Animonday: Ghost in the Shell 2 - Innocence

November 12th, 2007 Posted by Ian W | DVD Viewing Journal | no comments

The original Ghost in the Shell is one of the films that helped anime reach a wider audience, showing that it could produce intelligent science fiction as good as, and often better than, live action movies. Almost ten years after the original came Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence, and while it’s not as groundbreaking as its forbear it’s still an intelligent, action packed, visual feast.

The film is a murder mystery, with robots killing people and then commenting suicide. Cyborg detective Batou returns from the original film and, along with new partner Togusa, is tasked with getting to the bottom of the mystery. Along the way he’ll encounter robots with souls, Yakuza killers and his own “guardian angel.”

The film is chock full of big ideas but what makes it so effective is Batou. It would be so easy for him to be just your standard action hero, blowing away bad guys left and right (and he does plenty of that) but thanks to great writing, exceptional animation and the vocal talents of Akio Ôtsuka he becomes so much more. There are some great action scenes in the film, the Yakuza sequence being an obvious stand out but for me the films finest moment is a much quieter affair. Batou returns home after work, feeds his dog, cracks open a bear and stretches out in his chair, it’s the sort of thing anyone would do and it helps to humanise this gruff, tough and violent man. If the viewer wasn’t routing for Batou before, they will be after that scene. Either that or they don’t have a soul.