Version I saw: UK cinema release (dubbed)
Actors: 6/10
Plot/script: 5/10
Photography/visual style: 6/10
Music/score: 6/10
Overall: 6/10
Pokemon is a global cultural phenomenon and massive multimedia franchise, but despite being a Japanophile, it has largely passed me by, possibly because my family were more Playstation players than Nintendo.
For the 20th anniversary of the anime TV series, they created this cinema-release movie, editing together some of the key episodes and adding in some new footage that smooths out the joins between them.
At every level, the main contributors are all long-time Pokemon insiderds. The director is Kunihiko Yuyama, who directed the original TV series. Original writers Satoshi Tajiri and Takeshi Shudo are joined by comparative newcomer Shoji Yonemura. On the voice talent side, Sarah Natochenny has been playing Ash for some years, and the likes of Michele Knotz and James Carter Cathcart have ben there, in multiple roles, from the outset.
When it comes to Pokemon, the games are the core, and everything else is arguably advertising for them, so it should not have surprised me as much as it did that this film started (after the certification card, so it is part of the edited film) with an advertisement for a Pokemon toy, and ended with several 5-minute short films which I gather summarize the plots of the various games for new fans (i.e. potential customers). The whole thing was essentially a 96-minute advert!
Still, they do commit to it. The animation, while unremarkable artistically, is crisp and modern-looking, with new shots integrated smoothly. None of it looked out of place on a big cinema screen, and I could believe they actually did some work on restoring and cleaning up the 90s footage.
The plot is confusing at times, including a dream section that made no sense for more reasons than the expected dream-weirdness, and an apparent resurrection during the climactic battle through means I could not fathom. Would more dedicated fans have the background knowledge to fill in these gaps? Or indeed, would nostalgia for the characters and world carry them through? I don't know, you'd have to ask them... but I can believe it would.
What I, an outsider, got was a fairly entertaining, if unevenly plotted, child-friendly, ordinary shonen adventure story that did not overstay its welcome. Dedicated fans will probably get the required nostalgia hit, but I would not really recommend it to newcomers.
For my full review, see my independent film review blog on Blogspot, Cinema Inferno.
There’s a draining nature to the constant continuance of the Pokemon franchise. It was only inevitable that the classic animated adventures of the boy Ash Ketchum and his Pikachu pokemon pal would garner a reboot, given the theatrical reboots of Evangelion and Berzerk. But this could have been a sobering moment; a chance for the Pokemon story to regroup and restructure, perhaps form something grander than just whipping up another batch of Pokemon, pathos, and legends of MacGuffins and Chosen Ones. Oh, how I wish that were the case for I Choose You; new animation, new events, same old Pokemon monotony.
If you grew up with Pokemon, you most likely know the story of Ash and Pikachu. The young Pokemon trainer was late to Professor Oak’s for his Pokemon assignment and receives Pikachu as the last of the lot. They don’t connect right off the bat as Pikachu refuses to get inside his Pokeball but they soon grow to trust each other. The movie is counting on you recalling their first encounter that the film glazes over their connection within ten minutes, shorter than that of the TV episode. And right there is when the film makes its claim that it won’t be a story but a mere bullet point checklist for Pokemon fans to check for accuracy in its own weird way of rewriting the story.
There is a connecting story to Ash’s many adventures of banding together with his familiar crop of Pokemon but it’s a very uninteresting one. On his travels, Ash witnesses a mysterious Pokemon bird of legendary myth. While witnessing this sight, he happens upon a magical feather which could bring peace to the world or destroy it but only for those pure of heart. Uh-huh. Which means there’s a dark-hearted Pokemon trainer as well. We’ve been down this route before. Too many times, in fact, that the premature death of Ash garners hardly a batting of the eye. Sure, because we’re supposed to buy into the suspense that the hero of a new theatrical reboot is going to die so soon. I’m not even mad at the laughably dumb excuse to revive Ash from the dead due to pure-hearted bureaucracy.
Despite some better theatrical animation, I Choose You improves on nothing from Pokemon’s tedium, merely doubling down on the marketing dumbness. No time is spent getting to know the characters or Pokemon that Ash associates with. Whenever they’re not battling about other Pokemon, they’re talking about Pokemon and their histories. But who cares? We don’t learn that much about Butterfree so why should we shed tears when Butterfree leaves Ash to migrate and spawn? We only know of Ash and Pikachu for a few minutes before they start making tearful sacrifices. We only know a shred about the MacGuffin and various Pokemon before the film starts lobbing out terms and events that we’re expected to know about. And why, oh why, is it damn near impossible to just have one, ONE, Pokemon movie without heavy pathos. It was almost home free until a very pointless backstory is revealed of one trainer who watched their Pokemon die out in the cold. What a great scene for a fantasy film of cute monsters targeted at kids.
I Choose You would seem like an easy sell as a new Pokemon introduction that may get an aged coot who left the franchise long ago, such as I, back into the fold. Unfortunately, it’s strictly business as usual for a film meant for the devout and not those seeking more. Having watched the show growing up, yes, I can verify this story very much adheres to the events of the Pokemon TV series. In terms of emotion, however, that aspect is sorely lacking, to the point where even the comedic Team Rocket rivals come off as wasted villains. I never expected a lot from Pokemon but even I know there’s just a tad more here than this boring retread.