Ghost in the Shell

    Ghost in the Shell
    1995

    Synopsis

    In the year 2029, the barriers of our world have been broken down by the net and by cybernetics, but this brings new vulnerability to humans in the form of brain-hacking. When a highly-wanted hacker known as 'The Puppetmaster' begins involving them in politics, Section 9, a group of cybernetically enhanced cops, are called in to investigate and stop the Puppetmaster.

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    Cast

    • Atsuko TanakaMotoko Kusanagi (voice)
    • Akio OtsukaBatou (voice)
    • Iemasa KayumiPuppetmaster (voice)
    • Koichi YamaderaTogusa (voice)
    • Yutaka NakanoIshikawa (voice)
    • Tamio OhkiAramaki (voice)
    • Tessyo GendaDirector Nakamura (voice)
    • Naruki MasahisaDr. Willis (voice)
    • Masato YamanouchiMinister of Foreign Affairs (voice)
    • Shinji OgawaGaikôkan (voice)

    Recommendations

    • 100

      The Telegraph

      There are gripping chases and balletic combat scenes, painstakingly realised by Oshii’s animators, but the mood is mostly cold and melancholic, as Kusanagi broods over the fleshly implications of living in a world of data
    • 80

      Time Out London

      The plot is impossibly dense and the characters – perhaps appropriately – feel like little more than cyphers, but for sheer mind-expanding sci-fi strangeness this is hard to beat.
    • 80

      The Dissolve

      For a movie that’s so photo-realistic in its backgrounds and detailed in its character design, Ghost In The Shell is just as effective when it goes minimal, suggesting presence through absence.
    • 80

      The Guardian

      It is a dizzying, headspinning film, replete with violence, alienation and tech-porn. I confess I find it too opaque to make the kind of investment that would qualify me as a real fan. But it should be seen.
    • 80

      Total Film

      Most alluring are the crumbling neon cityscapes, real world/cyberspace fusion and the musings on identity.
    • 80

      Empire

      From its baddie-eviscerating opening sequence through innumerable car chases, shoot outs and tongue-in-cheek dialogue exchanges, this is exactly the kind of film that James Cameron would make if they ever let him through the Disney front gates.
    • 75

      Chicago Sun-Times

      The ghost of anime can be seen here trying to dive into the shell of the movie mainstream. But this particular film is too complex and murky to reach a large audience, I suspect; it's not until the second hour that the story begins to reveal its meaning. But I enjoyed its visuals, its evocative soundtrack (including a suite for percussion and heavy breathing), and its ideas.
    • 75

      San Francisco Chronicle

      Mamoru Oshii's direction deftly merges gritty realism with a dreamlike quality. The only problem is that the characters reel off their existential speeches with such harried deadpan that it's hard to tell whether the angst is serious or tongue-in-cheek.

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