MUTO

MUTO
Godzilla film series character

Male and female MUTO featured in Godzilla (2014)
First appearance Godzilla
Created by David Callaham
Gareth Edwards
Matt Allsopp
Portrayed by Matt Cross[1]
Lee Ross[1]
Aliases Winged MUTO (male)[2]
Eight-Legged MUTO (female)[3]

"MUTO (Massive Unidentified Terrestrial Organism)" refers to a fictional species of giant monsters that appeared as the main antagonists in the 2014 film Godzilla. They are the first completely original monster-characters to have appeared in a Godzilla film since Orga from 1999's Godzilla 2000.

Overview

Name

"MUTO" is an acronym for Massive Unidentified Terrestrial Organism. Director Gareth Edwards stated that "it's basically the UFO of monsters".[4] The film's first draft differentiated the male and female MUTO as Hokmuto and Femuto, respectively. Official merchandise connected with the film refer to the male MUTO as "Winged MUTO" and the female as "Eight-Legged MUTO". While the term "MUTO" is used to identify the two parasitic creatures in the film, it is mainly used to reference giant monsters who are yet to be named. Such was the case in the official prequel comic, Godzilla: Awakening, where a hive-minded superorganism from the Permian era that feeds on radiation, is identified as a MUTO before being designated as Shinomura ("Swarm of Death.")[5]

Development

Male MUTO featured in Godzilla: The Art of Destruction.

Upon acquiring the license for Godzilla, Legendary Pictures had planned to feature two new monsters in addition. David Callaham's first draft featured early versions of the MUTOs where they were established as ancient enemies of Godzilla but never established as to why. When Gareth Edwards came aboard the project, he created a back story to bridge the gap between Godzilla's connection with the MUTOs. Edwards brainstormed the idea that, "When these Godzillas were on Earth, there was another creature that would kill them and lay its eggs inside their dead bodies. Therefore, if these creatures ever came back, part of their life cycle would be the ability to attract Godzillas to the surface to kill them for reproduction."[6]

In an interview, Edwards commented that it took over a year to design the MUTO creatures, stressing that it took that long to create something that was aimed to be new and different for today's day and age. Edwards and the design team looked towards past monster characters from such films as Jurassic Park, Alien, Starship Troopers and King Kong for inspiration and reflected back on what made these monsters and their designs so iconic. From this, the design for the MUTO monsters kept evolving and "mutating", according to Edwards, into a design he felt was more cohesive.[7]

Edwards has credited artist Matt Allsopp for creating the majority of the MUTO's designs. Edwards stated, "The DNA of the MUTO is 80 to 90 percent from Matt, he was the main guy". Others contributed to the design of the MUTOs as well such as Weta, Rob Bliss, Steambot, and Legacy, who provided a 3-D model of the MUTOs.[8]

The film depicts the MUTOs as a sexually dimorphic species. The female is much larger and walks on eight limbs - the male is much smaller, with one pair of his eight limbs modified into wings for powered flight. Though the MUTOs have an arthropod-like appearance, filmmaker Guillaume Rocheron likened them more to vertebrates.[8] The angularity of the male MUTO's wing design was inspired by stealth aircraft.[9] As a side-effect of the radiation they absorb as food, the MUTOs are capable of causing electromagnetic interference, and emitting EMP shockwaves from their claws.[10]

Reception

Oliver Gettell of the Los Angeles Times called the MUTOs "Godzilla's most important co-stars", praising them as threatening antagonists that encourage the audience to root for Godzilla.[11] Some viewers have been critical of the MUTOs' design, which was perceived to be similar to that of the monster from Cloverfield.[12] WatchMojo.com listed the MUTOs as #10 on their "Top 10 Godzilla Villains" list.[13]

Appearances

Films

Video games

Comics

References

Bibliography

Notes

  1. 1 2 "Godzilla (2014) - Ending Credits". Retrieved July 22, 2015.
  2. "Godzilla Movie Chibi Figure 2-Pack with Godzilla (Figure A) and MUTO (Winged)". Amazon. Retrieved September 1, 2014.
  3. "Godzilla Movie Chibi Figure 2-Pack with Godzilla (Figure B) and MUTO (8 Legged)". Amazon. Retrieved September 1, 2014.
  4. "Facebook Q&A with Director Gareth Edwards - May 4, 2014". facebook.com. Retrieved August 1, 2014.
  5. Godzilla: Awakening, Max and Greg Borenstein, Chapter 1
  6. Vaz, Mark Cotta (2014). Godzilla: Art of Destruction. San Rafael, California: Insight Editions. p. 22. ISBN 978-1-60887-344-9.
  7. "Godzilla" Director Gareth Edwards explains why monsters still matter on YouTube
  8. 1 2 Vaz 2014, p. 82
  9. Vaz 2014, p. 114
  10. Godzilla, 2014, Legendary Pictures
  11. Gettell, Oliver (May 20, 2014). "'Godzilla's' monstrous costars: What do MUTOs mean for the franchise?". LA Times.
  12. Woerner, Meredith (March 12, 2014). "First descriptions of the new Godzilla monster (that isn't Godzilla)". io9.
  13. WatchMojo.com (September 25, 2015). "Top 10 Godzilla Villains". Youtube. Retrieved September 25, 2015.
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