Ghost in the Shell: Special Edition
Synopsis
In a world caught in the grip of information overload, where artificial intelligence is more than the real thing and cyborg cops spend their lives surfing on an electronic sea of living data, only the Ghost - the indefinable element of human consciousness - exists to determine who is alive and who is purely a creation of the net.
Major Motoko Kusanagi is an elite officer in the Section 9 security force: a cybernetic agent so heavily modified that little more than her Ghost remains. Along with fellow cyborg Batou and the mostly human Togusa, Kusanagi is set on the trail of a computer-criminal known as the Puppet Master, a data thief skilled enough to hack into the very minds of his victims. His human marionettes live out existences that are nothing more than computer generated fantasy, unwittingly committing their master’s crimes while the Ghost-hacker hides in the darkness.
But as Kusanagi digs deeper into the walls of secrecy surrounding the case, it appears that the Puppet Master has a special interest in her alone. And when the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and the shadowy Section 6, enter the scene, Kusanagi becomes tangled in a web of plot and counterplot, and realizes that the true identity of her invisible assailant lies at the center of a vast and lethal political conspiracy…
Review
Ah, Ghost in the Shell. It brings back good memories. For me anyway. I think by now anyone who knows anything about anime has at least heard of this movie. Considered the ’90’s Akira’ because of its similar style and the fact that it further brought anime into the American mainstream consciousness (much like Akira before it), Ghost in the Shell has gotten a reputation as being either the most deep, philosophically profound anime film of its time, or as those who hate it say, a very superficial, plodding, dull and boring film with little substance and a lot of ego. I’m of the first group who believes this film rocks on many levels.
It’s hard to actually decribe Ghost in the Shell on paper. It was originally a manga done by Shirow Masamune (Appleseed, Black Magic, Dominion Tank Police) which was then taken and adapted into this anime film by Mamoru Oshii, who should ring a bell with everyone. He was the mastermind behind films such as Jin-Roh, Angel’s Egg, and the first two Patlabor films, as well as series such as the Patlabor OVA and Urusei Yatsura. I’m a big fan of Jin-Roh, and I absolutely love his directing style, even if it tends to be a bit obtuse, verbose, and over-done in the psychological-philosophical department. While he’s very talented technically, Oshii has yet to learn how to show more than tell. But, unlike it’s sequel, Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence, where Oshii goes overboard on the quoting and philosophizing, this film doesn’t do too much talking, and is instead all about the visuals.
And what visuals they are. Even though it was made all the way back in 1995, the film still looks astounding, even today. And now with the special edition DVD out, it couldn’t look much better. The mesh between 2D cel animation and up-and-coming CG is very convincing, and the beautiful panning shots Oshii does of the city and skyline are breathtaking. It has aged a bit, but not nearly as much as a movie from 1995 should have.
What also bears mentioning is the great, if sparsely used, music. Kenji Kawai (Patlabor, Ranma 1/2, Gunparade March) uses a lot of Noh and choral chanting and ethereal instrumentals as ambiance (a lot like Akira, actually, except not as loud and bombastic). It works along with the somber, indifferent tone and mood the film establishes, rather than calling attention to itself. It’s extremely well-done and very solid, but, like I said, it’s used sparingly, unfortunately.
As for the actual story and plot? My synopsis (long in and of itself) at the top of the page will have to do. Beyond not wanting to ruin anything, it’s just very hard to explain the politics-heavy, thematically deep story that Ghost in the Shell is. I’d only confuse you more by trying to explain it to you. So trust me when I say it’ll probably take you more than one viewing to understand everything that’s going on.
The Breakdown
For those who are fans of this genre, this is a must buy. There are reasons why The Matrix films borrowed so much from this movie. There are reasons why it’s quality and underlying story are so hotly debated. There’s a reason people simply love it or hate it. I recommend everyone watch this film, if not outright buy it. Everyone should have this film in their collection.