Pokémon: Mewtwo Strikes Back—Evolution

Pokémon: Mewtwo Strikes Back—Evolution

By Kunihiko Yuyama & Motonori Sakakibara

  • Genre: Anime
  • Release Date: 2020-12-02
  • Advisory Rating: PG
  • Runtime: 1h 36min
  • Director: Kunihiko Yuyama & Motonori Sakakibara
  • Production Company: OLM
  • Production Country: Japan
  • iTunes Price: USD 9.99
  • iTunes Rent Price: USD 3.99
6.663/10
6.663
From 483 Ratings

Description

When researchers discover a fossil of the Mythical Pokémon Mew, they bring upon themselves a creation that goes against the very laws of nature: Mewtwo, a Legendary Pokémon intended for use as a tool of destruction. But as Mewtwo becomes aware of its existence, it begins to resent its human creators and seeks revenge—and Ash, Pikachu, and their friends find themselves at the center of its rampage! With the future of the Pokémon world at stake, will our heroes be able to overcome Mewtwo’s challenge…and will Mewtwo be able to find a new meaning for its life?

Trailer

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Reviews

  • Go!

    5
    By Nolan's Favs
    This reanimated version of Mewtwo strike back is slightly better than original version!
  • Feels like a draft of a better remake.

    3
    By Steven "Yoshi" Reich
    I don't think this movie is awful, but there seem to be a lot of missed opportunities, puzzling choices, and underdeveloped aspects that give this movie an unfished feeling. The CGI generally seemed okay, though I do think the Pokemon and environments fared better than the human characters. As for the script, even as someone who's aware of many of the differences between the '98 Japanese version and the '99 dub (be prepared for a lot comparisons to the latter), I find many of the changes and additions puzzling. The Meowth X Clone Meowth scene felt weaker (not just less direct-I found it didn't provide enough weight for the time the scene was allotted), and the harbormaster was made extra redundant by removing her foreshadowing. As for the additions, I found few, if any of them interesting, and in the case of Brock, rather tone-deaf. Speaking of audio, Shinji Miyazaki hasn't done a lot to impress me lately, and this movie hasn't changed that trajectory. The score isn't ear-splitting or grating, but I find it severely underwhelming overall. A rework of the score from the '99 dub would almost definitely have been more to my liking. The absence of "Brother My Brother" drained a lot of emotion from the clone fighting scene for me, and while "Keep Evolving" is a good song, it doesn't have the raw emotion of "We're A Miracle". If a remake of "The Power Of One" is in the pipeline, Pokemon will need to take a different route. In terms of voice acting, while I've generally acclimated to the TPCi cast, I don't feel like this is their best work. I honestly wonder if some of them were disappointed not to be doing something closer to (again) the '99 dub. Overall, I'd say that bizarrely, Mewtwo Strikes Back Evolution seems like an earlier version of the film released in the west in 1999. In the modern polarized climate (even prior to 2020), the theme of "don't reduce people to their differences"'s relevance should have been apparent, but it seems like it somehow got diminished instead of expanded upon. The movie isn't terrible because of it, but I don't think it lived up to its potential either.
  • Great Remake!

    5
    By LEGOKing77
    This is a great remake of the Pokémon movie that started it all!
  • Nostalgic

    5
    By jperezny
    Brings back memories
  • Great movie

    5
    By Gonzalez41991
    Great Movie worth watching if you are a Pokémon fan

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