Skip to content
a kaiju returns

New teaser gives us first look at Godzilla Minus Zero

Director Takashi Yamazaki told Cinemacon attendees that sequel is first Japanese film shot for IMAX.

Jennifer Ouellette | 55
gigantic godzilla monster rising out of the ocean with a great roar
He's baaaack! Credit: YouTube/Toho
He's baaaack! Credit: YouTube/Toho
Story text

The Godzilla franchise is going strong in 2026, with Apple TV’s Monarch: Legacy of Monsters (part of Legendary Entertainment’s MonsterVerse) and the pending release of Toho’s Godzilla Minus Zero, the hotly anticipated sequel to 2023’s critically acclaimed, Oscar-winning Godzilla Minus One. Toho unveiled the first short teaser at Cinemacon, and it has now been released online for our viewing pleasure.

(Spoilers for Godzilla Minus One below.)

Director Takashi Yamazaki wanted to return to Godzilla’s filmic roots with Minus One, setting the events in postwar Japan and tapping into the monster’s symbolic representation of the Japanese perspective on the 1940s nuclear holocaust—while also incorporating all-too-human themes of guilt and redemption. The film followed Koichi Shikishima (Ryunosuke Kamiki), a kamikaze pilot who was trying to flee from duty when Godzilla attacked the small garrison where he was hiding. Koichi’s courage failed him, and he ended up one of only two survivors, wracked with guilt for failing to act.

Koichi sought atonement by taking on a woman, Noriko Oishi (Minami Hamabe), and a young orphaned girl, Akiko (Sae Nagatani), and working aboard a minesweeper to support his new “found family.” Then a mutated Godzilla re-emerged, and Koichi redeemed himself by joining the collective fight to defeat the rampaging kaiju, after which he reunited with an injured Noriko, who had a mysterious black bruise spreading over her neck. The final scene showed a chunk of Godzillian flesh beginning to regenerate as it sank into the sea.

Godzilla Minus Zero is set two years after the events of the first film, with Kamiki and Hamabe reprising their roles as Koichi and Noriko, along with Nagatani as Akiko. There’s not much to see in 45 seconds—Yamazaki is still keeping details tightly under wraps—but we do get to see lots of devastation and airborne planes preparing for battle—plus everyone’s favorite kaiju wading past the Statue of Liberty toward New York City in the final shot. So it looks like a regenerated Godzilla is expanding his swathe of destruction beyond Tokyo.

Yamazaki has clearly retained the visual tone that made the film’s predecessor so striking. It’s also the first Japanese movie filmed specifically for IMAX, per Yamazaki. So we’re optimistic and pretty psyched for this one.

Godzilla Minus Zero hits US theaters on November 6, 2026; it opens in Japan on November 3, 2026.

Photo of Jennifer Ouellette
Jennifer Ouellette Senior Writer
Jennifer is a senior writer at Ars Technica with a particular focus on where science meets culture, covering everything from physics and related interdisciplinary topics to her favorite films and TV series. Jennifer lives in Baltimore with her spouse, physicist Sean M. Carroll, and their two cats, Ariel and Caliban.
55 Comments