Why MONARCH: LEGACY OF MONSTERS Can’t Use Certain Toho Titans, According to an Executive Producer
When Monarch: Legacy of Monsters returns for Season 2, it’s bringing more than just giant-sized chaos. Yes, Godzilla and Kong are still very much in play, but the next chapter of the Apple TV+ series is also introducing a brand-new Titan built specifically for the show.
It turns out there’s a strategic reason why some classic Toho monsters haven’t appeared, and Executive Producer Tory Tunnell has now shed light on what’s going on behind the scenes.
Speaking about whether certain Toho creatures were off limits to avoid stepping on the toes of the theatrical Monsterverse films, Tunnell said:
“I mean, yes, but not in a way that it’s a, you know, it feels like it is, gatekeeping. I think it’s something that we’re also, we want the world to feel as big as possible, and so for us to we don’t want to be overlapping with what the features are doing, because that just narrows the world.”
It isn’t about restriction for the sake of restriction. It’s about scale. The Monsterverse works best when it feels massive. If the series and the films start circling the same Titans at the same time, that sense of scale shrinks fast.
Tunnell continued, “So we’re always trying to look for, you know, what story hasn’t been told, and how can we tell that in a really effective way? And how can we take pieces that we know are coming or that came before us and have it all feel of a piece and all feel cohesive in a way that also surprises and doesn’t exhaust.”
That creative philosophy led directly to the introduction of a brand-new monster, currently dubbed Titan X. While fans have caught glimpses of the creature in trailers, its full form is still being kept under wraps.
What we do know is that it lurks beneath the water and wields massive tentacles that look more than capable of throwing down with Godzilla and Kong. Some fans have speculated about similarities to Toho’s Biollante, but no one involved with the series has confirmed any connection.
From the beginning, the plan was to build something original.
“I love that question. We, had some bad auditions from Mothra. No, I think that we felt like it would be really fun to do something new and to give audiences something that they weren’t expecting and to have that Titan navigating, you know, places of the planet that we haven’t seen before,” Tunnell said.
“And allowing it to have its own sort of personality in its own way, and also having it be something that, you know, we always think about, these monsters are always a great metaphor, as in any great sci-fi or any great horror for what it means to be human.”
That playful Mothra joke aside, the reasoning runs deeper than novelty. For Tunnell and the team, these Titans aren’t just giant creatures smashing cities. They’re reflections of human fears and anxieties.
“And these monsters have always represented this existential crisis that we have, and, you know, the things that are out of our control,” Tunnell said. “And so for this season, this monster is very bespoke to the drama that we’ve conceived, and it felt like it had to be inevitable that it was this Titan and no other.”
Titan X is designed specifically to serve the emotional and thematic direction of Season 2. This creature exists because the story demanded it.
That doesn’t mean classic Toho characters are gone forever. The Monsterverse has already introduced new fan-favorites like the Skar King, and there’s always the possibility of references or teases. But for now, characters like Jet Jaguar or Hedorah aren’t stepping into Monarch’s spotlight.
Monarch: Legacy of Monsters Season 2 premieres February 27 on Apple TV, and with a mysterious underwater Titan ready to shake things up, the series looks poised to carve out its own corner of the Monsterverse without stepping on the big screen’s turf.
If Titan X can hold its own against Godzilla and Kong, we might be looking at the franchise’s next breakout monster.
Source: ComicBook