I quite enjoyed Godzilla vs Kong.
Although it did have its problems, the film made me feel like a kid again watching the original King Kong vs Godzilla for the first time.
Going into the sequel, Godzilla X Kong: The New Empire, I was hoping the film could recapture that feeling for me.
Directed once more by Adam Wingard, the film follows Kong in Hollow Earth, where he discovers he is not the last of his species, exposing the world to another threat which he cannot face alone.

The New Empire is primarily a King Kong film, with Godzilla’s role feeling a little tacked on at times.
He is absent for most of the movie until the final fight where he is needed to team up with Kong.
Thankfully, Kong more than makes up for Godzilla’s lack of screentime, with The New Empire feeling like it focuses more on the monsters than any previous film in the Monsterverse, which is what I wanted.

Another thing I wanted was more screentime for Jia (Kaylee Hottle).
In my review for Godzilla vs Kong, I stated that I wished she had more screentime because she was pretty much the only interesting human character in the entire thing.
Well, I got my wish in The New Empire, with the human storyline focusing on her.
This resulted in the humans being much more bearable than in previous Monsterverse films, with the cast of Rebecca Hall, Brian Tyree Henry, and Dan Stevens standing out more.

The monster and human storylines both converge by the third act in a massive CGI battle between monsters which, while visually fun, had me a little uneasy.
This final fight was supposed to be a big, crowd-pleasing moment, yet I found myself kind of wincing because of the sheer amount of human casualties which are never acknowledged.
It felt kind of weird that the movie was trying to entertain me with the spectacle of a big monster battle, when said battle was clearly resulting in hundreds of thousands of fatalities at the very least.
The fact that the movie does not acknowledge such losses felt a little off to me.

Another issue was that, well, this film came after Godzilla: Minus One.
Granted this issue is through no fault of the movie, but it did feel like a step down going from one of the greatest Godzilla movies ever made to a big dumb action movie.
Still, this only dulled my experience with the film slightly.
Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire is a solid entry in the Monsterverse.
The Kong storyline is great, the humans are much more bearable, and, though the final fight does feel a bit off-putting by the unacknowledged casualties, it is still fun.
I look forward to seeing what the Monsterverse does next.




