Is Godzilla better as a hero or a villain?
Is Godzilla better as a hero or a villain?
neither, he just is
>1488
Stormfag pls go
He's better as an anti-hero. It gives him depth. Though I did like him as the villain in Godzilla Resurgence.
I like both
Godzilla is better when the plan is getting caught.
>Is Godzilla better as a hero or a villain?
He is better as a force of nature. Neither good nor evil.
he's better as a vero
no, a hillan
Villain. The fact that the advertising for the 2014 movie lied about him being a villain pisses me off.
>that time godzilla was snorting a train of cocaine and it exploded in his face
>MUH GOD OF THE NATURE
>never killed kids for the marketing
Diz
Don't kill kids pls
Better hero type because he has other monsters to fight then. As a force of nature it's vs. humans which relies on some trick to defeat him or a giant robo if we're lucky.
>he
>him
Fpbp
>referred to as KING of the monsters in both American and Japanese materials
>canonically referred to as male in Toho approved dubs and material
Off ya pronoun cunt
he's neither good nor bad. He's a force of nature.
Eat the most fresh of cowpies.
???
Godzilla would be best as a reality tv show host
For story: force of nature, but it is a narrative one trick pony
For flicks make him kick kaiju ass over Tokyo
What is Hedorah's prefered pronoun?
I prefer Herozilla but can't stand the revisionism that trying to make him a prehistoric natural-born monster.
Godzilla did a pretty good podcast recently with Joe Rogan.
In the original movies he was generally seen as a prehistoric beast reawakened, with the bomb only adding to his abilities
That dinosaur shit was only in the Heisei series
I had a Godzilla stuffed animal as a little kid but I left it on the stovetop and the bottom of his godzilla feet burned up and I cried. But it was all good Mom sewed little green felt godzilla patches back on his feet and tail.
With all that in mind, Godzilla (1998) is the best Godzilla.
I mean he is not a real moster until the humankind ruined his life with a H-bomb test
>it's a "i actually liked the emmerich zilla" post
>but I left it on the stovetop
Should I ask why you had your toy there?
I could only assume as a logical adult that the high vantage point would allow stuffed Godzilla the ability to create the most chaos and destruction in the kitchen.
>"It's over, Tokyo. I have the high ground."
What did he mean by this?
Without sounding like too much of a fag I tell that story in my job to people to illustrate a time where as a little kid I thought things were horrible and beyond repair but in the end everything turned out OK (because an adult fixed them).
>godzilla represents the nukes
>but it's also a force of nature
what the fuck did the japs mean by this
Godzilla = reaction of nature, so to speak
Basically, bomb opens up Pandora's box to horrors of humanity, godzilla represents a lashing out of nature caused by this, sort of.
I just watched the original again the other night and every single time, I come away with that thought.
It's quite easy, you don't need a K I N O inspired brain to realize their message has always been "you continue using nukes, you have no idea what will happen, and mother nature might just fight back."
>get nuked
>invent unstoppable city destroying monster that persists after nukes have been used as vengeance from nature.
what did buttblasted nips mean by this?
HIROHITO DINDU NUFFIN
He wuz a good boy
He wuz gonna conquer China an' turn his life around
Given that best Godzilla films have been the ones where he is the villain I would say that he works the best as an antagonist.
Hero/Anti-Hero Godzilla is best and all the best zilla movies are this