Godzilla eating other monsters?
I was watching one of my favorite Godzilla movies (Godzilla: Tokyo S.O.S.) and looking at the remains of Kamoebas, a thought occurred.
Has there been any instance of a kaiju eating another?
Godzilla has only ever killed, I can't remember a time when he has consumed an enemy.
I am excluding Godzilla's fight with Orga because Orga didn't succeed in his consumption.
godzilla kaiju
add a comment |
I was watching one of my favorite Godzilla movies (Godzilla: Tokyo S.O.S.) and looking at the remains of Kamoebas, a thought occurred.
Has there been any instance of a kaiju eating another?
Godzilla has only ever killed, I can't remember a time when he has consumed an enemy.
I am excluding Godzilla's fight with Orga because Orga didn't succeed in his consumption.
godzilla kaiju
6
I'm fairly sure Godzilla is a vegetarian; i.imgur.com/eYXMSFA.gif
– Valorum
Mar 19 '15 at 0:11
1
A vegetarian diet doesn't seem likely because he has teeth and jaws are designed to do damage to beings similar to him, as seen in "Godzilla Raids Again ". And the question encompasses EVERY monster in the Godzilla cannon.
– Kings Adviser
Mar 19 '15 at 0:17
@KingsAdviser A vegetarian diet doesn't seem likely for Pandas either.
– KSmarts
Mar 19 '15 at 19:52
1
Panda K9s are an unnecessary evolutionary side effect of being an Ursa, and every other function in their digestive system is specifically designed to process bamboo. You defeated your own argument. ( I'm gonna be a zoology major)
– Kings Adviser
Mar 19 '15 at 22:37
1
They also have a body fat index similar to polar bears, who are considerably larger, and not enough muscle tone to go faster than a light trot. They are living plush toys (who are stronger than humans). I mean you defeated your own argument as in they can't logically be mistaken for predators.
– Kings Adviser
Mar 19 '15 at 23:54
add a comment |
I was watching one of my favorite Godzilla movies (Godzilla: Tokyo S.O.S.) and looking at the remains of Kamoebas, a thought occurred.
Has there been any instance of a kaiju eating another?
Godzilla has only ever killed, I can't remember a time when he has consumed an enemy.
I am excluding Godzilla's fight with Orga because Orga didn't succeed in his consumption.
godzilla kaiju
I was watching one of my favorite Godzilla movies (Godzilla: Tokyo S.O.S.) and looking at the remains of Kamoebas, a thought occurred.
Has there been any instance of a kaiju eating another?
Godzilla has only ever killed, I can't remember a time when he has consumed an enemy.
I am excluding Godzilla's fight with Orga because Orga didn't succeed in his consumption.
godzilla kaiju
godzilla kaiju
edited 5 mins ago
JakeGould
8,76545095
8,76545095
asked Mar 19 '15 at 0:00
Kings Adviser Kings Adviser
855716
855716
6
I'm fairly sure Godzilla is a vegetarian; i.imgur.com/eYXMSFA.gif
– Valorum
Mar 19 '15 at 0:11
1
A vegetarian diet doesn't seem likely because he has teeth and jaws are designed to do damage to beings similar to him, as seen in "Godzilla Raids Again ". And the question encompasses EVERY monster in the Godzilla cannon.
– Kings Adviser
Mar 19 '15 at 0:17
@KingsAdviser A vegetarian diet doesn't seem likely for Pandas either.
– KSmarts
Mar 19 '15 at 19:52
1
Panda K9s are an unnecessary evolutionary side effect of being an Ursa, and every other function in their digestive system is specifically designed to process bamboo. You defeated your own argument. ( I'm gonna be a zoology major)
– Kings Adviser
Mar 19 '15 at 22:37
1
They also have a body fat index similar to polar bears, who are considerably larger, and not enough muscle tone to go faster than a light trot. They are living plush toys (who are stronger than humans). I mean you defeated your own argument as in they can't logically be mistaken for predators.
– Kings Adviser
Mar 19 '15 at 23:54
add a comment |
6
I'm fairly sure Godzilla is a vegetarian; i.imgur.com/eYXMSFA.gif
– Valorum
Mar 19 '15 at 0:11
1
A vegetarian diet doesn't seem likely because he has teeth and jaws are designed to do damage to beings similar to him, as seen in "Godzilla Raids Again ". And the question encompasses EVERY monster in the Godzilla cannon.
– Kings Adviser
Mar 19 '15 at 0:17
@KingsAdviser A vegetarian diet doesn't seem likely for Pandas either.
– KSmarts
Mar 19 '15 at 19:52
1
Panda K9s are an unnecessary evolutionary side effect of being an Ursa, and every other function in their digestive system is specifically designed to process bamboo. You defeated your own argument. ( I'm gonna be a zoology major)
– Kings Adviser
Mar 19 '15 at 22:37
1
They also have a body fat index similar to polar bears, who are considerably larger, and not enough muscle tone to go faster than a light trot. They are living plush toys (who are stronger than humans). I mean you defeated your own argument as in they can't logically be mistaken for predators.
– Kings Adviser
Mar 19 '15 at 23:54
6
6
I'm fairly sure Godzilla is a vegetarian; i.imgur.com/eYXMSFA.gif
– Valorum
Mar 19 '15 at 0:11
I'm fairly sure Godzilla is a vegetarian; i.imgur.com/eYXMSFA.gif
– Valorum
Mar 19 '15 at 0:11
1
1
A vegetarian diet doesn't seem likely because he has teeth and jaws are designed to do damage to beings similar to him, as seen in "Godzilla Raids Again ". And the question encompasses EVERY monster in the Godzilla cannon.
– Kings Adviser
Mar 19 '15 at 0:17
A vegetarian diet doesn't seem likely because he has teeth and jaws are designed to do damage to beings similar to him, as seen in "Godzilla Raids Again ". And the question encompasses EVERY monster in the Godzilla cannon.
– Kings Adviser
Mar 19 '15 at 0:17
@KingsAdviser A vegetarian diet doesn't seem likely for Pandas either.
– KSmarts
Mar 19 '15 at 19:52
@KingsAdviser A vegetarian diet doesn't seem likely for Pandas either.
– KSmarts
Mar 19 '15 at 19:52
1
1
Panda K9s are an unnecessary evolutionary side effect of being an Ursa, and every other function in their digestive system is specifically designed to process bamboo. You defeated your own argument. ( I'm gonna be a zoology major)
– Kings Adviser
Mar 19 '15 at 22:37
Panda K9s are an unnecessary evolutionary side effect of being an Ursa, and every other function in their digestive system is specifically designed to process bamboo. You defeated your own argument. ( I'm gonna be a zoology major)
– Kings Adviser
Mar 19 '15 at 22:37
1
1
They also have a body fat index similar to polar bears, who are considerably larger, and not enough muscle tone to go faster than a light trot. They are living plush toys (who are stronger than humans). I mean you defeated your own argument as in they can't logically be mistaken for predators.
– Kings Adviser
Mar 19 '15 at 23:54
They also have a body fat index similar to polar bears, who are considerably larger, and not enough muscle tone to go faster than a light trot. They are living plush toys (who are stronger than humans). I mean you defeated your own argument as in they can't logically be mistaken for predators.
– Kings Adviser
Mar 19 '15 at 23:54
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
I've gone through plot summaries of every Godzilla movie to date, and there's only one example of a scene where one Kaiju consumes, or attempts to eat, another. In Rodan (1956), the newly-hatched Rodan feeds on the Meganulon surrounding the egg. Beyond that, I haven't been able to find any cases of one monster feeding on another. This leads me to believe that, so far, there have been no other instances of one Kaiju actually eating another.
As per your examples, the Kamoeba corpse in Tokyo S.O.S. indicated CLAW marks, not bite marks. This led them to believe that the creature was killed in battle with Godzilla (or a similar monster). Orga, on the other hand, was not attempting to eat Godzilla, but rather to absorb his DNA.
Now, that said, it's important to note that Kaiju MAY have eaten other Kaiju "in the wild", where such things were not shown on-screen. The few glimpses we received of life on Monster Island showed the monsters fighting, but it's safe to assume that life in such a place would be similar to that in the time of the dinosaurs, with a defined food chain & pecking order. On the other hand, many of the monsters found on Monster Island are unique specimens rather than examples of an entire species.
If you're interested in learning more about Kaiju in the Godzilla canon, I highly recommend visiting the Godzilla Wiki site. It has detailed profiles about pretty much every Kaiju featured in the Godzilla universe, including dietary requirements & natural behavior (when such information is available for the monster type). There are also a range of comics & novels featuring Godzilla, most of which I'm not familiar with. It's entirely possibly that another example exists there.
Credit: Thanks to @WillFeldman for pointing out the Rodan reference.
What about in the graphic novels?
– Kings Adviser
Mar 20 '15 at 1:35
add a comment |
We do see a newly hatched Rodan eating several Meganulons in the original Rodan, (1956).
Shigeru able to regain conscious after he survived the cave-in and
only realize that he is now trapped inside the Meganulon's lair,
surrounded by hundreds of Meganulons, where he discovered that the
Meganulon weren't the only creatures that are awakened by the atomic
weapon test, but also a giant egg that was sitting right in the middle
of the cave as the egg sudden began to stir and hatches into the
gigantic ancient winged monster known as Rodan. Rodan proceeds to eat
the entire group of Meganulons in the cave until it has enough
strength to break through the ground and fly away.
I completely forgot about those bear sized worms
– Kings Adviser
Mar 20 '15 at 2:53
+1, I scanned the summary for Rodan and completely missed that part. Now I have to change my answer, since it's flat-out wrong.
– Omegacron
Mar 20 '15 at 13:40
add a comment |
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2 Answers
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active
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2 Answers
2
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I've gone through plot summaries of every Godzilla movie to date, and there's only one example of a scene where one Kaiju consumes, or attempts to eat, another. In Rodan (1956), the newly-hatched Rodan feeds on the Meganulon surrounding the egg. Beyond that, I haven't been able to find any cases of one monster feeding on another. This leads me to believe that, so far, there have been no other instances of one Kaiju actually eating another.
As per your examples, the Kamoeba corpse in Tokyo S.O.S. indicated CLAW marks, not bite marks. This led them to believe that the creature was killed in battle with Godzilla (or a similar monster). Orga, on the other hand, was not attempting to eat Godzilla, but rather to absorb his DNA.
Now, that said, it's important to note that Kaiju MAY have eaten other Kaiju "in the wild", where such things were not shown on-screen. The few glimpses we received of life on Monster Island showed the monsters fighting, but it's safe to assume that life in such a place would be similar to that in the time of the dinosaurs, with a defined food chain & pecking order. On the other hand, many of the monsters found on Monster Island are unique specimens rather than examples of an entire species.
If you're interested in learning more about Kaiju in the Godzilla canon, I highly recommend visiting the Godzilla Wiki site. It has detailed profiles about pretty much every Kaiju featured in the Godzilla universe, including dietary requirements & natural behavior (when such information is available for the monster type). There are also a range of comics & novels featuring Godzilla, most of which I'm not familiar with. It's entirely possibly that another example exists there.
Credit: Thanks to @WillFeldman for pointing out the Rodan reference.
What about in the graphic novels?
– Kings Adviser
Mar 20 '15 at 1:35
add a comment |
I've gone through plot summaries of every Godzilla movie to date, and there's only one example of a scene where one Kaiju consumes, or attempts to eat, another. In Rodan (1956), the newly-hatched Rodan feeds on the Meganulon surrounding the egg. Beyond that, I haven't been able to find any cases of one monster feeding on another. This leads me to believe that, so far, there have been no other instances of one Kaiju actually eating another.
As per your examples, the Kamoeba corpse in Tokyo S.O.S. indicated CLAW marks, not bite marks. This led them to believe that the creature was killed in battle with Godzilla (or a similar monster). Orga, on the other hand, was not attempting to eat Godzilla, but rather to absorb his DNA.
Now, that said, it's important to note that Kaiju MAY have eaten other Kaiju "in the wild", where such things were not shown on-screen. The few glimpses we received of life on Monster Island showed the monsters fighting, but it's safe to assume that life in such a place would be similar to that in the time of the dinosaurs, with a defined food chain & pecking order. On the other hand, many of the monsters found on Monster Island are unique specimens rather than examples of an entire species.
If you're interested in learning more about Kaiju in the Godzilla canon, I highly recommend visiting the Godzilla Wiki site. It has detailed profiles about pretty much every Kaiju featured in the Godzilla universe, including dietary requirements & natural behavior (when such information is available for the monster type). There are also a range of comics & novels featuring Godzilla, most of which I'm not familiar with. It's entirely possibly that another example exists there.
Credit: Thanks to @WillFeldman for pointing out the Rodan reference.
What about in the graphic novels?
– Kings Adviser
Mar 20 '15 at 1:35
add a comment |
I've gone through plot summaries of every Godzilla movie to date, and there's only one example of a scene where one Kaiju consumes, or attempts to eat, another. In Rodan (1956), the newly-hatched Rodan feeds on the Meganulon surrounding the egg. Beyond that, I haven't been able to find any cases of one monster feeding on another. This leads me to believe that, so far, there have been no other instances of one Kaiju actually eating another.
As per your examples, the Kamoeba corpse in Tokyo S.O.S. indicated CLAW marks, not bite marks. This led them to believe that the creature was killed in battle with Godzilla (or a similar monster). Orga, on the other hand, was not attempting to eat Godzilla, but rather to absorb his DNA.
Now, that said, it's important to note that Kaiju MAY have eaten other Kaiju "in the wild", where such things were not shown on-screen. The few glimpses we received of life on Monster Island showed the monsters fighting, but it's safe to assume that life in such a place would be similar to that in the time of the dinosaurs, with a defined food chain & pecking order. On the other hand, many of the monsters found on Monster Island are unique specimens rather than examples of an entire species.
If you're interested in learning more about Kaiju in the Godzilla canon, I highly recommend visiting the Godzilla Wiki site. It has detailed profiles about pretty much every Kaiju featured in the Godzilla universe, including dietary requirements & natural behavior (when such information is available for the monster type). There are also a range of comics & novels featuring Godzilla, most of which I'm not familiar with. It's entirely possibly that another example exists there.
Credit: Thanks to @WillFeldman for pointing out the Rodan reference.
I've gone through plot summaries of every Godzilla movie to date, and there's only one example of a scene where one Kaiju consumes, or attempts to eat, another. In Rodan (1956), the newly-hatched Rodan feeds on the Meganulon surrounding the egg. Beyond that, I haven't been able to find any cases of one monster feeding on another. This leads me to believe that, so far, there have been no other instances of one Kaiju actually eating another.
As per your examples, the Kamoeba corpse in Tokyo S.O.S. indicated CLAW marks, not bite marks. This led them to believe that the creature was killed in battle with Godzilla (or a similar monster). Orga, on the other hand, was not attempting to eat Godzilla, but rather to absorb his DNA.
Now, that said, it's important to note that Kaiju MAY have eaten other Kaiju "in the wild", where such things were not shown on-screen. The few glimpses we received of life on Monster Island showed the monsters fighting, but it's safe to assume that life in such a place would be similar to that in the time of the dinosaurs, with a defined food chain & pecking order. On the other hand, many of the monsters found on Monster Island are unique specimens rather than examples of an entire species.
If you're interested in learning more about Kaiju in the Godzilla canon, I highly recommend visiting the Godzilla Wiki site. It has detailed profiles about pretty much every Kaiju featured in the Godzilla universe, including dietary requirements & natural behavior (when such information is available for the monster type). There are also a range of comics & novels featuring Godzilla, most of which I'm not familiar with. It's entirely possibly that another example exists there.
Credit: Thanks to @WillFeldman for pointing out the Rodan reference.
edited Mar 20 '15 at 13:46
answered Mar 19 '15 at 17:53
OmegacronOmegacron
46.7k8144274
46.7k8144274
What about in the graphic novels?
– Kings Adviser
Mar 20 '15 at 1:35
add a comment |
What about in the graphic novels?
– Kings Adviser
Mar 20 '15 at 1:35
What about in the graphic novels?
– Kings Adviser
Mar 20 '15 at 1:35
What about in the graphic novels?
– Kings Adviser
Mar 20 '15 at 1:35
add a comment |
We do see a newly hatched Rodan eating several Meganulons in the original Rodan, (1956).
Shigeru able to regain conscious after he survived the cave-in and
only realize that he is now trapped inside the Meganulon's lair,
surrounded by hundreds of Meganulons, where he discovered that the
Meganulon weren't the only creatures that are awakened by the atomic
weapon test, but also a giant egg that was sitting right in the middle
of the cave as the egg sudden began to stir and hatches into the
gigantic ancient winged monster known as Rodan. Rodan proceeds to eat
the entire group of Meganulons in the cave until it has enough
strength to break through the ground and fly away.
I completely forgot about those bear sized worms
– Kings Adviser
Mar 20 '15 at 2:53
+1, I scanned the summary for Rodan and completely missed that part. Now I have to change my answer, since it's flat-out wrong.
– Omegacron
Mar 20 '15 at 13:40
add a comment |
We do see a newly hatched Rodan eating several Meganulons in the original Rodan, (1956).
Shigeru able to regain conscious after he survived the cave-in and
only realize that he is now trapped inside the Meganulon's lair,
surrounded by hundreds of Meganulons, where he discovered that the
Meganulon weren't the only creatures that are awakened by the atomic
weapon test, but also a giant egg that was sitting right in the middle
of the cave as the egg sudden began to stir and hatches into the
gigantic ancient winged monster known as Rodan. Rodan proceeds to eat
the entire group of Meganulons in the cave until it has enough
strength to break through the ground and fly away.
I completely forgot about those bear sized worms
– Kings Adviser
Mar 20 '15 at 2:53
+1, I scanned the summary for Rodan and completely missed that part. Now I have to change my answer, since it's flat-out wrong.
– Omegacron
Mar 20 '15 at 13:40
add a comment |
We do see a newly hatched Rodan eating several Meganulons in the original Rodan, (1956).
Shigeru able to regain conscious after he survived the cave-in and
only realize that he is now trapped inside the Meganulon's lair,
surrounded by hundreds of Meganulons, where he discovered that the
Meganulon weren't the only creatures that are awakened by the atomic
weapon test, but also a giant egg that was sitting right in the middle
of the cave as the egg sudden began to stir and hatches into the
gigantic ancient winged monster known as Rodan. Rodan proceeds to eat
the entire group of Meganulons in the cave until it has enough
strength to break through the ground and fly away.
We do see a newly hatched Rodan eating several Meganulons in the original Rodan, (1956).
Shigeru able to regain conscious after he survived the cave-in and
only realize that he is now trapped inside the Meganulon's lair,
surrounded by hundreds of Meganulons, where he discovered that the
Meganulon weren't the only creatures that are awakened by the atomic
weapon test, but also a giant egg that was sitting right in the middle
of the cave as the egg sudden began to stir and hatches into the
gigantic ancient winged monster known as Rodan. Rodan proceeds to eat
the entire group of Meganulons in the cave until it has enough
strength to break through the ground and fly away.
answered Mar 20 '15 at 1:53
Will FeldmanWill Feldman
1,83479
1,83479
I completely forgot about those bear sized worms
– Kings Adviser
Mar 20 '15 at 2:53
+1, I scanned the summary for Rodan and completely missed that part. Now I have to change my answer, since it's flat-out wrong.
– Omegacron
Mar 20 '15 at 13:40
add a comment |
I completely forgot about those bear sized worms
– Kings Adviser
Mar 20 '15 at 2:53
+1, I scanned the summary for Rodan and completely missed that part. Now I have to change my answer, since it's flat-out wrong.
– Omegacron
Mar 20 '15 at 13:40
I completely forgot about those bear sized worms
– Kings Adviser
Mar 20 '15 at 2:53
I completely forgot about those bear sized worms
– Kings Adviser
Mar 20 '15 at 2:53
+1, I scanned the summary for Rodan and completely missed that part. Now I have to change my answer, since it's flat-out wrong.
– Omegacron
Mar 20 '15 at 13:40
+1, I scanned the summary for Rodan and completely missed that part. Now I have to change my answer, since it's flat-out wrong.
– Omegacron
Mar 20 '15 at 13:40
add a comment |
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6
I'm fairly sure Godzilla is a vegetarian; i.imgur.com/eYXMSFA.gif
– Valorum
Mar 19 '15 at 0:11
1
A vegetarian diet doesn't seem likely because he has teeth and jaws are designed to do damage to beings similar to him, as seen in "Godzilla Raids Again ". And the question encompasses EVERY monster in the Godzilla cannon.
– Kings Adviser
Mar 19 '15 at 0:17
@KingsAdviser A vegetarian diet doesn't seem likely for Pandas either.
– KSmarts
Mar 19 '15 at 19:52
1
Panda K9s are an unnecessary evolutionary side effect of being an Ursa, and every other function in their digestive system is specifically designed to process bamboo. You defeated your own argument. ( I'm gonna be a zoology major)
– Kings Adviser
Mar 19 '15 at 22:37
1
They also have a body fat index similar to polar bears, who are considerably larger, and not enough muscle tone to go faster than a light trot. They are living plush toys (who are stronger than humans). I mean you defeated your own argument as in they can't logically be mistaken for predators.
– Kings Adviser
Mar 19 '15 at 23:54