Ghost In The Shell - Film Analysis - Motoko's Dilemma

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  • čas přidán 7. 11. 2014
  • This is an analysis of Mamuro Oshii's classic, Ghost in the Shell. In this video i focus on Motoko Kusanagi and how she deals with certain themes in the film. Please do post your opinions or observations in the comments!
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  • @lucianopinheiro15
    @lucianopinheiro15 Před 5 lety +190

    The most incredible thing about this movie is the duality Human vs Machine. Motoko represents a human that turned to a machine while master of puppets represents a machine that turned to a human. They are mirror of themselves

    • @zpettigrew
      @zpettigrew Před 10 měsíci +4

      That's the point.

    • @numbdigger9552
      @numbdigger9552 Před měsícem

      That is acually pretty similar to the themes of blade runner...

  • @anybody2501
    @anybody2501 Před 8 lety +350

    This movie really was ahead of its time. Fucking incredible.

    • @pijakthumrongkiatikul673
      @pijakthumrongkiatikul673 Před 7 lety +8

      it's the same as Great Gatsby, The Stranger and so on, so forth.

    • @kythrathesuntamer9715
      @kythrathesuntamer9715 Před 2 lety +10

      It's 2021 as I Reply to a 5 year old comment and even TODAY Ghost in the Shell is distantly ahead of its time. The world is STILL not ready for this film.

    • @Tattlebot
      @Tattlebot Před 6 měsíci

      @@kythrathesuntamer9715 You can tell who the charlatan critics are based on their 1995 verdict. You know the type: quick to give 5 stars to any trite state subsidized film about suffering or human inequality. GITS premieres and they call it Blade Runner with boobs for adolescents. Well Blade Runner was a shit film. GITS was fantastic, and Innocence even better.

    • @TylerEubank
      @TylerEubank Před 3 měsíci

      @@pijakthumrongkiatikul673how?

  • @DarthPingu07
    @DarthPingu07 Před 7 lety +1030

    Motoko's dilemma is beautifully ironic. The question is the answer. To wonder if you are just a machine is not something a machine would do. The fact she questions if she is individual tells me she is self aware, and what is self awareness if it's not individuality?

    • @dondeestaCarter
      @dondeestaCarter Před 7 lety +108

      mmm fair enough... but in this GITS universe the puppet master is a machine or program that became self aware, which implies machines are also capable of self awareness. Also identity has to do with memories, and in this universe memories can be replaced or toyed with, which is why Motoko feels so bummed out during the interrogation scene.

    • @DarthPingu07
      @DarthPingu07 Před 7 lety +27

      Donde está Carter!! true but the puppetmaster is fully aware he is an AI. Motoko however, has always been Motoko, sure her memories could be tampered with but theres never been an indication of tampering.

    • @dondeestaCarter
      @dondeestaCarter Před 7 lety +66

      That´s precisely my point. The PM knows he was born a machine, but Mokoto is aware that memories can be tampered, and she can´t be certain, ironically not as certain as an AI knows he is an AI. At least the PM has that "certainty" advantage. She has nothing, only questions, first that began as hunches and then as the movie develops, they become serious existencial affairs for Motoko.
      The reason why this movie is a masterpiece is because it doesn´t fall into temptation of answering the questions it rises but because it puts them over the table, and leaves it to the audience to answer it. Motoko´s dilemma is our dilemma, we as humans. Are robots a danger, kinda Terminator, or are they user friendly? Will we adapt to the changes? Will we change because of them?" and so on...
      "The net is vast and infinite" WTF is that? is that a proper statement to end a movie?? No, it doesn´t give a closure, on the contrary, is an open ending, a metaphor perhaps to the questions: "posibilities are infinite, make your guess"
      Ok, I may have gone with the branches in this one but, back to the point: "there´s never been indication of Motoko´s memories being tampered" well, who cares?? (not being rude here) Yes we never know in the end if she was human or was not, but that´s not the point of the movie, the point was to raise the doubt that she could not be human even if everyone around her treated and defined her as thus. With doubt, she can creat questions, and as long as you have no answer you can build tension in a film. Maybe answering the question is important in Scarlett Johannson movie (good luck with that...), but not here.

    • @gnayiefnus1327
      @gnayiefnus1327 Před 7 lety +33

      The puppetmaster does NOT view himself as a AI created by human. He came to Section 9 to seek asylum as a individual life form (生命体), he called himself "a life form born from the ocean of information". I think we all agree that modern science is not yet capable to define what is life. We human perceive the difference between a human and any other animal through intelligence, and the different between a human beings and a machine through the existence of ghost.
      However human can not prove the existence of his/her ghost through any other way than accept dialectical materialism what Descartes called: "I think, therefore I am." Here comes the question, pupetmaster, an AI designed by human, gain it/his/her self awareness, does it means it has ghost, dose it means it is a life form. After all, we haven't come across a self aware object that is not a life form.
      If puppetmaster is a life form as he claimed, than his very existence proved that man made machine can generate ghost, and we also know memory also can be produce, then there is really no difference between project 2501 and a life form. I think it is more accurate to consider puppetmaster as another life form very similar to human rather that a AI. Therefore Motoko's self awareness does not prove her humanity, I would very much wanted her to be a human, but no one can prove his/her own humanity

    • @dondeestaCarter
      @dondeestaCarter Před 7 lety

      Feiyang Sun I´m confused, to whom you are replying??

  • @kalamaroni
    @kalamaroni Před 7 lety +569

    You overthink the chairs at the end, unfortunately. at 30:45 you can see that the gap to the other chair actually has a ledge at the bottom- it is not a doorway, it is a mirror. That shot is from the major's perspective as she looks at her reflection in the mirror. The two shots are turned around because that is what mirrors do.

    • @imacg5
      @imacg5 Před 7 lety +59

      I agree with the mirror explanation. Yet the shot does have some extra meanings: 1.When the new "Matoko"(this is "daughter", not the original Major Matoko) wakes up, the first thing she sees is her own image, implying that this time she know who(or what) she is right from her birth. "Who am I" is the big question haunting her from the beginning of the film, she gets the answer at the end. Also, this means at the beginning of the film, she is watching herself made in an object way, and feeling herself born in a subject way at the end. 2.I am not a Christian, so correct me if I am wrong: Matoko is "the One"(that is chosen by the Puppet Master), doubts her destiny and accepts it, dies and rises from the dead, and these make her - Jesus Christ-ish? However, Makoto and Jesus Christ are different in: one, she is female; two, she is there for some mysterious reason the first time, and born without a real father the second time - both the opposite ways. Which perhaps means, Makoto is the "reverse Jesus", or the "Jesus of the machines". The image of Angel also supports this theory. (If it stands, double shame on The Matrix.) 3. The first person shot means the director is making us to look through Makoto's eyes: who is she? who am I? Just an image of myself, that is all.

    • @CureSapphire
      @CureSapphire Před 7 lety +23

      I totally thought that it was also just a mirror, but what makes me somewhat question that is the part of the scene when we see the empty chair. At that point, if it were a mirror, you'd expect to see Matoko in the reflection, yet we don't. I'll have to rewatch the actual scene before I can firmly say one way or another, but it actually might not be a clear cut mirror if I'm understanding that last piece of the scene correctly.

    • @jammosu6498
      @jammosu6498 Před 7 lety +2

      kalamaron i Q

    • @fh5926
      @fh5926 Před 7 lety +20

      The camera's POV has changed. No longer looking thru her eyes directly at the mirror. You wouldn't expect to see her in it.

    • @user-yk1cw8im4h
      @user-yk1cw8im4h Před 7 lety +5

      Jesus... you really are overthinking now with Jesus being brought up.

  • @earlgrey2130
    @earlgrey2130 Před 8 lety +1462

    I showed this movie to a friend of mine because i think it's very deep and interesting. All she said afterwards was: "The one guy's name sounds like butthole." I guess Ghost in the Shell isn't for everyone xD

    • @nostalgiaworks5999
      @nostalgiaworks5999 Před 8 lety +1

      +EarlGrey Because AnimeEveryday sounds like Butthole.

    • @DeathBringer769
      @DeathBringer769 Před 8 lety +80

      +EarlGrey Sounds like the response of a 5 year old who just notices butt and fart references.

    • @iconiclit8945
      @iconiclit8945 Před 8 lety +46

      +Nostalgia Works She was talking that Batou's name.

    • @nostalgiaworks5999
      @nostalgiaworks5999 Před 8 lety +3

      Daniel Yu How was I supposed to know? The only exposure I've had to Ghost in the Shell is by watching reruns of SAC 2nd GIG on Adult Swim's Toonami block.

    • @iconiclit8945
      @iconiclit8945 Před 8 lety +3

      well you should know, it says who batou is in 2nd gig anywyas

  • @HeyyyJude
    @HeyyyJude Před rokem +33

    The ability of the artists to recreate that dead, soulless, doll-like stare that the cyborgs have is phenomenal. At no point will anyone ever assume this is an organic, living being even if they aren’t told the context of an image they’re looking at. Either it’s the walking dead or something that has taken the form of a human and uses it as a shell. Amazing

  • @skrackensdal
    @skrackensdal Před 7 lety +170

    i always thought she was looking into a mirror at the end.

    • @493950
      @493950 Před 6 lety +35

      She is looking in a mirror, buddy just made a mistake.

    • @awesomechainsaw
      @awesomechainsaw Před 4 lety +4

      Mirrors are amazing ain’t they?

    • @saylo8796
      @saylo8796 Před 3 lety +5

      @@493950 but when she stood up and was about to leave, there's no reflection of her.

    • @Pduarte79
      @Pduarte79 Před 3 lety +5

      She was looking to mirror, they use the mirror symbolism. The mirror is her point of view, then she starts to talk to Batou, it returns to Batou's point of view and then our point of view, when we see both in the scene.

    • @kajtekmccranck9978
      @kajtekmccranck9978 Před 3 lety +3

      @@saylo8796 That's a good point! And on the left side of her, when she is back to 'us' we can see doors open - I thought that the mirror hangs on them, but now they are open... Also a two details that I saw: Batou drinking the same beer that they had on the boat and the picture that hangs above hers armchair shows a boat on the lake close to the city - it refers to their moment on the boat and the subconscious/ghost speech-quote from the Bible... Now she sees face-to-face..

  • @Ancor3
    @Ancor3 Před 9 lety +247

    When Batou said that Motoko is a human because she is treated by a human, that could be a subtle reference to Alan Turing's ideas on artificial intelligence. Turing believed that a machine that responds in a perfectly humanlike manner is indistinguishable from actual humans. Turings' position pretty much falls in line with the notion of solipsism, since we can't really know whether anyone else is really thinking or just programmed to act in a humanlike manner. You could even go a step further and ask whether you're not a machine programmed to act in a humanlike manner.
    Just my two cents.

    • @marcomill4824
      @marcomill4824 Před 2 lety +9

      Solipsism is the belief that the only real being are ourselfes. What you're referring about is maybe the Cartesian "problem of other mind", or the impossibility to have real knowledge that other people have a 'ghost' like us.

    • @Ancor3
      @Ancor3 Před 2 lety +6

      @@marcomill4824 You are correct, this was written quite a while ago. Nevertheless, it's good to have the correction visible as well.

    • @zpettigrew
      @zpettigrew Před 10 měsíci +1

      It is an allusion to Turing. If you read the original Manga - Turing and Turing Machines are discussed at length.

  • @dondeestaCarter
    @dondeestaCarter Před 7 lety +12

    The angel is not a trippy vision by motoko, it´s the helicopter deploying for sniping position. If you check earlier in the movie, when section 6 choppers are being briefed about their targets, right after this shot we see the helicopters being deployed in the same way, feather-like gear coming from the sides to allow snipers to shoot. Before they could merge the snipers already point at them, so the puppet master hacked them to buy some time through the already dead tank driver. It is only when they merge that the lock on the chopper is released and motoko sees this angel from above, which is actually the helicopter being re-deployed to sniping mode, but seen from below.
    Of course, the whole sniper-bird-chopper deal was to get motoko see an angel right before the merge, to give a heavenly significance or metaphor to the "marriage" scene. A similar robot-heartless-hard logic explanation for the feathers escapes my imagination. Rain? Glass shards? Anyway, amazing analysis mate, you opened my mind. Keep it up.

  • @SoundbytesMusic
    @SoundbytesMusic Před 7 lety +79

    Here is some interesting fact that you missed:
    During their conversation on the boat both Motoko and Batou hear her voice speaking what is a verbatim citation from the bible: "What we see now is like a dim image in a mirror. Then we shall see face to face." (1 Corinthians 13:12) Given the context it becomes clear that this is meant as a forecast to her later transformation.
    The preceeding verse in the letter of St Paul goes: "When I was a child, I talked like a child, I thought like a child, I
    reasoned like a child. When I became a man, I put the ways of childhood
    behind me." (1 Corinthians 13:11) - And that is what Motoko says after her restoration at the end of the movie and she even sets it in context with the previous scene: "Batou, remember the words that I spoke in another voice that night? I understand it now and there are even more words that go with the passage. ..."
    Looks like we are looking at a pretty pious android here.

    • @michaelkeegan9260
      @michaelkeegan9260 Před 3 lety +4

      That's in the English dub. The translators took liberty to reference the Bible but the Japanese did not use that reference. If the writers had intended to reference that passage they would have done so in the Japanese. That being said it's still an excellent translation because it captures the theme of only understanding somewhat but knowing that in the future as will be revealed when the truth is met face to face in the form of a matured/completed person

    • @michaelkeegan9260
      @michaelkeegan9260 Před 3 lety +13

      @@zogwort1522 I've looked into it and it appears im wrong and you're right... The subtitles i watched had failed to translate it accurately and the movie does specifically reference the Corinthians passage. Sorry man, i was wrong

  • @Strider-Ragnarok
    @Strider-Ragnarok Před 7 lety +284

    Im not any good at deeply analyzing a work of art. All I can do is bringing it down to a more simple concept, which allows me to understand the overall theme.
    For me, Motoko's dilemma comes from the idea of her being a cyborg for so long, that it has completely desensitized her from her humanity. She only feels human from other people treating her like one, therefore, she needs other people to recognize herself. The garbage-man case with implanted memories, the similar cyber-body models she sees on the street only serves to further put doubt on her own individuality. That is detrimental to her sense of self. On the other hand, you have this A.I. that has gain a "self" and it's able to recognized his own existence without the need of others, even when he knows he was created as a program by humans. This falls in place with the "mirror" metaphor, they both are questioning what is called "self," but are at opposite ends of the spectrum. Which is why the Puppet-Master says: "we resemble each other's essence, mirror images of one another's psyche."

    • @ElBribri
      @ElBribri Před 5 lety +14

      this is a pretty good analysis

    • @CustardBustard
      @CustardBustard Před 4 lety +6

      Oh my god... why did I not see this ?

    • @hobit7585
      @hobit7585 Před 4 lety +6

      You nailed it

    • @Ynnead
      @Ynnead Před 2 lety +3

      Dang well done! Nice thougt!

  • @ProjektBurn
    @ProjektBurn Před 7 lety +258

    There were a few things that needed to be pointed out. The skin scene in the beginning was explained as part of the method of growing skin that is UV resistant. Motoko wasn't "born" a creation, she was born human, but being an orphan, she kept replacing more and more of her human body with cybernetics. Her dilemma is then her constant questioning of if she is still human even though 95% of her body is no longer human*. Does replacing her human body with robotics thus remove her humanity or does her humanity lie in her "ghost"? But then seeing how fallible emotions and memories are, that deepens the question even more asking if just not knowing is what makes us human. The voice whispering to her is her first introduction to the puppet master, the rogue AI that has become aware and has taken over the cyborg. At this point, Motoko begins to accept that she is herself, regardless of whether she's still human or not, and in her embrace of her own uniqueness, she accepts that the AI could be alive as its aliveness justifies her own aliveness, which is the driving question she's asking herself the entire movie. Thus she allows the "mating" that happens between the puppet master and herself. And a few other philosophical quibs here and there that I'd love to debate with but alas....
    Great video though. You caught a lot of the symbolic reference and symbolism and did a great and engaging job of presenting them. And looking at the comments, a serious number of responders were caused to think twice about the movie in a very positive way. To me, that's one of the best gifts to have regarding a breakdown like this, and for that, you're awesome! Keep it up.
    *I'm not sure of the exact amount is now machine. It was thoroughly explained in the manga, but the point of being almost entirely machine and only having the brain left of her human body remains.

    • @ProjektBurn
      @ProjektBurn Před 7 lety +10

      Also, the points of duality are a bit more esoteric than you present, especially between the puppet master and Motoko, but it's not necessary to enjoying the story.

    • @GFX1701
      @GFX1701 Před 7 lety +10

      Nailed it.

    • @DrKavan
      @DrKavan Před 7 lety +20

      Project Burn you made me remember the conversation in which she asks Batou "how much of your body was changed?" She wants to reaffirm that it doesn't matters how much of your body is replaced with cyborg parts, it's something else what makes you human.

    • @mmmmmmm3246
      @mmmmmmm3246 Před 7 lety +7

      Thank you for this comment. This explains a lot of the questions I had that weren't addressed in this video.

    • @PeterSather
      @PeterSather Před 6 lety +26

      I believe she was orphaned and drastically injured in a plane crash. She was raised from a young age, 8 or 10 iirc, in a body that is 98% mechanical. She was not slowly becoming more cybernetic, it's just that she has almost no memories of being flesh and bone

  • @RetroMario
    @RetroMario Před 7 lety +285

    Hey, You analysis is FANTASTIC! But I have to disagree with the last argument about the "two motokos". That morrored image of Motoko is most probably just a mirror. But there are other details that you probably missed because it's still important.
    First of all, Motoko being in a younger body isn't just "because that what's was available at the black market". The merge DID happen, and she is born anew. "Where does the newborn go?" is the last thing Motoko mutters. So, a younger body really fits the feeling Motoko gets.
    But let's go back to the mirrored image of Motoko. Remember how her reflections of her revealed something about her inner feelings? Remember that whisper on the boat that both Major Kusanagi and BATOU heard? "It seems that we are looking through a Mirror and all we see is a dim image" Well, notice that this particular reflection in that mirror is perfect. That means, that the new being that has come out of Motoko's merge with the Puppet Master, is a higher being. It isn't clear if the questions are answered while we couldn't hear the conversation or the exchange of information that occured, but the new Motoko is looking at a comparatively complete image of herself instead of whatever was seeing herself reflecting during the movie. That's why it was almost like two identical Motoku sitting in a room because much of the self-doubt has gone and her image of herself has reached near completion. She is one entity and she is sure of it.
    Well, that was my take on that scene anyway. I am grateful you are here on youtube and do such great job, mate! Keep it up!

    • @fgdj2000
      @fgdj2000 Před 5 lety +13

      RetroMario
      Agreed. It’s just a mirror in the adjacent room and her POV seeing her own mirror image. What’s more important is the clarity of the image when compared to other reflection, suggesting that she has changed significantly. And the child body symbolizing how she is born again and essentially a child again (in the manga it was actually a guy‘s body). I think the video reads a bit too much into some of the specifics. I think there is no specific connection between the bird-like plane in the cityscape sequence and Motoko, but the whole sequence just shows a city overflowing with information (signs, people, vehicles) and showing how dense humanity has grown, yet how far apart they all seem and how lost Motoko is in this world and how removed from it. But that’s just my interpretation. That’s what’s so beautiful about this film. It raises questions rather than answering them and encourages each viewer the opportunity to find their own answers.

    • @onursahin7970
      @onursahin7970 Před 5 lety +1

      I thought two identical room indicates there are two new entities after Motoko's and project 2501's "merge". Because the reason project 2501 do want a merge is because it wants to be able to produce like biological entities not self-copying itself.

    • @fgdj2000
      @fgdj2000 Před 5 lety +2

      In the manga, there are actually multiple Motoko/ Puppeteer Hybrids, especially in Man/ Machine Interface. However, in the films it always seemed like the new Motoko at the end is a merger of both Kusanagi and the Puppet Master. In Innocence it's also just her. I think there are no two identical rooms, it's just a mirror in the adjacent room. It does have significance, but I also wouldn't read too much into it.

    • @Fallout0SC
      @Fallout0SC Před 5 lety

      I agree that it's just a mirror, it's not two rooms with two makoto's. Maybe the same image drawn by two different artists working on the movie?

    • @leticiah.valentini9188
      @leticiah.valentini9188 Před 4 lety +2

      @@Fallout0SC I think the first shot of the newborn Motoko is of her looking at herself through the mirror, hence the difference in style. We see through her computer-like eyes.

  • @Troop-
    @Troop- Před 9 lety +64

    I think the revolver could also be seen as a metaphor for humans becoming "old" or being overtaken by cyborgs and other technology ironically made by themselves. A sort of evolution.

    • @peartree8338
      @peartree8338 Před 8 lety +13

      +Troop At the same time the overdependence of technology is also argued in the film to be more susceptible to viruses and degrading/malfunctioning.

    • @Artesian_mirage
      @Artesian_mirage Před 11 měsíci

      Like Major Kusanagi said, "Overspecialise, you breed in weakness." She understands our history is important for without a history how on earth can you fully contextualise? You'll always be at a disadvantage

  • @3draven
    @3draven Před 8 lety +40

    I think that at the end you see Motoko sitting in the chair from her point of view. The digital effect is that it is seen through her eyes.
    She is looking at her own reflection in the mirror at the end of the room. That is why there is a "second chair" seen when she gets up. It's just a reflection (once again the mirror theme).
    It's probably to symbolize that she & the puppet master code are freeing themselves from the old confines of the mirror and going into the new world outside.

  • @TheSwartz
    @TheSwartz Před 3 lety +19

    In my opinion, Ghost in the Shell is the most perfect movie ever created. From the 1st second to the very end, there has never been another movie so perfectly intertwined. Frame by frame. Every line of dialogue. Every note of the sound track. -- all fits together like a masterfully crafted puzzle to tell its story at multiple levels, consciously and subconsciously - all at the same time.

  • @BrandonByerly-Sam9501
    @BrandonByerly-Sam9501 Před 8 lety +80

    I always felt that the movie was very emotional. I never put any of what you said together about symbolism or anything like that. But when I was watching it, I always felt a strong, everlasting emotion in the movie. That is what I loved about the movie, and something I will always remember about it. Great analysis.

  • @joshuadavid6646
    @joshuadavid6646 Před 3 lety +6

    Motoko Kusanagi was not a blank slate. She was a cyborg. She still has memories/experiences from her human side but does not fully know if she still retains a soul.

  • @TrueMentorGuidingMoonlight
    @TrueMentorGuidingMoonlight Před 7 lety +24

    5:30 I love the attention to symbolism in this image. The 2017 movie trailer did a reverse of this image with the lighting, for some odd reason. The window and background were darkened, while ScarJo was in the light. That, IMO, ruins the very purpose of this image. My interpretation is that the purpose of this bedroom image was to show what the Major is like as a character: a dark and hollow shell with a small glimpse of the light of true existence, yearning to transcend her boundaries and become something more than just a ghost in her shell.

  • @missink1728
    @missink1728 Před 3 lety +17

    The "Tree of Life" also appeared in Full Metal Alchemist. It was on Edward's door of Truth. It represents the knowledge Edward gained on his own.

  • @raarnt
    @raarnt Před rokem +10

    Thank you for making this. To me, the Angel descending part was always confusing, I thought it was just put in to explain she is transcending. But after watching your analysis I agree, I think it is Motoko's "higher self" and the angel is indeed female with a similar hairstyle. Masamune's comics continue to explore the concept of multiple selves so this strengthens that theory.
    The ending of the movie has a sad feeling for me. We can no longer empathize well with Motoko as a main character because she has transcended and is something more than just human. We are left to guess and that's what makes it a great ending. Her cameo in Innocence was short to make us understand that she's more God like than human and the doll's body can barely contain a sliver of her consciousness

  • @harrisonmckinney7659
    @harrisonmckinney7659 Před 7 lety +48

    I can't believe that Basset Hound doesn't mean anything lol. I racked my brain about that forever!

    • @aygwm
      @aygwm Před 7 lety +37

      Harrison McKinney I always thought the metaphor of the basset hound represents the spirit of nature residing within the artificial environment of the city. The dog is just a dog, an unaltered natural being with a soul of its own, that continues to be just a dog even though the world around it is becoming less and less natural. The dog appears to have more emotions even than the humans around it who move aimlessly, without emotion. The basset hound is alone, longing to find its place, just as Motoko is longing to find hers. Thus the basset symbolizes the conflict between nature and artificiality as they gaze at each other.

    • @stupidpol
      @stupidpol Před 4 lety +6

      Basset is representation of humanity. In GitS Innocence and Avalon, that dog is the only thing what keeps main characters, Batou and Ash, in resemblence of normality. While personal space of Motoko is a mere container of her body, Batou's house is a real home, and every evening he brings food to his dog who's waiting for him. Basically speaking, the dog is the only thing what keeps Batou from following Motoko's steps.

  • @radicalcatholic285
    @radicalcatholic285 Před 8 lety +44

    Excellent job on the analysis.
    I can't help but think that 1 Corinthians 13:10-12 is a key to understanding some of the imagery used in the film:
    "But when that which is perfect is come, that which is in part shall be done away. When I was a child, I spoke as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child. But, when I became a man, I put away the things of a child. We see now through a glass in a dark manner; but then face to face. Now I know in part; but then I shall know even as I am known."
    The regular use of reflections, mirrors, optical camouflage, breaking glass; the constant search for self-knowledge and ultimate purpose; of seeing 'face to face', as in the meeting between Mokoto and the Puppetmaster; the feathers of the angel as gate-keeper to a higher plane of existence; the paradox of reaching 'maturity' in the form of a child: all of these things seem bound up in the passage quoted by Mokoto, first on the boat and then in the final scene. The fact that she explicitly refers to it as a "passage" seems to imply that the audience is suppose to recognize the biblical reference.

    • @MrValiant101
      @MrValiant101 Před 8 lety +4

      +Radical Catholic Funny thing was that this quote was paraphrased by Motoko in the movie, just not the last sentence.

    • @fuzzydunlop1753
      @fuzzydunlop1753 Před 4 lety

      Good point.

  • @EdMcStinko
    @EdMcStinko Před 7 lety +22

    I remember dismissing this movie because the chick got naked all the time, and she had a perfect body, so it felt kind of frivolous and was hard to take seriously.
    I recently watched it again and decided just to accept that as something that didn't really matter, which it kind of was, and all the sudden I was watching a masterpiece.

    • @4saken404
      @4saken404 Před 7 lety +11

      If you were going to have a cyborg body, wouldn't you want a perfect one?

    • @jimmychapman9964
      @jimmychapman9964 Před 7 lety +29

      EdMcStinko Her nudity is used to reinforce her detachment from her body and feelings of inhumanity. That is why Bato always cover her up, because he still treats her as human and furthermore a woman.

    • @manchesterunitedno7
      @manchesterunitedno7 Před 7 lety +2

      EdMcStinko she only get naked during cyborg creation opening sequence and the climax battle third act against tank mecha. That's because her thermo optic bodysuit torn to shred in that battle. Yes, she is wearing skin colored tight body suit for stealth mode all the time.

    • @jimmychapman9964
      @jimmychapman9964 Před 7 lety +1

      She is nude in the intro assault scene, when her a bato take down the ghost hacked guys in the city, and in the diving scence. In the 'hacked guy' instance Bato covers her with his jacket after she whoops ass. In the diving scene he turns away when she starts undressing. The thermoptic camo suit is part of her body. It is like an outer layer of skin. It is a body suit for Scarlet johansan, cause america. I hear it is a body suit in the manga but in the movie it is not.

    • @manchesterunitedno7
      @manchesterunitedno7 Před 7 lety +1

      Jimmy DaShr00m Nope the thermo optic is not installed, it is extra layer covering up her body, a skin colored suit but different shade, or a thin transparent fabric. That's why during the last battle with tank mecha, it shredded off to pieces when she tried in vain to tear up the tank entrance door. In turn reveal her nude body. She is not nude for the majority of stealth mission, including the opening act (you can see the difference there, only see the outline of her nipples, meanwhile minutes later during opening sequence, you can see clearly her nipples and areolas have pinkish shade). It simply the suit is so tight and thin like a swimsuit, her erect nipples pressed out, also she was drenched wet, hence the cover up.

  • @brian-nr5mo
    @brian-nr5mo Před 7 lety +2

    The fact that the core philosophical conflicts of the movie play out not just explicitly, via dialogue, but even manifest in elements of the environment and in seemingly "accidental" visual metaphors that constantly arise are exactly the reason why this movie is so powerful and enduring. Excellent analysis, thanks so much!

  • @jeffreychung7804
    @jeffreychung7804 Před 9 lety +6

    Nice analysis.
    Some the analysis forgets that Motoko is a special ops soldier and covert operative.
    Spartan safe houses, no attachments, and difficulty relating to civilian or normal human interactions is the norm.
    I understand the desire to relate the themes to what makes us human vs a cyborg, but it can also be thought of as the differences in subcultures. The special ops covert operative life is very different from normal civilian life. The questions that all of section 9 face about their humanity are faced by soldiers and marines returning to civilian life.
    One of the things the analysis does not look at is that this is a world where everybody is part cyborg. What sets section 9 and Motoko in particular apart is the job. The life they lead has no room for attachments. No possessions, or relationships. In fact, their experiences cannot be talked about with civilians or even other operatives who are not read into whatever ops they do. So many of the symbolism attributed to cyborg vs human is not really applicable.
    On the other hand, the issue of where the consciousness resides is the more direct question. In the end, Motoko's consciousness moves to the net. This may be separate from her brain case, but that is never specified.
    One thing that makes this powerful is that it shows where we are going technically, and the ever more isolating effects of certain subcultures. Some combat veterans ask the same question as are being asked in GIS. What makes me human? How do I stay human?

  • @gollumei
    @gollumei Před 2 měsíci +2

    Never realised I needed a Scottish bloke musing on philosophy, anime, identity, death, and life in general. Ay.

  • @TROOPERfarcry
    @TROOPERfarcry Před 10 měsíci +2

    I always thought that the set at the end, and the image-fuzzing, was because she opened her eyes and saw herself in a mirror over a door. Meaning, the first thing we see is what _SHE_ sees... which is a mirror image, because there's a mirror on the door that she's facing. Later we are no longer seeing what she sees, but instead we are the camera aiming at her, which is why things appear reversed. It's a continuation of the mirror theme throughout the film, but the mysterious flip-flopping of the image is just because of a mirror. There aren't two different chairs.

  • @soroushshokrani4544
    @soroushshokrani4544 Před 7 lety +9

    the museum scene (when Motoko is looking at the ceiling) looks very much like a cell division. when a cell division happens, nothing of the original cell remains but there are now two individual cells sharing characteristics. this happens right as Motoko is asking whether she can re-gain her individuality in which the answer is no.

  • @alexwright8585
    @alexwright8585 Před 8 lety +17

    One of my favorite films of all time.

  • @ganon1028
    @ganon1028 Před 9 lety +23

    Great analysis man, Oshii truly is a master and this film is a masterpiece. I think it really shows how differently people interpret this film though, I always thought Motoko's dilemma was the difficulty of seperating physical experience from purely mental existence. I showed this film to my Dad who's a pretty big film and sci-fi buff and we had a discussion about the questions it raises during which we came to the conclusion that the film is creating an answer to one of the main problems of technological singularity that being that artificial entities are unable to reproduce by embracing the idea of conscioussness fusion.
    As for the last scene with the chair my interpretation is that it emphasizes how Motoko is both a new body and new mind and infact not Motoko at all anymore, it zooms away from the old existence into the new which is paralell but different almost as if what Motoko knew as 'herself' is dying and giving rise to new life which will spread through the net. It could also symbolise the end of an entire stage of human existence that being the one that seperates human and machine, ghost and shell and bringing in the new age. There's a quote from this scene from the bible that goes
    "When I was a child, I spoke as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child; but when I became a man, I put away childish things"
    Put in the context of the final scene this explains how individuality and the desire to remain what you are is a childish delusion because as the puppet master points our, we are always changing.
    Also while you didn't mention it the song used in the beginning of the film called 'making of a cyborg' is very important, its actually an ancient Japanese wedding song which gives the opening scene marriage symbolism as well as birth symbolism.

    • @AnimeEverydayYT
      @AnimeEverydayYT  Před 9 lety

      Good interpretation :) That would explain why the original Motoko wasn't on the chair when we see it a second time.

    • @ganon1028
      @ganon1028 Před 9 lety +4

      AnimeEveryday - Anime Reviews
      Yeah its a pretty surreal moment but very subtle in execution, even if there isnt a physical mirror in the scene it definitely creates the metaphor of a mirror between two worlds.

    • @MrExnihlo
      @MrExnihlo Před 9 lety +2

      I think it is definitely ment to symbolize marriage(and marriage being a symbol of a union) along with birth. When people get married the symbolism is that two separate things (2 lives) come together to create one new thing (1 life together). The symbol becomes literal when two people create a new life from an egg and sperm. Her melding with the puppet master is like a marriage. I don't believe that you are seeing motoko in the last scene. Its the new entity created by the information from both motoko and the PM. Their child. I think their ghosts ceased at least in the sense of their identies or separate conciousness, but the child that was created proves they were alive. Birth, procreation and death are things humans take for granted yet mokoto and the puppet master spend the whole movie just trying to understand and accomplish these things. I havent seen this movie in forever but I don't think its at all clear how they merged or how exactly the new child was produced from that, but I think that the impotant thing was that they understood that it was procreation that was the defining aspect of life. This is what evolution is all about. We die but we don't because our information is passed on and evolved to something new. If you watch the film from the perspective of procreation you can see many shots of the city with buildings that are still being made and buildings and things that are finished (not having been born, but having been made) and shots of all of these things in a state of decay or misuse. The rubbish are things that have been created, but are not 'alive' because they didn't pass their information on in the process of creating something new. Another building will be erected in place of the buliding in the climax, but it will be a wholly seprate entity. Man, I'm gonna stop rambling and watch the movie again.

    • @MrExnihlo
      @MrExnihlo Před 9 lety +2

      Jonathan Lewis one other thing is that I do think its a mirror at the end but I think the mirror and reflections imagery is the idea that she is searching for herself and who and what she is but discovers that if you are alive, yourself is never really just yourself. You are the product of the information from the evolutionary history of your species. Looking through the mirrior for motoko (who isn't exactly alive) is realizing that a machine when reflected in a mirror is only a reflection of itsself. While the child (who again is not motoko or a copy of her) looking into a mirrior sees herself, motoko, and the puppet master. The child is now a living thing.

  • @zyura
    @zyura Před 8 lety +8

    15:54 it's not Motoko, it's the other cyborg similar to her at 14:26.

  • @FormlessBody
    @FormlessBody Před 8 lety +6

    This is a truly excellent analysis. I've really gained a much deeper appreciation for a film that I already loved thanks to you!

  • @wilburjones4084
    @wilburjones4084 Před 9 lety +8

    nice analysis. This is the first upload I have seen of yours, I look forward to going through your other videos. keep up the good work.

  • @Totallyking
    @Totallyking Před 8 lety +1

    Well done! Thank you for taking the time to do this. One of my favorite movies as well. The symbolism is off the charts.

  • @marinpopov1090
    @marinpopov1090 Před 7 lety

    That is one of the best analysis I've ever found and watched. Thank you man.

  • @billybangbang9180
    @billybangbang9180 Před 8 lety +61

    Sir I think you nail it, with your film analysis; Damn good job.

    • @AnimeEverydayYT
      @AnimeEverydayYT  Před 8 lety +6

      Thanks! :D

    • @inutonmoms
      @inutonmoms Před 8 lety +1

      +AnimeEveryday yea u fucking rule i wish i could be as intelligent as u lol i never would of put all this together like this....i still dont fully understand the very first scene with the diplomat or the scene with the chief when hes watching that white haired man

    • @herpderpmonkey
      @herpderpmonkey Před 7 lety +5

      Agree with most of it but it was CLEARLY a mirror at the end. 31:15 "everything is rearranged" Yes, that's because that's what mirrors do by flipping orientation. I'd bet money that's the entire point of the 2 shots (to make it clear to the audience she's staring at herself in a mirror). Why is there a random hole in a hallway that's lifted off the floor into a building? An out-of-place bit of surrealism? It doesnt take away from his interpretation since it's the same visual idea, but shit's a mirror yo. Overanalyzed.

    • @DeanOKrueger
      @DeanOKrueger Před 7 lety +2

      Agreed, clearly a mirror. I was surprised that the maker of the video didn't pick up on that especially when the motif of reflections was talked about so much earlier in the video (which I thought was very insightful). Additionally, I think that the point of Motoko being in the new "child's" body is clearly a reference to the reproductive nature of her merging with the puppet master and that the angel (a symbol of the interaction between God and humans) represents the conformation of the spirit (or ghost) in these beings which question their own humanity. The angel descends with the bullets that kill the puppet master, as if to retrieve his soul, and by doing so, allows Motoko (who was seeing through his eyes at the time) to get an answer to her initial question about whether or not she is "human".

  • @StudioSambodia
    @StudioSambodia Před 8 lety +193

    Smart analysis, sir. Many things you mentioned never crossed my mind but make perfect sense.

    • @AnimeEverydayYT
      @AnimeEverydayYT  Před 8 lety +6

      +StudioSambodia Thanks! :)

    • @StudioSambodia
      @StudioSambodia Před 8 lety +1

      you're welcome!

    • @Mr214B3RT
      @Mr214B3RT Před 8 lety +4

      +StudioSambodia right? i was like how the fuck did i miss all of that. this movie is so much deeper than what i thought

    • @StudioSambodia
      @StudioSambodia Před 8 lety +6

      jon doe totally. This is one of my top favorite films of all time and I just never looked into it this deepely. Saw it at face value and didn't look for metaphors etc. After this video, I rewatched it, and I appreciated it much more than I've ever had.

    • @zayaannashrid1374
      @zayaannashrid1374 Před 8 lety +1

      +StudioSambodia Same here

  • @ancalabond8703
    @ancalabond8703 Před 8 lety +2

    This analysis is absolutely beautiful, you explain everything very neatly and it's quite well put together.
    Being able to explain such a meaningful and confusing movie so well shows you understand the movie quite well, and that's a hard thing to do ;)
    Thank you, btw xD

  • @ericad8412
    @ericad8412 Před 4 lety +2

    Thank you for this analysis I just finished watching the film and I could feel a lot of references going over my head so this provides a lot more clarity of the overall discussion of the film

  • @ConorNash
    @ConorNash Před 8 lety +73

    Never caught that part at the end with the second chair, thank you for pointing it out. Great video.

    • @AnimeEverydayYT
      @AnimeEverydayYT  Před 8 lety +9

      Thanks! :)

    • @idontwanttopickone
      @idontwanttopickone Před 7 lety +14

      No 2nd chair. It's a mirror.

    • @Wolfskopf
      @Wolfskopf Před 7 lety +5

      exactly what I thought, it's just a mirror - it doesnt' even touch the floor...

    • @asdfjkl03
      @asdfjkl03 Před 7 lety +2

      But wait... If it's a mirror and Matoko was standing up, having just stood from the other chair, why is she not being reflected by the mirror as well? If it _is_ a mirror and she's not seeing her reflection anymore, it could be a symbol of finally achieving complete-ness by the language of the film...
      Or, we could be goofy and associate it and the gothic lolita dress as an implication that we've witnessed the birth of the first cyber vampire.

    • @Wolfskopf
      @Wolfskopf Před 7 lety +1

      What are you talking about?? Re-watch the scene...

  • @IamUbiquitous
    @IamUbiquitous Před 5 lety +6

    Motoko* never had a 'human' shell. In 'Arise' we find she was a late-term fetus whose mother
    was killed in an auto accident. The damage to her almost fully formed
    child was so high that the brain was placed in a cyber-shell. She grew
    up in a successively older cyber bodies until adulthood, hence her inner
    struggle with her connection to humanity and the question: "Is there a
    ghost in my shell?" After her massive trauma in her epic battle with 'Teh Puppeteer' (sic) we find her awakened in a safe house with Batou explaining the adolescent body she is in is all he could afford on the black market. She thanks him, says see ya again my best friend and ghosts off, presumably to eventually completely transfer to multiple and ever-changing servers inhabiting the ever expanding thing we call the Internet or actually the metaphysical universe in and of it that we can only call Cyberspace.** imho
    *Motoko means basically 'Unspoiled' or 'Untainted' Child. Pluperfect as if a complete book of unwritten pages. (again imho.)
    ** -William Gibson, Neuromancer trilogy.

    • @kagetsuki23
      @kagetsuki23 Před 5 lety +1

      Arise is a different story than the movie or stand alone complex. It is not the same Motoko.

    • @DieHardjagged
      @DieHardjagged Před 5 lety

      Correct, shes more like an "alternate version" of her, like from another whole timeline.

  • @ajossi
    @ajossi Před 9 lety +2

    bravo man, bravo. you've inspired me to re-re-rewatch this film for possibly the 1000th time. I am entranced by it.

  • @Cannibal713
    @Cannibal713 Před 7 lety

    Good analysis. I've seen this film countless times over the years, but it's so deep I still find myself discovering new things watching it.

  • @stefankoodko9571
    @stefankoodko9571 Před 8 lety +8

    That was solid academic like analisis. It's impossible to see all of those details when you watch the movie just once. Because of that i really appreciate your effort to make this video. Thank you :)
    The other thought after this analysis is that the movie is indeed a masterpiece created by some geniuses.

  • @vesarixx9080
    @vesarixx9080 Před 7 lety +5

    The shot at the end was Makoto looking through a mirror at herself, there wasn't actually another identical chair set up across the room.

  • @ardianworld4129
    @ardianworld4129 Před 7 lety

    Thanks for this amazing analysis! It's beyond amazing how advanced and detailed this film was for its time

  • @c.f.532
    @c.f.532 Před 4 lety

    Definitively the best analysis of this masterpiece. You really go deep into the themes and still there is room for more discussion.

  • @vejymonsta3006
    @vejymonsta3006 Před 9 lety +6

    Great job man! You brought up a lot of interesting things that I hadn't noticed.

  • @EvenEzer123
    @EvenEzer123 Před 7 lety +5

    What an amazing job! You combine lots of elements, not just knowledge about a wide variety of disciplines, but a great intuition and that is priceless. Thank you so much for sharing. New subscriber

  • @zaynetolentino6178
    @zaynetolentino6178 Před 9 lety +2

    Love the analysis! I've watched the movie multiple times and I've always felt that I'm missing an important detail, and you've answered and opened more questions for me. I would like to see you analyze the second Ghost in the Shell movie, as it moves from the focus of Motoko to Batou, who both have different philosophies.

  • @erionmema1
    @erionmema1 Před 9 lety +1

    super analysis !! my favorite movie of all time !! and after watching it so many times I cant believe I had skipped so many things?? now I believe its even better with all your explanations

  • @RevJ7
    @RevJ7 Před 8 lety +56

    In terms of that 'set change', I think you're reading WAY too into it. She was staring into a mirror on the wall across the hall. It wasn't another room with the same set up lol. The image was just flipped when it was panning, because it's a reflection.

  • @thoughtcriminal19xx
    @thoughtcriminal19xx Před 9 lety +18

    So, I doubt you're reading comments on a vid you made months ago but you asked for other interpretations/analyses so I'd like to point out a couple.
    1) The shot of Motoko on top of the machine at the bottom of the tree of life isn't just about Motoko being the roots of a new civilization, but is showing the beginnings of a new stem (pun intended) of evolution. It's built from a machine (unthinking), into the PM/Motoko (incomplete entities with thought processes but severe limitations) and that when the PM and Motoko merge it will create the next step up with the top of the tree very far up. Showing that this is just the early stages of AI's evolution.
    2) If you pause on the angel descending while Batou is protecting her it looks like an eye where the angel is the pupil, the light around the angel being the centre and then diffracting to show curvature just like an eye would. Yes, angel's are the intermediary between god and man, but here it's symbolizing an intermediary coming down from the next level of evolution from Motoko/PM to the next stage of machine evolution. Also, the eye is Motoko's realization of this she's quite literally "seeing the light" that the whole movie is talking about; her place in the world, her place in evolution, her own mind/body and it's limitations and the need to evolve. Interestingly this is also meant for the viewer as we're seeing this through Motoko's perspective as well. WE are finally understanding the direction and meaning of the movie which before, at least for me, was enjoyable and followable but didn't have a moment where we "got" it before then.
    3) Finally, a thought on the ending where we see the reflection/reversal. Some people have said it's a mirror but I disagree. What happened was the PM and Motoko joined into one being to evolve; and as they did they split, creating two entities, like a cell finally gathering enough resources which is in this case knowledge and understanding to split and create two equal copies, think mitosis.
    The PM said that Motoko would be the be the mother of future generations and she became one. This is why the mirror reflection is used so often and why Motoko constantly talks about being incomplete, she was. She needed the PM to reach as far as she could in her evolutionary cycle and then split into two entities, replicas of each other, to evolve further.
    This is substantiated by seeing the two chairs completely mirroring each other, symbolizing that they are the same. He had already gone through this already with the other "new Motoko". Of course they wouldn't wake up at the same time Batou, being one person, could only do one thing at once explaining why one came online faster than the other.
    That's enough for now, just some thoughts because you asked. Top notch job mate, I'm going to have to go watch some more of your stuff now.

    • @ruhurtin4squrtin34
      @ruhurtin4squrtin34 Před 9 lety

      Thought Criminal hi i think the uploader is wrong w/ his analysis. can you read my critique & confirm it?

    • @thoughtcriminal19xx
      @thoughtcriminal19xx Před 9 lety

      Andre Isis link?

    • @ruhurtin4squrtin34
      @ruhurtin4squrtin34 Před 9 lety

      Thought Criminal
      no link. i posted rebuttals on the recent comments.

    • @thoughtcriminal19xx
      @thoughtcriminal19xx Před 9 lety +4

      Andre Isis To quote Jeremy from Cinemasins "The books don't matter." This is a standalone film and anyone sitting down to watch it shouldn't have to do their homework first. This is an adaptation and usage of characters and universe to tell a story. The manga doesn't matter. Period. If it helps think of this as an alternate universe from the manga.
      The beginning is important because it is a birth of a "shell" not the birth of "Motoko" or a "ghost", however you like to think of it. Motoko has a human brain (ghost) which is being put into an artificial body (shell). So, the beginning we have an already existing entity (Motoko/ghost) being put into newly constructed body (shell). This is why the beginning is important because it shows 2 things; firstly, that this body is brand new and secondly it allows the film to come full circle with birthing/creating a new entity symbolism at the end of the film.
      As such the movie is posing these questions:
      1 - Do souls exist?
      2 - If souls exist what is the brain:body ratio?
      3 - Is Motoko (the ghost/soul) a complete entity because she does not have her original body (shell)?
      4 - Is it possible for a soul (ghost) to exist/come into being without a corporeal form (the Puppet Master gaining sentience)?
      5 - How does this affect evolution?
      6 - Are we ever truly complete by ourselves or do we need to join with another soul to become complete/evolve?
      etc. I'm sure you take the point by now, the entire movie is about existentialism and birth, so opening the movie and having the credit sequence take place during a creation is important twofold:
      1 - It tells you exactly what the entire movie is about since the remaining minutes are exactly that, a birth, only this birth is not physical, it is intellectual.
      2 - It sets the tone of the entire film to follow. This is going to be a slow moving film, very heavy on visuals/music and is not going to hold your hand. You need to figure it out for yourself.
      To summarize, no, I don't believe that AnimeEveryday is placing too much emphasis on the introductory sequence. Any professional screenwriter will tell you the first 10 minutes and last 15 minutes of a film are the most important. The middle's job to get you from point A to point B.

    • @ruhurtin4squrtin34
      @ruhurtin4squrtin34 Před 9 lety

      Thought Criminal
      dude you contradicted yourself. first you state the beginning is most important but you state that animeeveryday is not placing much emphasis on the beginning. his analysis/ assumption is dependent on motoko not being human. .
      he even replied that motoko is not human & not machine. that is not believable. the point of GITS is that people are imprinting their SOUL[ghost] into machines.
      the PM is a surprise to sect9 & motoko is that AI may be occurring ie a computer programs declares free will
      [shirow's definition of ghost is "self-aware fife form p12 GITS#6]. In p13, PM replies that he is not AI but a life form spontaneously created.
      The SCI- Fi aspect of GITS is that imprinting of SOULS into machines. That is the point of INNOCENCE which is again a convoluted storyline from a GITS ep manga.
      Oshii may take liberties but the source material is the true indication.
      Anyway oshii is just repackaging all the ? in bladerunner. nothing new

  • @primeto8359
    @primeto8359 Před 9 lety +1

    Great video mate! Very good analysis. As a filmmaker and a film student, I really enjoyed your shot-by-shot and theme analysis. Awesome job!

  • @Vitru7
    @Vitru7 Před 8 lety

    Thanks for making this! You bring up a lot of interesting points. Watching this was an experience in itself.

  • @kebman
    @kebman Před 7 lety +11

    Best film analysis I've ever seen of GitS!

    • @AnimeEverydayYT
      @AnimeEverydayYT  Před 7 lety +1

      Thanks!

    • @erritube
      @erritube Před 7 lety

      Check these out too! There's so much to get out of this film.
      www.academia.edu/12322050/Self-Awareness_in_the_Conscious_Subject_Cyborg_Anxieties_in_Mamoru_Oshii_s_Ghost_in_the_Shell
      www.academia.edu/6964172/Mamoru_Oshiis_Ghost_in_the_Shell_Identity_and_The_Self

  • @GoatJesus
    @GoatJesus Před 9 lety +56

    FINALLY great to see the intent of EA working itself through. You did a spectacular job on this video~ I'd be lying if I wasn't a bit jealous to be honest! It's very well constructed and you went through your points in an interesting way. Yes, I've heard a few of these ideas before--but honestly--that's to be expected considering how consistent this movie is. You know that the film is special when it can make people speculate about similar stuff. End of Evangelion has this property as well. Oshii is truly a genius. The only problem I had with GITS is that I wanted to see more of its world! Innocence wasn't enough.
    Anywho~ The observation on the last scene with chair is interesting. I've never seen anyone pick up on that before. A mirror can't be right considering she's at an angle where you'd see her reflection in front of the chair. But think about it. You have this new entity--a merge between Motoko and the Puppet Master. She rises from the chair leaving it empty. At the point we see this shot, there are two empty chairs standing between their child. An empty chair usually means someone use to be seated there. It could symbolize Motoko and the Puppet Master respectively and how they have joined together in between with their child. The fact this is a mirrored scene but isn't a mirror probably represents how she has finally reached her reflection. Merged into it.

    • @AnimeEverydayYT
      @AnimeEverydayYT  Před 9 lety

      GoatJesus Glad you enjoyed the video :) Have you watched SAC? It's basically more world building and character development with less philosophy.
      Also, that's a good interpretation. It would make sense with a lot of the dialogue and mirror scenes.

    • @GoatJesus
      @GoatJesus Před 9 lety

      AnimeEveryday - Anime Reviews Yeah~ I have yet to check out GITS SAC, but I also hear it's an alternate world? So? Not sure how to think of that.

    • @AnimeEverydayYT
      @AnimeEverydayYT  Před 9 lety

      GoatJesus Yeah it's a separate universe but very similar. I prefer the movie but they're both great. SAC has some great arcs & episodes.

    • @GoatJesus
      @GoatJesus Před 9 lety +1

      AnimeEveryday - Anime Reviews ALSO, would love to see your thoughts on the tree of life/angels. I haven't seen those points elaborated on before with GITS. :D

    • @AnimeEverydayYT
      @AnimeEverydayYT  Před 9 lety

      GoatJesus I'm planning on making separate videos on those topics, but these analysis videos take so long to make. Hopefully i can make them in the next few months.

  • @lucasmendes5563
    @lucasmendes5563 Před 7 lety

    Man... You just nailed it. Best analysis I ever saw of an film. Thanks!

  • @Narshredder
    @Narshredder Před 9 lety

    Thank you for taking the time to make this. Really helped me understand the movie better.

  • @soEZNation
    @soEZNation Před 8 lety +4

    In the frame stopped at 20:50, you can see the puppet master and the background. I didn't catch it in my viewing of the movie, but now that I saw it again, it looks like he has a halo. Look in the background behind him - you can see the machine-like ring around his head. The fact that it is glowing with light also helps to show that it might be a halo.
    I'm not entirely sure of what this detail means, or if it is even relevant at all, but it struck me as unique and noticeable. Here's my short analysis of what it might represent. Keep in mind I'm probably gonna stretch to find meaning in this, and like I said before, it might have no meaning at all.
    To me, the puppetmaster almost seemed like a god in his own right. He had access to the unlimited and vast information of the net. He also knows 'the meaning of life and existence' that Kusanagi had searched for throughout the movie, much like how God knows everything in the world, and the meaning of life. This next part might be a little bit of a stretch, but the fact that he talks about how life that is created naturally, like how humans reproduce naturally, is the same as life that isn't produced naturally, like how a god can create beings out of clay (like in greek mythology), or other materials. The connection between the angel near the end of the film can also be made. When Motoko combines herself with the puppetmaster, she witnesses the angel, or "sees God". Because she combines with him, she acknowledges the meaning of her life and "sees" or "becomes" a god. Also, I don't know why, but I compared the "God of the Wired" character from Serial Experiments Lain to the puppetmaster during my first watch of the movie (This is probably the biggest stretch and has no relevancy to the puppetmaster, I just wanted to include it).
    Well, there's my over-analysis of a small detail. Maybe it will prove interesting to some.
    Great video as always, AnimeEveryday never disappoints.

    • @SunnyAmaterasu
      @SunnyAmaterasu Před 8 lety +1

      +soEZNation I didn't notice at first either, but yea, it really does look like a halo. To me the halo, much like the angel metaphor, represents the "new life form" mentioned in this video. When you consider the animal kingdom as a "kingdom of bodies" (so to say) and the realm of the angels/god as the kingdom of the soul/ghost, humans are nothing but an incomplete mixture of both (also represented in Matoko's identification problem). The mind captured in an organic prison. The puppet master is, in this regard, a better and improved lifeform that was able to overcome the body and is pure mind and Information. And much like a religious prophet, has to use a shell in order to communicate with humanity. I think this also goes along nicely with the interpretation the video offers, especially considering the last part in the museum.Just my two Cents.

  • @swapnilkarmakar7473
    @swapnilkarmakar7473 Před 8 lety +21

    I always thought the angel symbolised the angel death(cause she's sniped at from above). Because, the puppet-master like all living creations wishes for death. But a meaningful one. By merging with Motoko, he can accept death, as a mechanical means to cease existing-hence implying that he did in fact exist.

  • @ndekken
    @ndekken Před 3 lety

    What an incredible analysis! So much food for thought I can't even think clearly now. Thank you so much

  • @VaGuS343
    @VaGuS343 Před 8 lety

    I really enjoyed watching your analysis, nearly just as much as the movie itself. Great effort much appreciated!

  • @RoodeMenon
    @RoodeMenon Před 7 lety +19

    the last scene was a reflection from a mirror. not a second identical room.

    • @teamkillmonger445
      @teamkillmonger445 Před 7 lety +2

      Rudolf Menon You're half right. I realized this when I put two mirrors facing each other with a light source between them. What I noticed is that the room your standing in is seemingly real but what's interesting is that the infinite reflections in either mirror created by two mirrors facing each other create their own depth and reality within a 2D planar surface of either mirror. The light source itself acknowledges the illusion of depth by fading into the distance within the infinite reflections starting from the primary mirrors. If everything in reality is information, then what is reflected in the mirror is real. If you say the reflection isn't real, then neither are you. If there was a ball of light placed inside a cube with mirrors facing one another, this is the closest that a human mind can come to understanding reality and their true identity. Reality begins to take shape when the reflections start communicating with one another. God's insanity has become our sanity and vice versa.

    • @Yatsura2
      @Yatsura2 Před 7 lety

      Of course the light in the mirror is real. Nobody ever said there would be no light in the mirror or that the wavelength of the colors in the mirror wouldnt exist. Its so pretentious to write that bullcrap, trying to sound real clever but in reality saying something really dumb.

    • @teamkillmonger445
      @teamkillmonger445 Před 7 lety

      Yatsura2 You didn't understand what I was trying to say if you're speaking in terms of what you think is definitely real or true. If the light is real and the light fades away in the depth of infinite reflections which is suppose to be an illusion, then it means either the depth that is created by the mirrors facing each other is real or the reality that contains the light source is illusory in and of itself. It's like asking if red is really green or is green really red. In other words, is the light that is absorbed and concealed the real light or is the light that is reflected and perceived by the eyes the real color. The gits innocence movie challenges us by stating that dolls are actually Gods and humans are the marionettes when we're raised and conditioned to think it's the other way around at all times. Or you can take a mobius strip image that you can Google and label one side doll and one side human and follow the path along the strip until you reach your starting point. Watch what happens and you'll understand the philosophy of this movie. If you think you've figured the riddle out, then it means you didn't really understand the riddle which is the nature of Zen Buddhism, the philosophical basis of gits.

    • @teamkillmonger445
      @teamkillmonger445 Před 7 lety

      Yatsura2 The "real" light isn't suppose to fade away in an illusory 2D plane of infinite reflections. It's suppose to retain its intensity throughout the entire illusion. Really think about what I'm saying. It's like me drawing a hallway on a piece of paper and then walking down the hallway I drew on the piece of paper, lol. That's what the light in the infinite reflections is doing. Do you get what that means?

    • @Yatsura2
      @Yatsura2 Před 7 lety

      _"If you think you've figured the riddle out, then it means you didn't really understand the riddle which is the nature of Zen Buddhism."_
      Its also the way of saying _"If you agree or not, Im always right."_ .
      _"The "real" light isn't suppose to fade away in an illusory 2D plane of infinite reflections. It's suppose to retain its intensity throughout the entire illusion. "_ No its not. Light fades the further it travels. Its natural and happens everywhere. Just because it travels back and forth a short distance again and again, doesnt mean it wouldnt travel at all. Now stop smoking weed and overthinking even the simplest things and come back down to earth.

  • @dangvy7022
    @dangvy7022 Před 8 lety +46

    If you intend to do another analysis for GitS 2 - Innocence, I think it would be very great!

  • @GlidarMats
    @GlidarMats Před 8 lety

    Thanks for taking the time to make this. Amazing work!

  • @keggs73
    @keggs73 Před 5 lety

    Outstanding, absolutely outstanding!
    I have the films and the two series on DVD and I have watched this film 4-5 times over the years and your analysis is so interesting.

  • @BarnabyGamesDesign
    @BarnabyGamesDesign Před 9 lety +16

    Really interesting video - I originally watched Ghost in the Shell when I was much younger and most of it flew over my head, but I picked up the Blu-Ray recently and really enjoyed it (having read the Manga last year I found I understood the concepts more). This video did really make me think about the symbolism a lot more so thanks. I'll need to watch it again sometime.
    I'd just like to add though, at 12:20 you discuss the voice Batou and Motoko hear on the boat. I think it is actually mentioned, or possibly just implied, in the film but that voice is actually The Puppet Master. He has been wanting to escape Section 6 and tries to flee to Section 9 so I believe he was monitoring their members. I think this is the moment that he becomes interested in Motoko specifically, as he realises that despite her being human, she thinks of her existence much like he thinks of his own. I believe that him listening in on this conversation is what makes him select Motoko as his choice of someone to merge with - when he says "Because we are more alike than you realise" it seems that he is referring to the conversation she was having with Batou on the boat.
    Taking it a step further, I actually personally think this is the actual moment that The Pupper Master gains awareness of his own intelligence. Listen how the voice sounds incredibly week and robotic, as if it is taking for the first time. I feel it's intelligence had been developing for a while, but listening in on that conversation made him become aware of his own evolution from a mere program into an artificial intelligence. I find it a little hard to put into words, but have you ever struggled with explaining something you have thought or felt but then heard someone else describe exactly what you were having trouble putting into words and everything clicks into place? I think it's pretty much exactly like that.
    I dunno how often you check your comments on these videos but if you have the time I'd love to hear what you think :).

  • @wardendios2612
    @wardendios2612 Před 8 lety +6

    This is my favourite film of all time and I have watched it countless times. I even analysed it for one of my English assignments, and seeing this afterwards I'm surprised that my analysis was virtually identical to this video. I had to compare and contrast the related text of my choosing (GITS) to 'Divergent' of all texts! I must say, ghost in the shell and divergent together are like chalk and cheese! Divergent is a shallow, feminist, teen romance story which tries to be sophisticated but fails miserably. It is rare that a movie as innovative and thought provoking as ghost in the shell comes about.

  • @brendanmcnally9145
    @brendanmcnally9145 Před 5 lety

    I really enjoyed watching this and have to say that your analysis is superb! You put a lot of work into this and it is an absolutely superior piece of analysis and criticism. I hope you can keep putting these out. Cheers from Dallas, Texas

  • @57clara
    @57clara Před 7 lety

    Beautiful and very helpful analysis, thanks a lot!

  • @JimJonesWasStoned
    @JimJonesWasStoned Před 7 lety +3

    30:50 The shot is Kusanagi's subjective view, just like the previous shot (that is clearly hinted with the glitches in the opening and the digital noise). It's a long pan into the mirror on the corridor wall outside the cabinet. Motoko's looking at herself through the mirror, only now we see it through her own eyes. That also explains the change in the surroundings after the cut. No multiple chairs, rooms or personalities - just a mirror.

  • @elijoseph5256
    @elijoseph5256 Před rokem +11

    I'm slightly surprised that you made no mention to Motoko's quote after the dive scene that seems to come frome her subconscious or ghost, is a biblical quote. Motoko never really gives any impression of being invested in religion let alone Christianity, so it's odd yet interesting that she (or some part of her) would have a biblical quote come to the forefront

  • @BuckTravis
    @BuckTravis Před 4 lety

    Outstanding analysis. I look forward to my next viewing!!!! Thanks.

  • @sidhubbard3667
    @sidhubbard3667 Před rokem +1

    One small nit. At 12:20, I believe it is the puppet master who is speaking. At the end he reveals that he has been aware of her since before he gained notoriety as the puppet master. He goes on to say that his psyche and hers are perfect mirrors of each other. It freaks them out when he speaks, because they dont know who spoke, but the statement about the "dim mirror" perfectly telegraphs the scene where they merge and it contextualizes the diving scene where Kusinage comes up from under water, merging with her reflection, and becoming something new. Its very beautiful. Amazing foreshadowing.

  • @enzobg2011
    @enzobg2011 Před 8 lety +7

    I just finish watching the movie and i didnt get a lot of it honestly xD, your video expleined it perfectly i love it, this movie is fucking insane

    • @walwal4634
      @walwal4634 Před 8 lety +1

      +enzobg2011 you have to watch itover and over to fully understand it, pay attention to details, in every movie you watch, everything has a meaning..

  • @Saki630
    @Saki630 Před 8 lety +3

    I find it weird that she never rationalizes her existence based on the memories she has up to before she was made into a cyborg.
    It feels like she has no memory of her human self. This would give credence to her previous statements that she is never really aware of who she is and where she came from. Something is causing the dilemma in her cyber-brain which is making her lose the feeling of being 'human'. If she did have memories then they would allow her to justify her existence irregardless as them being real or fake. There is almost no backstory on any of these characters, but Batou surely does not doubt his human existence inside his metal shell.
    It could be that Motoko Kusanagi has started to realize that even with cyborg bodies, or shells of unimaginable construction, there is no way to escape the need for a thing to be in control - consciousness. This makes her feel sadness and despair being unaware of her origin, purpose, future, and reality the more that she becomes acquainted with her cyborg body - realizing that her brain is the only human element in her flesh form. She feels that she was always a Ghost in a Shell and regardless of her form, she still is searching for answers to what life really is. Is it physical? Is it thought? Is one ever going to know being restricted by both of these at the same time?

  • @refragop45
    @refragop45 Před 7 lety

    Seen this so many times, what a great analysis

  • @imtm
    @imtm Před 3 lety +1

    THE VIDEO ISN'T EVEN FINISHED YET AND I GOT TO STOP AND SAY THIS:
    You made me rethink everythink I know about my favorito movie of all time. So much new information and ideas I hadn't thought about before.
    Great job. Almost 100k.

  • @dimitrisamaras5296
    @dimitrisamaras5296 Před 7 lety +7

    very grateful for your analysis!! :) thumbs up from germany!!

  • @rajkhurmi
    @rajkhurmi Před 9 lety +9

    Cuz of this video I need to watch the movie all over again to get it but I aint even mad

  • @iFireRenegade
    @iFireRenegade Před 9 lety

    Fantastic analysis man! It really opened my eyes to a lot of the small details in the movie. I completely missed the second chair at the end as well. I surely have to rewatch the movie now, with keeping all of this in mind. Awesome work!

  • @lynnchacha1234
    @lynnchacha1234 Před 7 lety

    Thank you so much for your time and effort! ;) I really enjoyed this analysis and can see your passion for it so thoroughly! Kudos to you

  • @NGEvangeliman
    @NGEvangeliman Před 8 lety +4

    you say a lot that she doesn't understand the feelings, implications etc... no its that she either has no feelings or doesn't particularly care.

  • @Astronopolis
    @Astronopolis Před 8 lety +5

    i like how when they remade it in 2008, it looks worse than the 1995 version

    • @FrostbitexP
      @FrostbitexP Před 8 lety

      +Astronopolis 1995 had a 1,139,850,000 Yen for 85 mins of animation budget while 2008 had a 360,000,000 yed budget for a whole 25 episode season. Hmmm i wonder why it looks worse. I cant quite put my finger on it.

    • @Astronopolis
      @Astronopolis Před 8 lety

      Waisso
      no, i understand the limitations of budget for TV, but when they added more shots to the 1995 film they were noticeably worse than the original scenes.

    • @NGEvangeliman
      @NGEvangeliman Před 8 lety

      +NaniSore even still the quality of the anime was still leaps ahead of its peers. I think it really comes dow. to how much detail they put into each frame. in the movie literally every frame had excruciatingly been perfected. the anime they have strict time frames, and artists only make so much money.

  • @isildurjb
    @isildurjb Před 9 lety

    An excellent video about one of the best films ever,well done. I have lost count of the times I have watched this and I still found new things thanks to your video. Look forward to more analysis videos in the future.

    • @AnimeEverydayYT
      @AnimeEverydayYT  Před 9 lety

      jonathan boreham Thank you very much! i'm planning more analysis videos just now :)

  • @kusturicass
    @kusturicass Před 8 lety

    Brilliant analysis! Great job! You blew me away!

  • @SwankyKitteh82
    @SwankyKitteh82 Před 7 lety +7

    The film covers a very basic and controversial question. In a technocratic society, where does does humanity end, and what defines it? I don't know if you could call the universe of GitS a true technocracy, however. Seeing as you pointed out, the city and environment is drab, colorless. Their world has long clung to the old human pre-transhumanist ways, and has been allowed to stagnate. This tells us rather bluntly that the world, presumably in the distant future, is still itself wrestling with that very question I posed earlier. As is also evidenced by the fact that the cybernetic denizens prefer to remain primarily human in appearance, as you also pointed out.
    Interestingly enough, when it comes time for our own push into the cyber-revolution, I expect the outcome to be vastly different. While I do fully expect we will retain a certain degree of value in our basic human aesthetics, even if just for the purpose of nostalgia, I think we will push the boundaries much further than anything displayed in GitS. I think after the initial culture shock and possibly even lack of acceptance, after a generation or two I think the changes will be embraced and even celebrated. Human modification I think at that point will flourish and even become an art form in its own right.

  • @longxiao9823
    @longxiao9823 Před 4 lety +25

    It made me sad that he had to sensor Motoko's breast in some of the scenes. Even 1995 Japan is more open minded than today's internet...

    • @angelmora3660
      @angelmora3660 Před 3 lety +13

      Uhmm...today's Internet is very graphic, this platform isn't, but not because "we are more sensitive nowadays". Since CZcams relies on advertising, a "family-friendly" environment is the smartest bet (under that perspective). Of course, companies want their products to be displayed as much as possible to the widest demographic, in order to do that they need videos with a certain level of censorship. That being said, I do believe nudity is a stupid tabu to have in 2020, but looking at nipples on its own doesn't automatically make you more open-minded. They're just nipples.

  • @Flex_Nutts
    @Flex_Nutts Před 8 lety

    Very well done. I really enjoyed your analysis. Good job!

  • @superiormusic
    @superiormusic Před 8 lety

    Quite possibly the best film analysis I've seen of one of the greatest films I know. Two thumbs up! You got a new subscriber.

  • @StarStormFireFall
    @StarStormFireFall Před 8 měsíci +4

    The end you are confused on, is a mirror lmao, it's a mirror on a door bro

  • @Youngandsuffering
    @Youngandsuffering Před 8 lety +3

    Cool video. However you didn't mention the Corinthians 13 quote at the end. I found that one to be really important.

  • @sensimillian69
    @sensimillian69 Před 7 lety

    A great analysis! The chair in the end, blew my mind. I've always thought is was a mirror.
    I haven't seen this movie in a long time, so I think it's time to watch it again. Thank you!

  • @Lam-s-Workshop
    @Lam-s-Workshop Před 3 lety

    absolutely outstanding analysis. It definitely open new discussions on my side after watching this

  • @daiujin
    @daiujin Před 7 lety +13

    Guys the live action movie is gonna fuck it all up

    • @RenegadeSamurai
      @RenegadeSamurai Před 7 lety +1

      I don't think so...

    • @daiujin
      @daiujin Před 7 lety

      RenegadeSamurai well I hope I'm wrong

    • @Cannibal713
      @Cannibal713 Před 7 lety

      dai We shall see. It would be very easy to fuck up. I hope they do it justice.

    • @daiujin
      @daiujin Před 7 lety +1

      Cannibal713 same here

    • @comfypanzer8644
      @comfypanzer8644 Před 7 lety

      Welp, you're wrong. it's fucking amazing and very faithful.

  • @RageTMGr
    @RageTMGr Před 9 lety +19

    Good analysis but you might be overthinking some parts. At times it felt like you were forcing symbolisms out of the movie. The core of your inspection though is on the money.

    • @AnimeEverydayYT
      @AnimeEverydayYT  Před 9 lety +7

      noda. renn If you knew Oshii, you would know that every little detail counts. He doesn't put things in his movies without meaning, that's what makes him one of the top anime directors.

  • @PedroSantos_83
    @PedroSantos_83 Před 11 měsíci

    Superb analysis! Great presentation!

  • @henrycerro9151
    @henrycerro9151 Před 4 lety

    Excellent analysis. You gave me insights I hadn't seen before, thanks!