The King of Monsters is revving up to roar again.
Legendary Tokyo-based Toho Studios shared the title Monday morning for mighty Godzilla’s next rampage, revealing that the follow-up to the 2023 smash-hit Godzilla Minus One will be called Godzilla Minus Zero (also styled Godzilla -0.0) and that Oscar-winning director and VFX supervisor Takashi Yamazaki will return at the helm.
The title was unveiled during this year’s “Godzilla Day 2025” event in Tokyo, where a teaser logo and first-look artwork were revealed — both leaning into stark black-and-white brush strokes that mirror the minimalist design sensibility of the previous film’s branding. Yamazaki co-drew the emblem, signaling creative continuity while potentially teasing a darker, more expansive monster mythoscape.
Godzilla Minus One set several new benchmarks. Made on a reported budget of just $15 million, it defied expectations by earning more than $113 million worldwide and became the first film in the Godzilla franchise’s 70-year history to win an Academy Award, taking home the Oscar for best visual effects (in a category crowded with Hollywood tentpoles with vastly bigger budgets). It also became the all-time top-grossing live-action Japanese film at the North American box office.
According to insiders, the new film is being positioned not just as a sequel but as a statement piece. Yamazaki and Toho are reportedly locking in a late-2026 global release window, with production ramping up in New Zealand and Norway later this year. Full cast and story details remain under wraps.
Building upon the success of Minus One, Toho can be expected to step up both the scale and ambition for Godzilla Minus Zero — leveraging an re-awoken monster franchise that’s now firmly in blockbuster-prestige territory for viewers throughout the West. Godzilla Minus Zero will be the 31st Japanese feature in the famed kaiju franchise (not including the U.S. co-productions made with Legendary Entertainment).
