The Empire of Corpses
The Empire of Corpses | |
---|---|
屍者の帝国 | |
Directed by | Ryoutarou Makihara |
Screenplay by | Midori Goto Hiroshi Seko Koji Yamamoto |
Based on | The Empire of Corpses by Project Itoh and To Enjo |
Starring | Yoshimasa Hosoya Ayumu Murase Kana Hanazawa Taiten Kusunoki Shinichiro Miki Daiki Yamashita Akio Ōtsuka Takayuki Sugō |
Edited by | Aya Hida |
Music by | Yoshihiro Ike |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Toho Animation |
Release date |
|
Running time | 126 minutes |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
The Empire of Corpses (屍者の帝国, Shisha no Teikoku) is a 2015 Japanese science fiction adventure anime film produced by Wit Studio and directed by Ryoutarou Makihara.[1][2] The movie is part of a series of films based on novels written by Project Itoh. It was followed by Harmony and Genocidal Organ.
The film was released on October 2, and Egoist performed the film's ending theme. The film was originally set for release in December, but the date was later changed to October 2.[3] The film is licensed in North America by Funimation who gave the film a limited theatrical release on April 19 & 20, 2016,[4] and in the United Kingdom by Anime Limited.[5]
Plot
In an alternate version of 18th Century England scientist Victor Frankenstein discovered a method of reanimating a corpse with a soul that could think, feel and speak. After his creation was destroyed another method was used to replace the missing Soul with an artificial soul known as "Necroware." It can be upgraded like a computer program, though the corpses are unable to speak, feel or think for themselves.
By the 19th century, the use of corpses becomes more common as Necroware is improved daily via a machine known as the Analytical Engine, invented by Charles Babbage, which Corpse Engineers have access to. John Watson, an aspiring corpse engineer, illegally creates his own Necroware and resurrects his deceased friend who he renames Friday. M, a member of British Secret service, makes a deal with Watson after catching him: either he goes to prison or becomes an agent of the British Empire. Watson chooses the latter.
In India, Watson and Friday follow former U.S. President Ulysses S. Grant and his unnamed secretary. Watson and Friday are attacked by corpse assassins but are saved by Captain Frederick Burnaby, Watson's bodyguard. Watson is tasked by M to find Alexei Fyodorovich Karamazov, a Russian corpse engineer who stole The Memorandum, which also happened to be Frankenstein's original research on reanimating a corpse with a soul. Watson is ordered to retrieve the research. Watson and Burnaby meet with Nikolai Krasotkin to act as their guide to Kabul where Karamazov is hiding.
They reach the Khyber Pass and are ambushed by upgraded corpses and rescued by Grant's secretary. Watson retrieves an advanced corpse who is able to speak its own name; Krasotkin suspects that Watson is planning to use the Memorandum to fully resurrect Friday. Watson is approached by the woman Hadaly Lilith, Grant's secretary, wishing to know if the advanced corpses contained souls, but Watson is unsure.
They locate Karamazov who explains his wish to resurrect a human as Frankenstein once did. Karamazov upgrades Nikolai, whose soul is replaced by an artificial soul while Nikolai is still alive. This kills Nikolai but creates a more intelligent corpse capable of limited thought and speech. Watson is dismayed this was what Frankenstein's original creature was and angrily berates Karamazov for not trying to improve the technology. Karamazov admits the Memorandum is in Japan and asks Watson to destroy it. Karamazov then commits suicide by having Nikolai upgrade him. Watson, Friday and Burnaby depart to Japan, leaving Nikolai, Karamazov and his corpse servants to mindlessly follow their Necroware programming forever.
A year later in Tokyo, Watson meets Yamazawa Seigo of the Imperial Japanese Army, who knows the Memorandum is held by the Osato Chemical company. Watson, along with Friday, Burnaby, and Seigo infiltrate Osato Chemical, but are attacked by advanced corpses in armour. Watson flees to find the Memorandum and has Friday analyse it, setting off a trap that sets fire to the building. The analysis causes Friday to lash out and try to speak. A strange man retrieves the Memorandum, revealing himself as Frankenstein's original creation, known as The One - still alive after 100 years and just as intelligent as a human.
Watson awakes aboard the USS Richmond heading for America. Burnaby is also on board and the feral Friday is in chains. Grant wants Watson to work for him to defeat The One, who hates humans for creating him, but Watson spends the voyage fixing Friday. Upon reaching San Francisco, The One uses the Memorandum to send out a signal that causes corpses to attack humans, including the corpse crew of the USS Richmond. During the escape, Hadaly reveals she is an artificial life form created by her "father" Thomas Edison, and she can control corpses using sound waves and desires to one day have a soul of her own. She escapes with Watson, Friday, and Burnaby while Grant is killed by an exploding corpse. At Hadaly's safe house, Watson finishes fixing Friday, making him immune to the Memorandum's signal.
The One is captured by M, who plans to turn all humans into corpses; thus ending every war. The One is taken to the Tower of London where he has his mind analysed by Charles Babbage and the preserved brain of Victor Frankenstein. A new stronger signal is sent out by M causing even more corpses to attack humans. Aboard the submarine USS Nautilus, Watson, Hadaly, Friday and Burnaby smash through the Traitors' Gate. Burnaby fights the corpse guards with Hadaly's flamethrower while the others fight their way to M. Hadaly knocks out M and uses her sound waves to suppress The One's mind, while Friday takes over Charles Babbage to stop the signal. M awakens and shoots Hadaly before being shot by Watson. Now free, The One kills M, overpowers Hadaly, and takes over Friday.
The One finally reveals his true plan, to create the bride Victor Frankenstein promised him. Having orchestrated everything, he plans to combine all the corpses' primitive minds into a true human mind. Then, using the Memorandum and Charles Babbage, he will beckon forth his bride's soul from the knowledge inside Victor Frankenstein's brain and insert both the new mind and his bride's soul into Hadaly while he transfers his own soul and mind into Friday's body. As The One is on the verge of success, Burnaby damages Charles Babbage. The One is returned to his own body and Friday restarts taking over Charles Babbage, sealing The One's soul inside the Memorandum. The One tries to drag Watson in with him. Inside the Memorandum, Watson struggles until a smiling Friday helps him and The One is defeated.
Watson awakes in time to escape the collapsing tower with Hadaly and an unconscious Friday. Hadaly admits she was afraid that The One's bride was overwriting her, and Watson assures her that is a sign she has a soul of her own. She urges him not to give up trying to resurrect Friday.
Back in the house where he resurrected Friday, Watson is seen combining the research of Karamazov with the surviving pages of the Memorandum to perform an unknown corpse upgrade on himself.
Four years later in London, Watson is seen fleeing with his new companion, Sherlock Holmes, whilst Burnaby and Hadaly, who now goes by the name Irene Adler, watch from nearby. What appears to be a fully resurrected Friday also watches from a rooftop.
Characters
Characters | Japanese voice actor | English dubbing actor |
---|---|---|
John H. Watson | Yoshimasa Hosoya | Jason Liebrecht |
Friday (Noble Savage 007) | Ayumu Murase | Todd Haberkorn |
Hadaly Lilith | Kana Hanazawa | Morgan Garrett |
Frederick Burnaby | Taiten Kusunoki | J. Michael Tatum |
Alexei Karamazov | Shinichiro Miki | Mike McFarland |
Nikolai Krasotkin | Daiki Yamashita | Micah Solusod |
M | Akio Ōtsuka | Sean Hennigan |
The One | Takayuki Sugō | R. Bruce Elliott |
Seigo Yamazawa | Jirō Saitō | Kenny Green |
Ulysses Simpson Grant | Kōji Ishii | Greg Dulcie |
Moneypenny | Houko Kuwashima | Caitlin Glass |
Thomas Edison | Kōji Takeda | Chris Guerrero |
Sherlock Holmes | Yoshimitsu Takasugi | Chuck Huber |
Narrator | Issei Futamata | Jason Liebrecht |
References
- ^ "Project Itoh Anime Films Slated For October, November, December". Anime News Network. April 23, 2015. Retrieved September 13, 2015.
- ^ "屍者の帝国 (2015)". allcinema (in Japanese). Stingray. Retrieved October 3, 2015.
- ^ "The Empire of Corpses Anime Film Unveils Cast, Theme Song, Premiere Date". Anime News Network. July 16, 2015. Retrieved September 13, 2015.
- ^ "Funimation Announces The Empire of Corpses Film's Theatrical Dates". Anime News Network.
- ^ "Anime Limited Acquires Empire of Corpses and Harmony". Anime News Network. April 27, 2016. Retrieved April 27, 2016.
External links
- Official website (in Japanese)
- Funimation Films Page
- The Empire of Corpses at IMDb
- The Empire of Corpses (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
- 2015 films
- Animated adventure films
- Aniplex
- 2015 anime films
- 2010s science fiction adventure films
- Films based on Japanese novels
- Films set in the 19th century
- Films set in the Victorian era
- Funimation
- Japanese science fiction adventure films
- Japanese animated science fiction films
- Japanese films
- NoitaminA
- Sherlock Holmes pastiches
- Wit Studio
- Frankenstein films
- Films about zombies
- Films set in India