Legendary’s 'Godzilla' Squares Off With 'Shin-Gojira' In This Awesome Sketch By Matt Frank

Legendary’s 'Godzilla' Squares Off With 'Shin-Gojira' In This Awesome Sketch By Matt Frank

With Toho’s Godzilla reboot on the horizon, and Legendary's Godzilla sequel set to hit theaters in 2018, Matt Frank (an artist for various IDW Godzilla comics), has drawn a new sketch that sees these two new incarnations of Godzilla going at it! Hit the jump to check it out!

By NightWatcher - Jan 08, 2016 02:01 PM EST
Filed Under: Fantasy
Matt Frank has done artwork for many IDW Godzilla comics. These include, Godzilla: Kingdom of Monsters, Godzilla: Gangsters and Goliaths, Godzilla: Legends, Godzilla: Ongoing, and Godzilla: Rulers of Earth. Recently, Frank has released a new piece of art that showcases Toho’s new Godzilla facing off with Legendary’s Godzilla.

As you can see in the art below, Shin-Godzilla is slightly taller than Legendary’s Godzilla. This correctly portrays the height difference between the two. Aside from that note, it’s one fine work of art! Even though we’ll probably never live to see this happen, this art gives you an idea about how this showdown would look. What do you think? Share your thoughts in comment section below!

Who do you think would win this battle?
GLADIATOR II Poster Places Paul Mescal's Lucius In The Arena As Trailer Release Date Is Revealed
Related:

GLADIATOR II Poster Places Paul Mescal's Lucius In The Arena As Trailer Release Date Is Revealed

GLADIATOR II Stills Reveal First Look At Pedro Pascal's Marcus Acacius And More; Story Details Revealed
Recommended For You:

GLADIATOR II Stills Reveal First Look At Pedro Pascal's Marcus Acacius And More; Story Details Revealed

DISCLAIMER: ComicBookMovie.com is protected under the DMCA (Digital Millenium Copyright Act) and... [MORE]

ComicBookMovie.com, and/or the user who contributed this post, may earn commissions or revenue through clicks or purchases made through any third-party links contained within the content above.

Forthas
Forthas - 1/8/2016, 3:28 PM
I think the Legendary Godzilla wins!
smlshin
smlshin - 1/8/2016, 3:48 PM
I find the American versions to nail the overall look of Godzilla, more so than Japan's version. Even the awful 1998 film looked pretty cool.
marvel72
marvel72 - 1/8/2016, 6:43 PM
The American version of Godzilla looked great but the Japanese make the better movies.
DeusExSponge
DeusExSponge - 1/8/2016, 8:45 PM
I like the American version better. Still not sure why Toho said they wouldn't bow down to Legendary.
OniGoji
OniGoji - 1/8/2016, 9:41 PM
@Marvel72 Eh, I love the TOHO Godzilla films, been a huge fan all of my known life. But the Japanese Godzilla films, with the exception of good select handful, aren't films that set a high bar. In fact the bar is pretty low for a Godzilla film to be good or acceptable. Despite being made overseas, GODZILLA(2014) is definitely a Godzilla movie above most TOHO produced Godzilla film. And that's coming from a diehard fan here. It's mid-tier in my book, it's not perfect, but it's a good American produced film that's certainly above many TOHO entries.


Because you don't need to be Japanese to know how to make a faithful or good Godzilla movie, you just need to respect the source material, make Godzilla look, behave, and feel like Godzilla. And deliver a satisfying GODZILLA movie that TOHO and most of Japan would openly accept in approval. Which has all happened. Because again, you don't have to be Japanese to get Godzilla, you just need to have love for the franchise and know what you're doing. Same goes for any other popular tent pole that had a successful film or film adaption.

OniGoji
OniGoji - 1/8/2016, 9:42 PM
@DeusEXSponge

It wasn't really TOHO who said that, TOHO loves GODZILLA(2014) personally as it saved the franchise and made Godzilla profitable again. The one who said that they weren't going to "Bow to Hollywood" was one of the staff crew of SHIN Gojira and the movie's director Shinji Higuchi.

I've been hearing that it's most likely a "pride" thing. Japan is usually expected to know Godzilla well, and is expected to be the only country who knows how to make Godzilla films. But the country's love for Godzilla slowly dwindled in the early 2000's, leading to less ticket sales, less profit, and less bank for TOHO. The films weren't doing it anymore, and it showed when Final Wars bombed in the box office. The franchise was considered finished, with the last Japanese Godzilla film being more of a whimper than a bang.

Sure, Japan knows how to make traditional Godzilla movies, but in the endgame at the time, they were showing that they didn't know how to sustain Godzilla with better franchise movies. Fast forward 10 years later, Hollywood wants a 2nd round with Godzilla this time with Legendary Pictures G-fan Tull Thomas taking the charge. He pulls an indie director known as Gareth Edwards into directing GODZILLA as his first blockbuster, and not only succeeds in making a good Godzilla film, but it's a box office success that revives the franchise and makes Godzilla highly profitable again.
Earning Legendary and Warner Bros a GODZILLA trilogy and a new generation of fans for TOHO with a lot of bank.

While Shinji Higuchi praises GODZILLA as a masterpiece, he believes that Japan shouldn't be out-done in the game of Godzilla. Japan made the G-game first, and to have a newbie Hollywood director beat Japan at a 60-year game, revive it, and make successful bucks at the box office. It's no doubt a pride thing, TOHO is just cashing in on Godzilla's new found success, they accept and love America's new Godzilla. But some Japanese directors just don't want Japan to be outdone in a home-grown game that they were once invincible at playing. If you've been following Higuchi, he doesn't like Hollywood very much, the reception for his Attack on Titan films pretty much explains the sad story.
DeusExSponge
DeusExSponge - 1/8/2016, 10:11 PM
OniGoji - Ahhh I see, so it's just a couple of people not wanting to be beaten in their own game. I can sort of see why they said that "bow down" comment now. Thanks for enlightening me on the situation, I was honestly confused by that comment.

Also the new Godzilla director made Attack on Titans?! Yeesh, I know I shouldn't be judging a movie so early. But damn I hope this guy knows what he's doing with Godzilla.
BlackStar25
BlackStar25 - 1/8/2016, 10:17 PM
...They should make this happen.
marvel72
marvel72 - 1/9/2016, 6:12 PM
@OniGoji

Godzilla(2014) Had great visuals and better acting,it was more serious in tone.However the Toho movies give Godzilla fans what they really want to see Godzilla fighting huge monsters.Can't remember which movie it was I think it was Godzilla On Monster Island where he took on Gigan and King Ghidorah in one of the longest monster fights I have ever seen,about 30/40 minutes long.

My favorite Godzilla movies.

-Godzilla(1954)
-Godzilla(2014)
-Godzilla Vs King Ghidorah (time travel)
-Godzilla Vs Biolante
-Godzilla,Mothra and King Ghidorah:Giant Monsters All Out Attack
-Godzilla:Final Wars
-Godzilla:Tokyo S.O.S
-Godzilla On Monster Island

The next Godzilla movie(American version) with King Ghidorah,Mothra and Rodan could quite possibly be the greatest Godzilla movie thus far.
OniGoji
OniGoji - 1/10/2016, 12:40 AM
@marvel72

THAT IS A SOLID LIST! :D Mine is very much similar with a few exceptions of having a bit more Showa films. None the less, a pretty good mix!

But allow me to educate for a moment.

Godzilla fans want more than just kaiju battles, what Godzilla fans truly want are stories, good enjoyable Godzilla stories. Battles alone cannot save a Godzilla movie if the story isn't good. And while production values, effects, and actors are strong departments that also make or break a Godzilla movie, if the story that the film is trying to tell doesn't feel like a good Godzilla movie, then it doesn't stand up.

Example, Godzilla vs. SpaceGodzilla and Godzilla Final Wars, are considered within the Godzilla fandom to be poor Godzilla films. Both films had ton of Godzilla fighting monsters, but the story wasn't good leading to fans disliking it. Godzilla's Revenge is an obvious fail of a Toho Godzilla movie, although its reasons are quite clear.

Godzilla vs. Gigan while a fun movie to G-fans, isn't held in high regards because the movie uses mostly stock footage when Godzilla and Anguirus fight Ghidorah and Gigan. The stock footage and the less stellar story didn't leave a good impression for Godzilla fans. The only thing really great about it was Gigan and seeing 2 on 2 battles(when it was all new footage). Other then that, it's a film that while "fun" isn't great to the fandom.

Now that doesn't mean that you can't love those movies of course, hell I love Godzilla vs. Megalon! lol So by all mean, if they are solid to you, then more power to ya!

But GODZILLA(2014) was a different beast. No Godzilla fans wanted a big blockbuster Godzilla movie, they just wanted a Hollywood Godzilla movie that gave Godzilla the respect the icon itself deserved. And not be a repeat of 1998.

What Godzilla fans wanted out of GODZILLA(2014) wasn't a beat-by-beat Japanese Godzilla movie, all that they wanted was a faithful Hollywood adaption of TOHO's Godzilla that erased the 1998 film. A new film that not only unleashed a modern yet TOHO faithful Godzilla, but also give fans what they wanted back in 1998. Which was delivering a Godzilla movie where Godzilla felt, behaved, and looked like Godzilla, was indestructible, fierce-looking, fought monsters, and saved the TOHO franchise after the bombing of Final Wars. All while wrapped in a competent story that felt like a new venture in the franchise, and could set up bigger blockbusters. It didn't have to look like a TOHO Godzilla movie, it just had to respectfully feel like one in spirit and story. Which is definitely all had.

Don't get me wrong, it flaws, and it's not a perfect Godzilla movie. All fans have their subjective view. But GODZILLA(2014) is considered to be a successful Godzilla film in which America got Godzilla right.(And all it took was a 1998 film guide of "what-not-to do for a Godzilla movie", a G-fan British indie director, a movie production company who loved Godzilla-Legendary Pictures, and a stricter TOHO to make it all air-tight).

Now look what we have from its success, we have a full GODZILLA trilogy, we have Ghidorah, Mothra, and Rodan, and now we get a GODZILLA vs. King Kong movie! While some G-fans have their quirks with GODZILLA, it's very much well loved as much as the TOHO films. Not only for the things it set in motion, but for just being a good Godzilla movie in general.
felixxx
felixxx - 1/10/2016, 2:36 PM
There is a reason Godzilla looks all messed up and sick in the new film. It hasnt been revealed yet but he will go through multiple appearance changes into a final form by the end of the movie.
View Recorder