Godzilla vs. Kong Rescheduled to be Relased... Sooner
The creators of Godzilla vs. Kong decided to go against the movie industry and instead of delaying their movie, they accelerated the premiere by a few months.

And we like such surprises, don't we? After a flood of delays of high-profile blockbusters like the new Bond and Morbius, the time has come to reverse this unpleasant trend. We're finally going to see a movie sooner than we thought we would, and it's not just any movie, it's the highly-anticipated monsterverse mash Godzilla vs. Kong.
The movie was supposed to come out on May 21, but the new schedule says we'll see it whole 2 months earlier, on March 26. The form of distribution remains unchanged, so it will be released at the same time in multiplexes and on HBO Max (via Deadline).
The rescheduling is interesting as it means the start of a marketing campaign, which we should expect in the coming weeks. The producers don't have much time to waste, as two months will be gone in a flash, and they still need to remind all potential viewers of the project's existence.
Godzilla vs. Kong is the fourth film in the MonsterVerse franchise managed by Legendary Entertainment and Warner Bros. It will be a direct sequel to Godzilla II: King of the Monsters. Adam Wingard (Blair Witch, You're Next) is in charge of directing the movie, and it will star Alexander Skarsgard (The Legend of Tarzan), Millie Bobby Brown(Stranger Things), and Kyle Chandler(Manchester by the Sea).
- “How could you do something so fun and be so miserable.” Tom Hardy hated making this movie and has no intention of starring in a similar one
- “The most irresponsible bit of filmmaking.” Harrison Ford really likes the movie Brad Pitt starred in just to avoid being sued
- “It seemed like a fun storyline.” Aarti Mann's character in The Big Bang Theory was so unpopular that she wasn't kept on the show for too long
- “Philip Seymour Hoffman's tears in this scene were real.” 26 years ago, Tom Cruise gave one of the best performances of his career in this 3-hour film
- Steven Spielberg's 50-year-old film, which Quentin Tarantino called “the greatest movie ever made,” will soon be available at the Peacock