Max Borenstein included Mechagodzilla in his first draft for the third MonsterVerse film, Godzilla: King of the Monsters, which he wrote before director Gareth Edwards left the project. When Legendary Pictures brought him in to polish the Godzilla vs. Kong script, he was pleased to see it had made the cut this time: "It made a lot of sense to be there because then you have these two iconic adversaries, but neither one is a villain. So let's introduce an iconic villain." According to director Adam Wingard, this Mechagodzilla was inspired by the simple, blocky designs of classic Transformers. Lindsay MacGowan, Jared Krichevsky, Darnell Isom, and Simon Weber of Legacy Effects worked on the machine's design, with Wingard favoring Krichevsky's approach after just his first revision.They were instructed not to give Mechagodzilla "shoulder rockets", which were ultimately added anyway, but otherwise given free reign. Krichevsky previously designed a Mechagodzilla for another Warner Bros. film, Ready Player One, based on Noriyoshi Ohrai's advance poster for Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla II, though he wanted his second rendition of the character to be as distinct as possible. He put an "x" pattern on the panels running down its arms and legs as a homage to the original Mechagodzilla's Cross Attack Beam and borrowed Kiryu's "ribbed neck and abdomen pieces." Its design was also influenced by the endoskeleton of the T-800 from the Terminator movies , the Dinobots from Transformers: Age of Extinction., and the spines of Mecha-King Ghidorah. Its hands were inspired by mirror hand syndrome and chameleons.
Scritto da il 05-03-2025 alle ore 09:34

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