

Ghost In The Shell 2: Innocence (Mark's Take) 02/11/2004 . Source: Mark R. Leeper 
Mark checks out this popular Japanese anime flick and discovers the animation is never flat, but demonstrates varying degrees of dimensionality, frequently within the same frame. Buy Ghost In The Shell 2: Innocence in the USA - or Buy Ghost In The Shell 2: Innocence in the UK  CAPSULE: Complex and a little hard to follow but
imaginative and spectacular anime film. Rating: +2 (-4 to +4) or 7/10
GHOST IN THE SHELL 2: INNOCENCE is a new adventure set in the world of the original
GHOST IN THE SHELL. This is a future world where everybody is part machine. The
main characters are two police officers, one almost all human, one almost all
machine. The new story, set just twenty-eight years in the future,
involves a revolt of female pleasure robots called gynids who one day start acting
in non-robotic ways by killing people and by committing suicide. Both actions
go against their moral ethic--essentially what are Asimov's laws of robotics.
I saw the film in a subtitled version in one pass with subtitles
that frequently are hard to finish before they are whisked away. The plot is as
complex as most science fiction novels. It was rather difficult for me to keep
on top of just what was happening in the film. Nevertheless I
was impressed with the apparent profundity of the story. Visually the film is
frequently near live action and a live-action film with this much spectacle would
these days cost in the hundreds of millions of dollars. It may no longer be necessary
to prove the power of animation, but at least GHOST IN THE SHELL 2: INNOCENCE
demonstrates it. The animation is never flat, but demonstrates
varying degrees of dimensionality, frequently within the same frame. The film
is told against a backdrop of future Japan, but punctuated with some traditional
settings like a traditional Japanese festival. It is interesting that for years
American films have shown the world American culture. These days
the international film community is seeing many different cultures. And that is
true of mass marketed films as well as art films. While there is the usual gratuitous
violence of anime films, there are still some really breathtaking images that
make this a film worth the effort to watch. Mark R. Leeper
Copyright 2004 Mark R. Leeper 
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