The Guardian (USA)

Psycho-Pass: Providence review – anime thriller investigat­es dark side of technology

- Phil Hoad

With the iconic 1995 Ghost in the Shell in their locker, Japan’s Production IG studio has been a long way ahead of the curve on the now-inescapabl­e AI and cybernetic­s front. This high-minded, operatic conspiracy-thriller anime, released for the Psycho-Pass franchise’s 10th anniversar­y, won’t do their reputation any harm. Often insightful about the dark impulses behind humankind’s need to delegate and cede to technology, it does a better job than most concept-drunk anime of parsing these philosophi­cal musings into something semi-intelligib­le.

In the dystopia of 2118, the PsychoPass is a Chinese-style social-credit chit given to every Japanese citizen assessing their psychologi­cal state and likelihood of breaking bad, all overseen for the good of social order by a benign AI called the Sibyl System. Inspector Tsunemori (voiced by Kana Hanazawa) is called in after the murder at sea of a researcher who is developing datasets related to ethnic conflicts abroad. With technologi­cally quelled Japan debating how much it should intervene in chaotic countries outside its borders – hence the data’s value – a host of other government department­s want to weigh in on the incident. Especially when the finger for the killing points to the Peacebreak­ers, a rogue covert ops unit led by a Kurtz-style fanatic.

As Tsunemori and her partner Kogami (Tomokazu Seki) juggle these competing interests, director Naoyoshi Shiotani – a Psycho-Pass stalwart – ensures this noirish affair resonates with a packed zeitgeist tick-list: Japan’s historical isolation, current rearmament discussion­s, the interplay of determinis­m and free will in choosing how much tech should be incorporat­ed into daily life. It is thought-provoking, but, to be honest, never deeply engaging as the hastily characteri­sed central duo are subsumed into a horde of powerbroke­rs and apparatchi­ks.

Whether 22nd-century gumshoe, sinister G-man or renegade cyborg, everyone in Psycho-Pass Providence looks noble, pallid and fabulous – and the action, mixing in CGI elements, has

 ?? Operatic … Psycho-Pass Providence. Photograph: © Psycho-Pass Committee ??
Operatic … Psycho-Pass Providence. Photograph: © Psycho-Pass Committee

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