“Godzilla: King of the Monsters” can be accused of overkill. Then again, there’s so much to kill! Though we don’t meet them all, we’re told that no fewer than 17 massive creatures, hidden away in Antarctic ice packs, Mexican volcanoes, oceanic bachelor pads and what have you, come a-calling in this enjoyably chaotic continuation of the so-called “MonsterVerse” put into play by the 2014 “Godzilla” and the 2017 “Kong: Skull Island.” As paleo-zoologist played by Sally Hawkins summarizes early on, eyes wide and mouth agape, studiously avoiding technical jargon: “They’re everywhere.”

The new film likewise scoots all over the place, in a near-constant onslaught of rain. When last we saw Godzilla five years ago, he had chosen to retire, gunslinger style, after saving the world (while destroying much of it) and leveling San Francisco in the process. The “Skull Island” epilogue more recently rolled out the blood-red carpet for a host of additional monsters, tracked for decades by the super-secret agency known as Monarch.

Key non-human players in “Godzilla: King of the Monsters” include Godzilla, whose head remains touchingly small for his body; the bat-winged hydra-headed dragon King Ghidorah (first introduced in 1964’s “Ghidorah, the Three-Headed Monster”); the glowing, sympathetic Mothra, who doesn’t look like a killer but then, neither do most killers; and Rodan, the volcano-dwelling fire demon. The humans familiar from previous MonsterVerse pictures are led, staring, agog, by Ken Watanabe.

The fractured, grieving family unit introduced in “Godzilla, King of the Monsters,” meantime, takes up most of the narrative acreage. A son was lost in the 2014 San Francisco melee. Now divorced, the boy’s mother (Vera Farmiga, high priestess of dramatic exposition) and father (Kyle Chandler, getting paid by the glare and worth every dime) are the inventors of a bio-sonar means of communicating with the monsters. This little boom box, known as ORCA, serves as the linchpin of plot devices in the script by director Michael Dougherty and Zach Shields.

Some of the motivations and reversals involving a vicious eco-terrorist (Charles Dance), who swipes the boom box, lack a pleasing clarity. The script’s quippy streak could’ve used better jokes.

The real stars here? Sound designers Erik Aadahl and Ethan Van Der Ryn, whose aural creature designs actually sound like something new — part machine, part prehistoric whatzit. Director Dougherty keeps his hand-held cameras very close to the human faces, too much so, probably. But he’s going for a very different, more action-laden movie than director Gareth Edwards’ “Godzilla.”

MOVIE REVIEW

“Godzilla: King of the Monsters”

Grade: B

Starring Vera Farmiga, Ken Watanabe and Sally Hawkins. Directed by Michael Dougherty.

Rated PG-13 for sequences of monster action violence and destruction and for some language. Check listings for theaters. 2 hours, 11 minutes.

Bottom line: The monsters are pretty swell and it's more action-laden than previous