 miles closer to San Francisco than Las Vegas is), and all three creatures take the long way from their respective positions to end up in San Francisco. Within the locations however, the geography is quite good — Godzilla takes a reasonable path from Waikiki to the airport, the Female MUTO heads the right way on the Vegas Strip, and so on.
- Ford boards the train hauling the warhead at Independence, California. The scene was filmed in a Canadian town that bears exactly zero resemblance to Independence. Independence is located in Inyo County, in Owens Valley at the eastern foot of the Sierra Nevada mountains, and straddles Old Highway 395. Owens Valley is distinctly arid (it used to be quite fertile until William Mulholland stole the water rights at gunpoint to feed his new pet city, Los Angeles, but that's another story), the 11,000-foot White Mountains can be clearly seen just a few miles to the east, while the dominating 14,000-foot Sierras (including Mount Whitney) make up the entire southern, western, and northwestern horizons, and are even closer. It is literally impossible not to see this enormous wall of snow-capped granite from anywhere in Independence. The movie's version features an empty horizon. Also, there is no railroad line in or around Independence. The closest rail line that crosses the Sierras is 200 miles north, through Donner Pass.
- Ford's son is evacuated to Oakland Regional Park (which doesn't actually exist, though Redwood Regional Park in Oakland does) by bus. Via the Golden Gate Bridge. Those familiar with the layout of the city know the Golden Gate Bridge leads north while Oakland is to the east. To get there via the Golden Gate Bridge would take far longer. It would make more sense to head east via The Bay Bridge. A possible explanation though is that the city needed to be evacuated at all points due to the sheer amount of traffic trying to evacuated roughly a million people out of the city would create. It would make sense then to have some people evacuated to the north while others are evacuated to the south and directly to the east. It's still a stretch but it's not out of the question.
- All true, though traffic across the Oakland Bay Bridge is notoriously bad given that it carries three times the daily traffic that the Golden Gate Bridge does, and there are many times when a route from Oakland->Richmond Bridge->Golden Gate Bridge->SF is quicker than the Oakland->Bay Bridge->SF. If Sam had to be evacuated from western San Francisco, it will almost always be faster to go north first, especially if the goal is to leave the city as soon as possible rather than drive from the western side to the eastern side where the Bay Bridge is.
- Honolulu International Airport doesn't have a people mover, but damn if it wouldn't be more useful. It also lacks the O'Hare/SFO-style glass facade the airport goers see Godzilla through.
- Artistic License – Military: At the very start, Ford is returning to his wife and child after fourteen months away. Another officer tells him, "Take it slow. It's the one thing they don't train you for." The military actually does teach servicemembers about being careful when coming home from a deployment, especially with small children (who may have trouble remembering their parent after a long absence).
- Artistic License – Nuclear Physics:
- The radiation detection capability of the MUTO is quite extraordinary, and radiation is not nutritive, except to certain fungi.note But this is a Godzilla film after all.
- A geiger counter would never read zero unless in a highly shielded vault, there is some degree of background radiation in everything that surrounds us and even in human beings, as well as coming down from space.
- In theory, the geiger counter could have been calibrated to ignore the background radiation; in other words, "zero" means "zero above normal".
- A reactor breach would not result in a highly radioactive death steam, the scene where the engineers try to "outrun" the cloud of radioactive vapor is entirely unrealistic for multiple reasons. There was no explosion, so there shouldn't be some kind of billowing fog, likewise the steam would've been minimally radioactive at best, nuclear power plants do not contain "blast doors" to seal off reactor chambers, and even if they did, there was no real need to close it even if a small amount of radiation escaped. The engineers would've probably spent days inside dying of dehydration rather than in minutes due to exposure (to put it into perspective, workers at Chernobyl who were exposed directly to the reactor core survived for weeks and died mostly slow, agonizingly painful deaths).
- Captain Hampton argues that the nuclear weapons used to try to kill Godzilla in the 1950s were "firecrackers" in the kiloton range compared to modern variable-yield nukes. However, the nuclear detonation shown at the beginning of the film is strongly implied to be (and outright stated to be in Kong: Skull Island) the Castle Bravo explosion on Bikini Atoll, which was a 15-megaton explosion that was the largest ever performed by the US.
- Artistic License – Physics:
- Special effects artists still haven't figured out what really happens if you sever a suspension bridge's cables.
- While Godzilla is rather large, he can't create an ocean withdrawing, two story tsunami propagating for blocks inland just by stepping onto the beach. Tsunamis are caused by water displacement and Godzilla is just over two Olympic swimming pools in main body length/height. Whatever his density he cannot displace more than his physical volume of water as water cannot have its density increased beyond 1.0 in normal circumstances. He also a relatively small point rather than an ocean-wide wave, so water displaced by him can and will propagate in all directions (including passing him as he is broadly streamlined under water) rather than all pushed forward like a bulldozer.
- Until they detonate, modern thermonuclear warheads are just the teensy little bit of nuclear isotope (uranium or plutonium) to start the explosion. Most of the energy released is the result of a subsequent nuclear fusion reaction between two different hydrogen isotopes. Whatever good the MUTOs get from eating them is minimal.
- While the USS Saratoga is fictional, it is "played" by several nuclear-powered Nimitz-class aircraft carriers (see below), so it would be safe to assume it would have a tasty, tasty nuclear reactor for the MUTO to feed on.
- In real life electronics don't just turn back on after getting hit with an EMP — you need to replace the broken components, a process made more complicated by the miniaturisation that's occurred since the 1970s.
- Artistic License – Ships:
- Three aircraft carriers were used shooting the film and none of them is the USS Saratoga, because the real Saratoga was decommissioned in 1994, making it safe from bragging by current sailors. The hull number on the Saratoga is CVN-88, which isn't even being planned yet, so go with Alternate History again on this.
- Besides being useless at point-blank range (see Hollywood Tactics below), the Arleigh Burke class in real life are large ships with a length of 154-155m (505-509 feet). Godzilla is supposed to "only" be 108m (~354 feet) tall in his main body so he shouldn't be tossing them like toy boats as one rises from the bathtub.
- Appearing at points to be much of the length and breadth of the CVN Saratoga that is "escorting" him is the same issue. Those ships are over 1,000 feet long with flight deck widths of 77-78m, making them over 3/4s as wide as Godzilla is supposed to be tall.
- A Storm Is Coming: Used on the MUTO Research marketing website for the film if you type in "STORM" or something similar, in a bit of promotional Foreshadowing for Godzilla's Giant Wall of Watery Doom and the MUTOs' EMP:PLEASE BE ADVISED: SEVERE WEATHER ALERT ISSUED FOR THE NORTHEASTERN PACIFIC SEABOARD, WITH POSSIBLE ELECTROMAGNETIC DISRUPTION. NO FURTHER INFORMATION AVAILABLE AT THIS TIME.
- Attack Its Weak Point:
- Godzilla's gills are quite sensitive and seem to be his most vulnerable area. During the military's little attempt to ward him off at the Golden Gate Bridge, it's only when some of their firepower hits Godzilla's gills that he goes from completely ignoring them to screeching and lashing out until they stop.
- The female MUTO is too heavily armored to kill through brute force. Godzilla gets around this by forcing her jaws open and firing a torrent of atomic breath down her throat, disintegrating the MUTO from inside out.
- Battle Amongst the Flames: Mostly downplayed, fitting with the film's grim and slow-paced tone. Parts of San Francisco are visibly smoldering and the battling Kaiju are wreathed in smoke during the HALO jump. Probably the closest to dynamically playing with this trope is the chain of airport explosions which occur just as Godzilla arrives and engages in a (mostly offscreen) battle against the male MUTO in Hawaii.
- Battle Couple: The MUTO duo.
- Battle Discretion Shot: Large chunks of the battles between Godzilla and the MUTOs take place just off-camera, with the shot following the humans caught in the middle.
- Battle in the Rain: The scene where Godzilla and the flying MUTO first fight in San Francisco takes place in the rain.
- Behemoth Battle: Godzilla vs the MUTOs occurs at several points during the film but all except the last are cut short. This last one is awesome.
- Behind the Black:
- Godzilla manages to pull this off several times despite his enormous size. For instance, during the Honolulu airport attack a helicopter shoots at the MUTO only to suddenly have to dodge Godzilla's dorsal spikes. Said MUTO itself doesn't notice Godzilla until he stomps down just a few dozen feet away from him.
- The MUTOs do this thrice. Once when eating the submarine, once when the female has left a hole in the side of a mountain and is marching on Vegas in broad daylight (with no-one noticing until looking from the inside of the mountain's bunker), and once when the female sneaks up on the nuke-carrying train in the dark.
- Big Bad Duumvirate: The two MUTO monsters are more or less this, though the female is arguably the bigger threat (and literally the bigger monster) as she carries with her thousands of baby monsters and is the most protective of them. Yet, they are still anti-villains whose goals are to simply mate and reproduce.
- Big Budget Beef-Up: The film features a bigger Godzilla incarnation than any that came before in terms of both height (108 metres) and length (his tail alone is 168 metres). MonsterVerse Godzilla's record was broken two years later, in accordance with Toho's habit of one-upsmanship, with the Shin Godzilla incarnation (118.3 metres tall), then again in 2017 with the 330-metre-tall Godzilla Earth in Toho's AniGoji trilogy.
- Big Creepy-Crawlies:
- The "MUTOs" resemble large insects.
- The Teaser Trailer Monster is described as resembling a centipede or a tardigrade.
- Big Damn Heroes:
- The MUTOs seem unstoppable until Godzilla pimps into town to show them who's boss. The big reveal in the Honolulu airport suggests this trope, but really it's the final showdown in the San Francisco Bay that best captures it. After Ford blows up the female MUTO's eggs, she attempts to kill him — cue atomic breath, allowing Ford to escape.
- Ford to Godzilla, ironically enough. When both MUTOs are pummeling the snot out of Godzilla, the explosion that Ford causes to destroy all the MUTO eggs draws their attention, freeing Godzilla. There was a chance that without that distraction, the MUTOs would have defeated Godzilla and become unstoppable.
- Big Entrance: A MUTO is introduced demolishing a Honolulu airport. At one point, it causes a long chain reaction of exploding aircraft. The last explosion dissipates, revealing a Giant Foot of Stomping that manages to dwarf the entire MUTO. We then get a sweeping shot of Godzilla's whole body as he roars. In San Francisco, when about to face off against the female MUTO, Godzilla is introduced silhouetted amidst mist and flashes of lightning, from which he slowly looms forth and unleashes his three-mile Signature Roar.
- Big Good: In a very loose way, Godzilla is seen as this by Dr. Serizawa, who notes that the creature is humanity's best chance at survival. Yet, he is still nothing more than a wild animal who is presented as caring little to nothing of the human species.
- Big Red Button: The kill switch at the Janjira containment site which electrocutes the MUTO's cocoon.
- Bilingual Bonus: The title of the Kaiju movie poster in young Ford's room is "Let Them Fight." Also, Joe Brody will occasionally snap a phrase in Japanese; they aren't subtitled, but are all relevant to the action.
- Bioluminescence Is Cool: The MUTOs are black with glowing red markings which pulsate rhythmically when they're communicating. Godzilla's dorsal plates light up blue when his atomic breath is charging up, just like in the Toho films — this movie also adds in the plates glowing blue from the tail up, a la Godzilla: The Series.
- A Birthday, Not a Break: The prologue takes place on the morning of Joe's birthday; just to drive it home, his wife tells him "Happy birthday" twice. Within a few minutes of screen time, she dies in the earthquake at the nuclear reactor.
- Black Comedy: The occasional humor in the movie is usually based around this.
- After the presence of the MUTO become blindingly obvious, the media encourages people not to panic, and to evacuate in an orderly fashion. The next shot shows hundreds of cars either piled-up or in traffic, many of which are off-road as a way to sidestep said traffic, along with a plane that got downed by an EMP.
- As the female MUTO destroys Vegas and firefighters look on in horror, Elvis Presley's Devil in Disguise plays cheerfully in the background.
- The fight in Honolulu.
Sam: Look, Mommy! Dinosaurs! - Black Site: Monarch has built one on the site of the ruined nuclear power plant in the heart of the Janjira exclusion zone, to monitor and (try to) contain the cocooned MUTO. The facility is heavily fortified despite being surrounded on all sides by ruins that are believed by the public to be irradiated, but Joe and Ford manage to sneak in just in time to see the containment fail.
- Brainy Brunette: The three people who know the most about the Kaiju – Joe Brody, and Drs. Serizawa and Graham – all happen to be brunettes, although Joe's hair is graying. For bonus points, Joe can teach English as a second language to Japanese kids and he was a nuclear plant engineer before first encountering the kaiju.
- Breath Weapon: Par for the course for this trope's image holder. You know awesome is about to ensue when Godzilla's spinal spikes start glowing blue while shrouded by the dust cloud. Also, he visibly inhales before using it the first time — he is quite literally breathing atomic fire.
- Broad Strokes: Has Godzilla first awakening in 1954, but remaining publicly unknown for another sixty years and never having the chance to attack Tokyo before he was nuked and subsequently disappeared back into dormancy.
- Broken Aesop: As iconic as Dr. Serizawa's line about relying on Godzilla to fight off the other monsters isnote , the message behind it rings a little hollow in this film's context. Godzilla fights the MUTOs fair and square, and they come close to killing him anyway. The reason why the MUTOs don't finish Godzilla off and the latter gains the upper hand long enough to kill them is because human intervention, which is the very thing Serizawa was preaching against, destroyed the MUTOs' nest and distracted the adults; making Serizawa look more like a self-righteous and dangerous Principles Zealot than an enlightened spiritualist.
- Broken Masquerade: The military attempts to keep a lid on Godzilla and the MUTOs, but quickly writes that off when it becomes clear they can't stop them from reaching population centers.
- Bug War: The MUTOs, giant prehistoric insect-like creatures that are ancient enemies of the Godzilla species and continue this species rivalry into the Anthropocene. The conflict between humans and the MUTOs also plays out as one.
- The Bus Came Back: A meta-textual one for the franchise as a whole. Dr. Serizawa, a character not seen since the first film, is back, being portrayed by Ken Watanabe. However, the character is for Godzilla instead of against him.
- Bystander Action-Horror Dissonance: It goes a bit overboard with this trope — most of the sequences involving the Kaiju are shot with a focus on the people in the vicinity of their rampages trying to not get killed (and not always succeeding) or marching through the devastation they leave behind. Up until the climactic battle, all that is given of the monsters is fleeting glimpses at best.
- The Cameo: Garry Chalk makes a brief appearance as one of the administrators at the Japanese power plant at the beginning.
- Canon Foreigner:
- Although Toho's Godzilla franchise features plenty of giant mutant insectoid monsters, the makers of this film decided to introduce the MUTOs as an original set of this sort of creature for Godzilla to fight.
- The Teaser Trailer Monster only appeared in the SDCC teaser trailer, but will not be appearing in the final film. There is, however, a small nod to it in the form of a peculiar and brightly colored millipede in the Janjira zone.
- Celebrity Paradox:
- There are no Godzilla movies in this universe. While it might seem weird that the young Ford has a poster for a Japanese kaiju film, which Godzilla was the Trope Codifier for, the genre and Godzilla itself was inspired by giant-monster films like The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms. Gareth Edwards later explicitly confirmed that Godzilla movies don't exist in this universe.
- In the prologue, young Brody is shown playing with LEGO Star Wars sets, including a Snowspeeder. Director Edwards, himself a big Star Wars fan, would go on to direct Rogue One. Samuel L. Jackson, who plays Preston Packard in the Monsterverse entry Kong: Skull Island, also plays Mace Windu in the Star Wars prequels.
- Central Theme: That Nature Is Not Nice, and that mankind isn't nearly as powerful as we think we are, and we should learn to accept this and know when we're outmatched because trying to control what's beyond our ken won't do anyone any good. Also, family is important.
- Chekhov's Skill: Stealthily played straight and outright subverted.
- During the MUTO's emergence at Janjira, Ford is able to grab and don a gas mask in only a few seconds — something the average person would fumble for ten seconds or more to do. However, the Marines are drilled hard on rapid deployment of masks, so for Ford that action is ingrained in him as deeply as breathing.
- Later subverted in that despite repeatedly establishing Ford's EOD tech abilities, the bomb is too damaged to be defused and goes off, though out of range.
- Citywide Evacuation: Janjira goes through a Chernobyl-style total and rapid evacuation in the face of the local nuclear plant's violent collapse. Downplayed later in the movie, where the military evacuates San Francisco's children and critical hospital patients across the Golden Gate Bridge, but direct the remaining civilians to take shelter at designated locations in the city before Godzilla and the MUTOs arrive.
- Classified Information: The Title Sequence uses redacted text for both credits and exposition on the history of the title monster.
- Combat Pragmatism:
- While it can be difficult to see, Godzilla does adapt to his opponents based on their strengths and weaknesses. It's also how he kills them most effectively. This may also be why he seems to avoid the boats by diving under them, and does not destroy the Golden Gate Bridge until he literally falls through it.
- The MUTOs are not averse to double-teaming Godzilla or biting him and latching on.
- Comic-Book Movies Don't Use Codenames: Averted. Despite rumors that Godzilla would not be referred to as such in this film, Dr. Serizawa introduces him during the briefing as "Gojira", and the military uses the name Godzilla as a codename for the beast. News broadcasts even dub him "King of the Monsters."
- Conspiracy Theorist:
- Joe Brody. After his wife Sandra was among the deaths at the Janjira nuclear power plant when it was abruptly destroyed, he is convinced that whatever caused the disaster was a bit less "natural" than an earthquake. He spends the next 15 years trying to puzzle out the truth behind the tragedy and becomes estranged from his son in the process. He's unsurprisingly miffed to find out that a group called Monarch is, indeed, covering up what actually happened.
- The opening credits montage also has a glimpse of text concerning some guy who thinks the cover-up of Godzilla's existence in The '50s was the work of the Illuminati:
The illuminati has been using PRODUCTION DESIGNER OWEN PATERSON to build facilities to hide their study of the creature and its origins. All clues are suppressed.- Promotional videos for the home video release of the movie had one of these narrating over top secret footage from Monarch files and photographs of the Universal Western Mining collapse sight, the remains of the Janjira plant, and the massive fossil skeleton, with him claiming that this is all part of a conspiracy to cover up the existence of giant monsters. The special features for the Blu-Ray, meant to have been made chronologically after the events of the movie, feature most of the same content, but edited to give an I Told You So tone.
- Continuity Reboot: For both the original Toho films and the 1998 American film.
- "Could Have Avoided This!" Plot: Discussed. Ford questions why Monarch, who had access to the male MUTO's cocoon for fifteen years while studying it, didn't just kill it while they had the chance before it hatched (which if successful, would've probably also stopped the female's awakening without the male calling out to her formerly-dormant egg). Graham states that they didn't know what the cocoon was doing with all the radiation it absorbed and they feared killing it could've had Chernobyl-level global consequences. Nevertheless, the look on Serizawa's face as Graham is saying this suggests it was partly Just Think of the Potential! that made Monarch hold back and he now regrets not killing it sooner.
- Covert Group: Monarch, a top-secret government organization. But not so top-secret that they don't plaster their name all over their helicopters and such.
- Creative Closing Credits: Inverted. The opening credits are shown alongside text that ends up redacted with black ink - i.e. "Reliability of these sightings is still questionable BASED ON THE CHARACTER witnesses. One must ask, is GODZILLA OWNED AND CREATED BY TOHO COMPANY, LTD." Sequel Godzilla: King of the Monsters (2019) goes the same way ("Footage DIRECTED BY MICHAEL DOUGHERTY from U.S. Submarine Scorpion revealed").
- Creepy Monotone: The voice of J. Robert Oppenheimer plays over the SDCC teaser trailer, citing a partial quote after the Trinity test. It's also used to great effect in this modified version of the official teaser trailer.
- Crowd Panic: People in Waikiki stampede for safety when a tsunami triggered by Godzilla hits. In San Francisco, dozens of civilians caught between Godzilla and Hokmuto start screaming and running for shelter, Elle Brody among them.
- Curb-Stomp Battle: The first battle between Godzilla and the male MUTO at Honolulu goes this way. Godzilla supposedly beats the tar out of it due to his superior size and strength, forcing the male MUTO to flee. He also beats the heck out of the female in the final battle, until the male joins in and then the tide turns against Godzilla.
- Curiosity Killed the Cast:
- Curiosity causes a lot deaths at least. Long before civilization developed, primeval monsters dove to the depths of the ocean and burrowed past the mantle, far away from human habitat as radioactive material became scarce on the Earth's surface. A mining accident leads to the discovery of one of their eggs, which is brought up to the surface for study. A surface where there are new sources of radioactive material to feed on.
- Ford and the EOD team radio ahead in the dark countryside at night to ask their advance scouts if the coast ahead is clear for their nuke-carrying train. The response over the radio is screaming and automatic weapons-fire. Ford and the team's response to this transmission is to go and check it out. At the end of the following chain of events, Ford is the Sole Survivor of the entire team.
- Curse Cut Short: There's a humorous one for the most attentive viewers when the MUTO is attacking the soldiers at the dock.
- Darker and Edgier: While perhaps not as dark as the trailers for the film suggested, the film lacks any cheesiness or family-friendliness of the series post-Godzilla Raids Again, hearkening back to the dead-serious 1954 original, though Godzilla himself is still portrayed in a somewhat positive light.
- Death by Transceiver: In the night forest railway scene, shortly before Femuto attacks the train carrying the nuclear warheads, Sergeant Morales tries to radio ahead to the advance scouts, only to get nothing but frantic screaming in reply. Not that anyone takes that as a warning sign that there's danger up ahead.
- Decon-Recon Switch: The film initially plays off as a darker twist of the kaiju genre, showing horrific real-life consequences of giant monster attacks. We see the main character tragically lose his father when the Male MUTO escapes. Later we see Godzilla cause a massive tsunami in Hawaii which drowns thousands of terrified civilians, and later the main character's wife, a nurse, is seen tending to a crowded hospital filled with hundreds of wounded patients. Then comes the grand finale, where Godzilla battles the MUTO pair, and it's right back to the good old goofy-yet-awesome monster fights that we know and love.
- It also initially deconstructs the Gentle Giant trope. Godzilla is relatively benign compared to other incarnations. However, his massive size still makes him a danger to people such as when he first arrives in Hawaii and accidentally causes a massive tsunami simply by getting out of the water. It's later reconstructed when he learns to take his time around the tiny creatures he lives with and goes out of his way to create as little damage as possible.
- Decoy Protagonist: Though Joseph Brody is given a lot of development early on in the film, his son is The Hero of the story as far as human characters go.
- Deep Breath Reveals Tension: In the novelization, both Ford Brody and Admiral Stenz have to take a deep breath in light of a daunting task respectively. For Ford, it's just after his only phone call to Elle amid the nationwide crisis that the MUTOs are causing. For Stenz, it's just before he addresses assembled U.S. Army troops on the threat of the MUTOs and the stolen nuke in San Francisco.
- Destructive Savior: Godzilla is an ancient guardian against other more hostile kaiju wrecking Earth's biosphere. Once Humanity discovers this purpose, any collateral damage Godzilla causes is considered acceptable in Godzilla's bid to kill the the MUTOs. And in the end, after Godzilla's job is done, Humanity hails Godzilla as the King of Monsters.
- Determinator:
- Even 15 years after the Janjira incident, Joe Brody hadn't given up on finding the truth.
- Godzilla chases the MUTO relentlessly for miles and when he finally catches up to them, continues fighting even as he was being mauled by the two at once while constantly getting back up no matter how severely he's beaten down. Even a skyscraper collapsing on him only slowed him down for a few minutes.
- Angry mama MUTO after realizing Ford destroyed her eggs.
- Deuteragonist: Ford Brody plays the other role of protagonist while Godzilla is the lead. This is alluded to when Ford faints at the same time Godzilla collapses after defeating the MUTOs.
- Developing Doomed Characters: Gareth Edwards and Bryan Cranston have emphasized that it was vitally important to do this with the human characters so that there would be more interest and tension when pondering their fates in the midst of the carnage. They've stated that the best way to get viewers to care about them while Godzilla and the other monsters are crushing cities and fighting each other is for the character arcs of the humans to intersect with the monsters in an interesting and, in Edwards' words, "unexploitative" way so you don't feel that they're wasting screen time on them.
- Didn't Think This Through:
- Some rooftop-based gunmen open fire on Godzilla in Honolulu with their small arms. They quickly realize the pointlessness and give a face that says this trope. Godzilla doesn't seem to notice.
- The military overall seem to have a problem bordering on Perception Filter of disregarding the male MUTO's EMP attacks, until their plan with the nuclear warhead backfires. They send fighter jets to Honolulu to combat the male, but fail to account for his EMP blasts causing the jets to shut down mid-flight and violently crash — this is made quite bad by the fact the MUTO already demonstrated its EMP ability before this, during his hatching in front of Monarch. The military furthermore repeat this mistake when they have jets in the San Francisco airspace during the MUTOs' arrival. Notably, the military's plan to nuke the Kaiju seemingly doesn't account for the obvious fact that the MUTOs' EMP can deactivate the boat transporting the nuke before it's gotten far enough away from the city to avoid endangering the populace, which is exactly what happens.
- By extension, Monarch themselves are just as guilty here; even though it's been known for years that the MUTOs feed on radiation and have been able to consume the entirety of the radiation in Janjira to the point of the city's radiation levels being at zero (less than background radiation levels!), thus making nuking them being a useless endeavour, they neglect to inform the US military about this, causing them to believe using nukes is the only way to deal with the monsters; as a direct result of this, many completely unnecessary deaths happen.
- The second MUTO spore was taken to a nuclear waste depository after Monarch finished their experiments on it years ago. Serizawa and Graham seem to realize how reckless this was as soon as they learn the spore has reawakened in the place where the Americans stored it. Though to be fair, Monarch was certain the thing was dead (or at least fully "dormant") at the time, and the MUTOs' radioactivity did limit options of where to store the spore.
- The military underestimates the speed of the three Kaiju. Godzilla makes it to San Francisco while the evacuation efforts are still in-progress, and the male MUTO makes it to the nuke well before it can be transported to a safe distance and long before its timer is about to go off. In the novelization, it's explained that the military's failure to prepare in time is due to the setback that the train attack caused them when they had to salvage a working nuke from the wreckage.
- Did You Just Flip Off Cthulhu?: Ford's fellow soldiers attempt to hold off the female MUTO to allow him to get the nuke away from San Francisco, even attacking her with normal gunfire once they're out of missiles. She kills them to a man.
- Digital Destruction: The home video prints of the movie are noticeably darker and very murky compared to what was presented in theaters. Made even more confusing when the making of in the special features use clips that look brighter and better than the film.
- The 2021 4K UHD Blu-ray release averts this, bringing the colors to near 1:1 to the theatrical release. This print has also replaced the previous digital prints.
- Direct Line to the Author: Gareth Edwards and the design team kept this trope in mind when designing Godzilla:Edwards: The way I tried to view it was to imagine Godzilla was a real creature and someone from Toho saw him in the 1950s and ran back to the studio to make a movie about the creature and was trying their best to remember it and draw it. And in our film you get to see him for real.
- Disappeared Dad: Joe Brody becomes one in the emotionally absent but physically present sense after the Janjira disaster. He then becomes one in the literal sense right after his son Ford realizes Joe wasn't an obsessed crazyhead, and they reconcile.
- Disaster-Dodging Dog: Upon detecting the Male MUTO, the King of Monsters heads to Honolulu and the following movement of water generates a local tsunami. As the first wave floods the beach, a dog snaps its leash (which was tied to a palm tree) and outruns a few panicked tourists.
- Disaster Dominoes: A crashing helicopter takes out no fewer than three passenger jets.
- Distant Prologue: The film starts in Japan in 1999, where Joe Brody tragically loses his wife at the power plant, before cutting to the main plot fifteen years later.
- Does This Remind You of Anything?: In similar spirit to Gareth Edwards' earlier film Monsters (2010), the scenes of destruction left in the Kaiju's wake and how they're constructed with emergency services, camps and displaced survivors bring to mind the aftermath of Real Life natural disasters. Adding to the effect is that all the major urban locations the Kaiju wreck (Japan, Hawaii and San Francisco) are known for being hotspots of earthquakes or tsunamis and having infamous large-magnitude disasters of those types happen there at some point after 1900.
- Downer Beginning: Within the first fifteen minutes of runtime, Joe and Ford Brody lose their wife and mother respectively in a Shoot the Dog manner, and the town where they're living at the time suffers a Chernobyl-level nuclear disaster (or so the world is led to believe).
- Dropped a Bridge on Him: Quite literally. Joe Brody is set up as major protagonist with an integral role in the story. Minutes after the male MUTO gets released at the beginning of the second act, he is mortally wounded in a bridge collapse.
- Dull Surprise:
- Aaron Taylor-Johnson as Ford Brody, with military training to remain calm no matter what (and his job disarming bombs for them) helping matters.
- It must run in the family, as his six year-old son Sam Brody doesn't make a strong expression toward anything, even Godzilla or his mom appearing after San Francisco.
- Earn Your Happy Ending: In spite of the destruction that occurs over the course of the movie, Ford successfully reunites his family, and the victory over the MUTOs and Godzilla's return to the ocean are portrayed in a triumphant light.
- Early-Installment Weirdness: It's the first entry of the Monsterverse, after all.
- The movie takes Square-Cube Law into account, with Godzilla moving with the exact speed you'd expect from a kaiju his size. Him walking through Hawaii also inevitably results in a tsunami because of the displaced water. Later movies will have the Big G running and jumping when taking on other monsters, and doesn't abide by the rules of physics that much.
- Most of the film runs on Monster Delay, with Godzilla having less than fifteen minutes of screentime, and for the most part the movie's a disaster film (which the trailers and promotional materials doesn't attempt to hide). Later movies are far more action-packed, with Godzilla appearing repeatedly to save humanity from whatever rogue monster-of-the-day, that the advertising sells as action films and the kaiju smackdown being a selling point.
- The film has an odd grey filter to give it that "gritty" look (brought up even in reviews from 2021), even before the revelation of kaiju and their subsequent rampages, an element dropped in later movies.
- This is the only movie in the series which does not explicitly reference the Hollow Earth (it's only very briefly and subtly alluding to the concept during the exposition briefing, where it's stated many kaiju adapted to live "further underground"), which would become a pivotal setting in the series from Kong: Skull Island onward.
- This film is generally more grounded in terms of what human technology is like, with nothing notably different from reality, whereas subsequent entries in the franchise continue to up the ante in terms of how futuristic the kaiju-related machinations are. From Airborne Aircraft Carriers, massive underground bases, monster-sized Powered Armor, Humongous Mecha, and anti-gravitational hovercrafts.
- Starting from Godzilla: King of the Monsters onward, the term M.U.T.O. was abandoned as the catch-all name for the kaiju, most likely due to it being too confusing due to the specific monster species introduced in this movie only being called MUTOs, and all kaiju being called that too. Later movies started referring to kaiju as Titans instead.
- Easter Egg:
- During the exploration of Janjira, the camera moves in front of an aquarium with word "mothra" scratched on it. In the Godzilla canon Mothra is a friendly Giant Flyer.
- In the prologue, a diagram of a moth is briefly shown, bearing the same colors scheme as Mothra.
- Eat the Bomb:
- The MUTOs feed on radiation and radioactive materials, so to them a nuke is more of a tasty snack than a legitimate threat.
- Theoretically, this should apply to Godzilla himself as well, though we see no signs that he absorbs radiation in the same way he did during the Heisei series. However as proved in the prologue set in 1954, nuking Godzilla doesn't seem to work, and probably just made him even stronger.
- Emergency Broadcast: The MUTO Viral Marketing website has one when you type in "monster zero," "monster x," or "monster island."SCANNING....USER LOCATION ACQUIRED. [ALERT] THE UNIDENTIFIED NATURAL PHENOMENON IS APPROACHING YOUR AREA. PLEASE PREPARE ACCORDINGLY
- ...or if you type "run" or "escape."
PLEASE CONTACT YOUR LOCAL EMERGENCY SERVICES FOR EVACUATION ROUTES AND SURVIVAL PROCEDURES. - Empty Quiver: A pretty unusual form happens when the male MUTO steals an armed nuclear warhead, which the U.S. military deployed in an attempt to kill him and the other kaiju at once, and he presents it to the female as a gift and they build their nest around it while using its radiation to fertilize their new young. The last act of the movie follows Ford Brody and a team of H.A.L.O. jumpers trying to retrieve the nuke before it detonates and obliterates everyone who's still trapped in the MUTO-infested city.
- Enemy Mine:
- The prologue deals with how MONARCH and the military tried to kill Godzilla in The '50s with nuclear "tests" in the Pacific. When the MUTOs awaken decades later and Godzilla starts going after them, Admiral Stenz enacts a plan to kill all three monsters with an even bigger bomb. But the MUTOs steal the bomb and use it to feed their nest. This foul-up convinces Stenz to accept Dr. Serizawa's suggestion that they ought to leave all the heavy work to Godzilla.
- Godzilla refuses to attack the military (who attack him on occasion) because they are opposed to the MUTOs. It helps that it's quite quickly established that the military is effectively no threat to either of them.
- Epic Fail: The Navy trying to attack Godzilla just as he rises outside of San Francisco Bay. One of the ship rockets hit a supporting cable, prompting a soldier to tell them to stop firing due to civilians on the Golden Gate Bridge. They still keep firing at him, and the military's attempt at a defensive ends with Godzilla tearing the Golden Gate Bridge in half.
- Epic Movie: A trio of giant monsters move from the Phillipines to Japan to the American West Coast, with secretive groups and militaries tracking and attempting to stop them.
- Explain, Explain... Oh, Crap!:Navy Tech: As of now, it looks like Godzilla is still following the MUTO.Serizawa: He's hunting!Stenz: [...] Doctor, what did you mean, 'hunting'? You think he's chasing this MUTO?Graham: But if the MUTO is his prey, the signal shows a call, why call up a predator?Serizawa: No, it didn't. I think Gojira was only listening. The MUTO was calling something else. (Pause) The pattern... Focus the search on Nevada!
- Failed a Spot Check:
- Twice, when the infantry teams are searching for the MUTOs, their air support hovering directly overhead completely fails to spot the enormous kaiju munching on a Russian sub standing up in the jungle or the gigantic chunk of mountain ripped open until the people on the ground stumble within a few feet of them. They also fail to notice the massive hole and trail of destruction that comes out of the Yucca Mountain until one of the soldiers finds the monster's containment cell from the inside. It is given a bit of justification because the first two times are in the middle of the night and the MUTOs appear to have control over their bioluminescence, allowing them to blend into the environment with their black coats and mountainous size making them appear as part of the landscape. The Yucca Mountain instance can also be justified by being out of radio contact with the helicopters due to the mountain itself and the walls of the facility.
- In the airport attack, no one, not even the male Muto noticed Godzilla at all. The pilot engaging the male Muto apparently saw bumping into him as an inconvenience. The Muto didn't even see him right in front or next to him.
- The casino-goers in Las Vegas fail to see the news broadcast showing a monster going through the city. The ceiling is taken out for them to realize it. Anyone who's ever worked in a casino can tell you that this is a 100% accurate portrayal.
- Fatal Family Photo: Joe Brody dies roughly 20 minutes after finding an intact photo of his family in their old house. Subverted with Ford, who brings out a photo of his wife and son and has a close call soon after, but ultimately lives to the end. In the novelization, Sergeant Tre Morales shows a photo of his family shortly before he dies.
- Feed It a Bomb: The military's plan to get rid of all three monsters consists of taking an armed nuke out in the ocean and letting one of the MUTOs eat it, assuming that the blast's sheer force will rip the creature to shreds along with the other two monsters present. The radiation itself is bait.
- Fictional Province: Janjira, the japanese city at the beginning of the movie where the Power Plant disaster occurs, is entirely fictional, the "-jira" suffix of the name being derived from "Gojira."
- Final Battle: The only fight between Godzilla and the MUTOs that's seen up-close by the audience; taking place in an apocalyptic San Francisco.
- Fire/Water Juxtaposition: In keeping with Gareth Edwards' stated "Man vs. Nature" theme, and to emphasize just how small and helpless the humans are, one scene shows soldiers firing off tiny-looking flares in front of the massive Godzilla, who is still dripping with many gallons of sea water.
- Five Rounds Rapid: When Godzilla makes landfall in Honolulu, SWAT members and soldiers attempt to shoot both the MUTO and Godzilla alike. Amusingly, when Godzilla shows up, the SWAT members run dry… then decide not to reload, for obvious reasons.
- Foreboding Fleeing Flock: In the Golden Gate Bridge scene, a huge flock of seagulls flying past the bridge signals that Godzilla is approaching.
- Foreshadowing: The collapse of the Janjira plant has one shot where four origami crane figures are seen in a way that makes them look like Giant Flyers soaring over the plant, which hints at the Giant Flyer form the MUTO in the plant takes later in the film. There's also a bug crawling over a toy tank.
- Freeze-Frame Bonus: The opening credits have a lot of text that is quickly whited out to give credit to the production team. Several hidden messages are contained in said text.
- From Bad to Worse: The MUTOs rampaging over the Pacific, causing planes to drop like flies and electronics to shut down whilst trampling any trace of human civilization in their path is bad. The discovery that the MUTOs are looking to meet up and become Explosive Breeders is very bad. What's worse? Well, when Admiral Stenz and the military attempt luring and killing all three kaiju using a nuclear warhead, the MUTOs steal the nuke after it's been armed and they set up nest in the middle of San Francisco, with the nuke counting down and over 100,000 people within the blast radius, and with the female MUTO laying hundreds of fertilized eggs.
- Genre Throwback: The film is a throwback to Jaws, Alien, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Jurassic Park (1993) and many other sci-fi, horror and adventure films from The '70s, The '80s, and The '90s that used Monster Delay, Nothing Is Scarier, and Obscured Special Effects to build suspense and grandeur around their FX-heavy monsters. Gareth Edwards says that this was done as a sort of rebuttal against later FX-heavy blockbusters of the Turn of the Millennium and The New '10s that instead try to show off as many CGI-laden shots as possible without bothering to savor individual scenes.
- Gentle Giant: Strangely appears to apply to Godzilla himself. After waking up and being subjected to multiple nuclear attacks in an attempt to kill him, he spent half a century in the deep oceans, avoiding contact with humans. He only emerges to combat the MUTOs and ignores humans even when they attack him — the only time in the entire film that he directly harms any humans, it's when he's painfully disoriented.
- Ghost City: The entire prefecture of Janjira is completely abandoned after 15 years, allegedly because the area is affected by radiation (until Joe and Ford found out it isn't). Judging from the downtown skyscrapers, at least a million people lived there.
- Giant Equals Invincible: Brought back full-force. The MUTOs and Godzilla shrug off all bullets, tank rounds, and sea-to-ground missiles, though rifles successfully distract the MUTOs more than once. It is confirmed in the movie that Godzilla can survive point-blank nuclear explosions in the kiloton range, though they have no idea what megaton-level explosions will do.
- Giant Foot of Stomping: One of the MUTOs tears up Honolulu International Airport, causing a helicopter to crash and take out a long line of passenger jets. The explosions dissipate as Godzilla enters, showing that the MUTO is dwarfed by Big G's foot.
- Giant Wall of Watery Doom: Godzilla displaces so much water that he floods the neighborhood of Waikiki, just from rising out of the ocean.
- Gilligan Cut: The news reporters urge viewers to "stay indoors and stay off the roads." Cut to an aerial view of a traffic jam. Mood Whiplash when we see it's caused partly by a crashed airliner.
- Godzilla Threshold:
- Monarch seem to regard attempting to kill the male MUTO in its cocoon as this, based on Serizawa's contemplation before he reluctantly gives the order and based on Vivienne Graham's silent reaction. During the kill attempt, Serizawa and every other Monarch operative in the control room except for Whalen turns their head away in dismay.
- Invoked. Serizawa suggests that the only thing that can stop the MUTOs is the legendary Godzilla. Stenz at first turns this down out of disapproval at the idea of just letting what amounts to a gigantic unknown animal do its thing while standing on the sideline, but once the military's own plan completely backfires and puts them in a worse situation where their hands are utterly tied, Stenz concedes that Godzilla might be their last hope.
- Admiral Stenz' aforementioned plan to deal with the kaiju (the one that backfires) is ultimately this too in its own right. He decides to authorize the use of a nuclear warhead as bait to lure all the kaiju out to sea, hoping the sheer strength of the explosion will kill all three quicker than they can feed on it. Unlike other entries in this genre, this movie shows the usage of offensive nuclear weaponry is not a decision that the military would make lightly.
- Godzilla seems to have one of his own; he only uses his signature Atomic Breath once in Awakening and a couple of times in the climax of the movie.
- Going Critical: The male MUTO played a major role in the Janjira disaster.
- Good Colors, Evil Colors: Both Godzilla and the MUTOs have a black/dark-gray coloration, but Godzilla's Atomic Breath and dorsal spines produce a blue-colored light and he's ultimately humanity's Destructive Savior against the MUTOs in this movie, whilst the male MUTO produces red bioluminescence.
- Hair-Contrast Duo: The dark-haired, Japanese Dr. Serizawa and the silver-haired, American Admiral Stenz work together on tracking the rampant Kaiju, and they have a brief moment where they slightly open up to each-other over their respective countries' past with each-other at the end of WWII; although ironically, it's Serizawa who's the more idealistic and philosophical of the duo, and Stenz who's the more cynical and down-to-earth. Serizawa deeply reveres the Kaiju and he believes that Godzilla is mankind's ally rather than our enemy relative to the MUTOs. Stenz just sees the Kaiju as "things" and is focused on the harm that they do, and he initially tries to bomb both Godzilla and the MUTOs with a nuke rather than have faith in Godzilla partly because he mistakes Serizawa's view on Godzilla for wild naïvete.
- Halfway Plot Switch: In terms of the human element (which it should be said is consistently more foregrounded in this movie): roughly the first third of the movie is about a strained father-son relationship between Joe and Ford, with Joe coming across as the deuteragonist. Then shortly before the midway point, Joe gets a bridge dropped on him and the plot switches to Ford embarking on a cross-country journey to get back to his wife and son amid a classic Kaiju catastrophe.
- Hazmat Suit: The film shows Dr. Serizawa, Dr. Graham and the other MUTO researchers wearing these while investigating subterranean areas that have been frequented by radioactive Kaiju. Their suits have been somewhat modified with transparent face-plates and lights pointed at their faces so that the audience can more easily tell who's who.
- Held Gaze:
- Joe and Ford share a look through a window when they first see each-other at the police station: Joe manages a weak smile, while Ford doesn't return the smile and hesitantly looks away. This sets up father and son's dynamic: Joe tries to make pleasant small talk with his son in a thinly-veiled attempt to make it seem like everything's okay between them, while Ford feels resentful, dismayed and troubled at how his father has fractured their relationship with his endless obsession.
- In the novelization, Ford briefly reunites with Sam before the Final Battle. Ford and Sam lock gazes, "truly seeing each other for perhaps the first time."
- Helpless Window Death: When Joe's wife Sandra goes to check up on the reactor at the Janjira Nuclear Power Plant following suspicious "seismic" activity, another earthquake critically damages the plant, causing radioactive material to spill out. Sandra and her team run for their lives and Joe tries to hold the protective shield door open long enough for them to escape, but he is forced to seal it moments before the team would have made it out. Joe can only watch through the window as his wife is overcome by a cloud of deadly radioactive steam.
- Heroic Lineage: A couple in the novelization:
- Besides the fact Lieutenant Ford Brody and his father Joe both end up playing a role in combatting the kaiju, the novelization reveals father and son share a military history (Joe was once in the Navy).
- The novel also reveals Admiral Stenz's father served aboard the USS Indianapolis which helped transport the atomic bomb. Downplayed in the Stenz family's case, since the movie draws brief attention to the moral and ethical dilemmas that circulated the atomic bombs' historical usage, Stenz's own present actions with the plan to nuke the kaiju somewhat cross into Hero Antagonist territory, and the mention of Stenz's father in the novel comes when he and Serizawa are discussing the present nuclear plan.
- Historical In-Joke: The various nuclear tests conducted in the Pacific Proving Grounds during The '50s. It's revealed that rather than testing atomic weaponry for potential use against other nations, the real objective was to kill Godzilla with increasingly more powerful bombs.
- Hollywood Tactics: The Golden Gate scene where the navy tries to bar Godzilla's entry in the bay with what seems to be every Arleigh Burke-class destroyer in the Pacific Fleet, a type which is unarmored and designed to fight enemies at tens of kilometers, in formations with separations of kilometers.
- Hope Spot:
- During the monsters' arrival at San Francisco, a MUTO unleashes an EMP. Elle sees a trooper parachuting in and thinks help is on the way... until it turns out that the "trooper" was a pilot who had ejected from his fighter, as planes start dropping out of the sky.
- One occurs when Lieutenant Brody gets the boat with the armed and counting-down nuke on it going out towards sea, only to then have it die when the female MUTO shows up wholly intent on killing him.
- Human-Focused Adaptation: The film puts nearly all its focus on the human cast and their battle with the MUTOs, leaving the titular King of the Monsters with roughly 8 minutes of screentime. That said the ratio of Godzilla to not-Godzilla run-time is more or less equal with the original film, so this is Older Than They Think. Still, the creators clearly listened to the criticism; the sequel gives vastly more screen time and development to the kaiju, none of whom are Canon Foreigners like the MUTOs, to the delight of many.
- Idiot Ball:
- The American government disposing of a highly-radioactive "dormant" Kaiju egg which feeds on radiation by storing it in a bunker which is filled with the U.S.'s old nuclear waste stores — essentially leaving the egg with an "eat this and grow up fast" birthday gift when it hatches — wasn't exactly the smartest thing to do.
- Admiral Stenz at first is quite competent (as much as can be given how out of their depth the military are) and reasonable in his approach to tracking the Kaiju. But once he, his colleagues and Monarch learn the MUTOs are going to become Explosive Breeders, Stenz decides that attempting to nuke all three Kaiju with an even more powerful bomb than the ones used in The '50s is somehow not an even more impractical idea than hoping Godzilla would do the job of killing the MUTOs for them. If Godzilla was just allowed to do his own thing, then whilst there would certainly be regional collateral damage to property and civilians , there would not be the frightening and considerable risk of any one of the kaiju surviving the nuke's blast and becoming even more dangerous due to absorbing the radioactive fallout (especially considering that whilst the modern nuke is even more powerful than the ones used in the 50s, the 50s bombings as far as we can see failed to so much as lastingly scratch one kaiju, and in the present one nuke is being used against three of them). This leads to the crisis with the stolen nuke which drives the humans during the final act of the film.
- Ford and his team on the railroad bridge in the dark and foggy Sierras radio ahead to their advance scouts to ask if the tracks are clear. The scouts reply with frantic full-automatic fire and screaming. What do Ford and his team make of this? "Let's move up on foot and check it out." They start to take a hint when the MUTO throws a flaming M1 Abrams tank at them.
- Ignored Vital News Reports: A couple of examples where people are forced to pay attention: Mrs. Brody with her son ("Dinosaur!"), and a bunch of gamblers in Las Vegas with an EMP blast and then the female MUTO ripping away one the walls of their casino.
- Immune to Bullets: Though the military firing at the giant monsters is visually impressive, like this trope implies, it's not effective.
- Impact Silhouette: A rare non-comedic version: Skycrapers with massive holes in them.
- Impaled with Extreme Prejudice: The fate of the male MUTO after Big G gave him a tail whip.
- Improbable Infant Survival: Zoe, the little girl standing on the beach at the onset of a tsunami, and Akio, the little boy with Ford during the MUTO attack, both live through the moments of peril that they experience. The buses filled with kids evacuating San Francisco also make it across the bridge before Godzilla smashes it. As we see in Monarch: Legacy of Monsters, however, it was brutally averted for at least one other bus.
- In Space, Everyone Can See Your Face: In the Distant Prologue, Drs. Serizawa and Graham and Mr. Boyd are all wearing Hazmat Suits with lights that illuminate their faces when they enter the irradiated cave holding Adam/Dagon's bones.
- In Your Nature to Destroy Yourselves: While one of the main themes is that humans don't have anywhere near as much control or dominion over nature as we think we do and that forces of nature can wipe us out on a whim, it's human excavation in the Philippines which awakens the MUTOs' long-dormant underground spores and leads to them threatening to destroy civilization. Furthermore, the military, understandably, defaults to assuming Godzilla is just as much a threat as the MUTOs based on his very nature, and they try killing him with them, when as it later turns out, Godzilla is not hostile to humanity and is the only available force that can stop the MUTOs without destroying the world as we know it. Lastly, the military's attempt to resolve the crisis without relying on Godzilla by nuking the kaiju backfires catastrophically when the MUTOs feed on the nukes to make themselves stronger against Godzilla and to nourish their world-threatening young, bringing one intact and counting-down nuclear warhead into the heart of San Francisco.
- Irony:
- The Male MUTO does all the things Godzilla does in Blue Öyster Cult's song Godzilla from Spectres: he pulls some splitting high-tension wires down as he escapes from Janjira, helpless people on a subway train scream as he looks in on them, and he picks up a bus and throws it back down as he obtains a nuke from the military to present to his mate.
- Expecting a success, Godzilla 1998 had a blatant Sequel Hook, but it was cancelled for poor reception. This one doubted a 'two thumbs up' warm welcome and so made sure it was a stand-alone. Now it's green-lighted for a trilogy.
- Toho created Godzilla 2000 out of negative response to Godzilla 1998, especially to its crew and suit actors hating the film. This film? Toho released Shin Godzilla in July 2016, out of positive response to this film, especially to the suit actors loving the film. Haruo Nakajima, Godzilla's original suit actor, voiced his approval of the film, and fellow suitmation veteran Kenpachiro Satsuma (who portrayed Hedorah and Gigan in the Showa era, and Godzilla himself throughout the Heisei era) said Zilla did not have the spirit of Godzilla, but loved this remake.
- It Can Think:
- Godzilla shows distinct signs of problem-solving and tactical thinking in his fights against the MUTOs — he's clearly baiting the male MUTO before he delivers a Tail Slap which kills the latter, and after his first usage of his Atomic Breath fails to pierce the female MUTO's natural armor, Godzilla gets around this by firing his Atomic Breath directly down her throat. What's more, he gives the distinct impression of regarding Ford at one point when he gives a piercing glance in a transfixed Ford's direction with his head lowered near ground level.
- The MUTOs too. After the male MUTO's first usage of his EMP when hatching and after successfully trashing a Russian submarine, it's clear the male knows what he's doing when he activates the blast in response to jets approaching him, causing them to lose power and drop like flies. When the female MUTO is distraught at the destruction of her nest by gas explosion, spying Ford near the explosion site seems to give her an idea of what was the cause of her babies' deaths, and not long afterward the female flies into an unmistakable, full-blown Unstoppable Rage at the rest of the military team whom are trying to get rid of the nuke.
- It's Raining Men: The trailers and film rather impressively shows a group of soldiers HALO jumping into San Francisco in order to find the nuclear warhead that the MUTOs have taken in order to disarm it. The scene features them jumping through the clouds into the unknown of the destroyed city to the tune of György Ligeti's Requiem, better known as the Stargate music from 2001: A Space Odyssey.
- Japanese Delinquents: Before Joe is brought out to Ford at a Japanese jail, Ford sees a delinquent teen being brought into the lobby, whereupon the teen gets fussed at by his parents.
- Jump Scare:
- When Hokmuto emerges from his cocoon, his leg shoots out very unexpectedly.
- It happens on the bus on the Golden Gate Bridge. You're probably expecting Godzilla to jump out and spook ya, but instead it's done with a seagull slamming into one of the bus windows and cracking it in the process.
- There's a subtler version of this at the airport when the lights come back on and there's a giant monster sitting above the train.
- Just Think of the Potential!: Rather than simply destroying the MUTO's cocoon when it was young and vulnerable, the scientists elected to study it instead, thus granting it a chance to mature. They still almost avert this tripe when they flip the kill switch within seconds of it becoming active, and then demand immediate confirmation that it's dead, but by then it's too little too late.
- Kaiju: This time there's three of 'em.
- Karmic Jackpot: Albeit with both parties unaware of the fact: right when Godzilla is being pinned down by the MUTOs, Brody sets fire to the nest and draws the female's attention, giving Big G an opening to stand up and regroup. His assistance is rewarded when, just as the female MUTO is about to kill him, Godzilla appears out of nowhere to bite on the MUTO's neck and let Brody get away.
- Killed Mid-Sentence: Listen closely, and later in the movie you'll hear a soldier scream out, "Oh, SHI-!" before he's killed by a MUTO.
- Kill It with Fire:
- Ford kills the MUTO egg clutch by knocking the valves off a wrecked fuel truck in the nest, and then running like hell before the fuel hits any of the burning wreckage piles also in the nest.
- Godzilla's atomic breath, which takes the form of a blue-hot fire stream. He destroys the final MUTO by forcefeeding her this.
- Land, Sea, Sky: The three monsters fit this trope. The semi-aquatic Godzilla represents Sea, to the point where his initial Big Entrance involves a Giant Wall of Watery Doom and a Fire/Water Juxtaposition in the form of soldiers shooting flares past his drenched hide. The male MUTO represents Sky, being a Giant Flyer whose EMP is the one that takes down the most aircraft and whose second major scene sees him directly attacking an airport. The female MUTO represents Land, being (as far as we know) entirely land-bound and the monster that is seen furthest inland (namely, the Nevada desert).
- Last of Its Kind: Godzilla is described as the last of a species that lived when the Earth's surface was still being heavily bombarded by radiation, as are the MUTOs.
- Last Request: Sandra Brody's last words to Joe are asking him to take care of their son and be a good dad. Joe makes a similar last request to Ford when he's badly injured, asking Ford with his dying breaths to do whatever it takes to protect his own wife and kid.
- Lecture as Exposition: After Hokmuto escapes from Janjira, Drs. Serizawa and Graham give Ford an exclusive lecture in a makeshift boardroom to fill him in on what the hell he's been caught up in. The doctors explicitly confirm what the movie's opening heavily implied about the nuclear bomb tests in the 50s, and they detail the origins of Monarch, the MUTOs, and this movie's new incarnation of Godzilla.
- Lethally Stupid: The military firing on Godzilla, a creature who survived being directly nuked in the 50s with no lasting damage done, at the Golden Gate Bridge not only fails to slow him down but if anything provokes Godzilla to acting in self-defense once their artillery starts finding his weak spot. The Navy forces in the river get extra points for continuing to fire whilst there are still evacuating civilians on the Golden Gate Bridge, despite efforts by the military forces stationed on the bridge to signal them to stop precisely because of this.
- Let's You and Him Fight: Serizawa's solution to the MUTO attacks after the nuke is hijacked by a MUTO is to let Godzilla finish the job.
- Lighter and Softer: Yes, it's a dark film. But compared to this film to the horrifying original 1954 film, just be glad this film isn't depressingly cynical.
- Lightning/Fire Juxtaposition:
- The HALO jump scene has the soldiers diving down to a San Francisco engulfed in flames and smoke. As Ford Brody is scanning over the city the closer he gets, he catches sight of Godzilla, who would otherwise be really hard to make out from the dark, smoke-covered city were it not for the frequent flashes of lightning that brighten the view.
- Also, the MUTOs have their EMP attack (the male's more weaponized EMP in particular produces a flash of red light when activated), and Godzilla has his fiery Atomic Breath.
- Lightning Reveal: Done for Godzilla during the HALO jump scene.
- Logo Joke: None for the film itself (unusually given how Warner Bros. loves doing this), but IMAX viewers were treated to a special version of the pre-movie countdown.
- Lovecraft Lite: Ancient beings from Primeval Earth rise up and show us how little we truly understand the natural world, and demonstrating just how weak we really are.
- Lower-Deck Episode: The film is this to the entirety of the franchise. Taking some cues from Cloverfield, the film illustrates the terror of a rampaging kaiju primarily through ordinary humans trying to survive the devastation left behind. Throughout most of the runtime, Godzilla is shot from ground level or other angles that otherwise depict the King of Monsters as so colossal that he's borderline incomprehensible, tweaking him away from being a massive spectacle into a monolithic, impossibly fearsome sign of apocalypse.
- Magic Countdown: A soldier sets a nuke's timer to about an hour and a half in what appears to be midday. The active bomb gets stolen and has to be taken out of the city before it detonates. The soldiers assigned to retrieve it enter the city at sunset and find the nuke with 30 minutes left on the clock. By the time it reads five minutes (and it's nighttime), the nuke manages to be put on a boat and driven out of range from the city. A one megaton bomb is capable of a blast 7 miles wide. Meaning that boat must have been traveling 140 miles per hour at least.
- Male Might, Female Finesse: Inverted with the MUTOs: the male is an agile Giant Flyer, while the female is larger, land-based and relatively slower-moving (which is also Truth in Television for many insect species that inspired these creatures).
- Mama Bear: Upon figuring out that it was Ford who destroyed her nest, the female MUTO relentlessly and mercilessly chases after him.
- Mangst:
- Although Serizawa is a rather calm and stoic man, it's clear he's speaking from the heart when he pleads with Stenz not to go through with the Nuke 'em measure whilst revealing that his father was a Hiroshima survivor.
- Likewise, Ford is quite stoic himself and has tried to move on from his mother's death, but it's still clear he never fully got over it, and it's implied his father has a point when he accuses Ford of having dealt with the loss by running away from it. In the novelization, Ford is worried following his father's death about never seeing his wife and son alive again.
- Masquerade: Monarch has been covering up the existence of Kaiju for some time now, at least as far back as 1954, including Godzilla and the MUTOs. Later MonsterVerse installments reveal they were aware of even more than that, and they've been active since at least the end of the Second World War.
- Meaningful Look: Between Joe and Ford during the male MUTO's attack on the Janjira Power Plant, and at the end between Ford and Godzilla.
- Militaries Are Useless: As per usual for these films. However, once their folly creates a looming catastrophe and leaves them with their hands tied while they try to clean it up, the military decide to just dismantle their plans to kill all the kaiju on their terms (which might not have even worked at all) and just focus on cleaning up the mess they've made with the stolen nuke while Godzilla deals with the MUTOs for them. The military team sent into San Francisco help save the day in the climax by destroying the MUTO nest, which might've also prevented the MUTOs from successfully beating Godzilla to death.
- A Million Is a Statistic: Relatively subdued, but the movie does exhibit this attitude at times with Joe. During the city-threatening Janjira meltdown, Joe orders that the emergency shield doors be kept open specifically because his wife and Ford's mother is among the several plant workers still in there. Joe also, tellingly, only mentions Sandra's death and not the deaths of the several other workers who were lethally exposed to radiation with her when he calls out Monarch covering up the truth.
- Misplaced Wildlife: The Hawaii scene has loon calls, and we briefly see a chameleon (which are restricted to Africa) crawling through the jungle.
- Mistaken for Quake: Somewhat averted. One of Joe Brody's colleagues at the Janjira plant assumes when hearing about the encroaching trail of tremors (actually caused by the male MUTO's approach) that it's an earthquake, but Joe immediately corrects him, commenting the pattern is far too consistent and concentrated and not jagged enough in shape, and the fact the vibrations are increasing in strength further discredits the idea that it's a mere earthquake. Both Joe and a fellow worker at the plant make a point of referring to the vibrations as "tremors" or "seismic anomalies" instead of earthquakes.
- Mr. Exposition:
- Joe Brody spends maybe half his entire screentime espousing story-relevant info which fills the audience in on important details. For example, he at one point warns a trained nuclear plant engineer that she'll die in minutes if she fails to Outrun the Radiation-ball, almost as if she doesn't already know that, to tell the audience what kind of danger she's in.
- Drs. Ishirō Serizawa and Vivienne Graham exposit about the Kaiju's biology, abilities, behavior and what kind of threat they pose, taking over Joe's role as the film's chief expositors when Joe dies.
- The Mockbuster: Poseidon Rex, a monster film featuring an amphibious dinosaur that threatens the human race. It had already been on DVD since October 2013, but it was given a special theatrical release in April 2014 to get some more publicity in the wake of the hype surrounding Godzilla.
- Monster Delay: Godzilla didn't fully appear until about halfway through the movie, and he didn't have more than a few seconds of screentime until the final act of the film.
- Monster Munch: Jainway, Whalen, and the rest of Serizawa and Graham's colleagues at the Janjira Black Site exist solely to be slaughtered by the sheer havoc of the male MUTO's adult emergence and escape, establishing how this thing is so massive and powerful that it can decimate even the most well-prepared echelons of humanity without even trying.
- Monumental Damage: The Golden Gate Bridge and (in a tongue-in-cheek version of this trope) the replica Statue of Liberty and Eiffel Tower in Las Vegas are among the landmarks that get torn apart in the film. Waikiki, with 90% of the hotels on Oahu, gets flooded. Many notable San Francisco buildings are trashed, the Transamerica Pyramid being an exceptionnote . In the novelization, Godzilla also causes some damage to Alcatraz Island in the Golden Gate Bridge scene.
- Mood Whiplash:
- A violent, action-packed scene of the male MUTO savaging an army squad and destroying a military vehicle to access the nuke suddenly snaps to a surprisingly touching and heartwarming scene of the MUTO couple courting and caressing lovingly.
- As the male MUTO attacking civilians in a train, destroying airliners and people in an airport undergoing a screaming frenzy, Godzilla's foot appears, and everyone promptly shuts up, and hilariously enough, so does the music.
- More Deadly Than the Male: Implied and then averted with the MUTOs. Whilst the female MUTO is far larger and stronger than the male, the male can fly, and is far more agile. They are both able to put up a good fight against Godzilla (and nearly take him down working together) and the film treats them both as equally dangerous.
- Morton's Fork: Elle Brody is trapped on a road with a group of other people with Godzilla on one side and the winged MUTO on the other.
- Multi-Armed and Dangerous:
- Both MUTOs possess eight limbs total: the female has four forelegs, two hind legs, and a set of smaller arms, while the male MUTO has two forelegs, two hind legs, a pair of enormous wings, and a set of smaller arms.
- The Teaser Trailer Monster has several arms with hooked claws.
- Mutual Kill: Subverted in the Final Battle. Godzilla collapses from exhaustion after killing both the MUTOs, and he's presumed dead in the final scene, until he growls and his eyes open.
- Mythology Gag:
- The boat on the dock in the final showdown is marked "Go Whale Tours." Godzilla's Japanese name is simply a combination of the words for gorilla and whale ("gorira" and "kujira", respectively).
- There's a shot of a hole right through a wide skyscraper, as if something dived through it — similar to a hole Zilla made in Godzilla (1998).
- The backstory involves a nuclear submarine disappearing and the Americans and Soviets blaming each other for it before finding out that a certain nuclear dinosaur was the real culprit. This brings to mind the early scenes of The Return of Godzilla.
- In this film, Godzilla was first discovered in 1954, the year the original Gojira film was released.
- The old high-tension wires with electricity pumped through them in an attempt to kill a kaiju is trotted out again.
- Dr. Serizawa, the man who built the Godzilla-killing oxygen destroyer, is present — but in actuality he fills a role similar to Dr. Yamane/Shigezawa/Hayashida, as scientific adviser to the military on all things prehistoric and deadly.
- Bit of a double mythology gag—in addition to the above, his first name is "Ishirō" as a reference to the director of the original Godzilla film, Ishirō Honda.
- Godzilla being an ancient beast from a time when the conditions on Earth were severely inhospitable to human life and his conflict with other monsters from the same time period references Godzilla Raids Again. In both, the military attempts to lure fighting kaiju away with a fake-out plan, which falls apart.
- Also somewhat similar from the original film, which Godzilla is believed to have evolved from a hybrid species of dinosaurs and prehistoric sea reptiles.
- The kid getting separated from his parents on the train harkens back to when Fumiko and Kazuo were separated in King Kong vs. Godzilla. Even his getup (shirt, shorts and baseball cap) is evocative of the Showa films.
- The Brody's old house in Janjira contains a tank holding an old moth cocoon which is marked, uh, "Mothra". More precisely it was in a tank labelled "Dad's Moth", with the label partly covering the marking "Janjira" — spelling out "Dad's Mothra".
- The media dub Godzilla "King of the Monsters" at the end of the film.
- There is a large red paper pteranodon in Ford's Japan classroom. Additionally, one can see a theropod dinosaur skeleton and a biology picture of a moth.
- The echolocation poster in Joe's apartment has a bat and a moth communicating with each other.
- The way Godzilla kills the female MUTO is the same way he killed the Gryphon in the script of Godzilla (1994). In the same vein, Godzilla is awakened to specifically fight two kaiju endangering the Earth — and one is winged.
- There is a Stegosaurus toy on the table during the scene where Sam is watching TV footage of Godzilla kicking the crap out of the male MUTO.
- The way Godzilla's spines light up is VERY similar to Godzilla: The Series.
- Godzilla's breath weapon is less a concentrated solid beam that explodes like the '80s–2000s movies but more of a whispier heat wave like his earlier Showa movies.
- When Ford fills Femuto's nest with gasoline, the camera pans in to show a golden dragon statue head, a not so subtle reference to Ghidorah.
- Ford's killing of the nest that summons Mama Bear into a chase scene evokes Godzilla (1998).
- The Navy display on the Saratoga displays Godzilla's name as "Gojira," the Hepburn transliteration of the katakana.
- Likely unintentional, but in Janjira, we see a giant millipede and a giant cockroach.
- Just like in Godzilla (1998), the final act of the film features the human characters setting fire to the villainous monster's nest, but at the cost of invoking the mother's wrath. The only difference is that it's not Godzilla who's angry at the humans this time.
- The prequel comic Godzilla: Awakening has a location called "Moansta Island", a reference to Monster Island.
- This isn't exactly the first time Godzilla's used his Atomic Ray to fry an opponent from the inside out.
- Godzilla's pan up Reveal Shot references his entry in The Return of Godzilla.
- A newspaper clipping in Joe's apartment mentions atomic tests (which are later revealed in the film to have actually been covert attempts by the military to kill Godzilla) and gives the year as 1954, the same year that the original Godzilla film came out.
- Naval Blockade: The American Navy attempts to block Godzilla's approach to Oahu's shore. Unfortunately, they didn't anticipate Godzilla swimming under their blockade and displacing so much water that the destroyers and aircraft carriers get tossed about in the waves that proceed to flood the city in a tsunami.
- Never Trust a Trailer:
- The teaser trailer is made up entirely of original footage. There's no centipede monster, Las Vegas is shown smashed in broad daylight instead of San Francisco, the train is wrecked in Honolulu, and Godzilla is revealed in a pan-up shot in darkness, not a Face-Revealing Turn in a smoke cloud (though there's a similar shot in Chinatown during the climax). As a minor example, a Statue of Liberty is shown missing part of its face. New York is never visited, but the statue shown is a replica in Las Vegas, which is part of the film.
- The "send us back to the stone age" comment refers to the EMP coming from what used to be the Janjira NPP, not Godzilla — and most of the scenes of destruction are wreaked by the MUTOs, not Godzilla himself.
- Elle does not say "You're scaring me" at any point in the phone call with Ford.
- Ford Brody's "Can we kill it?" line does not occur with Serizawa and Serizawa is talking to Admiral Stenz with his above quote.
- The trailers for the film itself presents Godzilla as the principle threat, with the MUTOs as secondary antagonists, or the lesser of two evils. In the film itself, Godzilla is not depicted as an antagonistic threat, but as a borderline heroic force and a symbol of nature's balance. In fact, Godzilla deliberately moves out of the way of multiple ships and even seems to share a "yeah I know that feeling" moment with Brody while he's being whaled on by the last MUTO. Aside from the tsunami he causes that has very likely killed at least dozens of people in an attempt to intercept the MUTOs already actively smashing up Honolulu, the only casually he's "responsible" for is the Golden Gate Bridge, and it's really due to the Navy.
- News Monopoly: In the novelization, just after the Hawaii battle between Godzilla and Hokmuto breaks out, this event naturally takes over just about every U.S. TV channel, breaking down the Masquerade which Monarch has spent decades enforcing.
- The New '10s: The film's primary time frame.
- Nice Job Breaking It, Hero
- The train carrying the nuclear warheads meant to take out the MUTOs is ambushed by a MUTO, which promptly eats one of the nukes.
- Since the MUTOs get to the nuke ship a good hour before the timer is set to go off, the only thing it accomplishes is to provide them with a radiation source to incubate their nest with.
- The Navy accidentally provoke Godzilla into destroying the Golden Gate Bridge.
- Godzilla stops the flying MUTO with a quick tail swipe into a tall building... which then collapses on top of it.
- No-Holds-Barred Beatdown: The MUTOs give Godzilla one when they double-teamed him. It is such a pounding that he fell over unconscious and they continued to beat on him some more. Prior to that, Godzilla was curbstomping each MUTO whenever they were going one on one.
- Non-Malicious Monster:
- Godzilla's not particularly interested in fighting with humans and goes out of his way not to fight them even when they are opening fire on him. Like Gareth said, humans are like ants to him. You don't go out of your way to stomp on every ant you see, do you? He also dives under a ship while approaching Honolulu rather than just going through it without a care.
- The MUTOs are certainly indifferent, even callous, but they aren't really evil; most of the destruction they cause is just due to them being so large, and through the movie they act like actual animals. There are even sympathetic moments with them, such as the loving moment the couple have sharing a nuke, and the mother crying at the destruction of her nest. Notably, the destruction the female causes to Las Vegas seems largely incidental as she just walks through the city in a straight line, tearing down any structures that are blocking her direct path and ignoring everything else, and the female's Unstoppable Rage at the climax is entirely provoked.
- No OSHA Compliance: The nuclear plant at the beginning has very long corridors the team has to run down to Outrun the Fireball, with no interim doors or safety systems.
- No-Sell: The MUTOs are only mildly annoyed by even the heaviest ordnance the military can bring to bear. Godzilla, on the other hand, often doesn't even notice that the humans are attacking him.
- Not Dead, Just Asleep: After defeating both the male and female M.U.T.O, Godzilla collapses from a combination of exhaustion and his injuries sustained during the fight. The next morning he appears to be seemingly dead, only for him to wake up with a loud snort having just been sleeping the whole time.
- Not Drawn to Scale: As is usually the case in the franchise, Godzilla's size is... flexible. He's officially listed in marketing materials as around 350 feet tall. In the film he is frequently 2-3x that against known objects and in some shots and other marketing material including the poster more resembles a mountain.
- Nothing Is Scarier: A lot of the time, the presence of the monsters are felt through the paths of destruction they leave in their wake rather than actual appearances on-screen. Many scenes have significant moments of silence before the monsters reveal their extremely terrifying presence. All in all, the movie is seen more through human perception than the monsters'.
- Notably, we never see at all what the MUTOs' larval forms look like, but we do see the Worm Sign left by Hokmuto's escape from the cavern leading into the sea, which gives us a hint about how large it was, and his presence is still felt during the meltdown.
- Not Quite Dead:
- When Monarch realize that the MUTO cocoon in Janjira is done feeding and is about to hatch into a new, more dangerous form, they attempt to kill it by electrocuting it to death. All bioluminescent light from the cocoon ceases along with all its detectable life-signs. Then when Monarch send a worker to take a closer look at a broken-off section of the dead cocoon, the matured MUTO suddenly explodes out, alive and none worse for wear.
- In-Universe, Femuto's egg was assumed by Monarch to be completely "dormant" after excessive study and testing, but they realize it's awakened and hatched many years later.
- Godzilla himself is an (anti)heroic case at the movie's end. After a long and tiring battle where he almost died, which ends with him killing the female MUTO, Ford witnesses Godzilla collapsing in the ruins of San Francisco. He's still there the next morning, leading people who are combing through the ruins for survivors to believe that he's dead. They're proven wrong when he suddenly snorts and his eyes open. Fortunately, with the MUTOs dead, Godzilla no longer has any interest in sticking around.
- Not-So-Abandoned Building: A variation. The whole of Janjira is believed by the world to be an irradiated death zone, and with no civilians approaching for miles, Monarch has constructed a containment site where the destroyed Janjira power plant once stood so they can monitor the MUTO cocoon.
- A Nuclear Error: In real life, the yield of the 1954 Castle Bravo bomb was 'megatons, not kilotons' (specifically 15 megatons), so there is no way a Minuteman warhead would make it look like a firecracker.
- Nuclear Option: Overlapping with Nuke 'em. Whilst Admiral Stenz does eventually decide to authorize a highly-risky attempt to kill the Kaiju with a nuclear warhead, to the military's credit, the plan is only proposed once they realize the MUTOs are looking to reproduce and become Explosive Breeders roughly halfway through the movie. The military also aren't oblivious to the fact they already tried nuking Godzilla before and failed to kill even that one Kaiju, with Captain Hampton believing modern nukes will overwhelm the three Kaiju in the present due to producing a far greater concussive blast.
- Nuclear Weapons Taboo: When Admiral Stenz talks with Serizawa after deciding to use a nuclear warhead against the Kaiju, Serizawa hands Stenz his father's watch. Stopped at 8:15 ever since the morning of the 6th of August 1945, in a town called Hiroshima. Serizawa hopes it'll be enough to dissuade him. Though he's visibly provoked to thought, Stenz ultimately decides to use nukes anyway. This is a reference to the original Godzilla, who was a dinosaur mutated from overexposure to nuclear radiation; the entire concept was created as a metaphor for the horrors of nuclear war, which naturally the Japanese knew very well at the time of the original release. Since this movie attempted a more natural, scientific explanation, a nod was thrown in for the true origins of Godzilla. Godzilla: Awakening, which has been retconned from the larger MonsterVerse's canon by Monarch: Legacy of Monsters, states that Godzilla did surface for the first time in centuries due to the radiation of the atomic bomb dropped there, as it attracted the attention of Shinomura.
- Nuke 'em:
- Overlapping with Nuclear Option. Although the movie makes it clear that the military are not making the decision to deploy a nuclear warhead lightly, it's still also clear their plan has a relatively high chance of going horribly wrong. The nukes deployed against Godzilla in The '50s failed to kill or even cause permanent damage to one kaiju and now the military are trying to kill three of them the same way (Serizawa calls the military out on this, and Captain Hampton justifies it by saying contemporary nuclear warheads are far more powerful than what was used in the 50s). Drs. Graham and Serizawa point out that if even one kaiju survives the blast, the excess radioactive fallout will energize it and likely make it even more dangerous, but they end up Ignored Experts when Admiral Stenz decides to approve the plan anyway. Ultimately, the plan backfires horrifically when the female MUTO steals two of the nukes from a train, and the male steals the third one after it has been armed and is counting down, and he takes it to the center of San Francisco, putting over 100,000 un-evacuated civilians in mortal danger of the blast whilst also giving the female MUTO the radiation source she needs to fertilize her young.
- Serizawa reveals that almost as soon as humanity became aware of Godzilla's existence in the mid-20th century, their response was to build bigger and more powerful nuclear weapons all in an attempt to kill him. Bear in mind, this Godzilla incarnation ultimately proves during the movie to be one of the more heroic iterations of the character, and he never attacks humanity or other kaiju without provocation or reason, making it seem in hindsight like the military in the 50s just saw a gigantic animal and thought, "It's big and looks scary and we don't understand it, kill it". Godzilla: Awakening states this was more of a Nuclear Option, since the nuclear strike against Godzilla was only made when he and another kaiju were approaching a population center, and the nuke did succeed in killing Shinomura for good.
- Offscreen Moment of Awesome: The Hawaii battle between Godzilla and Hokmuto happens almost entirely offscreen. It's the first direct confrontation between Godzilla and one of the MUTOs, and it's MonsterVerse Godzilla's first fight overall; and it's the first time anything has managed to drive the MUTO off at all, with the creature having been depicted as an unstoppable force of nature up to this point. But all we see of the fight anywhere is a few scant, blurry glimpses of footage on the TV at the Brodys' house.
- Off with Her Head!: The female MUTO's fate, after Godzilla fries her neck from the inside with his radioactive breath and rips her head off.
- Oh, Crap!: Considering it's a Godzilla movie, expect it to be everywhere.
- There's the realization by Serizawa and company that the female MUTO has awakened.
- Also in Honolulu, several bystanders at the beach get a moment like this when they notice that the tide has suddenly gone out, and clearly realise exactly what that heralds. Or would, if there weren't monsters involved in this particular instance.
- Shortly after the power comes back on at Honolulu Airport, the train passengers start to scream when the lights reveal the male MUTO on it's rampage...and scream even louder when the train starts moving towards it.
- Older Hero vs. Younger Villain: Godzilla is millions of years old, while the MUTOs are only fifteen years old at mostnote — if we exclude their larval and metamorphosing phase, then the MUTO adults are only a few days old at most.
- Ominous Fog: When the MUTOs and Godzilla arrive in San Francisco, it's foggy (as it usually is in SF), and when a MUTO EMP goes off, everything goes quiet until jets start falling from the fog.
- Ominous Latin Chanting: György Ligeti's very creepy, very ominous "Requiem" (which had previously been most closely associated with 2001: A Space Odyssey) plays during the HALO jump. It was also used in almost all of the trailers for the film.
- One-Hit Kill: Godzilla performs one on the male MUTO, by way of a Tail Slap into a skyscraper. Amusingly, the way Godzilla turns around to deliver said attack looks almost casual.
- One-Word Title: "GODZILLA (ゴジラ)".
- Outrun the Fireball:
- During the Janjira plant incident, Sandra Brody and the other inspectors run while being followed by an enormous smoke cloud, representing the leaking radiation from the reactor. Unfortunately, none of the inspectors that were ahead of her make it before the blast shield closes.
- At the climax Ford barely makes it out of the way of an enormous gasoline explosion he himself ignited in order to destroy the MUTO eggs.
- Pacified Adaptation: This version of Godzilla focuses on the human characters a lot more than the monster fights. This has been a very common criticism of this adaptation series as a whole, although this one is particularly guilty of it.
- Parallel Conflict Sequence: While Godzilla and the two MUTOs duke it out during the Final Battle, the military squad is on a mission to destroy the MUTOs' nest and get the missile out of the city.
- Plot Armor: Ford has a big case of this, surviving no less than four close encounters with the MUTOs which devastate his surroundings, and in two of those encounters where Ford was joined by trained fellow soldiers, he was the Sole Survivor. Subverted with Joe — he survives the male MUTO's emergence which killed most of the Monarch staff at the site with a head injury, but then he dies on the chopper to the Saratoga.
- Plot Parallel: In the final act, Ford Brody entering San Francisco to combat the threat of apocalyptic destruction by the military's nuclear warhead is paralleled by Godzilla entering San Fran to combat the threat of apocalyptic destruction by the MUTOs, and Ford's efforts and his post-victory collapse are juxtaposed with Godzilla's own during the climax. Tellingly, this isn't the only time in the film that Godzilla and Ford are in the same location while Godzilla fights the MUTOs. The film hints that just as Ford fights to defend his family and also people like Akio; Godzilla, in his own way, fights to defend the world's balance.
- Poor Communication Kills:
- It seems that despite having the resources of the US west coast at their fingertips, no one is actively watching the hundred foot tall monster or warning other units when it gets near.
- Monarch might've been able to avoid or mitigate what was coming if they had talked to Joe instead of sticking him in a room for interrogation.
- Post-Apocalyptic Traffic Jam: Played With, and more like Mid-Apocalyptic Traffic Jam. Naturally, once the MUTOs' rampage becomes a public-known national disaster, roads become packed with a Big Honking Traffic Jam; with legions of cars packed bumper-to-bumper, and several trying to navigate around the traffic jams by cutting through roadside fields.
- Post-Victory Collapse: After killing both MUTOs, Godzilla exhaustedly flops to the ground, spending the next few days taking a nap before he finally wakes up and leaves San Francisco.
- Pragmatic Hero: Interestingly, Godzilla qualifies. He doesn't go out of his way to cause destruction and chaos or attract attention from the humans or MUTOs, and in fact he never attacks the humans until they open fire on him first.
- Previews Pulse: The second trailer for has them, during the scene where Godzilla is revealed from within an enormous smoke cloud. By contrast, the first trailer played the same scene without any pulses, instead playing Ligeti's Requiem during then.
- Primal Fear: The HALO jump scene has Ford Brody and the other soldiers jumping out of a plane at such a high altitude that they're practically in space. The jump requires them to dive through a massive, thundering storm cloud all the way down into a ruined San Francisco that the eponymous creature is still marauding through. Some of the soldiers even drop right past Godzilla as they get closer to the ground.
- Profane Last Words: Listen closely, and you can hear a soldier attempt to get out an "Oh, shit!" before a MUTO kills him. This would become a Running Gag across the MonsterVerse's subsequent film entries, where a character says these words (or attempts to) just before the film's antagonist kaiju kills them.
- Railroad Tracks of Doom: When the female MUTO attacks the USM train carrying nukes, the train is set on fire and nearly crushes Ford.
- Reality Is Unrealistic:
- When the first trailer was first released, some viewers complained that the parachute jump seen at the beginning was unrealistic, and that spending that much time free-falling without deploying their parachute was a death sentence. HALO (High Altitude–Low Opening) jumps are very real.
- Some critics think that Dr. Serizawa's characterization of Godzilla as the maintainer of nature's balance brings in a goofy mystical aspect to a film that otherwise strives to be as plausible as possible for a Kaiju film. However, this fits very well with the real life biological and ecological concept of a keystone species, where a particular species, frequently some kind of alpha predator (i.e. like Godzilla), has a disproportionate influence on an environment compared to how abundant it is. If such a keystone species were to disappear, its ecosystem would end up collapsing on itself due to the imbalance. The way Serizawa words it is rather grandiose, but the underlying notion isn't as far-fetched as it sounds.
- Reasonable Authority Figure:
- Joe Brody, before the death of his wife at least. He pushes for an emergency meeting because he's concerned about unexplained seismic readings near the nuclear power plant's vicinity, and when the quake chain reaches the plant before the meeting can happen, he rightfully orders the entire plant be taken offline without hesitation. Lastly, there's his tragic Shoot the Dog with Sandra.
- Serizawa himself. When he first sees Joe Brody being interrogated, at first he thinks the guy's a loony. Then he looks at the papers Joe had on him, and notices the patterns perfectly match the ones they're seeing now. When the US Navy picks him up, he also has them bring both Brodys along. He realizes too late that Joe had indeed predicted that something wasn't right about those readings he was examining for the last 15 years. Though his son Ford didn't have the same knowledge, he did provide enough of a clue for Serizawa to figure out that the female MUTO is still a threat.
- Admiral Stenz aims to be this despite the shortcomings created by his narrow mindset. He treats the Kaiju as a threat for a good reason, but he's constantly level-headed, he displays enough respect for the Monarch experts he's provided to not just brush them off without first hearing what they have to say, and he doesn't throw Monarch off his advisory committee the moment they disagree with him on a course of action. To give credit where it's due, Stenz puts his explicit first priority of safeguarding citizens at the front of his mind more than some obsession with the idea of killing the big, scary monster. He also seems to have serious second thoughts about his nuclear plan after he authorizes it, although he ultimately sticks to it, and after this plan horribly backfires and leaves the military with their hands tied, he concedes to holding out hope that Serizawa is right about Godzilla destroying the MUTO threat for them.
- The master sergeant in charge of the EOD train team transporting the nukes is reluctant to potentially compromise such a nationally-crucial high-priority mission by letting Ford (who isn't assigned to the mission) hitchhike a ride with them, pointing out that the assigned team are also EODs whom are supposed to be here, so he doesn't think he needs Ford. Once Ford makes the case that he has fresh experience putting his fingers in live bombs (unlike the assigned team), and he pleads for compassion on the grounds that his family are at the nuke-transporting train's final destination, the master sergeant relents to Ford's request.
- Reclaimed by Nature: The ruins of Janjira fifteen years after the Distant Prologue's events. This is actually a relevant plot point, as not only is vegetation overwhelming the buildings as murky water floods in, but the presence of wild dogs makes Joe realize the ruins are not really irradiated at all.
- Reconstruction:
- The movie takes a Revisiting the Roots approach to Godzilla, bringing back the grim tone and the scary-force-of-nature characterization of the King of the Monsters.
- The movie reconstructs the Lighter and Softer "Godzilla vs." movies that came afterwards; rather than treating such a set-up as a joke like so many parodies have done, it instead treats the "Godzilla vs." style in a straightforward way by introducing the same grim approach as Godzilla had in his initial solo outing.
- Various elements of Godzilla's design are updated to seem more plausible. His feet are rounder like a sauropod's to support his heavy weight, he has gills on the side of his neck to explain how he can live underwater, his armored hide and arms now look crocodilian. In general he's bulkier, as an animal his size and shape probably would be to support its own weight.
- Recycled Title: It's a Continuity Reboot and the third film in the franchise with this title — the fourth film if we count The Return of Godzilla (released in Japan as Gojira).
- Red Herring: Every trailer made Godzilla out to be the primary threat, but in fact the MUTOs are the real bad guys.
- Red Shirt Army: The US military. It's not that they're incompetent, just that they're facing off against something that can emit electromagnetic pulses which disables electronics, something that the military relies on heavily. Small arms fire, or even tank shells against heavily armored creatures that even nukes can't harm doesn't slow them down. Fortunately they realize that Godzilla is more interested in hunting the MUTOs than attacking humans. The army is well aware of their red shirt status, but they're willing to bite the bullet to save as many lives as they can.
- Red Sky, Take Warning: Done for night-time scenes of the urban places the Kaiju have demolished, as a result of all the burning buildings.
- The Remake/Foreign Remake: Of Godzilla (1954).
- Remake Cameo:
- Akira Takarada (who had starred in several Godzilla films including the original) has a cameo in a deleted scene.
- There is also Al Sapienza, who played a taxi driver in the 1998 film.
- In the Japanese dub, Shiro Sano (who appeared in some of the Milennium era Godzilla films) plays a military analyst.
- Retraux: Scenes taking place in The '50s are edited to look as if they were shot on film stock of the era. The cinematographer even used a camera lens not used since The '60s.
- Revisiting the Roots: Going back to the roots of the original, this one is being made Darker and Edgier to feel more like a horror film, with Godzilla being more of a terrifying force of nature and with the grim results of his rampage not glossed over.
- Rewrite: This film gives Godzilla a new origin story that slightly modifies his traditional one: at least some nuclear tests were, in fact, attempts to kill the monster after humans woke him up.
- Riding into the Sunset: When it's all over, Godzilla rises from several hours of Deep Sleep, stomps out to the docks, pauses to do The Roar one last time, and heads out to sea. Once the waves cover his scales, the movie is over.
- Rising Conflict: The plot starts with the nuclear attacks on Godzilla. Things stay largely silent until the Janjira incident. Then things really heat up when MUTOs starts attacking cities and Godzilla goes after them.
- Rock Beats Laser: Because the MUTOs can give off EMP bursts, the Navy arranges for the nuke they plan to use against them to have an ancient analog detonator that runs off of clockwork.
- Rule of Symbolism: Gareth Edwards says that the HALO jump scene was meant to resemble "angels descending into Hell".
- Saharan Shipwreck: The MUTO manages to lift and drop a Russian "Akula" in the middle of a Hawaiian jungle. An "Akula" is a submarine.
- Saved for the Sequel: Although the MUTOs were introduced as Canon Foreigners rather than updated versions of classic Toho monsters in order to give the film a bit more narrative freedom, Gareth Edwards has jokingly stated that he is contacting the casting agents of creatures like Mothra and Ghidorah so that they can appear in sequels. Five years later, and the cast of Ghidorah, the Three-Headed Monster were indeed reunited for the MonsterVerse.
- "Save the World" Climax: Despite a consistently apocalyptic/post-apocalyptic vibe, this human-focused Godzilla film begins with a hero's personal quest to find out what a government agency is hiding in the ruins of Janjira years after an apparent nuclear disaster turned the city into Japan's Chernobyl. The situation gradually escalates as more revelations come to light, leading to a fight to stop the MUTOs (just two of which manage to cause mass destruction on a seaboard-wide scale solely by being active) from becoming Explosive Breeders and overwhelming the world with thousands more of their kind, which leads into the military's plan for dealing with them going spectacularly pear-shaped whilst the MUTOs reproduce.
- Scenery Gorn: Any area/city in the paths that Godzilla and the MUTOs have rampaged through.
- Scientist vs. Soldier: Played Straight during Monarch and the US Navy's cooperation. Monarch didn't try killing the MUTO in its cocoon during the years they were studying it (allegedly with a reasonable explanation that they feared trying to kill it might release the absorbed radiation, although it's also implied they kept it alive so they could study it and because they didn't want to kill a creature they admired while they believed it was passive), but they still play Admiring the Abomination straight when they cooperate with the military to see the MUTOs destroyed to save humanity. When it comes to Godzilla, Drs. Graham and Serizawa clearly admire him as a Physical God a great deal, whereas the US military operation led by Admiral Stenz has no such attitude towards Godzilla and regards him as a threat like the MUTOs. The movie ultimately leans towards the Scientist side of the conflict with the Green Aesop, although the military are not portrayed unsympathetically.
- Sequel Hook: Deliberately averted by Edwards. He says that he typically rolls his eyes at films that go out of their way to introduce plot points near the end for the express purpose of having them resolved in future installments. He prefers to have a film that can stand perfectly well on its own.Edwards: I want a story that begins and ends, and you leave on a high. That’s all we cared about when we were making this; just this film. If this film is good, the others can come, but let’s just pay attention to this and not get sidetracked by other things.
- Serkis Folk: For certain pivotal scenes, Gareth Edwards had Andy Serkis himself hired to control the motions of Godzilla.
- Shooting Superman: The military continues to use conventional weapons against Godzilla, who has survived multiple nuclear strikes. They quickly realize how pointless this is. It's justified against the MUTOs as the conventional weapons are no more effective against them than against Godzilla, but they are capable of distracting the creatures.
- Shout-Out:
- The far-away shot of the HALO jumpers landing past Godzilla is a nod to the first poster for Cloverfield.
- The visual setup of the shot when the door of the HALO jump plane opens, with the setting sun framed dead center just above the horizon, is a reference to the start of the Stargate sequence in 2001: A Space Odyssey'. The use of Ligeti's 'Requiem' from that scene in the film confirms this.
- The massive Godzilla-species skeleton in the second trailer and the plot of an ancient monster going up against equally ancient winged creatures seems evocative of the Heisei Gamera series.
- The loving, tender moment between the two MUTOs echo Edward's previous film Monsters. On a slightly amusing note, the way the two kiss as they share a nuke has been compared to Lady and the Tramp.
- Edwards has said that the team looked at the monsters from Alien and Starship Troopers for inspiration in designing the MUTOs.
- Early images of the toy version of one of the MUTOs show it to be suspiciously similar to the Cloverfield monster, right down to the arms on the abdomen and the layout of the body, albeit with a far more upright posture, two sets of frontal limbs and a pitch black coloration.
- AKIRA served as a major source of visual inspiration as far as portraying the scenes of destruction.
- The main family had the name Brody — a shout-out to Jaws.
- One of the many gags hidden in the opening credits: the paragraph surrounding Bryan Cranston's name is about a man named Walter Malcolm.
- The MUTO eggs, orange and glowing, resemble the nest of Sammael from Hellboy.
- The single word redacted after Gareth Edwards's name is the name of his first movie, Monsters.
- The male MUTO looks like Mothra or Battra and fights like Megaguirus.
- It might not be a coincidence that the Golden Gate Bridge is once again destroyed by a Kaiju.
- Also that the MUTOs charge an EMP: much like Leatherback.
- The opening title sequence is a montage of (fabricated for the movie) old footage regarding nuclear "testing" in the '50s and '60s in the South Pacific, much like the 1998 film.
- In the novelization, the captain leading the team who head into the Nuclear Waste Depository is named Roger Pyle. The actor who portrays him in the movie does kinda look like Private Pyle...
- Godzilla pries open the female MUTO's jaws as part of the finishing move, from the same angle and manner as King Kong did in the 2005 remake.
- The initial disaster in the beginning of the movie happens on Joe's birthday. In other words, Bryan Cranston's birthdays SUCK.
- Monarch's (completely ineffective) plan for dispatching Hokmuto in the ruins of the Janjira reactor is called "Wildfire Protocol".
- Shown Their Work:
- According to this news article◊, Gareth Edwards and his crew prepared for the monster fights by studying footage of animals fighting, so Godzilla's fighting style is based off of those of real life animals such as bears and Komodo dragons.
- There's the tsunami scene which begins when all of the water on the beach is retreating far beyond where it normally would, heading out to sea. This is a real life sign of an incoming tsunami.
- Males offering food to females is a common aspect of animal (and human, for that matter) courtship rituals.
- When Godzilla confronts the MUTO in Hawaii, it immediately flares out its wings and roars. This is exactly what certain birds and insects will do when confronted by a predator, to appear larger and intimidating.
- Sliding Scale of Unavoidable vs. Unforgivable: Is the military's plan to nuke Godzilla and the MUTOs a Nuclear Option as Stenz believes, or a Nuke 'em move as Serizawa believes?
- On one hand; nothing else humanity has tried throwing at the Kaiju has stopped or even slowed them down by much, and the only piece of advice suggesting that Godzilla will peacefully go back to where he came from after killing the MUTOs is mostly conjectural and is pretty esoteric-sounding, in an otherwise semi-realistic setting. Furthermore, the nukes the military are planning to use in the present time setting are noted to make the ones which previously failed to kill Godzilla in the mid-20th century "look like a firecracker" – and according to the prequel comic Godzilla: Awakening, even those nukes proved strong enough to kill another kaiju named Shinomura.
- On the other hand: (1) Godzilla hasn't demonstrated himself to be nearly as active or huge a threat as the MUTOs, (2) they don't know anything about how critical Godzilla's role in the deep sea's ecosystems might be, a fact which Serizawa emphasizes in the novelization; (3) the military already tried to kill Godzilla with nukes in the 50s, and based on Godzilla's reappearance, the Bikini Atoll bombings not only failed to kill Godzilla but probably didn't even scratch him; (4) the military failed in the 50s to kill Godzilla via a nuke, and this time they're trying to kill Godzilla plus two more daikaiju using just a single nuke's power; (5) if the nuke fails to kill even one of the three Kaiju quickly enough, then they will surely feed on the radioactive fallout and become even more powerful, nevermind the possibility that the blast will provoke them to more actively attack humanity in self-defence if they come to recognize humans as a threat for attacking them (as Femuto eventually does in the movie proper).
- Ultimately, the sequel Godzilla: King of the Monsters (2019) effectively comes down on the Unforgivable side of the debate, as Godzilla tanking a nuke point-blank not only doesn't kill him, but it overloads him with excess power that almost turns him into a literal walking, ticking atom-bomb.
- Smash to Black: The first officially-released teaser has two, one right after the first glimpse of Godzilla, another right before the second glimpse.
- Soft Water: Ford takes quite a fall from the bridge, but fortunately for him this trope is in full play.
- So Proud of You: Two in the novelization:
- Ford feels a swell of pride in his son for the latter's strength of character when Sam understands the situation and keeps it together after Sam and Elle have been separated.
- Dr. Serizawa tells Ford Brody before the latter departs with the HALO team to San Francisco to try and disarm the nuke stolen by the MUTOs that his recently-deceased father would be proud of him.
- Soundtrack Dissonance: Played for Laughs — when the female MUTO tears through Las Vegas, Elvis Presley's "Devil In Disguise" plays inside a building as a group of people Late to the Tragedy get a good look at the debris of the monster's rampage.
- Space Whale Aesop: As usual to the franchise's origins as a metaphor. Building up nuclear arsenals results in the awakening of ancient creatures who feed off of radiation, and any attempt to harness or fight back against nature is met with a swift fate — and in the end, only the balance of nature itself (Godzilla) saves the world.
- Spoiler Title: The soundtrack has basically a 20 sentence summation of the plot. Closing with "Godzilla's Victory" and "Back Into The Ocean".
- Spotting the Thread: After breaking back into old Janjira after it was quarantined due to the reactor meltdown, Joe Brody realizes the place isn't radioactive when he spots three dogs chasing each other, when they should be dead from radiation. A quick check of his Geiger counter confirms his suspicions.
- Spreading Disaster Map Graphic: When Serizawa is discussing the nuclear plan with Stenz and Hampton, a screen uses colorful graphics to depict the considerably large-looking blast zone. It's used to further effect in the novelization where, after the nuke is stolen by the MUTOs, a map indicates to Monarch and the military the blast zone shifting as the nuke is being moved by Ford (how the nuke can be tracked is never explained, given how it had to be fitted with clockwork to stop the MUTOs' EMP deactivating an electronic detonation mechanism).
- Standard Snippet: Requiem (György Ligeti) used in the trailers to indicate how this film was Darker and Edgier than other Godzilla movies.
- Starring Special Effects: Subverted. The monsters look amazing, but aren't seen all that much or focused on. The story sticks with the poor humans who are just unfortunate enough to be in the vicinity of the Kaiju as they go about their business.
- Steel Ear Drums: Implied. Ford and the other HALO soldiers don't seem to have had their ears injured by hearing Godzilla roaring at the top of his lungs from less than 1.5 miles away in Chinatown. Bear in mind, the production team deliberately aimed to design the roar of this film's Godzilla incarnation to be as realistic as possible for a creature of his size, audible for miles around.
- Stock Footage:
- The film's opening credits are interspersed with footage from Operation Crossroads's Baker test.
- Footage from the Castle Bravo nuclear test was used at the beginning of the film.
- Stock Quotes: J. Robert Oppenheimer's "Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds." is used prominently in the very first teaser.
- Stock Sound Effect: The MUTO Research marketing website uses a Geiger Counter Crackling as one of its background sounds.
- The Stoic: Admiral Stenz is polite, consistently level-headed, no-nonsense, and scarcely ever raises his voice an octave even when he's making tough calls; even if the calls he makes aren't always the right ones. Somewhat downplayed with Dr. Serizawa, who is calm, soft-spoken and respectful but has a visible emotional range multiple times throughout the movie.
- Stoic Spectacles: Lead Monarch scientist and Godzilla expert Serizawa is a perpetually-calm man, with a lot of subdued mangst, who often wears narrow-rimmed and rectangular glasses. Another Monarch higher-up – named Whalen in the credits and the novelization – also wears narrow but rounder-shaped glasses, and he's at least as calm as Serizawa, and is the only person who doesn't look away when Monarch are attempting to fry Hokmuto in his cocoon.
- Stuff Blowing Up: For a kaiju movie, this one is comparatively restrained with the explodium, more so than the sequels and follow-ups. The only really notable onscreen explosions beyond the military's artillery raining on the Kaiju are the jets falling and exploding under Hokmuto's EMP, the chain of explosions at the Oahu airport, and a Chinatown district going up in a fireball near the movie's end. Burning debris and a burning train decorate the big screen in the train attack scene, but in true Gareth Edwards style, only the aftermath of the flames being lit is seen; not the actual stuff blowing up.
- Stunned Silence: At the airport in Honolulu as the MUTOs are rampaging and destroying airliners, the entirety of the population within the airport is screaming. The second Godzilla's foot appears, they promptly shut the hell up, even the music.
- Summon Bigger Fish:
- Played With. The humans don't exactly summon Godzilla, but Dr. Serizawa knows that humanity needs Godzilla to stop the MUTOs.
- Sort of coincidental but the male MUTO, who is significantly smaller than Godzilla, calls to the female for the purpose of mating, who happens to be almost as large as Godzilla.
- Suspiciously Specific Denial:
- Typing in "conspiracy" into the MUTO website brings up:M.U.T.O. ASSURES ALL PERSONNEL, THERE IS NO CONSPIRACY IN OUR ORGANIZATION.
- Typing in "Godzilla" or the name of any other kaiju from the franchise gets you:SYSTEM CANNOT CONFIRM OR DENY THE EXISTENCE OF THIS LIFEFORM.
- Typing in "conspiracy" into the MUTO website brings up:
- Swallowed Whole: The female MUTO massacres a group of soldiers on a pier by swallowing them all in one gulp. From the way she leans her open jaws towards Ford when she has him dead to rights, it can be inferred she was going to grant him the same demise before Godzilla comes to his aid.
- Tagline: "The world ends. Godzilla begins."
- Technology Levels: Mentioned poetically for dramatic effect by Joseph Brody when he screams that the EMP coming from Janjira NPP's ruins will "send us back to the Stone Age".
- That's No Moon:
- Subtle nonverbal example, achieved by means of clever cinematography. Ford and some other soldiers are doing a HALO jump into San Francisco, which Godzilla has recently ravaged. As they get into visual range of the city, we see Ford's point of view as he scans over the numerous burnt and ruined skyscrapers. Then he catches on to one "structure" that is moving, and sees several of his guys diving right past it... This is just the trailer, though. In the movie, it's pretty obvious that it's not a building, as Godzilla is busy in the middle of a battle with a MUTO.
- In the movie proper, there's a Freeze-Frame Bonus where a mountain starts moving in the train attack scene, revealing that the "mountain" is actually the female MUTO, before she makes her presence known to the EOD team.
- Thousand-Yard Stare: Serizawa seems to have one when he's observing the destructive aftermath of the male MUTO's escape which killed most of the other Monarch staff on-site. Likewise, Elle Brody has this look in her eyes when she walks into the makeshift refugee center at the end, covered in dust after spending the night in a shelter surrounded by battling kaiju, before she spots her family.
- Time Abyss:
- Godzilla is suggested in the prequel comic to have survived the Permian Extinction and shifted between dormancy and active hunting across 250 million years, appearing at various points throughout human history.
- It's implied the MUTOs' eggs lay dormant in a massive skeleton for millions of years. Godzilla: Aftershock reveals they were specifically there for 3100 years.
- Too Dumb to Live: Can't be a Godzilla movie without military stupidity.
- Whilst the majority of the Honolulu beach-goers sensibly run for high-rise buildings upon seeing the tsunami warning signs, in the camera shot of the barking dog a few moments before the tsunami hits, several people are visible on the ground, on the beach, staring dumbly outward.
- After Godzilla makes landfall on Honolulu, the landing forces decides it's a good idea to open fire on a 350-foot monster with their puny assault rifles, given the flares have shown just how huge he is.
- As Godzilla enters the San Francisco Bay, the Navy pelt him with gunfire on Admiral Stenz' ordersnote . Not only does this not work, but if anything it provokes Godzilla into acting in self-defense when his gills are wounded, likely leading to extra military and civilian casualties. And as of Monarch: Legacy of Monsters, it did.
- They have airplanes flying around San Francisco in anticipation of the arrival of a monster that has already demonstrated EMP abilities powerful enough to disable military-grade aircraft and send them crashing. Not-a-spoiler: they crash all over again.
- Truer to the Text: This film is much more faithful to the original Japanese films than the first American remake of the franchise, Godzilla (1998), in regards to both the character himself and the overall tone of the story. So much so, later Japanese designs borrowed heavily from this one.
- Truth in Television: One of the trailers revealed a scene that takes place on a beach in the evening. The people who were having a simple family get-together suddenly notice the ocean receding and promptly go to high ground. This is exactly what you should do if you witness this phenomenon happening in real life. It's a major warning sign of an oncoming tsunami.
- The military claims that modern nuclear weapons are so much more powerful than the World War II and Cold-War-era nukes that were originally used against Godzilla that they were firecrackers by comparison. This is and isn't true and rests very much on the type of weapons you choose to compare. The USA tested several hundred nuclear weapons in the pacific, of which only a handful were 'hydrogen-(thermo-)nuclear' weapons with an explosive force equivalent to that of megatons (millions of tons) of TNT. The rest were mere kilotons-of-TNT-equivalent (thousands of tons) nuclear-fission and atomic weapons such as the ones used in the Atomic Bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The type of nuclear weapon (taken from one of the US's 'Minuteman' strategic nuclear ballistic missiles) used by the US's military in their attempt to kill the MUTOs, however, could only have an explosive force equivalent to some 300–400 kilotons — making it more than a hundred times more powerful than the kiloton-range weapons used on Japan, but less than a tenth as powerful as some of the megaton-range weapons (e.g. Castle Bravo, 1954) the USA tested in the Pacific in the 1950s.
- Two-Keyed Lock: The Navy's nuclear warhead is armed this way at San Francisco Bay, partly due to relying on an unconventional clockwork arming mechanism which is unaffected by the MUTOs' EMP.
- The Unmasqued World: Monarch's been upholding the Masquerade and keeping the existence of Godzilla and other Kaiju secret since at least 1954. Needless to say, three of the creatures appearing all at once and trashing several major cities has broken it before the movie's end.
- Unreadably Fast Text: The opening credits feature the names of the cast and crew surrounded by narrative text that gets quickly redacted about a half-second after appearing. The text deals mainly with the efforts of MONARCH and the military to kill Godzilla and cover up his existence, along with text about a Conspiracy Theorist who thinks the Illuminati are behind all this.
- Villain Protagonist: Subverted. This version of Godzilla is The Hero (nominally) rather than a villain the trailers made him out to be. The creators say he's an anti-hero.
- Waist-Deep Ocean: The 108-meter-tall Godzilla stands upright and towers over the Golden Gate Bridge — despite the bridge having a clearance of 67 meters and the water beneath the bridge having a depth of 115 meters.
- We Hardly Knew Ye:
- Sandra Brody and her relationship with her husband and son are succinctly fleshed out, before she's killed, all within the first twenty minutes of the runtime.
- All of Serizawa and Graham's colleagues at the Janjira containment site get only a little screentime before they're killed amidst the male MUTO's awakening.
- We Have Become Complacent: Done subtly with the Las Vegas attack scene. The female MUTO has escaped from Yucca Mountain and is rampaging through the Entertainment Capital of the World on its way to meet its mate on the West Coast. We get a shot of the inside of a busy and dangerously unaware casino where the people are so preoccupied with the slot machines that they all ignore the news report on the interspersed televisions warning about the monster. When the MUTO's EMP suddenly knocks out the power in the building, everyone's reaction is a mass groan of annoyance, then an abrupt switch to screaming panic when the MUTO crashes through the roof.
- Wham Shot: As the soldiers hide from the female MUTO on the bridge, she steps over them, revealing her pregnant belly.
- An eagerly anticipated one for the audience. The female MUTO, furious at Ford destroying her eggs, confronts Ford…and a blue glow starts emanating from Godzilla’s spines…
- What Happened to the Mouse?:
- The dog at the beach. Its fate is uncertain, though it does at least escape from the beach when the tsunami hits.
- Elle's coworker Laura is entrusted with Sam when the latter is put on a bus evacuating the city, but she's completely absent from the bus in the next scene featuring Sam.
- Wide-Eyed Idealist:
- Admiral Stenz regards Drs. Serizawa and Graham this way, thinking they admire the creatures they study a little bit more than they're supposed to. In actuality, the pair are closer to The Idealist, as they're well-aware just how dangerous the Kaiju can be to humanity (even trying to kill the male MUTO in its sleep once they became aware of how dangerous it was), and the movie implies they're right to protest against the military's plan to use a nuke and to insist Godzilla is ultimately an ally rather than enemy to mankind — the sequel retroactively outright vindicates them on the latter two counts.
- In the novelization only, Monarch chief scientist Dr. Whelan believes Monarch can harness the MUTO cocoon's power to solve the worldwide energy crisis, until the MUTO bursts free.
- Window Love: Joe does this with Sandra across the window of the door behind which he had to lock her to keep irradiated steam from leaking into Janjira.
- The Worf Barrage:
- Several of the US' nuclear tests in the Pacific were attempts by the military to kill Godzilla. They didn't work, and may have even made him stronger.
- Godzilla himself does this towards the MUTOs. While he beats the male one pretty badly in Hawaii, in San Francisco his initial attack against both of them doesn't quite work out, and he suffers a tag-team attack by the duo.
- Worm Sign:
- Much like Zilla in Godzilla (1998), Godzilla creates a massive swell in the water as he swims, with his dorsal spines protruding from the top. Taken further when the act of landfall is preceded by a tsunami.
- The MUTOs make their presence known with an EMP field they emit, causing all electronic devices to fail within their radius.
- You Can't Thwart Stage One: The military (quite spectacularly) fail to stop the MUTOs from wrecking San Francisco, mating, and building a nest for their thousands of newly-fertilized eggs. For the last act of the film, humanity's best bet is in hoping Godzilla will destroy the MUTOs entirely before their eggs can hatch and flood the world with a newborn MUTO horde.