The outsized hero of Godzilla: King of the Monsters makes his 35th appearance on the big screen when the latest movie in the long-running series opens nationwide today. And it鈥檚 by far his biggest appearance.
In fact, say two 天美麻豆 scientists whose research into the life and times of the creature appears this week in the , Godzilla has doubled in size since 1954, the year the series began.
Godzilla鈥檚 鈥渆volutionary biology,鈥 write Nathaniel Dominy, the Charles Hansen Professor of Anthropology, and Ryan Calsbeek, an associate professor of biological sciences, is a 鈥渢opic of enduring interest among devotees, with numerous fan pages and forums dedicated to the subject.鈥
So why not an academic paper?
鈥淎ll of this is silly conjecture, of course鈥擥odzilla is a commercial enterprise, and the films are responding to market forces,鈥 they write. 鈥淵et still we wondered, what agent of natural selection could act so swiftly and at such high intensity?鈥
At its inception, Godzilla was a 50-meter tall metaphor for indiscriminate destruction, particularly U.S. hydrogen-bomb testing in the Marshall Islands, which, in the film, destroyed the creature鈥檚 deep-sea ecosystem. Sixty-five years, the creature is now 119.8 meters tall, battling it out for supremacy against three other kaiju, or monsters from Japanese cinema. At stake? The future of humanity.
Film critics and fans have long observed that Godzilla has been getting larger over time, as buildings become taller. In fact, Godzilla has evolved 30 times faster than any organism on Earth, far surpassing the rate of evolution observed in 2,500 natural organisms today. 鈥淕odzilla鈥檚 body was consistent for some 150 million years until 1954, suggesting a sudden and strong selective pressure on body size during the past 65 years,鈥 write Dominy and Calsbeek.
The researchers propose that Godzilla has been 鈥渆volving in response to a spike in humanity鈥檚 collective anxiety.鈥 They use U.S. military spending as a proxy for humanity鈥檚 collective anxiety and find a strong correlation between it and Godzilla鈥檚 growth between 1954 and 2019. 鈥淚f Godzilla is the embodiment of our anxiety, they argued, then our collective anxiety appears to be spiking as it did during the nuclear age of the 1950s.鈥
In 1965, the writer Susan Sontag 鈥渁sserted that a great enough disaster cancels all enmities and calls for collective action in the service of self-preservation,鈥 Dominy and Calsbeek write. 鈥淚ndeed, Godzilla鈥檚 near invincibility almost always eventually leads humanity to the realization that they must work together to defeat it (except, of course, when the creature becomes an unlikely ally, but that is another story). The monster is thus more than a metaphor; it is a fable with a lesson for our times.鈥
Amy Olson can be reached at amy.d.olson@dartmouth.edu.