Ghost in the Shell: S.A.C. Solid State Society

Ghost in the Shell: S.A.C.
Solid State Society

Ghost in the Shell: S.A.C Solid State Society DVD cover
Directed by Kenji Kamiyama
Produced by Production I.G
Written by Masamune Shirow (creator)
Kenji Kamiyama
Shotaro Suga
Yoshiki Sakurai
Starring Atsuko Tanaka
Akio Ōtsuka
Koichi Yamadera
Osamu Saka
Yutaka Nakano
Tōru Ōkawa
Takashi Onozuka
Taro Yamaguchi
Music by Yoko Kanno
Studio Production I.G.
Distributed by

SKY PerfecTV!
Animax

Bandai Entertainment (US) Manga Entertainment (US & UK)
Release date(s) September 1, 2006 (2006-09-01)
Running time 105 minutes
Country Japan
Language Japanese
Budget $3.6 million

Ghost in the Shell: S.A.C. Solid State Society (攻殻機動隊 STAND ALONE COMPLEX Solid State Society Kōkaku Kidōtai: Sutando Arōn Konpurekkusu Soriddo Sutēto Sosaieti?) is an OVA and part of the Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex series based on Masamune Shirow's manga Ghost in the Shell. It was produced by Production I.G and directed by Kenji Kamiyama.

In order to provide theatrical quality, the film premiered on the Japanese satellite PPV platform SKY PerfecTV! Perfect Choice ch160, on September 1, 2006.[1]

It also aired in Japan on the anime satellite TV network Animax starting May 27, 2007. The film was also released on DVD in Japan on November 24, 2006, and was released in the U.S. by Bandai Entertainment and Manga Entertainment, in a normal and limited edition on July 3, 2007.[2]

The Sci Fi Channel aired Solid State Society to inaugurate its Ani-Monday programming block on June 11, 2007. On March 26, 2011, a 3-D version of the film was released to Japanese theaters.

Contents

Plot

In 2034, two years after the events of 2nd GIG, Major Motoko Kusanagi has left counter-terrorism task force Public Security Section 9. Togusa is leading a Section 9 field team to investigate several suicides by refugees from the Siak Republic. When they intercept Colonel Ka Gael (カ・ゲル大佐 Ka Geru Taisa?), son of the exiled dictator General Ka Rum (カ・ルマ将軍 Ka Ruma Shōgun?), who has taken a hostage to ensure safe passage out of Japan, he claims that the "Puppeteer" (傀儡廻 Kugutsumawashi?) is coming for him, and he shoots himself in the head. Chief Daisuke Aramaki asks Prime Minister Yoko Kayabuki for permission to arrest Ka Rum for more information, but Kayabuki declines, stating it would harm her political position. Aramaki orders the raid regardless and Section 9 discovers that Ka Rum has been dead for some time, having been assassinated and staged to look like a suicide, with the word "Puppeteer" written in his blood. Section 9 also discovers that the Siak refugees plan to release a micromachine virus in a terrorist retaliation for Ka Rum's death.

Batou is sent to intercept Ma Shaba (マ・シャバ?), the Siak operative who has the micromachine virus, but he has an unexpected run-in with the Major who says that she is running a separate investigation. When they both find Ma Shaba, he believes that the Major is the Puppeteer and attacks both Kusanagi and Batou in a vehicle that he believes will protect him from cyberbrain attack, but he dies during the fight in an apparent cyberbrain hack. Kusanagi takes a case of virus ampules and warns Batou to stay away from the Solid State Society, before leaving. When Batou reports back to Section 9, he does not say that he saw the Major but says Ma Shaba attacked him without provocation. The Section 9 operatives develop a theory that the Puppeteer is a very powerful hacker who hacked into the Siak agents' cyberbrains and forced them to commit suicide. Togusa also discovers that there are several kidnapped children in the facility, believing that the Siak agents were going to use them as vectors for the virus. While trying to discover their identities, they find that the children have had their cyberbrains replaced and their IDs reveal that they are the children of Noble Rot Senior Citizens (貴腐老人 Kifu Rōjin?), elderly citizens who are hooked up to a health care monitoring network that takes care of their every need, leaving them effectively comatose. Further investigation of the children reveals government file discrepancies that show over 20,000 unreported child kidnappings. When a case of the micromachine virus ampules arrives at a government office, Section 9 believes that the Puppeteer is tipping them off to the kidnappings by infiltrating the Siak rebels, when it was the Major who left the ampules behind. When Proto and several Operators watching the children are hacked, and the children disappear. Due to the turn of events, Batou reveals he saw the Major and that he believes she is the Puppeteer.

When Siak sniper Raj Puhto (ラジ・プート Raji Pūto?) is spotted in Japan, Batou and Saito are sent to keep him from causing an assassination, but are located before they can stop him. Saito manages to incapacitate Raj Puhto, and under Batou's questioning, he reveals he was tipped off by a mole in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs by the name of Ito Munei (宗井 仁 Munei Ito?) that his target was the man who ordered Ka Rum's assassination, until it is discovered that Munei, a highly nationalist member of the House of Representatives, was his target. Batou believes the Puppeteer orchestrated the events, and Raj Puhto says that he would kill the Puppeteer if he were human, claiming that the Puppeteer is a child abduction infrastructure in the Solid State System (ソリッド・ステート・システム Soriddo Sutēto Shisutemu?), the root of the Noble Rot program. Batou believes Ka Rum's people were targeted because they made this discovery and planned to use the children for their terrorist plot.

Elsewhere, Togusa tracks down one of the abducted children and discovers his parent, an elderly man in the Noble Rot program. When Togusa takes the child, the elderly man wakes up and demands the child be returned as he is his sole heir and does not want the government to have his assets upon his death, saying it is the will of the Solid State and Togusa will only become another suicide if the Solid State is interfered with. Shortly after, the man dies, and Togusa hands the child over to the authorities pointing out the paperwork discrepancy. However, he realizes that if he had not interfered, the boy would have been given to social services and adopted elsewhere when his Noble Rot adoptive parent died which was the ultimate plan of the Solid State. Togusa receives a call from his wife that their daughter is missing, which he initially believes to be an attempt by the Solid State to retaliate, but his daughter is not cyberized. After he discovers that it is a false alarm and she was at a friends house, he drives her off to school. On the way, he gets a call from the Puppeteer who says he is to be punished by losing his daughter and his cyberbrain is hacked over the phone.

Togusa is forced to drive to a cyberbrain implant hospital, trailed by the Major and Batou, both independently. Togusa converses with the Puppeteer during the hacking, who reveals the members of the Solid State "only wish to utilize resources that have slipped through the net of society", and Togusa realizes that this is how all the kidnappings took place: the parents' cyberbrains were hacked and forced them to have their kids cyberized, before both of their memories were wiped, resulting in kids sent to live with the Noble Rot Senior Citizens and parents who believe they lost their children. The Puppeteer allows Togusa to either allow his daughter to be abducted or commit suicide. Togusa chooses to kill himself just as Batou arrives, but the Major steps in to stop him and end the hacking. She reveals that she discovered the kidnappings on the net and she used Togusa as bait to unmask the Puppeteer: a rhizome formed by the collective consciousness of the Noble Rot Senior Citizens in a hub cyberbrain in the health care monitoring system. Using several Tachikoma AIs she managed to scrape from cyberspace, they discover the location of the hub cyberbrain: the Seishomin Welfare Center (聖庶民救済センター Seishomin Kyūsai Sentā?). The Major rejoins Section 9 to help with the investigation, starting with Ito Munei who is indeed behind the assassination of General Ka Rum. She had a contract with the Treaties Bureau, an organization Munei has close connections with, to perform the assassination herself, but by the time she found him the Puppeteer had already killed Ka Rum. Munei also has control over the Seishomin Welfare Center that he and other politicians use as a front for a brainwashing facility to create an elite group of pure-blooded Japanese to take control of the country in the next generation and lead it into Munei's vision of a new Golden Age. However, the Solid State is also using the Welfare Center to house their kidnapped children, and Munei was targeted for assassination due to interfering in their plans. Analyzing the building, Section 9 discovers that it was set up to perfectly serve the Solid State's abduction infrastructure. They decide to infiltrate the building to catch the Puppeteer, despite the political consequences

Section 9, with the Tachikomas in their physical bodies, infiltrate the building and the Chief confronts Munei who reveals that he used the profits from the Noble Rot program to fund his "education" program as they need to be used to profit the system, despite being exempt from taxes. When confronted about the Solid State's abduction system, Munei reveals he knows nothing and just thought the children were orphans. A designer named Tateaki Koshiki (コシキ・タテアキ Koshiki Tateaki?) steps forward, claiming he developed the Solid State system before shortly shooting himself in the head. Kusanagi dives into his cyberbrain before the memories are lost and Koshiki explains that he was using the six million Noble Rot Senior Citizens to save abused children. Children in high risk homes were transferred to be children of Noble Rot Senior Citizens who willingly took care of the children, giving them purpose, and allowing them to pass on their assets to the children rather than the state upon their death. Munei interfered with the Solid State by brainwashing the children, eliminating the Solid State's goal of giving the children free will. However, the Major has fallen into the Puppeteer's trap, and he hacks into her cyberbrain. The Major calls him an "arrogant, self-righteous ass" and asks of his true identity, but the Puppeteer hacks her eyes to replace his face with those of Batou, Togusa, the Laughing Man, Kazundo Goda, the Chief, Hideo Kuze, and finally the Major herself. He reveals that he was spread across several egos until a collective consciousness emerged and developed into a Solid State, allowing him to move into the society beyond as the vanishing mediator.

As the Seishomin building is emptied, Aramaki and Togusa discuss the future of the abducted children whose fates will be left in the hands of the justice system. As Kusanagi recovers at Section 9 from the hacking of the Puppeteer, Batou reveals that the real Tateaki Koshiki used a cybernetic body to work from his home because of his skill. When he was hired by Munei, he built the Solid State Society into the welfare system, but his physical body died soon after and had been dead for two years until someone discovered he died as he never interacted with anyone, but his cyber body continued to act under his control. Batou believes that either Koshiki uploaded his consciousness onto the Noble Rot network or their collective consciousness controlled his cyber body after his death, leaving the Puppeteer's identity a mystery. The Tachikoma did not keep a record of the conversation after Koshiki's death, believing that it had no further meaning, and Batou does not make it clear as to what he remembers, but claims that it is not important in the end as to who the Puppeteer was as the situations of the Noble Rot Senior Citizens and kidnapped children are being resolved.

Production

The film was announced by Production I.G at the 2006 Tokyo Anime Fair. The film had a production budget of 360 million yen (equivalent to US$3.6 million).[3] It was produced in Hi-vision format and was made by the same staff that originally made the TV series.[4]

As part of the Nissan sponsorship, the movie features two concept cars designed by Nissan. Section 9 drive a white Nissan Sport Concept sports hatchback and seater Infiniti Kuraza that premiered at the 2005 New York International Auto Show and North American International Auto Show.[5][6] The license plate on the Nissan Infiniti Kuraza is "3923" which reads in Japanese as "san-kyuu-ni-san" or Thank you Nissan.

Releases

Ghost in the Shell: S.A.C. Solid State Society was originally released in Japan as a TV movie on SKYPerfecTV! network on September 1, 2006 and premiered on Sci-Fi Channel's Ani-Monday block on June 11, 2007.[7] Two DVDs were released on July 3, 2007: A normal and special edition.[8] The Special Edition contained an additional DVD containing various development interviews and videos and the Solid State Society Original Soundtrack CD. In July 2008, Solid State Society was released alongside the two OVA The Laughing Man and Individual Eleven in Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex trilogy box set was released.[9]

On November 2010, it had been announced that the film would be converted into a stereoscopic 3D version. The 3D version adds a new opening sequence and was released on March 26, 2011.[10]

Music

Stand Alone Complex: Solid State Society O.S.T.
Soundtrack album by Yoko Kanno
Released November 22, 2006
March 30, 2011 (re-issue)
Label Victor Entertainment
Bandai Entertainment
Producer Yoko Kanno

Stand Alone Complex: Solid State Society O.S.T. is the original soundtrack to the made-for-TV anime film Ghost in the Shell: S.A.C. Solid State Society, composed by Yoko Kanno. It features music composed specifically for the film, in addition to music from the first and second series of Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex. The soundtrack was produced by composer Kanno, Victor Entertainment and Bandai.

Track listing
No. Title Lyrics Vocals Length
1. "Player"   Origa Origa with Heartsdales 5:42
2. "Replica"   Gabriela Robin Ilaria Graziano 5:23
3. "Zero Signal"     Gabriela Robin 4:05
4. "Solid State Society"       4:40
5. "Tempest"       2:52
6. "Born Stubborn"       3:25
7. "She Is"   Gabriela Robin Gabriela Robin 2:34
8. "From the Roof Top ~ Somewhere in the Silence (Sniper’s Theme)"   Tim Jensen Ilaria Graziano 6:33
9. "Undivided"       2:03
10. "Blues in the Net"       6:41
11. "Human Step ~ Aramaki’s Theme"       3:32
12. "Date of Rebirth"   Origa Origa 4:40
13. "Take a Little Hand"   Gabriela Robin Gabriela Robin 5:05
14. "Remedium"       3:10


Reception

Christopher Monfette of IGN gave Solid State Society an "Impressive" score of 8.0 out of 10, stating that it was "A worthwhile watch".[11] Carl Kimlinger of Anime News Network gave the film a "B" rating, calling it a "swift-moving futuristic crime film with some clever science-fiction twists and solid action" but criticizing it was "wordy, confusing and somewhat bloodless."[12] Wai Yung (Wayne) Chim of Animesou.com gave Blu-ray version an 8.0 out of 10, claiming, "While the overall product was good, there was just too much dialogue and not enough action..."[13]

The film was awarded the Juri Prize at the 21st Digital Content Grand Prix.[14] The film was featured in the "Late Night Manga to Anime Film Season"hosted by The British Museum.[15] The 3D version won the Movie award for The Japanese Committee of the International 3D Society.[16]

References

  1. ^ "Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex Solid State Society Overview". Production I.G. November 24, 2006. http://www.productionig.com/contents/works_sp/39_/s08_/index.html. Retrieved November 8, 2011. 
  2. ^ "Bandai Warns Fansubbers Against Illegal Fansubs of Ghost in the Shell: Solid State Society". Anime News Network. August 22, 2006. http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/press-release/2006-08-22/bandai-warns-fansubbers-against-illegal-fansubs-of-ghost-in-the-shell-solid-state-society. Retrieved November 8, 2011. 
  3. ^ "Into the Network: The Ghost in the Shell Universe". Production I.G. http://www.productionig.com/contents/works_sp/39_/s08_/index.html. Retrieved November 8, 2011. 
  4. ^ "Solid State Society Details". Anime News Network. http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2006-03-21/solid-state-society-details. Retrieved November 15, 2011. 
  5. ^ "Nissan Gets Animated project unveiled". Production I.G. http://www.productionig.com/contents/works_sp/47_/s081_/index.html. Retrieved November 14, 2011. 
  6. ^ "Nissan Cars to be Featured in Ghost in the Shell Film". Anime News Network. http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2006-09-21/video-nissan-cars-to-be-featured-in-ghost-in-the-shell-film. Retrieved November 14, 2011. 
  7. ^ "Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex: Solid State Society (movie)". media Village. http://www.nbcumv.com/mediavillage/networks/syfy/animonday. Retrieved 2010-12-21. 
  8. ^ "Solid State Society in July". Anime News Network. 2007-02-01. http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2007-01-25/solid-state-complex-in-july. Retrieved 2010-12-21. 
  9. ^ "Stand-Alone Complex Blu-ray Box English-Dubbed, Subbed". Anime News Network. http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2008-02-15/stand-alone-complex-blu-ray-box-english-dubbed-subbed. Retrieved 2010-09-04. 
  10. ^ "Ghost in the Shell S.A.C. Movie Converted into 3D". Anime News Network. 2010-11-22. http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2010-11-22/ghost-in-the-shell-s.a.c-movie-coverted-into-3d. Retrieved 2011-02-23. 
  11. ^ Monfette, Christopher (June 29, 2007). "Ghost in the Shell: Solid State Society DVD Review". IGN. http://dvd.ign.com/articles/800/800725p1.html. Retrieved January 28, 2011. 
  12. ^ Kimlinger, Carl (September 18, 2007). "Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex: Solid State Society DVD – Review". Anime News Network. http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/review/ghost-in-the-shell-stand-alone-complex-solid-state-society/dvd. Retrieved January 29, 2011. 
  13. ^ Chim, Wai Yung. "Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex: Solid State Society (Blu-Ray)". Animesou. http://www.animesou.com/?p=1064. Retrieved August 9, 2011. 
  14. ^ "Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex - Solid State Society Awarded with Jury Prize at 21st Digital Content Grand Prix". Mania.com. February 8, 2007. http://www.mania.com/ghost-shell-stand-alone-complex-solid-state-society-awarded-jury-prize-21st-digital-content-grand-prix_article_85222.html. Retrieved November 7, 2011. 
  15. ^ "British Museum Hosts Ghibli, Ghost in the Shell, More". Anime News Network. September 6, 2007. http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2007-07-06/british-museum-hosts-ghibli-ghost-in-the-shell-more. Retrieved November 15, 2011. 
  16. ^ "Ghost in Shell SAC, Hipira, Final Fantasy XIII Win 3D Awards". Anime News Network. October 22, 2011. http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2011-10-22/ghost-in-shell-sac-hipira-final-fantasy-xiii-win-3d-awards. Retrieved November 7, 2011. 

External links