Godzilla vs. King Ghidorah
Time travelers use Godzilla in their scheme to destroy Japan to prevent the country's future economic reign. Time travellers from the 23rd century return to 1992 to warn Japan that Godzilla will cause…
Godzilla vs. King Ghidorah
Time travelers use Godzilla in their scheme to destroy Japan to prevent the country's future economic reign. Time travellers from the 23rd century return to 1992 to warn Japan that Godzilla will cause a catastrophic nuclear incident in the 21st century and suggest a way to rid the world of him forever. They intend to go back to 1944, to Ragos Island, where a dinosaur was exposed to radiation from the Bikini H-Bomb test and became Godzilla. Upon completion of this task, King Ghidrah appears in 1992 and the visitors' true plan is discovered. They wish to destroy Japan so it will not become the dominant economic force. Luckily for the Japanese, Godzilla was still created and will now fight Ghidrah. —Todd A. Bobenrieth <TAB146@PSUVM.EDU> Time-traveling terrorists use the three-headed monster King Ghidorah in an attempt to prevent Japan's future economic reign. The destruction of a nuclear submarine revitalizes Godzilla, who sets his sights on this new monster as well as Tokyo. In this sequel to Godzilla vs. Biollante, time-travellers from the future warn that Japan will ultimately be destroyed if the monster Godzilla can't be neutralized. They reveal the circumstances of Godzilla's origin: a dinosaur who survived into the 20th Century (and who inadvertently saved a group of Japanese soldiers from American forces during World War II), only to be mutated by atomic testing on his island home. The future people have an audacious plan: to remove the pre-Godzilla dinosaur from his timestream and prevent his mutation. However, things take an unexpected turn, resulting in the creation of a new horror--the three- headed dragon King Ghidrah. —David Thiel <d-thiel@uiuc.edu>
Godzilla vs. King Ghidorah
Action,Adventure,Drama
Film Details
Time travelers use Godzilla in their scheme to destroy Japan to prevent the country's future economic reign. Time travellers from the 23rd century return to 1992 to warn Japan that Godzilla will cause a catastrophic nuclear incident in the 21st century and suggest a way to rid the world of him forever. They intend to go back to 1944, to Ragos Island, where a dinosaur was exposed to radiation from the Bikini H-Bomb test and became Godzilla.
Upon completion of this task, King Ghidrah appears in 1992 and the visitors' true plan is discovered. They wish to destroy Japan so it will not become the dominant economic force. Luckily for the Japanese, Godzilla was still created and will now fight Ghidrah.
—Todd A. Bobenrieth <TAB146@PSUVM.EDU> Time-traveling terrorists use the three-headed monster King Ghidorah in an attempt to prevent Japan's future economic reign. The destruction of a nuclear submarine revitalizes Godzilla, who sets his sights on this new monster as well as Tokyo.
In this sequel to Godzilla vs. Biollante, time-travellers from the future warn that Japan will ultimately be destroyed if the monster Godzilla can't be neutralized. They reveal the circumstances of Godzilla's origin: a dinosaur who survived into the 20th Century (and who inadvertently saved a group of Japanese soldiers from American forces during World War II), only to be mutated by atomic testing on his island home.
The future people have an audacious plan: to remove the pre-Godzilla dinosaur from his timestream and prevent his mutation. However, things take an unexpected turn, resulting in the creation of a new horror--the three- headed dragon King Ghidrah. —David Thiel <d-thiel@uiuc.edu>.