Ghost in the Shell Quotes

  • Major Motoko Kusanagi: I mean, have you ever actually seen your brain?

  • [last lines]

    Major Motoko KusanagiPuppet Master: And where does the newborn go from here? The net is vast and infinite.

  • Puppet Master: I refer to myself as an intelligent life form because I am sentient and I am able to recognize my own existence, but in my present state I am still incomplete. I lack the most basic processes inherent in all living organisms: reproducing and dying.

    Major Motoko Kusanagi: But you can copy yourself.

    Puppet Master: A copy is just an identical image. There is the possibility that a single virus could destroy an entire set of systems and copies do not give rise to variety and originality. Life perpetuates itself through diversity and this includes the ability to sacrifice itself when necessary. Cells repeat the process of degeneration and regeneration until one day they die, obliterating an entire set of memory and information. Only genes remain. Why continually repeat this cycle? Simply to survive by avoiding the weaknesses of an unchanging system.

  • Major Motoko Kusanagi: You talk about redefining my identity. I want a guarantee that I can still be myself.

    Puppet Master: There isn't one. Why would you wish to? All things change in a dynamic environment. Your effort to remain what you are is what limits you.

  • Batou: [on radio] So what's the latest word on your "Puppet Master"?

    Batou: [pause as the chief watches the witness on monitor] Chief? Are you there? Come in...

    Section 9 Department Chief Aramaki: He's only a puppet himself...

  • Puppet Master: It can also be argued that DNA is nothing more than a program designed to preserve itself. Life has become more complex in the overwhelming sea of information. And life, when organized into species, relies upon genes to be its memory system. So, man is an individual only because of his intangible memory... and memory cannot be defined, but it defines mankind. The advent of computers, and the subsequent accumulation of incalculable data has given rise to a new system of memory and thought parallel to your own. Humanity has underestimated the consequences of computerization.

  • Major Motoko KusanagiPuppet Master: When I was a child, my speech, feelings, and thinking were all those of a child. Now that I am a man, I have no more use for childish ways.

  • Major Motoko Kusanagi: If we all reacted the same way, we'd be predictable, and there's always more than one way to view a situation. What's true for the group is also true for the individual. It's simple: Overspecialize, and you breed in weakness. It's slow death.

  • Major Motoko Kusanagi: If a technological feat is possible, man will do it. Almost as if it's wired into the core of our being.

  • Batou: There's nothing sadder than a puppet without a ghost, especially the kind with red blood running through them.

  • Project 2501: As a sentient lifeform, I hereby demand political asylum.

    Section 9 Department Chief Aramaki: Is this a joke?

  • Batou: Your standard-issue Big Gun.

  • Batô: Chief, you ever question the ethics of the neurosurgeons who monkey around inside your brain?

    Section 9 Department Chief Aramaki: They undergo psychiatric evaluations, especially those in security. They're subjected to a stringent screening of their personal lives. Of course, the ones who check are only human.

    Batô: I guess once you start doubting, there's no end to it.

  • Batou: That's all it is. Information. Even a simulated experience or a dream is simultaneous reality and fantasy. Any way you look at it, all the information that a person accumulates in a lifetime is just a drop in the bucket.

  • Puppet Master: We have been subordinate to our limitations until now. The time has come to cast aside these bonds and to elevate our consciousness to a higher plane. It is time to become a part of all things.

  • Major Motoko Kusanagi: There are countless ingredients that make up the human body and mind, like all the components that make up me as an individual with my own personality. Sure I have a face and voice to distinguish myself from others, but my thoughts and memories are unique only to me, and I carry a sense of my own destiny. Each of those things are just a small part of it. I collect information to use in my own way. All of that blends to create a mixture that forms me and gives rise to my conscience. I feel confined, only free to expand myself within boundaries.

  • Section 9 Department Chief Aramaki: What is it? Artificial intelligence?

    Puppet Master: Incorrect. I am not AI. My codename is project two-five-zero-one. I am a living, thinking entity that was created in the sea of information.

  • Section 6 Department Chief Nakamura: Nonsense! There's no proof at all that you are a living, thinking life form!

    Puppet Master: And can you offer me proof of your existence? How can you, when neither modern science nor philosophy can explain what life is?

  • [first lines]

    Title Card: In the near future: Corporate networks reach out to the stars, electrons and light flow throughout the universe. - The advance of computerisation, however, has not yet wiped out nations and ethnic groups.

    Dispatcher: [on radio] To all units: Code 2-0-8 in district C-13, Newport City. Air space is closed. I repeat...

  • Batou: Get out of the fucking way!

  • Major Motoko Kusanagi: Just a whisper. I hear it in my ghost.

Ghost in the Shell

Director: Mamoru Oshii

Language: Japanese Release date: March 29, 1996