Godzilla, Mothra and King Ghidorah: Giant Monsters All-Out Attack
is a 2001 Japanese kaiju film directed by Shūsuke Kaneko. Produced and distributed by Toho Studios, it is the 26th film in the Godzilla franchise and the third film in the franchise's Millennium era, as well as the 25th Godzilla film produced by Toho.
Plot
During a meeting of the Japan Self-Defense Forces (JSDF) for the potential return of Godzilla, Admiral Taizo Tachibana briefs cadets about Godzilla's first attack. An American nuclear submarine is reported missing, which is later found to have been destroyed by Godzilla. Tachibana's daughter, Yuri Tachibana, films a docudrama with her crew for BS Digital Q at Mount Myōkō, where a mysterious earthquake randomly ensues. The odd earthquake returns later that night burying a biker gang and leaving one surviving trucker who witnesses the monster Baragon, which he mistakenly identifies as Godzilla. The next day, Yuri's friend Teruaki Takeda supports her theory that a monster may have been the cause of the mysterious Myōkō earthquake by giving her a book on The Guardian Monsters.
More details
| author | Keiichi Hasegawa Masahiro Yokotani Shūsuke Kaneko |
|---|---|
| contentLocation | Yokohama |
| director | Shūsuke Kaneko |
| editor | Isao Tomita |
| events | dinosaur |
| genre | fantasy science fiction |
| keywords | baragon beat biker gang bonin islands bōsōzoku elderly man fighter jet godzilla godzilla's first attack hakone heat ray injured kagoshima kill king ghidorah lake ikeda meet mothra mount myōkō nuclear submarine ocean floor pacific war survive the 300 |
| musicBy | Kow Otani |
| producer | Shōgo Tomiyama |
| productionCompany | Toho |
| publisher | Toho |
| recordedAt | Japan |
| theme | ghost japanese kaiju monster movie sequel submarine |