10 Movies Where The Director Hated The Source Material

10. Godzilla (1998)

Godzilla 1998
TriStar Pictures

It won't surprise anyone to learn that Roland Emmerich wasn't much of a Godzilla fan when he signed on to helm the much-anticipated - and eventually widely-reviled - 1998 Hollywood adaptation.

In fact, Emmerich only agreed to direct the movie when he was given a wide remit to reinvent the character to his own fancies.

He wasn't fond of the franchise at all, saying, "I was never a big Godzilla fan, they were just the weekend matinees you saw as a kid, like Hercules films and the really bad Italian westerns. You’d go with all your friends and just laugh."

The Independence Day filmmaker also wasn't keen on the monster's iconic - and let's be honest, bloody charming - guy-in-suit look, and wanted to transform Godzilla into something faster and sleeker for his new vision.

So, not really Godzilla, then?

Emmerich co-wrote the screenplay alongside his regular writer-producer partner Dean Devlin, and rather than hew close to the original 1954 Japanese Godzilla, opted to give audiences a cutting-edge reboot.

This extended to making Godzilla a more "plausible" monster, and when the controversial re-design was first unveiled to producers at Toho - the studio behind the original movie - they simply sat silent for several minutes. Yikes.

Despite a successfully enigmatic marketing campaign, the movie released to near-universal critical disdain and under-performed at the box office. Shocker.

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Stay at home dad who spends as much time teaching his kids the merits of Martin Scorsese as possible (against the missus' wishes). General video game, TV and film nut. Occasional sports fan. Full time loon.