If you want a convoluted storyline and a continuous bashing of christianity over your head until you convert under the skin of a technically excellent animation, give it a go. This is the last time I give this director any interest from my part. NOT RECOMMENDED.
And if you really you dig religious-themed mechas, check out Ideon by Tomino, at least it less pretentious and FAR less over-your-head than the usual standard of this director (Ghost in The Shell I'm looking at you too).
Plot summary
A mysterious suicide and a series of unmanned robot run-aways sparks off a Police investigation into the suspicious software on-board thousands of industrial robots around Tokyo. Step by step, the police find themselves tangled up by the web of a perfect crime which awaits the approaching Typhoon to activate thousands of virus affected robots. As time runs out, Asuma and his team must complete a task that is doomed to be a failure before the Typhoon lands Tokyo.
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Typical Mamoru Oshii crap, nothing special here
Patlabor's first cinema.
It's the year 1999, the world we live in has Labors(human operated robot carriers) used for construction and giving mankind an easier living style. After The suicide of a mysterious man from the massive constructing Babylon Project a computer virus was created to infect the Labors. And make them cause havoc on their own free will. Which leads to Section 2 of the Patlabor team in investigating this incident. Before the Tokyo district faces it's destruction.
I first saw this movie back in 2005, and it imminently got me into the franchise. Which I had no idea it existed before. Compared to the popular TV series. This movie has all the characters we all recognized and know. Only the theme to this movie is more serious than the theme of the TV show. In other words more seriousness and less comedy.
But that didn't change the plot a bit. As the movie does have some great and believable moments in it, that make you forget it's animated. Plus it's directed by Masumo Oshii who was one of the dudes who made this franchise possible. And really knows how to make it the way it should.
If you like a unique Sci-Fi anime or interested in seeing something new. Patlabor the Movie has been highly recommended by various websites. It's enjoyable even if you don't know the series.
"Patlabor: The Movie" (1989) review...
(I saw this one first back in the summer of 2006.)
It must be said that widely acclaimed Japanese animation (Anime') director Mamoru Oshii is one of the most distinguished personalities in all of Anime'. His most famous work - and my personal favorite film of his - is 1995's "Ghost in the Shell" (which gained added popularity in the United States and around the rest of the world for its apparent influence on "The Matrix" and its sequels).
Before "Ghost in the Shell," though, he was probably most famous for his work on the "Patlabor" series of films, which were adapted from a popular Manga (Japanese comic) and TV series - both of which Ishii himself co-created (based on original concepts by Yuuki Masami),alongside longtime collaborator Kazunori Ito and several others. The first in the series was 1989's "Patlabor: The Movie." While a little confusing at times, I got through it with little difficulty. The story itself is engaging, but I actually save my best praises for this film's darker, superior, politically-charged and mature 1993 sequel, "Patlabor 2: The Movie."
"Patlabor: The Movie" is set in Japan in the late '90s (the then-future),where mankind is aided in everyday tasks (like construction work) by "Labors," giant robots that are operated by specially trained humans. They are also used extensively in military and law enforcement duties; the series focuses mostly on the "Patrol Labors" ("Patlabors") that are being used by the Tokyo Metropolitan Police force.
The plot gets moving when the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department's 2nd Special Vehicles Section (SV2) begins investigating a series of incidents where Labors of differing size and operations begin malfunctioning all across the city. The young SV2 operative Asuma Shinohara, alongside female SV2 pilot and close associate Noa Izumi, suspects that a new operating system (OS) that had recently been installed to over 80% of the labors in the city, is what is causing the malfunctions. The OS was written and designed by Eiichiro Hoba - who committed suicide just five days before the story begins - with the intention that all Labors installed with the program deliberately malfunction if a series of specific conditions are met (like high winds generating low-frequency sound-waves all across the city, for example). The now-deceased Hoba had become obsessed with the Babylon Project - a series of man-made islands in the Tokyo Bay area, and its nerve center the Ark (Hoba's fixation was on the obvious biblical allusions to the Ark, as in Noah's Ark) - and specifically targeted the Labors involved in its construction.
"Patlabor: The Movie" is quite an early achievement from Mamoru Oshii and shows many of his trademark filmmaking signatures that would become more apparent over the course of his career. The numerous biblical references; the deep, involving plot and colorful, multi-dimensional cast of characters; the moody, atmospheric score by frequent collaborator Kenji Kawai; and philosophical musings about technology run amok in the then-future all appear here. It's an astounding piece of animation, though as I stated earlier, it's not as good as its darker, more mature and plot-heavy sequel "Patlabor 2: The Movie."
8/10