Okay, so I have spent the last few days watching back over the most notable movies to grasp the concepts again. It was rather a grueling process but I believe the movie that deserves the title of the best Pokemon movie has to be Pokemon: Mewtwo Strikes Back.
The movie from the stand point of a child made for the likeness of flashing lights, well rounded shading for the time, and team rocket having an actual function instead of just complicating Ash and the gang's plans during the regular series. Watching from that point of view was almost impossible this time around due to my eyes picking up the bigger themes and details that I had missed over the years.
Viewing the movie as an adult, I had noticed that the color pallet was rather awkward at points, using full black for shading, for example. Due to the dark nature of the movie, this was perfectly acceptable and gave off the depressing aura that was well placed and needed in order to understand the world from Mewtwo's perspective. Dark and terrifying.
The first scene used this which is something completely different than what the next four films have done. They gave a rather detailed view of Mewtwo and how he came to be. If they had not done this, most of Mewtwo would have been rather misunderstood as sinister, it still is but it's true motive could be understood due to it's upbringing. Being a clone used as a basis to become a weapon, shall I say, more powerful than Mew is. Realizing that he can use this power to rule everything because nothing could stop him. The words drilled into his head since his creation, a clone of a being that might still be stronger than him. It's almost akin to being compared to your older sibling, depressing, filling with hate. So, he would naturally want to prove himself as the stronger between the two or strongest of all.
This movie followed a rather stark perspective than the others do. The haunting feeling that something so powerful could be created, the feeling of sadness for the people who were brought to the island, the Pokemon who just want to prove to the clones that the point of being alive is not to fighting to the death.
This perspective of a rather serious perspective versus a relaxed perspective is what this movie succeeds upon as it could have had Mewtwo play the fool that would just be trumped in the process. But for most of the movie, it left the space for the viewer to guess how it will all blow over. This lack of having the ability to guess or feel immersed in the true underlying theme of the movies are what I feel lacked form the others. The Immersion Factor, to speak.
In the second movie, the viewer had the predestined thought that Lugia would eventually show up to lend a helping hand to the chosen one, Ash. In the end, he brought Ash to the shrine in order to place the orbs that would lead to cease the fighting in between the other three legendary birds. The third movie, Spell of the Unknown, did a little better in showing the seriousness of the story but also kept the sense of a power beyond the realm of physics. "The unknown says it shall be, so shall it be." The sense of easy magic that pulls the plot of the movie away from the tangible real world into a little girl's imagination. I will give it it's props, it does keep the fun that the original series shows but that is also it's downfall. When I watch a movie, I expect it to ponder to the real not the faked "true" world. Entei was made from the unknown due to Molly's missing father and the likeness of her father and the Legendary Dog. Entei lives to fulfill Molly's wishes and be her "father" of sorts. This eventually led to Molly wanting all of the Unknown's doings to be undone, this includes Entei. Entei ends up attacking the Unknown to stop them, that is the part that confuses me. Couldn't they have stopped the beast that they have created? Or did they want to be changed back into hieroglyphs due to molly's wish? To be honest, I may have missed something that may have explained this but from what I remember, they left it as, "it happened due to plot reasons."
Mewtwo Strikes Back did not go without it's faults of course. One example is that about 3/4ths through the movie, the big fight in between the clones and their real counterparts, Ash decides that he needs to stop it by running right in the middle of the fighting, fighting that has happened in every episode of the show with no stopping the Pokemon or combatants but is now a problem. The fighting that includes fire, high pressured water, electricity, and nameless others. A little too much heroics, eh Ash? The scene following may have been not have been prevented even if he hadn't but hey, it was such a great scene why question it?
In the end, Mewtwo leaves with all the clones and gives a much needed quote after learning his much needed lesson. “The circumstances of one's birth are irrelevant. It is what you do with the gift of life that determines who you are.” As I believe, the emotions felt from this film has left many with the feeling of nostalgia when remembering these moments and a few thoughts on how cloning can effect the world and the clones themselves thoughts towards the originals. But that may just be my curiosity. |