Monarch: Legacy of Monstersis two shows in one. In certain scenes, it’s little more than a breezy, big-budget series about a bunch of monster hunters, and it’s extremely good at being that. In other instances, it feels like a homework assignment — a piece of IP entertainment designed solely to bolster up a section of its greater franchise that was never all that developed in the first place.
The new Apple TV+ show is, of course, a spinoff of Legendary’s Godzilla and King Kong-led monster franchise, and it’s named after the government organization that was created to track and monitor the powerful titans at the center of its larger, multimedia series.Monarch, consequently, dedicates a not-insignificant portion of its runtime to subplots revolving entirely around its eponymous organization and, specifically, its responses to the monster attacks featured in 2014’sGodzillaand 2017’sKong: Skull Island. The show flashes back so many times to the San Francisco-set third-act disaster fromGodzilla, in particular, that it calls to mind Marvel Studios’ post-Avengers: Endgameobsession with The Blip.

Its repeated callbacks to its franchise’s greatest hits aren’t the only things aboutMonarch: Legacy of Monstersthat make it reminiscent of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, either. The show feels distinctly tied to the wave of Cinematic Universe-style franchise-building that has dominated Hollywood for the past 10 years, but which seems to be in the midst of slowly but surely dying out.Monarchrepresents both the best and the worst of this brand of storytelling, and its flaws may reveal why audience interest in franchises like the MCU is fading at an exponential rate right now.
An entertaining show buried under IP obligations
Monarch: Legacy of Monstersisn’t, by any means, a complete miss. On the contrary, it’s a frequently entertaining show that looks significantly better than a lot of the other big-budget TV series that have premiered in recent memory. Thanks to the participation of cast members like Kurt Russell, Wyatt Russell, and Kiersey Clemons,Monarchalso has enough star power to keep you consistently engaged. In fact, whenever it decides to simply trap its central stars in dangerously close proximity to a new, impeccably well-designed monster,Monarchis more entertaining and thrilling than it has any right to be.
Despite that fact, the series often diverts its focus away from its monster-hunting adventures in order to explore both the founding of Monarch and the organization’s morally dubious modern-day methods. These scenes not only require the inclusion of unlikable and uninteresting characters like Joe Tippet’s Tim, a low-level Monarch worker, and Anders Holm’s William Randa, a younger version of John Goodman’sKong: Skull Islandvillain, but they also ground the show’s present-day action sequences to a halt. They’re jam-packed with dull exposition dumps and, even more importantly, seem to exist solely to fulfillMonarch’s obligations to its greater franchise.
To put it simply: They take a lot of the fun away fromMonarch. What could have been a lighthearted, rollicking adventure show is only partly that, and partly an unnecessarily somber, staid drama that feels compelled to constantly remind you of its place within its wider fictional universe. The show is, in many ways, a perfect representation of the pros and cons of MCU-style storytelling. Its franchise lineage is simultaneously what makes it so appealing on paper and also the thing that drags it down.
Can Monarch: Legacy of Monsters exist without Godzilla and Kong?
Monarch: Legacy of Monstersis one of the year’s most pitchable shows. Who wouldn’t want to watch a TV series about a bunch of monster hunters traveling across a world where Godzilla and King Kong already exist? The show sells itself. The problem is thatMonarchdoesn’t have enough faith in its own premise. It feels the need to remind you over and over again of the events of the films that have preceded it. Rather than just fully committing to its live-action monster adventures, it tries to split its focus between its pulpy set pieces and collection of dime-a-dozen government conspiracies.
The series should be one of the most purely enjoyable TV shows of 2023, and yet it spends more time exploring the origins of an underbaked, fictional organization and revisiting the climax of 2014’sGodzillathan it does just pitting its charismatic stars against its terrifying monsters. Whether or not that fact will make viewers give up en masse onMonarchremains to be seen. Either way, there’s no denying that audience interest in sprawling cinematic universes is waning. Fewer and fewer people seem interested in keeping up with the MCU, there remains a surprising lack of general interest in James Gunn’s new DCU, and the hype surroundingMonarch, one of the year’s most expensive shows, has been shockingly low.
There are surely many reasons for all of this, and both critics and industry analysts alike will likely spend years parsing through them online. But ifMonarch: Legacy of Monstersproves one thing, it’s that not every new blockbuster needs to double as a history lesson, especially not at the expense of its overall entertainment value.
The first two episodes ofMonarch: Legacy of Monstersare streaming now on Apple TV+.