The Godzilla series had been postponed for nine years, from 1975 to 1984. The drought lasted nearly a decade, and Toho knew that Japan wanted Godzilla back at the time, since re-releases of many Showa Godzilla movies in 1982 brought droves of people into theaters. His 1984 resurrection led to this, as stated by William Tsutsui in his book
Godzilla On My Mind (2004): "[
Gojira (1984)] was not a runaway box office smash, but it was the second-highest grossing Japanese release of the year and sold 3.2 million tickets, well over three times as many as the final Showa series offering in 1975." It was a success, but why didn't it compel Toho to produce yet another Godzilla movie the following year? Instead, they chose to wait five years, resulting in a less-than-expected gross revenue for
Godzilla vs. Biollante (1989) five years later. The most likely reason, IMO, is that Toho wanted to build even more anticipation, but I have heard of many other proposed assumptions. Here they are:
- The 1984 Godzilla suit was lost (assumed to have been stolen, even), which might have delayed any production.
- The contest entries submitted by people for a movie script of the sequel may have consumed more time for production.
- Toho was willing to sit on the growing sales of its merchandise.
- The movie's underwhelming performance in the United States could have given Toho a negative impression on the demand for a Godzilla series.
Are there any known reasons for the moderate gap in time?
