dvd movies, new dvd releases for everyone
ACTIVE NOV-23
Total: $0.00USD
Your Cart is Empty
Movies
On Demand
Adult
Music
MP3 Downloads
Title
Actors
Director
And
Or
Exact
Fuzzy
Starts
SUB SECTIONS
DVD Movies
Blu-ray DVD
HD DVD Movies
Adult DVDs
Adult Novelty
Anime DVD
5.1 Audio DVDs
Music CDs
MP3 Downloads
Video On Demand
Vinyl LPs
UMD Movies
DVD QUICK LINKS
New Releases
Top Sellers
DVD Coming Soon
Cheap DVDs
Recently Added
BD QUICK LINKS
New Releases
Top Sellers
Coming Soon
Cheap Blu-ray
Recently Added
HD QUICK LINKS
New Releases
Top Sellers
Coming Soon
Cheap HD DVD
Recently Added
MY ACCOUNT
Login/Register
Adjust Account
Shipping Profiles
Order History
Current Invoices
Email Subs
My Currency:
My Email Alerts
My Wishlist
My Shopping Cart
Checkout Now
SITE MATTERS
Help & Support
Shipping Info
RSS Feeds
HiDef Blog
Sitemap
Resources
dvd cohorts
EXTRA! EXTRA!
Iron Man Blu-ray
Blockbusters
Gift Center
All Time DVD
blu-ray resources
entertainment things
entertainment news
Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex, Volume 04 (Special Edition)
DVD
Unrated :: Manga Video ::
Released:
2005-01-25
$21.29USD
Low Stock
Buy From The Marketplace:
$24.99
In Stock
Amazon Marketplace New:
$4.99
19 Available
Amazon Marketplace Low:
$4.88
11 Available
Buy.com:
$18.99
In Stock
Deep Discount DVD:
$18.34
In Stock
DVD Boxoffice:
$30.76
In Stock, Ships in 1 to 5 days
Rent Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone... DVD:
(USA)
(Canada)
(UK)
Grab Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone... DVD Posters:
AllPosters.com
Rank:
#93172
Rating:
4.5/5 (11 Reviews)
5/5
What you would expect!
by Tom E. Thompson (California)
This is what you would expect from the team that makes this awsome film and series! Visuals are as always, Top notch in the anime world, with thought provoking story lines, that make it so you can't wait to watch the next episode in the series. If you like you anime like i do with realistic looking charaters, and just alaround good damn movie. you have to have this in your collection, along with the whole series!
5/5
gift for boyfriend
by Emily A. Baldwin
really love it boyfriend is going to be super excited when he gets it as a gift
4/5
A Review of the Special Edition Features
by David Stilley (Santa Cruz CA USA)
I would rate the show as 5 stars, this is a review of the extras and features of the Special Edition issue.
I recently bought all the Special Edition releases of "Stand Alone Complex" after trying to research what I was going to get as extras not included in the regular edition. I found the listings on Amazon's product details to be a little confusing and incomplete on some of the volumes so I decided to write this guide for others trying to decide. I'm not going to review the "Ghost in the Shell" episodes or the series in general because there are so many excellent reviews already on this site, and most of you probably know about this great anime TV series already. There are various other reviews that say that some of the DVD's and CD's have errors on them and Bandai will replace them with corrected discs if you send them in for exchange. I have not ran into problems yet, although I haven't gone through the whole series either. And I will also state that I love the TV series as well as both movies, but I would recommend the Imported Region 2 version of GITS2:Innocence if you have a region free DVD player. Dreamworks really messed up that release omiting the English dub and putting Hard of Hearing subtitles instead of regular ones on the early issues of that movie. Most people find them very distracting and annoying.
First off the discs themselves, you get two DVD discs in each volume with the same episodes on both discs. Volumes 1-5 have 4 episodes each, 6 and 7 have 3 episodes each making 26 episodes total in the series. Both discs are Anamorphic wide screen encoded directly from the High-Definition Masters. Both Discs also have English subtitles. Each set also has two interviews with voice cast or someone associated with the production of the anime, and a printed DVD insert pamphlet or booklet with different interviews and such for each volume. All discs are Region 1.
Disc one has Dolby Digital 5.1 in Japanese and English, and Dolby Digital 2.0 in English and Japanese.
Disc two has DTS 5.1 in English and Japanese and a Dolby Digital 2.0 English track.
Volumes 1 and 2 include soundtrack CD's of the music of Yoko Kanno, the most excellent and versatile composer of the music in the TV series. Anime lovers know her work from the many fine soundtracks that she's done for countless other anime movies and TV series.
Volume 3 has a Black XL Fruit of the Loom Tee-Shirt with the section 9 logo on the front and a Major Kusanagi graphic on the back. Nice shirt!
Volumes 4 and 5 have a collectable I.D. cards for a section 9 member.
Volume 6 has a Black XL Fruit of the Loom Tee-Shirt with the section 9 logo on the front and a Batou graphic on the back, and another I.D. card. Nice shirt again!
Volume 7 has another Tee-Shirt! This time it's a White XL with the section 9 logo on the front, and the Laughing Man logo on the back! Once again nice shirt! It also comes with a tin box that's supposed to hold all 7 volumes of the DVD set. I was excited about getting the box but when it arrived I was disappointed with the design. It's kind of like the rectangular lunch box that you used to take to school as a kid, without the handle and latch. Its also of a thinner metal that dents easily. It has marketing type of printing on the backside that pertains to vol. 7 only, and the DVD cases stack inside one on top of the other. The spines of the cases are not visible when you open the box, only the front of the last case you put in. So you have to take all the cases out of the tin to get to a specific volume. There's also not room for the cardboard sleves that the DVD's were in when you got the individual volumes, and no room for the soundtrack CD's either. All said, I was disappointed with the box. Because of it's odd dimensions it doesn't stack in well with my DVD library. I would have much preferred the normal five sided box that usually comes with DVD sets.
Overall I'd say it's worth it to buy volumes 3, 6 and 7 new to get the shirts if they interest you and pick up the others used if you can to save some money on the series. That is if you're interested in the DTS soundtrack options. I much prefer the DTS mixes to Dolby Digital and wanted the soundtrack CD's as well. Also the cardboard boxes that come with volumes 3 and 6 are better than the tin box to store your set in when you complete the series, if you stack them on shelves one row of DVD's on top of another row, and you can fit the movies into those boxes as well to fill them the rest of the way.
4/5
YOU'RE NEVER SATISFIED
by Sesho (Pasadena, TX USA)
Section 9 locates a missing girl who was kidnapped years ago and plans to rescue her from an old oil rig that has become an open access black market and a haven for the heavily armed kidnappers. The strange thing is that the girl looked exactly as she did over ten years ago. It's the main mystery as the action-packed episode gets underway. In "Yes" the Major and company are assigned to protect a billionaire from assasination by an internationl crime syndicate. The problems is that he's so reclusive that they can't locate the man they're supposed to protect. And a cyborg killer is on his trail. Episode 15 concerns the growing AI of the Tachikoma tanks as they begin to see themselves as individuals. The creators of GITS did a good job in showing how childlike they are and also showing how they could become dangerous too. In the last episode, and probably the best on the dvd, Batou goes undercover to catch a military spy who just happens to be one of his former sports idols. Will he be able to do his duty when the time comes, no matter his personal feelings?
After the slam bang of the first episode, this dvd really settles into a groove of what the line is between humans and robots (if there is one?) and the dissatisfaction that humans have with their lives. And sometimes the barreness that human life can become without a "ghost". The last episode, especially, was classic human nature as Zaitsev, Batou's sports idol, is not satisfied with his life. Even though he has a great job and family. He just has to make that extra buck for his own greed. You can tell Batou envies his life and thinks he's an idiot for blowing it. Great show.
5/5
Where the line between humans and machines is blurred
by Mark Schaefer (Brockport, NY USA)
I'll admit to you that I love to watch Adult Swim, and I'll also admit that I like certain types of anime. No, I'm not one of those nerdy card-trading Poke'mon lovers, I'm a young adult who likes to use my imagination in my down time. I like anime that's made for adults like: Big O!, Cowboy Bebop, Trigun, Outlaw Star, Tenchi and Ghost in the shell.
I was watching either watching Family Guy or Aqua Teen Hunger Force when I saw previews for this show start to air on Adult Swim, I thought thought it looked cool, it featured what looked to me like a cool futuristic take on robots and the humans that are seamlessly integrated with cybornetics to make them almost immortal, But I didn't know the half of it.
What I got was a cyber-punk version of the old black-and-white film noir mysteries. The series receives its subtitle from a theoretical mental complex attributed to the adaptation of cybernetics into the mass public. In the story, 'stand alone complex' is said to describe copies with no original and is portrayed by copycat crimes with no original criminal, or in other words, an imaginary criminal. It also refers to the structure of each episode: Each episode can be viewed independently of each other, and there is little catch-up (if at all) given in each episode to keep the viewer up to date.
Taking place in a fictional city of Japan called "Niihama-shi" (New Port City) in the year 2030, Stand Alone Complex tells the story of a special operations task-force called Public Security Section 9, or simply "Section 9". The series follows the exploits of Section 9's agents who range from ex-military to ex-police as they address each case and how it affects them on a personal level, eventually leading to the mysterious figure dubbed by the media as "The Laughing Man".
Public Security Section 9 is an elite domestic anti-crime unit tasked with the charge of preemptive prevention of technology-related acts of terrorism and crime. Their duties include response to serious cyber crimes (i.e. Cyberbrain hacking, cyber-terrorism), investigation of unlawful acts of those in public office and of high profile murder cases. From time-to-time they also serve as protection to foreign VIPs.
If you have seen the movie then you know that the TV series differs from the cinema adaptation in its focus upon issues created by the advance of technology. Instead of the intensely focused and personal examination of technology, presented is a look at society and technology as a larger whole. The series of 26 half-hour TV episodes has a larger budget of time to explore the concepts and ideas found in the original manga. In comparison to the film version, the series is considered by many to be easier to understand. Also, in comparison, the series can be found to be closer to the manga; due to the presence of some humor, the usage of the Tachikomas (Fuchikomas in the manga, and referred to simply as "tanks" in the one scene a derivant version makes an appearance in), the design of the characters, and also, the usage of the characters Paz, Bouma and Saito. Stand Alone Complex exhibits the accumulated experience and expertise of Production I.G. in their application of computer generated imagery. This is evident in their digital color grading, environmental effects, and cell-shaded computer models. Their work has been highly praised for its subtle contribution to a scene, which adds greatly to the atmosphere.
I think a lot of people will try to compare this to Cowboy Bebop as with so many other anime and mangas, but that's foolish. Stand Alone Complex is no better or worse than Cowboy Bebop, it's just a different story, different style, different sets of charactors and there places.
if you like anime or manga you'll definitely like this show. It's complex, has views on modern terrorism and how to deal with it, and not to mention the technology! Even if you don't watch anime just give a chance and take it for what it is.
Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex, Volume 04 (Special Edition) Summary
Studio: Starz/sphe Release Date: 01/25/2005
The search for the mysterious cyber-villain the Laughing Man falls by the wayside in this collection. Mamoru Oshii's original feature focused on Major Motoko Kusanagi; in the broadcast series, Batou emerges as a more complex and compelling character: Episode 16 hints at the complicated past that forged the human-cyborg fusion he ultimately became. In "Machines Desirantes," the Tachikomas, crab-like robots used by Public Security Section 9, appear to be developing individual personalities and a sense of their existence. Not surprisingly, they fear Kusanagi, but like Batou. The Tachikomas also seem to recognize some of the implications of their growing consciousness, and look to
Flowers for Algernon
and
I, Robot
for inspiration. However, their cute, childish voices--modeled after the performance of Japanese actress Akiko Tamagawa--sound odd discussing deep philosophical questions. (Rated 13 and older: considerable violence, grotesque imagery, alcohol and tobacco use)
--Charles Solomon
Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone... DVD Techincal Details
Cast:
Dino Andrade
,
Loy Edge
,
Barbara Goodson
,
Michael Gregory
Director:
Kenji Kamiyama
Aspect Ratio:
1.78:1
Rated:
Unrated
Running Time:
120 mins
UPC:
669198252235
Binding:
DVD
Studio:
Manga Video
Release Date:
2005-01-25
Region Code:
1
Specs:
Animated, Color, Dolby, DVD, Limited Edition, Widescreen, NTSC
Language & Subtitles
English (Original Language), Japanese (Original Language),
You may be interested in..
::
Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex, Volume 05 (Episodes 17-20)
::
Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex, Volume 06 (Episodes 21-23)
::
Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex, Volume 03 (Episodes 9-12)
::
Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex, Volume 07 (Episodes 24-26)
::
Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex, Volume 01 (Episodes 1-4)