Genre:
Science Fiction
Release Date: 11/24/2009
Flags: Nudity, Questionable for Children
Distributor/Studio: Starz/Anchor Bay
In the year 2029, the world has become interconnected by a vast electronic network that permeates every aspect of life. That same network also becomes a battlefield for Tokyo's Section Nine security force, which has been charged with apprehending the master hacker known only as
the Puppet Master. Spearheading the investigation is
Major Motoko Kusanagi, who -- like many in her department -- is a cyborg officer, far more powerful than her human appearance would suggest. And yet as
the Puppet Master, who is even capable of hacking human minds, leaves a trail of victims robbed of their memories,
Kusanagi ponders the very nature of her existence: is she purely an artificial construct, or is there more? What, exactly, is the "ghost" -- her essence -- in her cybernetic "shell"? When Section Six gets involved in the case, she is forced to confront the fact that there is more here than meets the eye, and that
the Puppet Master may hold some of the answers she seeks. But little does she know that he has been seeking her as well.
~ Emru Townsend, All Movie Guide
Based on a manga by
Masamune Shirow and directed by
Mamoru Oshii,
Ghost in the Shell marries the best aspects of both creators' styles. As in
Appleseed,
Shirow's tale is set in a near-future that should, by rights, be a utopia, yet still has a need for specialized police and military. Once again,
Shirow uses his characters to pose questions about the nature of humanity -- how we regard each other, how societies form, and how we can expect to cope when technology pervades every aspect of life to the point where the line between man and machine blurs.
Oshii, who has turned even the most popular of properties into personal, pensive films (
Urusei Yatsura,
Patlabor 2), runs with
Shirow's world of high-tech thrills and armchair philosophy and makes it his own. He adds layers of luscious, CGI-enhanced visuals and a dark, moody soundtrack, and paces it all in a way that makes even the most pulse-pounding
action scenes seem dreamlike.
~ Emru Townsend, All Movie Guide