Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex

Ghost In The Shell: Stand Alone Complex (2004 - ) is a Japanese anime television show based on the manga by Masamune Shirow and made popular world-wide by Mamoru Oshii's 1995 cyberpunk classic Ghost in the Shell.

SA: Public Security Section 9; SECTION-9

Opening Screen: It is a time when, even if nets were to guide all consciousness that had been converted to photons and electrons toward coalescing, standalone individuals have not yet been converted into data to the extent that they can form unique components of a larger complex.



Perp: [after being chased down by the Major] You people are cops?! Now I know there’s no hope for justice in the system!
Major: If you’ve got a problem with the world, change yourself. If that's a problem, close your eyes, shut your mouth, and live like a hermit. And if that’s a problem… [cocks gun and presses it against his head]



Batou: Borma, I’m almost at your location!
Borma: Don’t run out into traffic, okay?
Batou: I'll look before crossing, Mom. [he runs into traffic and is almost hit by Pazu and Borma’s car]



Batou: He’s got guts, burning out his own memories like that. He did it, even though he knew it might cause brain damage.



Major: [To Togusa] If you’ve got time to be depressed, why not grace us with your special talents?



Major: This next footage is of the Minister and a geisha going into the bathroom.
Aramaki: With a geisha?
Major: Apparently, he sometimes likes to swap bodies with geishas when he gets drunk.



Aramaki: At section 9, we aim to please.



Aramaki: Major!
Motoko: Almost there!
Aramaki: The military's itching to jump in. Watch your back!
Motoko: Thanks for the concern.



Batou: But Major! What if the robot geishas demand a pay raise?
Togusa: Knock it off.



Motoko: All personnel in position! Standing by!
Aramaki: Right. You're on.
Motoko: Go!

SA: Proof of Recklessness; TESTATION

Major: Togusa, meet up with the Chief at Kenbishi. Find out what caused the tank to go haywire. Batou and I will herd the runaway tank with the six Tachikomas.
Batou: Gee, you get all the action…
Togusa: Don’t come crying to me if that tank blows you to hell.



Tachikoma: [upon seeing the larger tank] Wow.
Major: Don’t get so googly-eyed that you wander into its field of fire! Let’s go!



[while following behind the large tank inside the Tachikomas]
Batou: I know we don’t stand a chance against it, but being totally ignored like this ticks me off.
Major: Care to head around in front of it, then?
Batou: I’m kidding.



Tachikoma 1: He’s so lucky! He broke down!
Tachikoma 2: Maybe they’ll do a structural analysis on him!



Kago: When my body dies, I’ll be free of my religion.



Batou: Son of a bitch. He hated his parents that much?
Major: No. It was just for a split second, but I felt something when I burned out Kago’s brain. “Well, Mom? What do you think of me in my steel body?” It was a strange sensation. It wasn’t pride… Or vengeance.
Batou: Forget about it. It was just a hallucination.
Major: I hope so. There’s no way we’ll ever know for sure now.



Batou: Hey, we don't even know its capabilities and we're going in with Tachikomas.
Motoko: [chuckles] Don't be too quick to underestimate them.
Tachikoma 1: That's right!
Tachikoma 2: You tell 'em, Major!
Tachikoma 3: Bring it on!



Batou: You get all the fun jobs, don't ya?
Togusa: Don't come crying to me if you get blown away.



Tachikoma 1: Harima Research Academy is the place where our neurochips were made.
Tachikoma 2: A triumphant return to our birthplace.
Tachikoma 3: The Major gets mad when we chatter.



SWAT Officer 1: First time I've seen them work.
SWAT Officer 2: I didn't think Section 9 really existed.



Batou: You ok?
Destroyed Tachikoma: I'm fine!
Motoko: Wait there for assistance.
Destroyed Tachikoma: Sure thing...since I can't move.

SA: A Perfect Day for a Jungle Cruise; JUNGLE CRUISE



Tachikoma 1: Wow, it sure is damp. Our optical camouflage visibility index is definitely going to shoot up.

Tachikoma 2: Our gaskets won't corrode, will they?

Boma: Quit your whining. Just be thankful you don't have a sense of smell.

Tachikoma 1: Is there an unpleasant odor? We can analyze it with our sensors.

Tachikoma 2: Bouma's discomfort index is at 68%.

Boma: Ah, shut up.

C: Inside the Forest of the Sub-Imagoes; PORTRAITZ

  • Writing, in blue oil-based paint, on the inside of the door to the cable box: "I thought what I'd do was, I'd pretend I was one of those deaf-mutes. Or should I?"

  • Writing, in blue oil-based paint, on lefty's catcher's mitt: "You know what I'd like to be? I mean if I had my goddamn choice, I'd just be the catcher in the rye and all."

SA: Tachikoma Runaway/The Movie Director's Dream; ESCAPE FROM

Kanazuki: What do you think?

Major: I have to admit, for a movie it wasn't bad- but diversionary entertainment is transitory, it just comes and goes at the viewers whim. It's the way it should be, but a film with no beginning or end that hooks an audience and won't let go of them is harmful no matter how wonderful you may have believed it was.

Kanazuki: Ohh, you're a tough critic. Are you saying that we members of the audience have a reality to which we should return?

Major: Yes I am.

Kanazuki: For some who sit and watch the film, misery will be waiting for them the instant they go back to reality. You're willing to accept responsibility for depriving these people of their dreams?

Major: No, I'm not. But dreams are meaningful when you work toward them in the real world. If you merely live within the dreams of other people it's no different from being dead.

Kanazuki: You're a realist.

Major: If a romantic escapes from reality, then yes.

Kanazuki: A strong girl you are. If the reality you believe in ever comes about, you give me a call. When it happens, that's the time we'll leave this theatre.

SA: Time of the Machines; MACHINES DÉSIRANTES



Tachikoma 1: I've got a better idea of the internal design, but it looks like this thing's not equipped with any autonomous functions to output its condition to the outside.

Tachikoma 2: You mean it can't even talk?



(The Tachikomas circle behind the Operator)


Operator: Huh?

Tachikoma 1: Keep up the good work.

Tachikoma 2: It's nice to see a robot enthusiastic about her duties.

Operator: Ah, what are you up to? I'm responsible for this prototype until the debriefing is over. Don't you Tachikomas even come near it.

Tachikoma 3: We won't do anything.

Operator: Please stop wasting my time with your blatant lies.

Tachikoma 2: You're right. I only tell lies. I never, ever say anything that's true.

Operator: Eh?

Tachikoma 1: A curious dilemma. Because if what it said is true, that means it wasn't lying. And if what it said is false, that would mean that it does tell the truth. How do you resolve this perplexing contradicton?

Operator: Uh. Um, well.

All Three Tachikomas: Well, come on, don't you know, figure it out.

(The Operator malfunctions. Tachikoma 1 takes the prototype, and all the Tachikomas leave the Operator behind.)

Tachikoma 1: Folks who can't handle a self-reference paradox are real suckers.

SA: Chinks in the Armor of the Heart – Ag2O

Pavlo Zaitsev:
Now I understand it, it was the same as back then, I'm the one with the blind spot,
In my heart.

SA: Assassination Duet; LOST HERITAGE

Tsujisaki: It's been a long time, Aramaki.

Aramaki: It can't be! What's the meaning of this?

Tsujisaki: At first I had no intention of doing anything, I only wanted to tell me the truth. A truth I thought posterity should know. The thing I needed to tell me, was that I overwrote my memories into my cyberbrain. I never suspected the potential danger of it. That it would turn me into an assassin.

Aramaki: What have you hidden in there? What's in your data library?

Tsujisaki: The truth about Okinawa. I only wanted to hand it down to future generations, but when I learned this truth, I discovered the truth behind mom's death. All I wanted after that was revenge. It was a miscalculation on my part. I had no intention of carrying out an assassination, but I am unable to stop the thirst for revenge that festers in my heart.

C: The Other Side of Good and Evil; EQUINOX

The Laughing Man: A basic rule of thumb about hackers is that we live to peek at things that others have hidden, it's our nature. But, the depth of darkness in the hotbed of corruption that I had tried to challenge defeated me, and all I could do was become a deaf-mute, and avert my eyes from it all. Just as you've done these past six years. The Laughing Man, hmm, that was a catchy name they came up with. And here I've been thinking that if I was unsuccessful in persuading you, I'd simply follow Holden's quote and disappear. They went with the Salinger angle, too, good grief.

C: Sunset in the Lonely City; ANNIHILATION

Togusa: We've been through this, like I've told you over and over, that's not true.

Questioner: Then why was a member of Section 9 in contact with Mr. Cerano while impersonating the Laughing Man

Togusa: Look, that was only to...

Questioner: To what?

Togusa: Hey! Section 9 didn't even exist six years ago, did it? How the hell could it be involved with the Laughing Man incident?! Huh?!

Questioner: Word has it that data falsification is a specialty with you guys, that true?

Togusa: Huh? Ah... gimme a break, would ya? Six years ago a was a police investigator, same as you.

Questioner: All right, let's take this again... from the top.



Batou: Hell, this is my own life. How I decide to waste it is my own damn business.

C: Public Security Section 9, Once Again; STAND ALONE COMPLEX


Togusa: It's not like I had aspirations to be a hero or anything. However, I'm positive we followed a code of justice that all of believed in without condition or compromise. Laughing Man, you were the one who first tried to shed some light on the black abyss of this case and bring it to the world's attention. Is it possible that at this moment, you're feeling the same as I am? Nah, you wouldn't. Your not the type to go in for that stuff. You must've had a revelation of something and you're watching this with eyes that see the big picture. Isn't that right? I could tell. Major...




Laughing Man: Welcome. You took longer than I expected.

Motoko: Don't give me that. You didn't even send me an invitation.

Laughing Man: "If you stay right where you are, then people will eventually come to you"

Motoko: I believe it was Doisneau who said that?

Laughing Man: Yes.




Laughing Man: I'll tell you. It was a simple piece of mail I stumbled across on the net that began the whole thing. What I'd found was a blackmail document that had probably been sent to Cerano Genomics. It was armed with a thesis that was a comparative of the inadequacy of Cerano micromachines versus the effectiveness of the Murai vaccine.

Motoko: Than the original Laughing Man was the person who offered it?

Laughing Man: You could put it like that, I suppose. "I am the machine that reveals the world to you as only I alone am able to see it"

Motoko: Dziga Vertov. He was a Russian film maker, wasn't he?

Laughing Man: Yes. I was kidding myself by thinking it was my personal mission to prove and circulate that information, vital data I alone had happened upon.

Motoko: Failing spectacularly. The pure innocent mediator grew dejected at the base nature of the social system and he turned mute.



The Original Laughing Man:You have to adapt in order to survive, bend your morals ,or you'll break eventually.



DI: Saturday Night and Sunday Morning; CASH EYE

Tachikoma 1: Are these the people they refer to as perverts?

Tachikoma 2: Yeah, but maybe we should refer to them as eccentric.

IN: Those Who Have the Motive; INDUCTANCE

Tachikoma 1: If I understand it correctly, zen is not so much a religion, but rather it is a means of freeing human karma from worldly thoughts, right?

Tachikoma 2: For us, maybe it correlates to deleting data from our cache when it's full.

Tachikoma 1: Yeah, maybe it's similar to that, and having our data synchronized, too.

Tachikoma 2: Wow, if that's true, maybe we could link up with someone who's meditating , and download enlightenment!

Tachikoma (all): Yeah!

DU: Rhapsody - The Melody of a Bygone Nation; Pu239/94

Bato: Hey, what do you think you are?
Gouda: What do 'you' think you are? A small elite special force? If the refugees were armed, you all would get killed.

DI: Repaired Mother-Child Relationship; RED DATA

Kid: (When Motoko gets into bed that night) I have a question. When you're full prosthetic, can you have sex?

Major: Want to find out?

IN: Chain Reaction of Symmetry; CHAIN REACTION

  • Guy With Gun: The real deal, with these we can mount a war.

Kuze: We didn't buy them for the purposes of fighting a war. These oughta give us enough power so we won't have to fight.

  • Motoko: Sounds like Dejimas declared itself an autonomous region.

Daisuke: Hmm

Batou: You figure Kuzes behind it?

Daisuke: So far there's been no evidence of Kuze himself but it's a safe bet it's him. He's cleverly making affected use of the net to devose the refugee's intentions to the media.

Togusa: He's the Che Guevara of the refugee residental district. At least that's what the Nonial Press is calling him.

Batou: Great another intangible hero. The thing I don't get though is, Kuze started it as one of the individual 11 correct? Why did the refugees welcome the guy with open arms. Does he really have some kind of special ability like investigations of The Major in Ishikawa suggested?

Motoko: To get the answer we'll just have to capture him and ask him in person. You also have to realize it's only due to his involvement that we can even step in here like this.

Daisuke: That's right. The first order of business is to put the bricks on this situation by apprehending Kuze, the suspected leader of the refugees. We'll worry about getting the authority to challenge the C.I.S. afterwards.

  • Ishikawa: In cases like this, it's always the ones whose backs are up against the wall that pull together and take action the quickist. The actions of our own citizens are an opposition to the government agencies at this point.

Togusa: It's a mass trend toward individualism. No it's more like a peace at any price movement growing within the population. Even though this is basically a declaration of war from the refugees.


Motoko: Bateau, you and the others go on ahead and gather information on how extensively the refugees are armed. Ishikawa and I will dive the refugees' net and rendezvous with you after we've pinpointed Kuze's location.

Batou, Ishikawa and Togusa: Roger!

  • Batou: Section 9, looks like things are starting to turn ugly here.

Police: The top brass don't seem to think so. I admit we're always hard up here on the field. More than a few of them are itchin' to pass operation command over on to the self defense army. I'm guessing you guys are here as part of them right?

Batou: We just came as part on an independent op.

Police: Huh, must be nice to pick your jobs with no strings attached.

Bateau: You'd think but we gotten haul our own ass' out of the fire.

  • Motoko: We'll hack a refugees' brain. Kuze's cyberbrain seems to be accible to them at any given time. We won't require any back up until we get close to his ghost line.

Ishikawa: Understood

  • Togusa: It's alot livelier here than I had heard.

Batou: The refugees have been building up this high rise slum for over twenty years. That's why I don't find it strange they refer to the place as their castle.


Motoko: Now then, what would be the shortest route to Kuze?

Tachikoma: Major! I found a duty roster for a Dejima police station showing that a female officer no else is of full percent is on duty right now!

Motoko: Alright good work. Give me a visual.

Tachikoma: Here you go!

Motoko: Hmm they sure seem bored.

Tachikoma: Maybe they're on alert for terrorist attacks.

Motoko: Ok we're going to borrow this woman's cyberbrain.

Tachikoma: Roger!

  • Motoko: Ishikawa, I want you to run a trance back from gate 5 on the net and try to find out what draws these people to him.

Ishikawa: I'm on it.

Kusanagi Motoko: Tachikoma, inject maskarae I'll cross his ghost line using my corma file.

  • Kuze: It's me.

Refugee: That you Kuze? Something happened?

Kuze: I'm sorry, but theres a good chance that you'll be raided by the police or a militry special ops soon. There's no need for you to fight them and um hide the weapons and avoid combat as much as possible. Don't throw your lives away.

  • Motoko" Bateau

Batou: What's up?

Motoko: We have Kuze's location. It's a camouflaged harbor on the north east edge of Dijima. There's a retro fitted fishing troller anchored there. He's probably aboard it.

Saito: That's not like you Major are you sure?

Motoko: He spotted me at the last minute. We're currently circling above the harbor. He hasn't gone anywhere yet. We'll grab him before he escapes. Meet up with us at the harbor ASAP.

Everyone: Roger!

  • Refugee: You came here to capture Kuze.

Motoko: What the hell.

Refugee: You're idiots. Kuze will never be caught by the likes of you. He's the real thing, he's a legend.

  • Batou: Major what the hell's going on? You never screwed up like this before. Kuzes not here and we've just lost one of our own damn rookies. In an ambush by a handful of armed refugees!

Motoko: I know, sorry because he was never even here to begin with.

Batou: Huh?

Motoko: Kuze is securing a deal with the Russian mafia for plutonium. He's in Etorofu.

IN: Return to Patriotism; ENDLESS∞GIG

Man in Car: Ishikawa of Section 9 I take it. I came here to take that off your hands.

Ishikawa: Oh you mean this?

[Ishikawa motions to the plutonium hanging from his shoulder.]

Man in Car: That's right.

[Ishikawa punches him in the face through the car window]

Ishikawa: Don't screw with us punk, Section 9 practically invented dirty tricks and information warfare.
Motoko: Kuze?

Kuze: Yes?

Motoko: Do you know how to fold origami cranes?

Kuze: Cranes?

Motoko: That's right, and only using your left hand.

Kuze: With the correct control software, anyone can do that.

Motoko: No, that's not what I mean.

Kuze: Can you do that, fold left handed?

Motoko: Now I can.

Kuze: It sounds like you've endured your fair share of loneliness too. I never asked, but who are you? What's your name?

Motoko: Don't recall, I do have a pseudonym though. It's the same thing with you, isn't it?

Kuze: I see, you're right. The refugees have given me countless names. I joined forces with them with the intent to save them. But maybe the real reason I united with them was to keep the loneliness at bay.

Motoko: Yet in the end you couldn't make it go away, because others could rely on you, but you couldn't rely on them.

Kuze: Do you have someone you can open yourself up to?

Motoko: I suppose I do.

[A scene flashes with Batou trying to save her.]

Kuze: I see, I've been looking for mine, for a long long time.
 
Quoternity
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