I don't wanna say, but overall, Godzilla movies have had very little actual Godzilla action in them, Godzilla's there for an easy 20 min in this one, but I can understand that some are frustrated.
Edwards explains it very plainly:
I get strangely more excited about, What if we didnt do this? That would be rebellious, that would be different, he said.
"If this was the first-ever Godzilla movie or monster movie or blockbuster set in a city that might be destroyed using CGI, we would have probably just gone for it in the way that everything else does, he admits. But youve seen that so many times over the last few years. Its the default third act of all these movies, and that worked against us.
You get battle fatigue quite quickly when you have these fight sequences at the end of the movie, he said. And you can easily peak and then hit a plateau and then theres nowhere else to go.
It obviously doesn't work for some people, but I don't know, we've seen so many movies lately full, full of action to the point where like Gareth says, it just becomes the norm or what is expected.
For the MUTOS, they're a cool concept that allow to bring in Godzilla and a rivalry, Godzilla being nature's weapon (sort of) to restore balance. I don't think you can just have a movie of Godzilla showing up, wrecking **** (not on purpose obviously, he's been a benevolent figure for a while now) with no antagonist, and nothing around it.
That's the challenge, it may be a Godzilla movie, but it still needs a story surrounding it, that makes sense and is not a retread of that horrendous 98 Zilla.
About Godzilla not being the focus, I'm sure if he was there right from the start in the movie, or for like the majority of the movie, it would just be uneventful & some people would just complain as well, it's 100 times more exciting & rewarding (at least for me, but also from a filmmaking point of view) to have your monster off camera or in the background, a phantom presence, only showing bits of it, building up & building up, but I guess that's the problem here for some, that they feel like it doesn't build up to much.
In your opinion, those who feel that way, what should Edwards have done differently?
And about your audience's reactions, if they really reacted like this to those scenes, I don't know what to tell you, we don't have the same perception at all. That scene Uncle talks about was on the contrary a pretty dramatic scene for me without any question