In the 35th volume of the show
thta has a better shelf life
than any potted meat, flowers
blanket the town and start
spreading rumors in "I Hate
more info ...
Keiichi Morisato is an
engineering student and the top
driver of the campus racing
club. While calling for take
out, a wrong number puts him in
contac
more info ...
Jimmy Kudo is a cocky teenage
detective, known far and wide
for his crime solving skills.
While working a particularly
gruesome case, Kudo is attacked
more info ...
It is the beginning of the
industrial revolution, and
feudal Japan is in turmoil. The
ruling Shogun are wielding their
abusive powers to instill fear
more info ...
I can understand that although
we are together, everybody is
different. It feels like I`m in
the world that is on the
opposite side of the mirror. (Ya
more info ...
Urara likes Touma. Touma likes
Mieko. Mieko might like Touma,
but Mieko will only date a
college man, so what`s a low
achiever like Touma to do Well,
more info ...
In the 34th volume of the highly
un-decaffeinated series, Mendou
has some trouble with one of his
sister`s dolls in "Don`t Die!
Ryoko`s Special V
more info ...
Pacifica and her siblings are
determined to return to Leinwan
to prevent the loss of any more
lives. The Generals fear an
invasion and launch an offen
more info ...
Earth`s top warriors venture
into Kami`s Pendulum Room where
the past, present and future
exist simultaneously. After
their eventful trip back in time
more info ...
Eclair and Lumiere are sent to
ensure control of the powerful
Rosenfelt Financial Group is
handed to the rightful heir.
However, in the midst of this
more info ...
Money & Blood! Whether a fake
promisory note or an empty
wallet, a variety of challenges
face Mugen, Jin and Fuu in their
strugle to survive. Not
more info ...
Togusa finds himself in the
hospital after being shot, but
is desperate to impart what he`s
learned to the rest of the
group. It seems other clandesti
more info ...
A secret war brews in the night
- a war where humanity is only a
pawn. The Hellsing Organization
deploys in the shadows to
protect the mortal world. B
more info ...
During the 20th century, the
world experienced a large-scale
war. A war between humans and
monsters. Words could never
describe the violent bloodshed
more info ...
Naomi Armitage and Ross Sylibus
have changed their names and
live with their daughter Yoko as
a normal happy family on Mars -
until a robot riot break
more info ...
Diana, a spirited princess,
flees her kingdom to join her
true love - the sworn enemy of
her royal house. But misfortune
befalls her almost immediatel
more info ...
3000 years have passed since the
future was buried. Countless
armies of machines are all that
remain of human civilization.
Without orders, they build
more info ...
The crew of DICE Fortress F-99
continues their adventures
throughout the galaxy. A planet
with enormous gravity is their
first stop, and Jet and the P
more info ...
An ancient Japanese legend says
that if one were to partake of
the flesh of the mermaid, one
would be granted eternal life
and youth. Yuta ate the mer
more info ...
Three junior high school girls
hear a voice pleading for them
to save Cephiro, a magical world
where belief is power. It is
Princess Emeraude, the Pil
more info ...
Things are looking up for Yucie.
Having passed the Judgment of
Light she`s done with part-time
work! But things don`t seem to
get any easier for her.
more info ...
The journey continues as they
successfully evade the forces of
Mauser. But a bounty on
Pacifica`s head is now set and a
bounty hunter aims to collect
more info ...
Thanks to Gain and Gainer, the
Siberian Exodus has completed
the first half of its journey to
Yapan, and its example begins to
inspire the citizens of
more info ...
Alien-hybrid cat-eared girl Di
Gi Charat (Dejiko) travels to
Earth with one goal-world
domination as a superstar. But
superstardom doesn`t just fall i
more info ...
Krillin receives a startling
message. He is to gather Yamcha,
Tien, and Chiaotzu for special
training. With intense sadness,
he and Roshi must find a
more info ...
Yuri is totally bummed. She just
started 6th grade and has been
elected to fight the aliens that
invade the school on a daily
basis. Worse, she has to
more info ...
Grave`s success in dismantling
Millennion has come at a steep
cost. The constant fighting and
the many attacks he suffers have
left his wounded body w
more info ...
Ryuzo`s hard work has finally
paid off. His reports on the
mysterious death of Dr. Frank
and the DC`s involvement in the
series of explosions result i
more info ...
The new series from legendary
creator Leiji Masumoto (Star
Blazers, Captain Herlock, Galaxy
Express 999, Interstella 5555).
Carrying on his deceased f
more info ...
The new series from legendary
creator Leiji Masumoto (Star
Blazers, Captain Herlock, Galaxy
Express 999, Interstella 5555).
Carrying on his deceased f
more info ...
The desert explodes in an
all-out war as a tyrant
unleashes a flying battleship
against a rebel army. Guns blaze
and lives are lost in the
devastation
more info ...
Wataru`s life on Promised Island
with thirteen sisters is
certainly never dull, but things
are about to get really
exciting. In an effort to make
her
more info ...
I Am Saiyaman (Episode 186)
Afraid his classmates will
recognize him as the Gold
Fighter, Gohan goes to Bulma for
help. Using her her high-tech
wizard
more info ...
An unseen evil lurks in the
streets of Paris, and unless
something is done, the darkness
will unleash its destruction and
consume all that is good. Th
more info ...
In Volume 31 of the show that
has more uses than the peanut,
Sakura loses her wand and Cherry
oses a drunken demon in
"Exercise: Exorcise! Beauti
more info ...
A band of terrorists claims to
have possession of a girl who
was kidnapped some years ago,
but when the Major and company
are called in to resolve the
more info ...
The Daichis are broke! To
compensate for their lack of
teamwork, the family members
have been relying upon upgrades
to their battle suits and
weaponry
more info ...
To conquer the world, the fiery
demon Pyron assembles an army of
supernatural beings with magical
powers: the DarkStalkers! And
two of the biggest and
more info ...
Harry grows Millennion into a
powerful government-dominating
organization that rules a world
of violence through its demonic
soldiers, the orgmen, who
more info ...
Animated, Color, Closed
Captioned, Widescreen Edition,
English Soundtrack, English
Subtitles, Dolby Digital 5.1,
Japanese Soundtrack, DTS Sound,
Unrat
more info ...
The journey begins when
Professor Kaneda creates the
ultimate soldier robot,
Tetsujin, as a substitute for
his son, Shotaro, whom he
mistakenly believ
more info ...
Families, husbands and wives,
lovers and people. Dramas that
emerge from life`s human
crossroads... Ordinary people
muddle through life and
intersect
more info ...
Arucard and the Hellsing
Organization face a twofold
challenge! A traitor within
begins leaking classified
information about the
organization - and a
more info ...
The Lil`s Slugger epidemic runs
rampant in Tokyo while Umaniwa
researches Tsukiko`s childhood
and discovers the disturbing
origins of Maromi! However,
more info ...
When Inuyasha and his friends
come upon a village being
tormented by a group of monkeys
wreaking havoc in their fields,
the villagers mistake him for
more info ...
Animated, Color, Widescreen
Edition, Additional Footage,
English Soundtrack, English
Subtitles, Dolby Digital 5.1,
Japanese Soundtrack, Rated PG13
more info ...
n a world where the power of
imagination becomes reality, the
young, powerful minded Mutsuki
creates a utopia for herself and
her brother. Then comes
more info ...
Meet Noa Izumi. Cute and spunky,
she could be the girl next
door...except that she loves
giant robots with a passion
that`s a little scary. Today`s
he
more info ...
Hanamichi secretly works on his
shot making skills to improve
his overall game. He soon learns
that his team has already
scheduled their first practic
more info ...
The bone-crushing finale! When
it comes to martial arts, Kiichi
Miyazawa has always been the
best. But when his father is
hospitalized, it`s time for
more info ...
Animated, Color, Closed
Captioned, English Soundtrack,
Spanish Soundtrack, English
Subtitles, Spanish Subtitles,
French Subtitles, Unrated, Mucha
Luch
more info ...
The Arms have decided to break
into the business...of
kidnapping. Even with Arms
specialist Dr. Tillinghast under
lock and key, the Arms discover
that
more info ...
The Galaxy Angels have been
chosen to be pilots for a new
weapons development by the army.
When combined the vehicles will
form into a super robot! No
more info ...
Yoshiaki Kawajiri is famous for
such classics as Ninja Scroll,
X: The Movie, and The Animatrix
(Episode Program). This
specially priced brick contains
more info ...
Inuyasha and friends head to the
coastal region to confront a
horde of Bat-Demons. There,
Inuyasha meets Shiori, a young
girl who is also a half-demon
more info ...
Thelonious Monk, Dizzy
Gillespie, Charlie Parker...Jazz
legends who lived by their own
rules, redefined style and were
the epitome of cool in their er
more info ...
As Harry`s ambitions uncoil, he
uses his power to usurp control
of more than half of Millennion
and to destroy anyone in his
path. His sponsorship of
more info ...
Cybuster and it`s pilot, Masaki
are finally captured by
Saphine`s dirty trick. However,
while being transported by DC`s
helicopters above the "Se
more info ...
Meet Shobu Kirifuda, son of
legendary (and missing) Kaijudo
Master Shori Kirifuda. Shobu`s
just an ordinary kid, but with
one big difference - he has
more info ...
Something evil is ravaging the
coeds of Enoshima College. But
Megumi Iijima is no ordinary
coed. She`s a tempestuous time
traveler from a future ruled
more info ...
A bold kidnapping foreshadows a
desperate plan by the lusty
female leader of a deadly army
of mercenaries. It is simple:
transform Freeman - the enigm
more info ...
It`s cold steel and hot babes as
our morally impaired young
knight must rescue multiple
damsels in distress imprisoned
in an enchanted castle by an ar
more info ...
Plot Outline: In 1860s
Britain, a boy inventor finds himself caught in the
middle of a deadly conflict over a revolutionary advance
in steam power.
Plot Synopsis: Rei is a
young inventor living in the U.K. in the middle of the
19th century. Shortly before the first ever World Expo,
a marvelous invention called the "Steam Ball", behind
which a menacing power is hidden, arrives at his door
from his grandfather Roid in the U.S. Meanwhile the
nefarious Ohara Foundation has sent men to acquire
theSteam Ball so that they can use its power towards
their own illicit ends.
The first feature Katsuhiro
Otomo has written and directed since his
watershed Akira (1988), Steamboy
offers a fantastic, sepia-toned vision of the
past-as-future. In place of the dystopic
Neo-Tokyo of Akira, Steamboy is
set in England in 1866. Young Ray Steam receives
a Steam Ball, a mysterious, powerful device,
from his inventor grandfather. Governments and
businesses covet the Steam Ball, and Ray finds
himself in a murderous conflict over its
possession. He's also caught between his father,
a 19th century Darth Vader who builds terrible
weapons for an American arms merchant, and his
grandfather, who believes science should improve
people's lives. Otomo uses computer graphics to
create dazzling visuals that few recent
films--animated or live action--can match:
monumental systems of gears and pistons;
machines that dwarf the Tower of London; antique
weapons of mass destruction. But the dazzling
imagery can't disguise the lack of a coherent
plot and the flimsiness of the characters.
Steamboy is being
released in a dubbed version that's been
shortened by 20 minutes, and a more satisfying
subtitled version that preserves Otomo's
original pacing. Both versions suggest that
Steamboy is the work of an important
filmmaker who can't quite shape his awesome
visions into a effective narrative. (Rated PG-13
for action violence.)
--Charles Solomon
Ghost in the shell 2 is truly a
masterpiece and one of the best science fiction films
Plot Outline: In the year
2032, Batô, a cyborg detective for the anti-terrorist
unit Public Security Section 9, investigates the case of
a female robot--one created solely for sexual
pleasure--who slaughtered her owner.
Plot Synopsis: Batô is a
living cyborg. His whole body, even his arms and legs,
are entirely man-made. What only remains are traces of
his brain and the memories of a woman. In an era when
the boundary between humans and machines has become
infinitely vague, Humans have forgotten that they are
humans. This is the debauchery of the lonesome ghost of
a man, who nevertheless seeks to retain humanity.
Innocence... Is what life is.
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
Plot Outline: A young boy
and a girl with a magic crystal must race against
pirates and foreign agents in a search for a legendary
floating castle.
Plot Synopsis: A young boy
stumbles into a mysterious girl who floats down from the
sky. The girl, Sheet, was chased by pirates, army and
government secret agents. In saving her life, they begin
a high flying adventure that goes through all sorts of
flying machine, eventually searching for Sheet's
identity in a floating castle of a lost civilization.
Inspired by "Gulliver's Travels," the
fantasy-adventure Castle in the Sky (1986) was Hayao
Miyazaki's third feature, and helped to establish his reputation
as a visionary in both Japan and America. The orphan Sheeta
inherited a mysterious crystal that links her to the legendary
sky-kingdom of Laputa. With the help of resourceful Pazu and a
rollicking band of sky pirates, she makes her way to the ruins
of the once-great civilization. Sheeta and Pazu must outwit the
evil Muska, who plans to use Laputa's science to make himself
ruler of the world. Castle echoes elements in Myazaki's
earlier Nausicaä, and anticipates imagery in his later
films, from My Neighbor Totoro to Spirited Away.
Disney's new English dub, which features Anna Paquin (Sheeta),
James Van Der Beek (Pazu), and Cloris Leachman (pirate matriarch
Dola), is lively and close in tone to the original Japanese, if
a bit talkier. The exciting flying sequences, appealing
characters, and fantastic vision of a steam-powered future Jules
Verne might have imagined make Castle in the Sky a
must-have for fans of Japanese and Western animation. (Unrated:
suitable for ages 10 and older: violence) --Charles Solomon
Plot Outline: In the middle
of her family's move to the suburbs, a sullen
10-year-old girl wanders into a world ruled by witches
and monsters, where humans are changed into animals.
Plot Synopsis: Chihiro and
her family are on their way to their new house in the
suburbs when her father decides to take a shortcut along
a lonely- looking dirt road. After getting out of the
car and walking along a path for a while, they discover
an open-air restaurant filled with food but with no
workers or customers present. Mom and Dad don't hesitate
to sit down and dig in, but Chihiro senses danger and
refuses. As night falls, she is terrified to see the
area fill with faceless spirits, but when she runs to
find her parents, she discovers that they have been
turned into pigs. She is found by a mysterious boy named
Haku, who promises to help her. He gets her a job
working in a nearby building, which turns out to be a
spa hotel for the thousands of Japan's gods and spirits.
Though the work is hard and the people strange, she does
as well as she can. Her parents, however, are still
waiting in the hotel's stockyard, and Chihiro must find
a way to break the spell on them before they end up as
the main course of some guest's dinner.
Released on July
20th, in 2001 in Japan, "Spirited Away"
stayed in theaters for almost 10 months,
breaking all the previous box-office
records in Japan, including that of
"Titanic" and "Princess Mononoke" by the
same director Hayao Miyazaki. With this
astonishing film about a girl's
spiritual journey, Mr. Miyazaki again
showed that he is one of the best
directors living in the world. This
animation film was also awarded
prestageous Golden Bear Prize in Berlin
Film Festival, and that is not a
surprise at all, after you see this
movie.
The story quickly is established, so
don't ever be late for the show. It
traces a girl's strange and fascinating
life in another world, where her parents
are accidentally magically transformed,
and she has to survice herself and
return to her own world. To do so, this
pudgy-faced little girl Chihiro, now
deprived of her name by a greedy witch
Yu-baba, has to work at the baths where
gods and sprites all over Japan come to
take a rest. Chihiro's life is full of
wonderful (and often hard, even
terrifying) things, and through her
experiences she learns how to live,
gaining the true will and power,
changing from a sulky girl languidly
lying on the backseat of a car, into a
lively and truely courageous girl.
That's all you have to know: you
don't need to see its trailer (English
version trailer is a bit misleading),
and just watch this masterpiece. Though
there is a character called "Kao-nashi"
(meaning "Faceless"), who out of
loneliness does something harmful to the
place; and there is an episode about a
very stinking monster who turns out
something very different, there are no
villains, no heroes, and no so-called
actions. And another strength of the
film comes from its designs of the
baths. It is based on a mosaic of
Japanese and Western traditions (the
witch's office looks obviously Western
while Chihiro and other female workers
room is inspired from the texitle
factory girls' residence 100 years ago)
Incredibly, some part are even from
Chinese style.
The story, some say probably rightly,
goes slower in the latter half (of the
film that runs more than 2 hours), but
"Spirited Away" never lets you down.
It's time for any American audience to
know Miyazaki's name, and that animation
films are not meant for only kids, but
for adults.
[The following might hopefully help
understand some part of the film. No
spoilers contained, but you might read
them after watching them. Al the names
referred to are from Japanese original
print.]
[1] The name "Chihiro" is, when
written in Chinese letters, divided into
two parts: "Chi-hiro." The first part
"Chi" has another way of pronounciation,
"Sen," which becomes her temporary name.
[2] Chihiro's real name is "Chihiro
Ogino" which is briefly seen on the
contract paper she signs.
[3] The handsome boy who offers a help
to Chihio is called "Haku" which means
in Japanese, "white."
[4] Haku's real name is "Migihayami
Kohakusui." All the Japanese audience,
as Chihiro in fact was, would be
surprised to hear this long and
old-fashioned name, which clearly
suggests his ancient and aristocratic
origin.
[5] The witch's spoiled baby is called
"Bou" (and his name is written
prominently in a Chinese letter on his
clothes). This is shrewd naming because
the word "bou-ya" (which is used to
call, affectinately, to baby boys)
implies too much fondness to the babies
on mother's side.
[6] Chihiro's father, at the diapidated
red gate, talks knowingly about the
posibility of a disused theme park. It
is true that Japan saw economic
depression after the boom of the 80s,
and his remarks, though half telling of
his too much confidence, have some ring
of truth.
[7] For Miyazaki's fans, there are some
extra fun: see, for example, the
re-appearance of "Susuwatari"s, tiny
black speck-like creatures that carry
coal in a boiler room. As fans know,
they are also seen in Miyazaki's
delightful film "My Neighbor Totoro."
And check out one of the "guests" at the
spa who looks and moves exactly like
Totoro.
[8] And those harmless "Susuwatri"s eat
Japanese traditional, very sweet
confectionary called "Konpeitou" made
from sugar. This is the part Japanese
viewers smile because of the unexpected
combination.
[9] In the same boiler room, the
spider-like veteran master gives Chihiro
"Kaisuu-ken," coupon-style tickets for
train. This is also the part we would
smile because we all somehow share the
same experience of giving them to
children who go somewhere by train or
bus, or of finding very old ones
somewhere in the desk.
[10] That same kind master, seeing
Chihiro step on the crawling worm, makes
a gesture of a knife with his hand, and
touches Chihiro's hands in a unique way.
This is a (now out-of-fashion) custom
when touching something very dirty,
symbolizing the total safety from the
object in case, often accompanied with
Japanese word "Engacho" (no more
connection). This part is also funny to
us.
[11] In the opening scene. behind the
back of Chihiro, you can see the glimpse
of half-hidden, red-colored package of
chocolate bar, which looks like one
famous brand. Probably, this is a small
token of thanks for the company (famous
for coffee, too), which joined in the
tie-in campagin for the film's promotion
in Japan.
[12] Finally, director Miyazaki says
that the film is originally made for
unnamed 10-year-old girls he and the
movieproducer are both acquainted with,
and hope that those girls are delighted
to see the film. No doubt they are. T.
Nakajima
Plot Outline: Kenichi and
his uncle Shunsaku Ban must find the mystery behind
robot girl Tima.
Plot Synopsis: Metropolis is
a story of how important emotions are and how they
separate humans from everything else. The movie follows
a young boy and his uncle (a private investigator). The
story is set in the far future where humans and robots
live together, unfortunately not in harmony. Many robots
are forced underground and are terminated for entering
unauthorized areas. They are more or less servants to
humankind. The plot starts to unfold when the boy meets
a robot named Tima and they get in all kinds of trouble.
Never a dull moment when you've got a robot by your
side.
"Metropolis" is a gorgeously rendered
futuristic world where robots and humans mingle, usually not
without friction. When a Japanese detective and his nephew
Kenichi arrive in Metropolis to seek out an underworld figure,
they find themselves confused by all that surrounds them. To
assist them, they are loaned a robot guide dressed in a trench
coat who has access to the underground zones carved out beneath
the city. Almost at once, a fire at an abandoned factory in Zone
1 attracts their attention. Kenichi rescues a naive nymph-like
girl from the blaze, only to plunge through the collapsing
building with her into another zone. Unbeknownst to them both,
Tima is a robot charged with human feelings, a super-being
created by the despot Duke Red and the scientist Kenichi and his
uncle are tracking. When the Duke's jealous and ruthless adopted
son Rock discovers that Tima lives, he dedicates himself to her
destruction. Add a conspiracy, political machinations, the
breakdown of technology, and a populace fraught with prejudice -
and you have the complex film that is "Metropolis." As confusing
as the plot can get, the film never falters toward its powerful
conclusion.
Plot Outline: A female
cyborg cop and her partner hunt a mysterious and
powerful hacker called the Puppet Master.
Plot Synopsis: The year is
2029. The world has become intensively information
oriented and humans are well-connected to the network.
Crime has developed into a sophisticated stage by
hacking into the interactive network. To prevent this,
Section 9 is formed. These are cyborgs with incredible
strengths and abilities that can access any network on
Earth.
The skillful blending of
drawn animation and computer-generated imagery
excited anime fans when this science fiction
mystery was released in 1995: many enthusiasts
believe Ghost suggests what the future of
anime will be, at least in the short term. The
film is set in the not-too-distant future, when
an unnamed government uses lifelike cyborgs or
"enhanced" humans for undercover work. One of
the key cyborgs is The Major, Motoko Kusanagi,
who resembles a cross between The Terminator and
a Playboy centerfold. She finds herself caught
up in a tangled web of espionage and
counterespionage as she searches for the
mysterious superhacker known as "The Puppet
Master."
Mamoru Oshii directs with a staccato rhythm,
alternating sequences of rapid-fire action (car
chases, gun battles, explosions) with static
dialogue scenes that allow the characters to
sort out the vaguely mystical and rather
convoluted plot. Kusanagi's final quote from I
Corinthians suggests that electronic evolution
may compliment and eventually supplant organic
evolution. The minor nudity, profanity, and
considerable violence would earn Ghost in the
Shell at least a PG rating. --Charles
Solomon
Porco Rosso, with its beatiful animation
and unique storytelling makes me feel so calm and peaceful.
Plot Outline: The adventures
of a 1930's bush pilot who just happens to look like a
humanoid pig.
Plot Synopsis: In Early
1930's era Italy, air pirates, bounty hunters and high
flyers of all sorts rule the skies. The most cunning and
skilled of these pilots is Porco Rosso, a man cursed
with the head of a pig after watching the spirits of the
pilots killed in the last air battle he fought in rise
to the heavens. He now makes a living taking jobs, such
as rescuing those kidnapped by air pirates. Donald
Curtis, Porco's rival in the air and in catching the
affections of women, provides a constant challenge to
the hero, culminating in a hilarious, action packed
finale.
Plot Synopsis: "Memories" is made
up of three separate science-fiction stories. In the first,
"Magnetic Rose," three space travelers are drawn into an
abandoned spaceship that contains a world created by one woman's
memories. In "Stink Bomb," a young lab assistant accidentally
transforms himself into a human biological weapon set on a
direct course for Tôkyô. The final episode, "Cannon Fodder,"
depicts a day in the life of a city whose entire purpose is the
firing of cannons at an unseen enemy.
Three short anime stories into one weird
movie directed by three of the best directors in anime is truly
a rememborable anime.
Although these three shorts were made to
be shown together, they have little in common beside lavish
production values. In "Magnetic Rose," a two-bit salvage rig
answers an SOS in deep space from the palatial ship of a former
opera diva. Koji Morimoto (Fly Peek!) blends shimmering
visuals and snatches of Puccini, turning the derelict vessel
into a lovely, fatal siren's song. Nerdy researcher Nobuo Tanaka
takes an experimental drug and begins emitting a murderous gas
in Tensai Okamura's (Kikaider) "Stink Bomb." Too silly to
be scary, but too grim to be funny, it's the weakest entry. In
"Cannon Fodder," Katsuhiro Otomo (Akira) uses long
tracking shots and an acid palette of khaki greens and faded
reds to depict a militarized civilization where gargantuan
machines dominate vapid little people. This brief but timely
vision of the insanity of war suggests a mixture of 19th century
Prussia and World War II Japan. (Rated PG-13: profanity,
violence, tobacco and alcohol use) --Charles Solomon
Princess Mononoke - The
fight in man against nature, makes this Myazaki's first true
action epic.
Plot Outline: On a journey
to find the cure for a Tatarigami's curse, Ashitaka
finds himself in the middle of a war between the forest
and Tataraba, a mining colony. In this quest he also
meets San, the Mononoke Hime.
Plot Synopsis: A prince is
infected with an incurable disease by a possessed
boar/god. He is to die unless he can find a cure to rid
the curse from his body. It seems that his only hope is
to travel to the far east. When he arrives to get help
from the deer god, he finds himself in the middle of a
battle between the animal inhabitants of the forest and
an iron mining town that is exploiting and killing the
forest. Leading the forest animals in the battle is a
human raised by wolves, Princess Mononoko.
This epic, animated 1997
fantasy has already made history as the
top-grossing domestic feature ever released in
Japan, where its combination of mythic themes,
mystical forces, and ravishing visuals tapped
deeply into cultural identity and contemporary,
ecological anxieties. For international
animation and anime fans, Princess
Mononoke represents an auspicious next step
for its revered creator, Hayao Miyazaki (My
Neighbor Totoro, Kiki's Delivery Service),
an acknowledged anime pioneer, whose
painterly style, vivid character design, and
stylized approach to storytelling take
ambitious, evolutionary steps here.
Set in medieval Japan, Miyazaki's original
story envisions a struggle between nature and
man. The march of technology, embodied in the
dark iron forges of the ambitious Tatara clan,
threatens the natural forces explicit in the
benevolent Great God of the Forest and the
wide-eyed, spectral spirits he protects. When
Ashitaka, a young warrior from a remote, and
endangered, village clan, kills a ravenous,
boar-like monster, he discovers the beast is in
fact an infectious "demon god," transformed by
human anger. Ashitaka's quest to solve the
beast's fatal curse brings him into the midst of
human political intrigues as well as the more
crucial battle between man and nature.
Miyazaki's convoluted fable is clearly not
the stuff of kiddie matinees, nor is the often
graphic violence depicted during the battles
that ensue. If some younger viewers (or less
attentive older ones) will wish for a diagram to
sort out the players, Miyazaki's atmospheric
world and its lush visual design are reasons
enough to watch. For the English-language
version, Miramax assembled an impressive vocal
cast including Gillian Anderson, Billy Crudup
(as Ashitaka), Claire Danes (as San), Minnie
Driver (as Lady Eboshi), Billy Bob Thornton, and
Jada Pinkett Smith. They bring added nuance to a
very different kind of magic kingdom.
Recommended for ages 12 and older. --Sam
Sutherland
Ghost in the Shell -
Stand Alone Complex (Vol. 1) [Standard Edition - Single Disc]
(2004)
Plot Outline: The futuristic
adventures of a female cyborg counter intelligence agent
and her support team.
Plot Synopsis: In a future
Japan, Major Motoko Kusanagi operates as a key agent of
Section 9 of internal security under Chief Aramaki.
Together with her support crew and a group of quadraped
enforcement droids who operate with childlike
enthusiasim, they confront the numerous threats facing
Japan. However, their opponents are predominately
capable of using the advanced technology around them to
their considerable advantage and it will take all the
talents of Section 9 to stop them.
The broadcast series based on Mamoru
Oshii's influential film Ghost in the Shell (1995) has
been eagerly awaited on both sides of the Pacific. Although its
production values are lower, and director Kenji Kamiyama never
equals Oshii's inspired camerawork, Stand Alone Complex
does an impressive job of re-creating the setting and
characters. Major Motoko Kusanagi moves through a deadly city of
mecha, cyborgs, humans, and human-prosthetic hybrids.
(The series takes place in a parallel world, where Kusanagi
never encountered the Puppet Master.) With the help of Batou,
Togusa, and other officers from Public Security Section 9, she
battles terrorists, hackers, and rogue machinery. An insect-like
tank with a grating, babyish voice is a dubious addition to the
cast, but fans of both Oshii's film and Shirow Masamune's
original manga will find the program delivers plenty of
hard-hitting action. (Rated 13 and older: considerable violence,
grotesque imagery, nudity, alcohol use) --Charles Solomon
Plot Outline: A secret
military project endangers Neo-Tokyo when it turns a
biker gang member into a rampaging psionic psychopath
that only two kids and a group of psionics can stop.
Plot Synopsis: Kaneda is a
bike gang leader whose close friend Tetsuo gets involved
in a government secret project known as Akira. On his
way to save Tetsuo, Kaneda runs into a group of
anti-government activists, greedy politicians,
irresponsible scientists and a powerful military leader.
The confrontation sparks off Tetsuo's supernatural power
leading to bloody death, a coup attempt and the final
battle in Tokyo Olympiad where Akira's secrets were
buried 30 years ago.
Artist-writer Katsuhiro Ôtomo began
telling the story of Akira as a comic book series in 1982 but
took a break from 1986 to 1988 to write, direct, supervise, and
design this animated film version. Set in 2019, the film richly
imagines the new metropolis of Neo-Tokyo, which is designed from
huge buildings down to the smallest details of passing vehicles
or police uniforms. Two disaffected orphan teenagers--slight,
resentful Tetsuo and confident, breezy Kaneda--run with a biker
gang, but trouble grows when Tetsuo start to resent the way
Kaneda always has to rescue him. Meanwhile, a group of
scientists, military men, and politicians wonder what to do with
a collection of withered children who possess enormous psychic
powers, especially the mysterious, rarely seen Akira, whose
awakening might well have caused the end of the old world.
Tetsuo is visited by the children, who trigger the growth of
psychic and physical powers that might make him a superman or a
supermonster. As befits a distillation of 1,318 pages of the
story so far, Akira is overstuffed with character,
incident, and detail. However, it piles up astonishing set
pieces: the chases and shootouts (amazingly kinetic, amazingly
bloody) benefit from minute cartoon detail that extends to the
surprised or shocked faces of the tiniest extra; the Tetsuo
monster alternately looks like a billion-gallon scrotal sac or a
Tex Avery mutation of the monster from The Quatermass
Experiment; and the finale--which combines flashbacks to
more innocent days with a destruction of Neo City and the
creation of a new universe--is one of the most mind-bending in
all sci-fi cinema. --Kim Newman
Lupin the 3rd - A fun Oceans
Eleven kind of movie. Hayao Myazaki's first anime.
Plot Outline: A flamboyant
thief and his gang struggle to free a princess from an
evil count's clutches and to learn the hidden secret to
a fabulous treasure that she holds part of a key to.
Plot Synopsis: Reknowned
international thief Lupin III (known as "Wolf" in the
English dub) comes to the small European duchy of
Cagliostro to investigate some excellently-forged money
and stumbles across a national conspiracy going back
some hundreds of years. Lupin and his friends must
rescue the beautiful Clarice from the hands of the evil
Count Cagliostro and solve the mystery of a hidden
treasure dating back to the 15th century.
Hayao Miyazaki (Princess Mononoke,
My Neighbor Totoro) achieved his first international hit
with this delightful 1979 adventure yarn. Quick-paced,
high-spirited, and loaded with wit, Cagliostro is a dandy
throwback to the caper pictures of the '60s. International man
of mystery Lupin III stumbles back into the picturesque European
duchy of Cagliostro with his faithful and gruff sidekick, Jigen.
They will encounter, in no particular order, a runaway bride, a
magical ring, an evil count with a dastardly plan, an inspector
bent on catching Lupin, perilous rooftop chases, hooded guards
with superhuman powers, a well-used dungeon, a counterfeiting
scheme, and an ancient mystery promising grand treasure. Lupin
deploys an array of Bond-type gadgets, razor-sharp wit, and a
surprise up both his sleeves. Despite the hail of bullets, this
caper is great fun, never taking itself seriously. Miyazaki's
career illustrates how limiting the term anime can be for
these films; there are hardly more than 10 live-action films of
this genre as entertaining. Far less mean than Hollywood fare,
it nevertheless is for ages 9 and up with language and gunplay.
The Lupin character has been featured in other anime films, but
never as successfully or with as much fun as in Miyazaki's film.
The new English-language dubbing is excellent to boot. --Doug
Thomas
Another Myazaki anime epic against
the forces of nature with cool animation. - Nausica the Valley
of the wind..
Plot Outline:
Warrior/pacifist Princess Nausicaä desperately
struggles to prevent two warring nations from destroying
themselves and their dying planet.
Plot Synopsis: In the far
future, man has destroyed the Earth in the "Seven Days
of Fire". Now, there are small pockets of humanity that
survive. One pocket is the Valley of Wind where a
princess named Nausicaa tries to understand, rather than
destroy the Toxic Jungle. Note that the old US release
titled Warriors of the Wind is an entirely kiddified
version which edits the original movie heavily, thus
creating an entirely different story. -Andre
Hayao Miyazaki gained widespread
attention in Japan for his complex ecological manga series,
Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind (1982), which he adapted
for the screen two years later. One thousand years after a war
devastated much of the Earth, humanity clings to existence at
the fringes of a vast, polluted forest inhabited by monstrous
insects. Only Nausicaä, the princess of the tiny realm of the
Valley of the Wind, grasps the environmental significance of the
forest. She sees beyond petty wars and national rivalries to the
only viable future for the planet. In Nausicaä, Miyazaki
began to explore elements he would develop more fully in his
later films: daring, compassionate heroines; exciting flying
sequences; colorful side characters; strong interpersonal
relationships; and a call for an ecologically sustainable way of
life. Nausicaä prefigures Sheeta in Castle in the Sky and
Chihiro in Spirited Away, just as the rough and ready
Asbel anticipates Pazu in Castle in the Sky and Ashitaka
in Princess Mononoke. For years, Nausicaä was
available in the United States only as the badly re-edited
Warriors of the Wind. The new English dub from Disney
presents the film in its entirety, with strong vocal
performances by Uma Thurman, Patrick Stewart, Alison Lohman, and
Edward James Olmos. (Rated PG: violence, frightening imagery)
--Charles Solomon
KiKi's Delivery Service -
Breathtaking scenery. One of the most best animation used in a
Myazaki film and one of the most funnest stories.
Plot Outline: A young witch,
on her mandatory year of independent life, finds fitting
into a new community difficult while she supports
herself by running an air courier service.
Plot Synopsis: Kiki is
thirteen and on her own. Once a witch turns thirteen, it
is time for her to go out and find a city to settle in
for a year to complete her witches study. It is this
time for her and we get to go along as she attempts to
survive in the world on her own.
In Hayao Miyazaki's magical Kiki's
Delivery Service, a 13-year-old girl meets the world head on
as she spends her first year soloing as an apprentice witch.
Kiki (Kirsten Dunst) is still a little green and plenty
headstrong, but also resourceful, imaginative, and determined.
With her trusty wisp of a cat Jiji (a gently subdued Phil
Hartman) by her side she's ready to take on the world, or at
least the quaintly European seaside village she's chosen as her
new home. Miyazaki's gentle rhythm and meandering narrative
capture the easy pulse of real life (even if his subject is a
girl flying high upon a broomstick) and charts the everyday
struggles and growing pains of his plucky heroine with
sensitivity and understanding. Beautifully detailed animation
and the rich designs of the picture-postcard seaside town of
red-tiled roofs and cobblestone streets only add to the sense of
wonder. This charming animated fantasy is a wholesome,
life-affirming picture that doesn't speak down to kids or up to
adults. --Sean Axmaker
Paragon Agent -
Truly a weird, but intriquing anime.
Dark, unsettling, and intriguing,
Paranoia Agent confirms Satoshi Kon's position as one of the
most interesting directors currently working in Japan. A
baseball bat-wielding adolescent randomly attacks five people in
Tokyo, each of whom is grappling with a serious problem. Toy
designer Tsukiko endures tremendous pressure to repeat her
previous success; bottom-feeding journalist Kawazu desperately
needs money. Popular sixth grader Yuuichi feels threatened by
the new kid in his class, the dumpy nerd Usshi. Yuuichi's tutor
Harumi is a compassionate scholar by day; at night, she becomes
Maria, a sleazy hooker. The seemingly purposeless violence of
Lil' Slugger (originally Shounen Bat, literally "Bat
Boy"), also disrupts the lives of police detectives Maniwa and
Karino, and their corrupt boss Hirukawa. As he did in Perfect
Blue, Kon deliberately blurs the boundaries between reality
and fantasy: Does Tsukikio's stuffed toy really talk to her?
Which is Harumi's true personality? A noteworthy series from an
important artist. This set includes all four volumes of the
series. (Rated 16 and older: violence, sexual situations, brief
nudity, alcohol and tobacco use) --Charles Solomon
.hack//SIGN - Vol. 1:
Login (2003)-An
interesting anime with very good animation and storytelling.
Plot Outline: A strange boy
named Tsukasa appears in the online video game "The
World". He claims to be alive, and without a computer.
Plot Synopsis: It is the
year 2010. After the great network crash of 2005, online
entertainment was restricted. Two years after, the CC
Corporation released the first Massively Multiplayer
Online Role Playing game since the incident. The
extremely popular game, called "The World" sells
millions of copies. And when that many are playing,
things are bound to go wrong. A mysterious boy, who
calls himself Tsukasa, appears. He is very mysterious,
and he claims that he is actually alive "in the world" -
that he isn't a person in front of a computer. He is
branded a server malfunction by Ginkan and the Scarlet
Knights, and is pursued.
Based on a popular PlayStation2 game,
the fantasy-adventure .hack//Sign is set in the world
within an online game. Tsukasa, a powerful Wave Master, finds
himself lost in the cyberworld, with little memory of how he got
there. More significantly, he's unable to log out of the game
and is apparently immune to many of its restrictions. He may be
the focus of an impending crisis linked to the mysterious Key of
the Twilight. As he wanders through different realms, Tsukasa
meets spunky girl warrior Mimiru; earnest soldier Bear; the
Crimson Knights, who maintain order in the game-world; and
genially heroic Crim, a Heavy Spear wielder. Tsukasa also
encounters a potent but unseen entity who promises to protect
him--and does. Handsomely designed, nicely animated,
intriguingly scripted, and refreshingly free of unnecessary
dialogue, .hack//Sign looks like a winner. (Rated 13 and
older: violence) --Charles Solomon
Tokyo Godfathers (2003)
-A
kind of comical drama with a suprisingly plot for an anime.
Plot Synopsis: Christmas in
Tokyo. Three homeless friends: a young girl, a transvestite, and
a middle-aged bum. While foraging through some trash, they find
an abandoned newborn. Hana, the transvestite with delusions of
being a mother, convinces the others to keep it overnight. The
next day, using a key found with the baby, they start tracking
down the parents, with many adventures along the way.
Satoshi Kon's third feature (following
Perfect Blue and Millennium Actress) confirms his
status as one of the most interesting directors working in
anime. Tokyo Godfathers centers on three homeless people:
Hana, a flamboyant ex-drag entertainer; Gin, an alcoholic former
bicycle racer; and Miyuki, a sullen teenage runaway. Their
tenuous existence becomes more chaotic when they set out to find
the parents of an abandoned baby on Christmas Eve. They scream
insults as they confront the lies they've told each other--and
themselves--about the past. Yet they remain curiously endearing
and even noble. All three care passionately about the abandoned
infant, and they love each other, although they're loath to
admit it. Kon skillfully uses color to suggest the bitter winter
cold and the characters' alienation. Tokyo Godfathers
shows that battling the inner demons that led these three
characters to skid row can be a more daunting challenge than
fighting aliens and cyborgs. (Rated PG-13: profanity, violence,
tobacco and alcohol use) --Charles Solomon
Grave of the Fireflies
(Collector's Edition) (1988)-Truly
a remarkable and dramatic anime. One of the most saddest and
best dramas.
Plot Outline: A tragic film
covering a young boy and his little sister's struggle to
survive in Japan during World War II.
Plot Synopsis: Setsuko and
Seita are brother and sister living in wartime Japan.
After their mother is killed in an air raid they find a
temporary home with relatives. Having quarreled with
their aunt they leave the city and make their home in an
abandoned shelter. While their father's destiny who was
a soldier is unknown the two must depend on each other
to somehow keep a roof over their heads and food in
their stomachs. When everything is in short supply, they
gradually succumb to hunger and their only entertainment
is the light of the fireflies.
Isao Takahata's powerful
antiwar film has been praised by critics
wherever it has been screened around the world.
When their mother is killed in the firebombing
of Tokyo near the end of World War II, teenage
Seita and his little sister Setsuko are left on
their own: their father is away, serving in the
Imperial Navy. The two children initially stay
with an aunt, but she has little affection for
them and resents the time and money they
require. The two children set up housekeeping in
a cave by a stream, but their meager resources
are quickly exhausted, and Seita is reduced to
stealing to feed his sister.
The strength of Grave of the Fireflies
lies in Takahata's evenhanded portrayal of the
characters. A sympathetic doctor, the greedy
aunt, the disinterested cousins all know there
is little they can do for Seita and Setsuko.
Their resources, like their country's, are
already overtaxed: anything they spare endangers
their own survival. As in the Barefoot Gen
films, no mention is made of Japan's role in the
war as an aggressor; but the depiction of the
needless suffering endured by its victims
transcends national and ideological boundaries.
--Charles Solomon
The Cat Returns (2002) -A
fun little imaginative anime.
Plot Outline: After helping
a cat, a young girl finds herself involuntarily engaged
to a cat prince in a magical world where her only hope
of freedom lies with a dapper cat statuette come to
life.
Plot Synopsis: A young girl
rescues a mysterious cat from traffic and soon finds
herself the unwelcome recipient of gifts and favors from
the King of the Cats, who also wants her to marry his
son, Prince Lune. With the assistance of a fat, grouchy
real cat and a an elegant cat statuette come to life
(both characters featured in Studio Ghibli's earlier
anime "Whisper of the Heart"), the girl visits the Cat
Kingdom and narrowly escapes again.
The Cat Returns
(2002) brings back Muta, the cranky fat cat, and
Baron von Gikkingen, the elegant statue, from
the feature Whisper of the Heart (1995).
On her way home from school, Haru, a confused
17-year-old, prevents an elegant gray cat from
being hit by a truck. She's inadvertently saved
the life of Lune, Prince of the Cat Kingdom, and
his royal father decides to thank her. He fills
her locker with gift-wrapped mice and decides
she should come to his kingdom and marry Lune.
Haru seeks help from the Cat Bureau, and
eventually returns to relatively normal life,
with the assistance of Muta and the Baron.
The Cat Returns recalls Whisper of
the Heart and Takashi Nakamura's
Catnapped, but it offers neither the wistful
charm of the former nor the bold visual
imagination of the latter. Hayao Miyazaki has
been seeking young directors for Studio Ghibli
for several years. After preparing the script
and storyboards for Whisper, he turned
the film over to Yoshifumi Kondo, who died
tragically shortly after the film's release.
The Cat Returns was directed by Hiroyuki
Morita, who shows promise, but lacks Kondo's
elegant sensibility. The DVD extras include a
fulsome making-of documentary, Morita's
voluminous storyboards, and mini-interviews with
the vocal cast that includes Tim Curry, Cary
Elwes, Peter Boyle, and Elliott Gould. (Rated G:
minor scary imagery and cartoon violence)
--Charles Solomon