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Patlabor: The Movie | |
---|---|
Directed by | Mamoru Oshii |
Screenplay by | Kazunori Itō |
Story by | Masami Yuki |
Based on | Patlabor by Headgear |
Produced by | Makoto Kubo Shin Unozawa Taro Maki |
Starring | Toshio Furukawa Miina Tominaga Ryunosuke Ohbayashi Shigeru Chiba |
Cinematography | Mitsunobu Yoshida |
Edited by | Morita Edit Room |
Music by | Kenji Kawai |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Shochiku |
Release date |
|
Running time | 98 minutes |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
Patlabor: The Movie[a] is a 1989 Japanese animated science fiction film directed by Mamoru Oshii and written by Kazunori Itō, with an original story by Headgear. It was produced by Bandai Visual, Tohokushinsha and animated by I.G. Tatsunoko.[1] It is part of the Patlabor series.
Plot
Set in 1999, Tokyo is undergoing a huge re-development program: old suburbs are being demolished and human-made islands are being constructed in Tokyo Bay under the Babylon Project. Dominating the scene is the Ark, a huge man-made island that serves at the Project's nerve center and chief Labor[b] manufacturing facility.
However, several of the Labors being used in Tokyo, specifically those built by Shinohara Heavy Industries, suddenly go haywire even while unattended. The Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department's (TMPD) 2nd Special Vehicles Section (SV2) is assigned to help reel in the errant Labors, but only the SV2's Division II is on duty around the clock (with Division I already on training duties elsewhere). The JGSDF is also preoccupied as they send their own forces to stop an HOS-equipped TYPE-X10[2] Labor tank prototype.
As Division II goes out on the field, team commander Captain Gotoh, Sgt Asuma Shinohara, and mechanic Shige Shiba work with police Detective Matsui to find further leads on the case. They discover that all the errant Labors, plus other Labors in the Greater Tokyo Area, were equipped with the company's new Hyper Operating System (HOS). Low-frequency resonance emanating from wind-struck high-rise buildings triggers the erratic behavior in these units. To SV2 pilot Noa Izumi's relief, no copies of the software were installed in Division II's AV98 Ingram police Labors. They also learn that HOS programmer Eiichi Hoba, who had committed suicide days before, was obsessed with the Babylon Project's Biblical references (the Ark being alluded to Noah's Ark, for example; his own name. E. Hoba—Jehovah—for another) and planted a self replicating virus in the code that would cause Labors to malfunction. A computer simulation predicts that gale-force winds acting on the Ark could send all the Labors in Tokyo into a massive rampage, especially since the Ark's size and steel framework amplifies the resonance frequencies causing them to reach farther into the city. Worse, the weather bureau announces that a typhoon is expected to hit Tokyo within two days.
Gotoh discreetly gets clearance from the TMPD leadership to destroy the Ark as Shige tries to dig up more evidence of Hoba's guilt to justify the operation. Kanuka Clancy returns from the US to help in the raid. Division II attaches flotation bags to their vehicles and head out to the Ark. Malfunctioning HOS-equipped Labors engage the team as soon as they land on the Ark. Ingram pilots Noa and Ohta, plus Kanuka in a hijacked AV-X0 TYPE-0[3] police Labor prototype, buys time for Hiromi, Asuma and Shinshi to break into the control room and activate the Ark's self-destruct sequence. However, Kanuka loses control over the TYPE-0 in the chaos because it runs on HOS as well. Trapped by the TYPE-0 in one of the last remaining ledges, Noa climbs out of her damaged Ingram and fires her shotgun into the Labor’s S-RAM[4] system to finally shut it down. With the successful destruction of the Ark, SV2 sends helicopters to rescue the team.
Development
The Biblical references in the movie were due to Oshii being inspired by Noa's name's similarity to Noah, and he reused some concepts from his cancelled Lupin the Third movie as a result, with the ark being the equivalent of the cancelled film's tower of Babel. The plotline involving the architect and mastermind having committed suicide before the start of the story was also taken from the cancelled film.
Oshii also wanted to reuse part of the cancelled film's ending, but was stopped by other staff members such as Izubuchi. He would later go on to use that ending for the live action film THE NEXT GENERATION Patlabor: Shuto Kessen.[5][6][7][8][9]
Voice actors
Character | Japanese[10] | English[10] | |
---|---|---|---|
Manga UK | Bandai Visual | ||
Asuma Shinohara | Toshio Furukawa | David Jarvis | Doug Erholtz |
Noa Izumi | Miina Tominaga | Briony Glassico | Julie Ann Taylor |
Kiichi Goto | Ryunosuke Ohbayashi | Peter Marinker | Roger Craig Smith |
Shinobu Nagumo | Yoshiko Sakakibara | Sharon Holm | Megan Hollingshead |
Kanuka Clancy | Yō Inoue | Tamsin Hollo | Lisa Enochs |
Isao Ohta | Michihiro Ikemizu | Martin McDougall | Sam Riegel |
Mikiyasu Shinshi | Issei Futamata | Ron Lepaz | Joe Ochman |
Hiromi Yamazaki | Daisuke Gouri | Michael Fitzpatrick | Jason C. Miller |
Shigeo Shiba | Shigeru Chiba | Edward Glen | Peter Doyle |
Seitaro Sakaki | Osamu Saka | Blain Fairman | Jamieson Price |
Jitsuyama | Mahito Tsujimura | Don Fellows | Milton Lawrence |
Matsui | Tomomichi Nishimura | Mac McDougall | Paul St. Peter |
Kaihou | Toshihiko Kojima | Paul St. Peter | |
Fukushima | Shinji Ogawa | William Roberts | Bob Papenbrook |
Kataoka | Kouji Tsujitani | William Dufris | Liam O'Brien |
Home media
The first two Patlabor films have been released on DVD numerous times. The original release uses the same master as the Laserdisc release and offers stereo Japanese. The next release featured remastered non-anamorphic letterbox video. The original North American DVD release from Manga Entertainment featured a VHS transfer and the original Manga UK English dub.
The third release, which the latest R1s from Bandai Visual use, features remastered anamorphic letterbox video and 5.1 sound. The US release features a new English dub produced by Bandai Visual. The Australian Madman/Manga UK R4 release uses the Australian Manga VHS master, and includes remixed 5.1 Manga UK dub and the original 2.0 Japanese dub. [citation needed]. In 2008, both movies were released in Japan on Blu-ray with English audio and English subtitles.
It was licensed in Europe by Beez Entertainment. Section23 Films has licensed all three Patlabor films and the first film on Blu-ray and DVD was released on May 5, 2015.[11]
Legacy
Animations from the movie were used extensively in the music video "Juke Joint Jezebel" by KMFDM.[12]
Notes
References
- ^ "Patlabor 1: The Movie> STAFF & CAST". Production I.G. Retrieved 2014-03-01.
- ^ 0:03:46
- ^ 1:22:32
- ^ 1:32:20
- ^ 文 押井守、イラスト 天野喜孝「映画『ルパン三世』制作おぼえがき」『アニメージュ』1984年12月号、pp.38-39
- ^ 「インタビュー押井守 幻の押井ルパンは『虚構を盗む』はずだった」『THEルパン三世FILES ルパン三世全記録 〜増補改訂版〜』キネマ旬報社、1998年、p.36
- ^ 押井守『イノセンス創作ノート 人形・建築・身体の旅+対談』徳間書店、2004年、p.73
- ^ 『BSアニメ夜話Vol.03 機動警察パトレイバー』キネマ旬報社、2006年、p.75
- ^ 「神山健治インタビュウ」『S-Fマガジン』2012年12月号、pp.6、190
- ^ a b "Patlabor: The Movie". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved 2020-07-06.
- ^ "Section23 Films Adds Patlabor Film, The World God Only Knows OVAs". Anime Network. 2015-01-22.
- ^ MTV's Primestar Boost; Japanimation Rocks by Brett Atwood, page 47, Billboard, 19 Aug 1995.
External links
- Official website (in Japanese)
- Patlabor: The Movie at IMDb
- Patlabor: The Movie (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
- Patlabor: The Movie at AllMovie
- 1989 films
- 1989 anime films
- 1989 science fiction films
- Bandai Visual
- Films directed by Mamoru Oshii
- Films set in 1999
- Animated films set in Tokyo
- Japanese science fiction films
- 1980s Japanese-language films
- Maiden Japan
- Manga Entertainment
- Patlabor
- Postcyberpunk films
- Production I.G
- Studio Deen
- Films scored by Kenji Kawai
- 1989 in Japanese cinema
- Animated films set in the 1990s
- Animated films set in the future