Pokémon: Mewtwo Strikes Back - Evolution
Original title: Gekijô-ban poketto monsutâ: Myûtsû no gyakushû Evolution
IMDb RATING
5.7/10
6.6K
YOUR RATING
After a scientific experiment leads to the creation of a clone of Mewtwo, he sets out to destroy the world. Ash and his friends then decide to thwart Mewtwo's evil plans.After a scientific experiment leads to the creation of a clone of Mewtwo, he sets out to destroy the world. Ash and his friends then decide to thwart Mewtwo's evil plans.After a scientific experiment leads to the creation of a clone of Mewtwo, he sets out to destroy the world. Ash and his friends then decide to thwart Mewtwo's evil plans.
Sarah Natochenny
- Ash Ketchum
- (English version)
- (voice)
Bill Rogers
- Brock
- (English version)
- (voice)
Michele Knotz
- Jessie
- (English version)
- (voice)
- …
Ikue Ôtani
- Pikachu
- (voice)
Alyson Leigh Rosenfeld
- Nurse Joy
- (English version)
- (voice)
James Carter Cathcart
- James
- (English version)
- (voice)
- …
Lisa Ortiz
- Neesha
- (English version)
- (voice)
- …
Billy Bob Thompson
- Dr. Fuji
- (English version)
- (voice)
- …
Aaron Phillips
- Raymond
- (English version)
- (voice)
- (as Ben Phillips)
Emily Bauer
- Officer Jenny
- (English version)
- (voice)
- (as Emily Jenness)
Eddy Lee
- Researcher #1
- (English version)
- (voice)
Sam Haft
- Researcher #2
- (English version)
- (voice)
- …
Rodger Parsons
- Narrator
- (voice)
Justin Anselmi
- Additional Voices
- (English version)
- (voice)
Suzy Myers Jackson
- Additional Voices
- (English version)
- (voice)
- (as Suzy Myers)
Marc Thompson
- Additional Voices
- (English version)
- (voice)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaTakeshi Shudô receives a posthumous credit for this film's screenplay.
- ConnectionsFeatured in AniMat's Crazy Cartoon Cast: Grover Said WHAT?!? (2019)
- SoundtracksPokémon Theme (Mewtwo Mix)
Originally written by John Loeffler and John Siegler
Arranged by Ed Goldfarb
Performed by Ben Dixon and The Sad Truth
Featured review
In 1998, for reasons that may be better left unknown, Gus van Sant released upon humanity his parvum opus "Psycho". One of the many questions pondered was "why?", as in why would you release a remake shot-to-shot, identical to the original?
The first Pokémon movie is far from being a landmark of cinema and the arts as a whole like Hitchcock's "Psycho", but it has its place among fans, and is still one of the most popular Japanese anime films outside Japan, if not the first. The Western release unfortunately was handled by 4Kids, infamous for their "americanization". This can be mild such as changing character and location names, understandable like removing substance use, questionable as in changing food, and infuriating when they decide to change the plot.
And oh boy, they changed the plot. The three most egregious are Mewtwo's characterization, Mew's motivations, and how human characters react to the copies vs originals fights. In the original, Mewtwo had a philosophical crisis about who he was, what was he purpose, and if his existance and life had the same meaning as natural beings. They changed him to this unidimensional villain bent on evil, because it would be simpler for young children to understand and, in contrast, sympathize with Ash. Mew is painted as this messianic savior, appearing out of the blue to fight against Mewtwo and saying that "real strength comes from the heart", while the original Japanese was pretty much "copies aren't deserve of living, and must be wiped out".
Both parties were to fight to the bitter end. The human characters realize this is pointless: they are all living beings, worthy of being here and all that. Then, 4Kids used "American Beam", and suddenly characters are shouting that fight is bad. Very contradictory with the whole Pokémon media being based on fights.
Lastly, I never understood as a kid why would a bunch of tears can revive someone. This was actually covered in a prologue released along the first film that covers Mewtwo "infancy". It also covers the scientists motivations behind the cloning, why Giovanni was involved, why Mewtwo decided to create his first clones as the final forms of the Kanto starters, and also explains that tears carry lifeforce. Granted, this prologue wasn't part of the original movie, but since is part of it and actually fills plot holes of the original, they could easily included it.
Plotwise, I would like to include that Mewtwo is said to be the "greatest trainer". But in a Venusaur mirror match, he commands his to use Leaf Storm. The greatest trainer is using a 4x resisted move, which also drops the Special Attack. And somehow, he wins. Guess his clones were that overleveled.
The first Pokémon movie is far from being a landmark of cinema and the arts as a whole like Hitchcock's "Psycho", but it has its place among fans, and is still one of the most popular Japanese anime films outside Japan, if not the first. The Western release unfortunately was handled by 4Kids, infamous for their "americanization". This can be mild such as changing character and location names, understandable like removing substance use, questionable as in changing food, and infuriating when they decide to change the plot.
And oh boy, they changed the plot. The three most egregious are Mewtwo's characterization, Mew's motivations, and how human characters react to the copies vs originals fights. In the original, Mewtwo had a philosophical crisis about who he was, what was he purpose, and if his existance and life had the same meaning as natural beings. They changed him to this unidimensional villain bent on evil, because it would be simpler for young children to understand and, in contrast, sympathize with Ash. Mew is painted as this messianic savior, appearing out of the blue to fight against Mewtwo and saying that "real strength comes from the heart", while the original Japanese was pretty much "copies aren't deserve of living, and must be wiped out".
Both parties were to fight to the bitter end. The human characters realize this is pointless: they are all living beings, worthy of being here and all that. Then, 4Kids used "American Beam", and suddenly characters are shouting that fight is bad. Very contradictory with the whole Pokémon media being based on fights.
Lastly, I never understood as a kid why would a bunch of tears can revive someone. This was actually covered in a prologue released along the first film that covers Mewtwo "infancy". It also covers the scientists motivations behind the cloning, why Giovanni was involved, why Mewtwo decided to create his first clones as the final forms of the Kanto starters, and also explains that tears carry lifeforce. Granted, this prologue wasn't part of the original movie, but since is part of it and actually fills plot holes of the original, they could easily included it.
Plotwise, I would like to include that Mewtwo is said to be the "greatest trainer". But in a Venusaur mirror match, he commands his to use Leaf Storm. The greatest trainer is using a 4x resisted move, which also drops the Special Attack. And somehow, he wins. Guess his clones were that overleveled.
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official sites
- Languages
- Also known as
- Pokémon: Mewtwo Phản Công Tiến Hóa
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $27,347,118
- Runtime1 hour 38 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1 / (high definition)
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