I always thought Batou was Caucasian. Btw I'm not really a fan of his look here, always thought of him more as this grizzled mentor/father-figure looking somewhat... Stephen-Lang-ish.
The issue of how the camouflage works in confused by her using the headpiece and veil in one scene but not the other. It has been said by some that the camouflage is built in, and I think that's how it will be in this film.I was always under the impression that (not counting the opening "building" scene) she wasn't naked in those scenes but wearing a (literally) skintight bodysuit of that therm-optic camouflage material. There's a definite seam at her neck and a difference in colour clearly visible after the post chase fight. You even see a little curtain of the material under her visor to cover her face.
In-universe:As for the issue of whitewashing...I don't know.
On the one hand it's a manufactured cyborg body so technically ethnicity is irrelevant. But from a real world perspective, there are already so few good roles for Asian actors in western movies that it does take the piss a bit when a classic Japanese movie is remade with a largely white cast but still actually set in Japan.
Would it *really* be that hard for western audiences to accept an all or mostly Asian cast? It's not like there aren't plenty of American Asian actors who would jump at the chance to play the Major. If the issue is the lack of "star power" then they're just compounding the issue.
Sometimes they are, sometimes they aren't.By the conventions of the anime art style, yes they did. Plus, in that very same style, Caucasians are also drawn in a distinctly different way from the Asian characters.
She has nipples in the movie but nothing 'down there' and no navel. Given she's a cyborg, the nipples are superfluous, and it fits with the sci-fi concept to omit them.Does the Barbie doll anatomy come from original anime or is that something they did here so they could do the scene without making ScarJo do a full nude scene? I thought she at least had realistic breasts in the anime.
It won't be a remake, as we've seen scenes in the trailer that aren't in the first movie. The robo-geisha attack is from GITS:SAC season 1. The specific appearance of the geisha is from Innocence (apparently - years since I saw it). I haven't previously seen the scene of Motoko finding a room of people all jacked in (it may be from the later series or movies). AFAIK there is no precedent for the scene of Aramaki shooting someone with a revolver.As far as the story goes, I don't want this film to just be a live action scene-for-scene remake. Give us something new, but inspired by the original.
Anime characters in general tend to have "Caucasian attributes".The Major's body in the 1995 film appears to have some Caucasian attributes.
She's not a hitman.So ScarJo is a cyborg hitman. Does she have a soul? Better question: will I care?
It does, and that's exactly the problem. The 1995 GitS was a slow-paced, atmospheric, thought-provoking philosophical film. For grown ups. A kid would find most of it utterly boring, and the rest would give it nightmares. As opposed to this trailer which looks like something a 13-year-old would get a huge kick out of.Looks like Lucy crossed with The Matrix crossed with tons of other similar sci-fi properties.
ScarJo is a cyborg policewoman with very little organic left.So ScarJo is a cyborg hitman.
Does she have a soul? Better question: will I care?
I don't think that's what Gaith meant. It's the movie's job to make you care. The question is - will it?If you're not interested, what are you doing here?
To every single idiot in the comments-section complaining about "whitewashing", I'll bet that none of you have ever read the original manga.
Do any of you know that Major Motoko Kusanagi actually prefers bodies that resemble European (Caucasian) women?
^ This is even backed up by statements from Shirow Masamune HIMSELF in the appendices of the original manga.
This time, the masses can believe that Scarlett Johansson cast as the Major is "whitewashing" all they want, but Guess what? You're technically WRONG.
Mansell wrote a great score for the sci-fi movie Pi, so this should be good.[D]uring a round-table interview, Sanders revealed that Clint Mansell will be serving as composer on the movie. He wouldn't be drawn on whether Kenji Kawaii's extraordinary music from the '95 film will feature, but given that Kawaii performed part of the score live at the event, we're guessing it'll feature somewhere.
http://www.denofgeek.com/uk/movies/...-clint-mansell-to-compose-score#ixzz4PwIcEN57
I watched a two-minute trailer, which, as a member of the target/potential audience, qualifies me to comment on said trailer. An hour later, about all I remember is ScarJo in a skin-tone catsuit, and that I've never actually seen Dark City.She's not a hitman.
If you're not interested, what are you doing here?
There's a reason why YouTube comments section holds so much notoriety. Having the urge to finish your post with the word WRONG written in caps usually indicates you don't have much faith in the strength of your argument.Re whitewashing, I haven't read the original manga, but I thought this youtube comment might be of interest:
I loved his work on The Fountain, and I loved the movie itself. I think Aronofsky would be a great fit for directing GITS. Paramount went with the "Snowhite and the Huntsman" guy instead... I guess he must have delivered a great pitch or something.Mansell wrote a great score for the sci-fi movie Pi, so this should be good.
I did. Apologies.I think you misunderstand.
No, it indicates strong emotion (not always accompanied by rational thought).There's a reason why YouTube comments section holds so much notoriety. Having the urge to finish your post with the word WRONG written in caps usually indicates you don't have much faith in the strength of your argument.
Even if the anime somehow invalidates the manga, the anime itself never specifies the ethnicity of the body. So the manga remains the only source for that info.I haven't read the original manga (let alone the appendices), but from what I understand (I have friends who read manga), it differs quite a bit from the Mamoru Oshii's written (and directed) movie. In fact, it's pretty much a consensus that the film surpasses and exceeds the source material.
What I am hoping for is a scene where Motoko looks at pictures of herself as a young girl, and we see that she is Japanese. The racial difference would make the scene more poignant.
Re whitewashing, I haven't read the original manga, but I thought this youtube comment might be of interest:
I suspect his fee was the more germane issue.I loved his work on The Fountain, and I loved the movie itself. I think Aronofsky would be a great fit for directing GITS. Paramount went with the "Snowhite and the Huntsman" guy instead... I guess he must have delivered a great pitch or something.
In the manga Kusanagi uses a much younger looking body, though. Before this devolves into a canon discussion, I'll just say that to me manga and the movie are two entirely separate entities.Even if the anime somehow invalidates the manga, the anime itself never specifies the ethnicity of the body. So the manga remains the only source for that info.
Speaking of which, getting someone like, say, Rinko Kikuchi (Pacific Rim) to play the Major would have been a hell of a lot cheaper and the whitewashing controversy would have been avoided. But then, there's no such thing as bad publicity. And ScarJo's star power even managed to sell a turd like Lucy.I suspect his fee was the more germane issue.
Speaking of which, getting someone like, say, Rinko Kikuchi (Pacific Rim) to play the Major would have been a hell of a lot cheaper and the whitewashing controversy would have been avoided. But then, there's no such thing as bad publicity. And ScarJo's star power even managed to sell a turd like Lucy.
Nicely put. The most memorable thing about Kusanagi for me have always been her large doll-like blue eyes. They intentionally made them look very artificial and lifeless, incredibly haunting and creepy. She never blinked once, I think.Rinko Kikuchi would certainly have been a good casting choice if they were going with the manga version of the Major, I'm just not sure if she has the chops for the anime version. It's a character that requires a laconic, introspective performance that borders dangerously on wooden and lethargic.
Nicely put. The most memorable thing about Kusanagi for me have always been her large doll-like blue eyes. They intentionally made them look very artificial and lifeless, incredibly haunting and creepy. She never blinked once, I think.
I don't see many actresses pulling that off, honestly. Judging from the trailers, Scarlet doesn't even seem to be trying.
Puppet Master body's eyes were almost identical to Major's.Does it just apply to the Major or all the android bodied characters?
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