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Pokémon: The Movie 2000 |
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After 25 very long minutes of Pikachu's
Rescue Adventure, the feature, subtitled
The Power of One, finally opens. The
villain, Lawrence III, reads aloud an ancient
and cryptic inscription (think Indiana
Jones). The carved words foretell power
and treasure for the one who can unite three
rare Pokémon birds found in the Orange
Islands. Coincidentally, Pokémon trainer Ash
Ketchum and his friends Misty and Brock are
on vacation with their Pokémon in those very
islands. Strange disturbances in nature draw
trainers and Pokémon alike to one island-
Shamouti-where Ash is asked to participate in
the ritual of the Chosen One. The ceremony is
performed every year to look forward to the day
when the real Chosen One will gather three
Pokémon treasures and thus tame "the beast
of the sea" (a.k.a. the new Pokémon
Lugia).
Meanwhile, Lawrence has upset the
balance of nature by disturbing the harmony
between the Pokémon titans of fire, lightning
and ice. Team Rocket, comprised of Jessie
and James, a pair of thieving Pokémon
trainers, shows up to steal Ash's Pokémon,
Pikachu. It soon becomes clear that Ash's
presence in the islands is not a coincidence
and that the treasure ritual has given way to
the real thing: Ash is the Chosen One.
The treasures he seeks belong to the three
Pokémon Lawrence wants to capture, and
Ash is able to use them to save the day.
Positive Elements: Pokémon:
The Movie 2000 celebrates a "can-do"
spirit. Ash valiantly steps up to his
responsibility: "Some things are more
important than fun. This is serious. I'm the
Chosen One. I gotta be responsible." Misty is
willing to risk her life to rescue Ash when he
gets in trouble at sea. All the Pokémon rush to
the scene of trouble in hopes of being the
one to help. Lawrence is clearly ignoble
because he uses Pokémon for his own
personal satisfaction rather than caring for
them and training them for good. Team
Rocket gives up trying to steal Pikachu for the
higher goal of defeating Lawrence and
restoring order to the world ("We don't want
the world destroyed. Even if we survived,
there'd be no one left to steal from. We'd be
out of work.") Ash's mother is relieved when
he survives his task, expressing her concern
and fear and reminding everyone that, "Ash is
the world to me."
Spiritual Content: The idea of the
Chosen One is treated as a prophecy and the
ceremony as a semi-religious festival. The
Pokémon all have preternatural powers and
the ability to shoot streams of power from one
to the other. These seem to be fantastical
rather than occult. Still, some viewers will
associate ideas about harmony in nature with
New Age religion or Eastern mysticisms.
Sexual Content: None.
Concerning romantic content, Misty balks
when Melody teases that she's Ash's
girlfriend. In the end she admits a strong bond
between herself and Ash but expresses it
through a lifesaving, selfless act of
friendship.
Violent Content: Mild to moderate.
The action is continual, and may frighten very
young viewers, but there is no bloodshed. The
most intense scenes involve the ice, lightning
and fire Pokémon. Lawrence's capture
methods are harsh, and once the three
birdlike Pokémon have been thrown out of
balance, they attack one another with
electric-current-like powers as they vie for
rank. A fierce storm shipwrecks the Pokémon
trainers, but no one is injured. Ash nearly
drowns in his attempt to collect the treasures
and restore order to the islands. When
Lawrence is defeated, his ship crash-lands
with him inside.
Foul Language: None
Drug and Alcohol Content:
None
Other Negative Elements: The
reformation of Team Rocket is celebrated
("We did the right thing and it feels great!"), but
it's not complete. They decide they want to
continue doing the right thing, but to do so
they'll have to break from their current boss
and start all over. They'll be starting out
penniless, so how will they fund their efforts?
They'll steal money, of course.
Summary: The plot is as
wearisome as it was in Pokémon: The
First Movie. But the violence has been
tamed somewhat, so the positive messages
shine a bit more brightly. If only there were a
way for kids to extract those positive
messages without making parents suffer so
much.
Note: In the short film that
precedes the movie, Pikachu and friends work
together to rescue Poké-egg character Togepi
from a storm. To the delight of children and
annoyance of adults, only four English lines
are spoken during the entire 25 minute ordeal.
In place of dialog is a barrage of gibberish
from Pokémon whose only intelligible sounds
include the high-pitched repetition of their own
names. Again, a positive story, but positively
nerve-grating.
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