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Kôkaku Kidôtai 2.0

Kôkaku Kidôtai 2.0 (2008) Movie Poster
  •  Japan / USA  •    •  83m  •    •  Directed by: Mamoru Oshii.  •  Starring: Atsuko Tanaka, Akio Ôtsuka, Kôichi Yamadera, Tesshô Genda, Masato Yamanouchi, Shinji Ogawa, Yoshiko Sakakibara, Kazuhiro Yamaji, Shigeru Chiba, Maaya Sakamoto, Steve Bulen, Toni Burke, George Celik.  •  Music by: Kenji Kawai.
     A hacker known as the Puppet Master is hunted by a female cyborg cop and her partner. This film is a revised version of ''Kôkaku Kidôtai'' (1995).

Trailers:

   Length:  Languages:  Subtitles:
 0:51
 
 
 1:02
 
 

Review:

Image from: Kôkaku Kidôtai 2.0 (2008)
Image from: Kôkaku Kidôtai 2.0 (2008)
Image from: Kôkaku Kidôtai 2.0 (2008)
Image from: Kôkaku Kidôtai 2.0 (2008)
Image from: Kôkaku Kidôtai 2.0 (2008)
Image from: Kôkaku Kidôtai 2.0 (2008)
Image from: Kôkaku Kidôtai 2.0 (2008)
This story was... well confusing. The problem was that they had a 'puppeteer' who was changing people's thoughts and memories in order to use it for his own purpose to hack into official's heads. I won't lie, I don't normally understand all that political stuff. The fact that this was so heavy in that made it more of a chore to try and figure stuff out. If I missed something that someone said, to bad, I couldn't really go back and check it out because I wouldn't know where to find it again.

When we get to the characters, the only ones we really get to understand slightly are Batou and Kusanagi. The others just seem like background characters compared to them. Even then, we don't get much about the two although you can tell that Batou really cares greatly for Kusanagi. When we do get near the end, it does get into a rather interesting and deep. It really dives into physiological problems and aspects to life. It might of still been a rather confusing show but I did enjoy it.

The art style starts out with a lot of CG stuff in the beginning of the show and then going deeper into the normal animation after. I have to say they really took me off guard when they showed the naked body of the major in CG while she was working. Of course then they had to have an opening that expanded on showing a women's naked body being created through electronic means. There were little scenes where they would do a bit more of the CG and half of it is rather pretty. Some of the characters designs seem a bit off from how they looked in the anime that I had watched part of before, namely the major. Still, the camera angles and some of the ways they showed the world felt very classic to the anime style of the late 1990s.

Some of the sounds are a bit off and the English voices sometimes don't match lip movements but the voice actors really tried their best to make such a serious show work. You can tell just how they read their lines that they were trying really hard to keep it interesting but sadly, I keep feeling that they do a whole lot of talking and sometimes not all that much action or just a lot of shooting. When we do get action, its mostly slow movement, looped or over almost as fast as it starts. Now there are also some talks that feel more like a lecture about the problems with the cyber technology and a philosophy of having your own identity. These small parts were the only things that kept my attention as the others talks seemed a bit more complicated and I had no way of understanding the political problems.


Review by Angels_Review from the Internet Movie Database.