IMDb RATING
7.0/10
5.8K
YOUR RATING
The screwball cops of Special Vehicles Section 2 Division 2 must investigate and stop a spree of rampaging construction robots.The screwball cops of Special Vehicles Section 2 Division 2 must investigate and stop a spree of rampaging construction robots.The screwball cops of Special Vehicles Section 2 Division 2 must investigate and stop a spree of rampaging construction robots.
Toshio Furukawa
- Asuma
- (voice)
David Jarvis
- Asuma (1995)
- (English version)
- (voice)
Doug Erholtz
- Asuma (2006)
- (English version)
- (voice)
Mîna Tominaga
- Noa
- (voice)
Briony Glassco
- Noa (1995)
- (English version)
- (voice)
Julie Ann Taylor
- Noa (2006)
- (English version)
- (voice)
Ryûsuke Ôbayashi
- Gotoh
- (voice)
- (as Ryûnosuke Ôbayashi)
Peter Marinker
- Gotoh (1995)
- (English version)
- (voice)
Roger Craig Smith
- Gotoh (2006)
- (English version)
- (voice)
- (as Roger C. Smith)
Yoshiko Sakakibara
- Nagumo
- (voice)
Sharon Holm
- Nagumo (1995)
- (English version)
- (voice)
Megan Hollingshead
- Nagumo (2006)
- (English version)
- (voice)
- (as Karen Thompson)
Tamsin Hollo
- Clancy (1995)
- (English version)
- (voice)
Lisa Enochs
- Clancy (2006)
- (English version)
- (voice)
Michihiro Ikemizu
- Oota
- (voice)
Martin McDougall
- Oota (1995)
- (English version)
- (voice)
Sam Riegel
- Oota (2006)
- (English version)
- (voice)
- (as Sam Regal)
Storyline
Did you know
- Trivia(at around 1h 25 mins) Behind Shinohara in the background, under his hand, the screen says "OMG".
- ConnectionsEdited into Cartoon Sushi: Episode #1.1 (1997)
Featured review
Japanese animation has become very popular in the past few years. Somehow, it also gained the notoriety for "extreme" sex and violence, though it's a misconception that all Japanese animation is about that. Yet, animation in general is viewed as a kids only fare.
I recommend anyone to watch Patlabor: the movie. It has a very mature storyline. When I mean mature, I meant well-thought out story that can leave you thinking.
In the future, giant industrial utility robots called labors are used throughout Japan. Those in the law enforcement department use labors called Patlabors (patrol labors). Lately, there are reports of labors running amuck on its own. From this point we follow the heroes in a detective like story.
There are no nudity, violence is pretty tame compared to your half-hour dose of Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers (a series also a byproduct of Japan, I know but I'm not here to discuss my distaste for the Rangers) TV show. What we have is a straight-forward mystery as the story unravels what is going on. It also explores about man and technology and how it's like the Tower of Babel in biblical literature.
The movie is based on the tv show and comic. I only got to see a few episodes of the show. The movie, like the show, do not have the robots dominating the story, thus focusing more on the human characters. Watching the movie, I almost feel like I'm watching a PG/PG-13 live-action movie. Akira and Ghost in the Shell also have a deep story in them, it's not as involving perhaps they were covered so much cinematic effects (and sex and violence?). Patlabor blew me away in that it successfully simply told an honest-to-goodness story without being covered in so much effects.
The verdict: 5 of 5 stars.
I recommend anyone to watch Patlabor: the movie. It has a very mature storyline. When I mean mature, I meant well-thought out story that can leave you thinking.
In the future, giant industrial utility robots called labors are used throughout Japan. Those in the law enforcement department use labors called Patlabors (patrol labors). Lately, there are reports of labors running amuck on its own. From this point we follow the heroes in a detective like story.
There are no nudity, violence is pretty tame compared to your half-hour dose of Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers (a series also a byproduct of Japan, I know but I'm not here to discuss my distaste for the Rangers) TV show. What we have is a straight-forward mystery as the story unravels what is going on. It also explores about man and technology and how it's like the Tower of Babel in biblical literature.
The movie is based on the tv show and comic. I only got to see a few episodes of the show. The movie, like the show, do not have the robots dominating the story, thus focusing more on the human characters. Watching the movie, I almost feel like I'm watching a PG/PG-13 live-action movie. Akira and Ghost in the Shell also have a deep story in them, it's not as involving perhaps they were covered so much cinematic effects (and sex and violence?). Patlabor blew me away in that it successfully simply told an honest-to-goodness story without being covered in so much effects.
The verdict: 5 of 5 stars.
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Details
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $578,959
- Runtime1 hour 40 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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