This Week in Anime: Ghosts in the Shell
The column frames the upcoming Science SARU series as the first direct adaptation of Shirow's manga stories into cel animation, marking a shift from the franchise's long history of reinterpretations.
Reporting from 1 sources: Anime News Network.
The latest installment of Anime News Network's 'This Week in Anime' column is a roundtable discussion covering the entire Ghost in the Shell franchise, timed around the upcoming Science SARU adaptation. The column's participants survey every major iteration of the series, from Masamune Shirow's original manga to Mamoru Oshii's 1995 film and its sequel Innocence, the Stand Alone Complex television series and its CG sequel SAC_2045, the Arise prequel series, the 2017 live-action Hollywood film, and even the PS1 video game. The conversation highlights the franchise's thematic flexibility, noting how its core cast of characters can work across vastly different tones and formats. The column gives particular attention to the Science SARU series, which the writers describe as the first direct cel-animated adaptation of Shirow's manga stories rather than a reinterpretation. The writers also discuss the Major's role as a transfeminine icon and the franchise's handling of feminine sexuality and power. The column closes by mentioning Pandora in the Crimson Shell: Ghost Urn as a connected prequel work.
The column compares the 1995 Mamoru Oshii film to his earlier Patlabor movies, calling both "tight action films with a little more to chew on hiding under the surface." Oshii's sequel Innocence is described as "one of the neatest-looking anime films ever," with the writer praising how Oshii uses the "unwieldy CG of the mid-2000s to a beautifully uncanny effect." The column notes that the handful of CG scene recreations in Ghost in the Shell 2.0 "don't really hold a candle to the original hand animation." The writers call Stand Alone Complex "my platonic ideal of 'extremely watchable cop procedural'" and praise its English dub as "probably one of the strongest dubs of its era." They name Mary Elizabeth McGlynn as the Major, Richard Epcar as Batou, and the late William Knight as Aramaki. The column also mentions a set of famous SAC fansubs and describes the series' 2017 Blu-ray release as "deeply bizarre," with no chapter breaks, "weird audio quirks," and "noisy video." SAC_2045 is called "a deeply strange Netflix original" with visuals that are "simply not ready for prime time." The writers note character models clipping into each other during cyberspace conversations. The Arise series is remembered mostly for its "excellent opening and ending songs." The 2017 live-action film is dismissed as "a joke from announcement through execution," with the column calling Scarlett Johansson's casting "a punchline about Hollywood whitewashing." The column highlights the PS1 Ghost in the Shell game, which had animated cutscenes from Production I.G and the film's English dub cast. The writers call it the closest any animation got to the manga's tone, "at least as far as the horndog aspect goes."
Synthesized by Yomimono from the 1 cited source below, including Japanese-language reporting where cited, then editorially reviewed before publishing.
Sources
- Anime News Network This Week in Anime - Ghosts in the Shell