I am pretty disappointed with this one and with the second episode before this one. In the second one, there was no MechaGodzilla, just “MechaGodzilla City” which was made out of the nano metal that MechaGodzilla was originally made out of 20,000 years before these story events take place, and somehow the nano metal can move on its own and shape into whatever it can, like the city for example. Like the metal was of MechaGodzilla, but we never saw MechaGodzilla himself make an appearance, only the “city” or whatever.
K, now this third installment was just as disappointing: Mothra is only an egg, and Ghidorah is only sticking his three heads out from underneath the clouds via wormholes per head, attacking Godzilla with its heads. Only grabbing Godzilla with its mouths attacking him that way from what I think I remember. We only see Mothra and Ghidorah show their full bodies in visions, not while in person.
The only monsters we see in-person appearances of are Godzilla Filius and Godzilla Earth! Only the two Godzillas, which Filius was killed in the first episode.
They should have made a fourth installment where all of the other monsters made full on in-person appearances (which may not have been possible with MechaGodzilla given the fact that nearly all of the nano metal was destroyed in the second installment). I don’t know. But this whole series had a lot of potential, but then it was all wasted by coming up with bizarre dumb ideas that have nothing to do with what people want to see in monster movies! MechaGodzilla is in it, but except he’s a city. Mothra is in it, but except she’s an egg; she never hatches. Ghidorah is it, except he’s only a ghost version of himself sticking his three heads out of the clouds. Who at Toho came up with this idea? I’m sorry but whoever it was wasn’t thinking straight. Plus, I find it offensive that Ghidorah was referred to metaphorically to God in this series. I find that offensive, as it felt like the show was metaphorically and figuratively and philosophically trying to imply God to being an evil entity or to be Satan, as they literally call Ghidorah God in the movie! Philosophy in such shrewdness and crudeness has always been messed up and way off and always missing the point behind religion! Philosophy is not how one goes about trying to understand religion, as philosophy is anti-religion! They were trying to implement philosophy into this series in many areas throughout the series, which were ludicrously distorted ideas that they were trying to give to viewers to think about, which shouldn’t be thought about any more than one should think about “What if the moon is made out of cheese?”