Product Details
Ghost in the Shell 2 - Innocence

Ghost in the Shell 2 - Innocence
Directed by Mamoru Oshii

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Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #5652 in DVD
  • Released on: 2004-12-28
  • Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
  • Formats: AC-3, Animated, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Original language: Japanese
  • Subtitled in: English, French
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 100 minutes

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
Mamoru Oshii's landmark Ghost in the Shell (1995) largely defined the cyberpunk genre and influenced the Matrix films in the U.S. The long-awaited sequel continues the adventures of Batou, Major Kusanagi's former assistant, who was left behind when she disappeared into the cyber-realm of the Net. With his new human partner, Togusa, Batou investigates a series of bloody murders involving gynoids, robots with sexual functions. The case leads them to the headquarters of the Locus Solus company, where Batou uncovers the evil secret behind the creation of the gynoids. Innocence includes some staggeringly beautiful CG images, especially a parade depicting characters from Chinese mythology. Oshii contrasts this glittering beauty with a Blade Runner-esque dystopia. But even his skill as a director can't disguise the fact that the underdeveloped story and flat characters are far less interesting than the opulent visuals. (Rated PG-13: graphic violence, violence against women, brief nudity, profanity, alcohol and tobacco use.) --Charles Solomon


Customer Reviews

Buyer Beware: No English Dub!1
This movie looks good but is unwatchable due to the lack of a English vocal dub, what a disaster. Sub-titles are one thing, but, come on now, not on anime of this quality, there is too much visually to take in besides reading dialogue! Oof!

Not as good as the first.3
The thing that bothered me the most about this movie is the PG-13 rating, which you can tell in the movie they strived for. No gore at all! Not that gore is the number one factor in an anime, but it feels like a more kid friendly version of the first movie. Also, with Studio Ghibli being involved, I thought the animation would be better.

I'm Not Going to Complain About the Captions....3
...because I returned the DVD and got a non-captioned version. So to all you people who insist on filling up page after page of complaints about the captions...STOP IT! I went scrolling through the 1-star reviews looking for differing opinions on the movie, and all people could talk about was Dreamwork's screwup.
Let me also preface this by saying - I don't mind that there's no English dub. And no, I don't speak Japanese, but I like the sound of it. Would hearing dozens of Confucian-lite quotes in English over and over really have made for a better experience? I mean really, it's not like people spend the whole movie talking. I'd be willing to bet only about 50% of the movie has dialogue. I got an idea - why don't we just put an English dub on every great foreign film ever made? Seven Samurai, Breathless, Fellini's 8 1/2. Why not? Gotta make 'em palatable for Americans, right?
Some of you people make me sick: "If I wanted to read, I'd get a book." Truth is, if you read books - EVER - subtitles aren't that hard. The amount of time it takes your eye to scan down and quickly go over a line of dialogue is not that long. But seriously, on to talking about the movie, 'cause I'm getting a little pissed here.
Like many people upon first seeing this, I was just in awe. The melding of CG with the 2D animation is top notch. Look at that scene in the beginning when Batou is walking down the alley and tell me that's not photo-realistic!
However, I watched the movie with a more critical eye lately, and plot-wise, there are a few problems. One, the dialogue. Entire conversations between characters are made up of quotes and parables. I mean, does everyone in the 21st century walk around with a copy of the Tao Te Ching in their pocket? Two, there is this feeling of malaise throughout the whole thing. Obviously, Oshii is trying to carry over the feeling of what is real/what is a soul? etc. from the first film. But there is no resolution to this conflict. The pedantic existentialism mostly revolves around "the soul of a doll" (Oshii even mentions this in the extras). The monologue of the Puppet Master in the first movie is much easier to take than all the crap that pours out of the hacker Kim's mouth.
Third and final point - the last half of the movie absolutely drags, basically everything after Batou decides to go North. The overlong parade sequence, the slow walk into Kim's place. It's like they took the sequence from the first movie when the Major is on the boat looking at the Tokyo skyline and stretched it to absurd lengths. Don't get me wrong, it all looks beautiful (especially the parade stuff) but to what end is it serving? I mean seriously, the last half of the movie is like Valium in DVD form. And the mediocre action at the end doesn't make up for it. I don't feel that threatened by a whole army of killer nymphet cyborgs.
So in conclusion, this is not a hands-down great film. It has great execution, but the ideas ultimately come off half-baked and unresolved.
And a minor quibble, but what does the word "Innocence" in the title have to do with any of this?