Sunday, January 27, 2019

Cybernetic Future Shock






This is my second entry in the Robots in Film Blogathon hosted by Hamlette's Soliloquy and ME.





Anime and manga are a form of entertainment that originated in Japan.  Manga is adult comic book format, while anime is the adult cartoon form, often derived from manga versions of the same.  Go to any comic-con or sci-fi convention and you will encounter devotees of both.  You will even see people dressed up as their favorite manga and anime heroes (just like you would fans of American films and TV shows).





Ghost in the Shell (1995):

In the future of 2029, almost everyone has some cybernetic adaptations.  The common man, it seems, has their brain hard-wired into a system.  The internal, still existing human is referred to as the "ghost".  Some are even more cybernetically enhanced. and some, such as our hero of the piece, Major Kusanagi (voiced by Mimi Woods in the American dubbed version) are basically living organisms with robotic bodies.  The cybernetic brain allows some to be able to access the equivalent of the internet through their own brains.  (The future as depicted in Ghost in the Shell has some stuff that predicts the future of sorts, because anyone can access the internet, even without cybernetic enhancements, through small hand-held computers... cell phones, anyone?)

In this future world, nations are still committing intrigue and deception.  And even internally there are subterfuges going on.  Kusanagi works with section 6 of an unnamed country (but which I identify as Japan for convenience).  Section 6 is the police force of the nation, and finds itself at odds with section 9 (which is something like our American C.I.A.)  Kusanagi works as a secret agent of section 6, trying to prevent the defection of a high-level computer programmer to a foreign country, and assassinates a rogue embassy official from said country.

In the process, she and her partner Batou (voiced by Richard George [Epcar]) discover that the real culprit behind the scenes is a mysterious figure known as "The Puppet Master", a hacker who can access the cybernetic brains of individuals and reprogram them to do his will.  During their investigation they uncover a plot by section 9 in which the Puppet Master has been lured into another body, with the intent to control it.

But an attempt to transport the body to another site goes haywire.  It seems the Puppet master is a bit more powerful than anyone expected.  Kusanagi and Batou work together to try to recapture the Puppet Master.

That's about all I can tell you with out revealing too much about the movie that will intrigue you if you discover it for yourself.  This movie is quite a bit more complicated than your average Disney cartoon.  You will need to bring your entire brain to the game.  It does contain some that sounds rather existentialistic to my mind,  and it is a bit more violent than any Disney film.  Despite the fact that it is a cartoon, in other words, you probably don't want to watch it with the kids.

Drive home safely, folks  Time for me to shut down for maintenance.

Quiggy


6 comments:

  1. Need to give this style of movie a try one of these days. maybe now I will!
    - C

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anime is not for everyone, but I think you might enjoy it. Thanks for reading, Chris.

      Delete
  2. I've never gotten hugely into anime, despite having a bunch of college friends who were very into it, but I do enjoy a few manga books. This definitely looks better (and more plausible) than the live-action version. Which I haven't seen, I just saw so many trailers for it that I feel like I've seen it, lol.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I have never really gotten into live-action versions of cartoons. Note: that's not the same for comic books. Of course I love Marvel movies, but then I didn't watch the cartoon versions of them either. Thanks for reading.

      Delete
  3. When I worked for a video store this was a huge tile that everybody wanted to check out. I tried just could not really get into. Like Hamlette I hung out with an Anime crowed but did not watch much of it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I'm not a big fan, but I do like some of the anime output. Thanks for reading.

      Delete

I'm pretty liberal about freedom of speech, but if you try to use this blog to sell something it will be deleted.