La policière Akane Tsunemori obéit aux règles de Sybil, le système informatique pré-cognitif. Mais lorsqu'elle est confrontée à un génie criminel qui peut éviter ce système parfait, elle com... Tout lireLa policière Akane Tsunemori obéit aux règles de Sybil, le système informatique pré-cognitif. Mais lorsqu'elle est confrontée à un génie criminel qui peut éviter ce système parfait, elle commence à douter de Sybil et d'elle-même.La policière Akane Tsunemori obéit aux règles de Sybil, le système informatique pré-cognitif. Mais lorsqu'elle est confrontée à un génie criminel qui peut éviter ce système parfait, elle commence à douter de Sybil et d'elle-même.
- Récompenses
- 4 victoires et 11 nominations au total
Avis à la une
I'm still relatively new to the anime world, and I finished this series quite a while ago, but it is absolutely amazing.
the storyline is intelligent, creative, and is sure to keep you on the edge of your seat. every character has so much depth and their stories are explored with so much care that you feel like you really know them. the ending is so beautifully well done and wraps up the story perfectly.
I will admit I found it hard to watch the second season (I have yet to get very far in it) but the first is and probably always will be one of my favorite shows.
Technological advancement and lack of humanity is an open question all- time throughout the history. While we are seeking to enrich our lives by using gadgets and machines, we may lose something important as human beings. What if we are born in a safe society where criminals and even potential criminals are managed and isolated from the society in order not to harm other good citizens, and they are guaranteed to live in the society with given happiness. We may not even have questions about morality.
In the story, a person's mental state is simultaneously measured, and the value is determined whether the person is potentially a criminal and is killed depending on the state level. The police officers use a gun, but the gun is only fired if the targeting person's mental state is measured as dangerous, seemingly it also helps them avoid shooting the wrong person. Akane Tsunemori is a novice officer who is in charge of solving crimes with other members.
One of the things that astonishes me is the dialogues where characters talk, referring to quotes from famous authors such as Philip K. Dick, George Orwell, Gulliver Travels, Wiliam Gibson, Macbeth, Humlet, etc. The lines that characters speak casts philosophical questions as to what is justice and what is an ideal society.
I really like the story in which it depicts a different aspect of the technological world from Ghost In the Shell or Blade Runner, yet somehow it reminds me of those epic anime and films.
I was extremely pleased to learn the series had continued, I felt the first Psycho Pass was a surprising hit, which attempted to add to the GITS, Deus Ex or cyberpunk societal dystopia type anime, which is among the most interesting style of anime entertainment, IMO.
I do not believe Psycho Pass managed to reach '9/10' heights, but it did pose interesting questions and I did want more.
For Psycho Pass 2... the assistant inspector character is simply so illogically blind to the obviousness of the truths around here, from the beginning, that it is somewhat immersion breaking.
The previous reviewer seemed to feel that was explainable by only fools being chosen to be police officers. I'm seeing a bit of disconnect there however. Perhaps that is how this series chose to present the situation, but I didn't get that vibe from the original series, and it's just too ridiculous. The 'hounds' are far more capable thinkers, as were the officers originally. That is poor writing, bending the reality of the world they created to serve their point.
(Which better writing could've avoided)
Additionally there are, IMO, several aspects that are poorly written justifications for scenarios.
Although overall, I am still pleased there was more of this world to watch, I enjoyed the literary and historical references and the overall warnings the show presents.
I would simply argue that Psycho Pass '1' was the superior work.
I don't think anything plot or characterisation wise was better done here, and of course, Psycho Pass 1 was great, because it was better than many other things, not because it was actually an amazingly cerebral work of art, to the standards of GITS.
There are too many 'plot sheep', but I suppose there are in life as well.
However unlike our reality, the evils of society, are extremely obvious, unchanging and clear cut. IMO, more black and white, than a show discussing these themes should have - and far moreso than Psycho Pass 1 - but then this IS a continuation.
Still worth watching!
The Animation, the writing, the voice acting (ok, for Japanese version) are all top notch. Production IG, the animation studio that made this, is at the top of their game, and I knew them from watching Ghost in the Shell: Stand alone complex (I highly recommend as well). The writing is superb if not genius, and before I knew it, I was attached to all the characters (on both sides). Although the main theme have been done to death (future worlds where AI's run things and judge us, and so on) the show definitely made it feel fresh and had me diving in episode after episode. I'm actually on episode 19.. I can't express how excited I am finishing this!
Watch it!
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesSupervising Director, Katsuyuki Motohiro instructed his director Naoyoshi Shiotani "not to make anything that could not be adapted into a live-action film."
- Citations
Rikako Oryo: This epidemic leads innocent people to their deaths, and yet it's pathogen will never be eradicated. This is a disease called serenity, a form of death that people have wished for.
- ConnexionsFeatured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Science Fiction Anime Shows (2015)
Meilleurs choix
- How many seasons does Psycho-Pass have?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Durée25 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.78 : 1
- 16:9 HD