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  2. Pokémon: The First Movie - Mewtwo Strikes Back [a] is a 1998 Japanese anime fantasy adventure film [4] directed by Kunihiko Yuyama. It is the first theatrical release in the Pokémon franchise. The film was first released in Japan on July 18, 1998.

  3. The first Pokémon animated film, Pokémon: The First Movie, was released in Japan in 1998, and in 2019 was remade as Pokémon: Mewtwo Strikes Back – Evolution. A live-action film, Pokémon Detective Pikachu, was produced by American studio Legendary Entertainment, directed by Rob Letterman, and written by Letterman and Nicole Perlman. [1]

    #
    English Title
    Japanese Title
    Japanese Release Date
    23
    Coco (ココ, Kōkō)
    December 25, 2020 [12][c]
    22
    Mewtwo Strikes Back: Evolution[10] ...
    July 12, 2019
    21
    Everyone's Story (みんなの物語, Minna no ...
    July 13, 2018
    20
    I Choose You! (キミにきめた!, Kimi Ni ...
    July 15, 2017
    • 'Pokémon: The First Movie – Mewtwo Strikes Back' (1999) Release Date: November 10, 1999. Runtime: 85 Minutes. In the first movie, Ash, Brock, Misty, and many other Pokémon trainers travel to an island where they think they’ll be battling another Pokémon trainer.
    • 'Pokémon: The Movie 2000 – The Power of One' (2000) Release Date: July 21, 2000. Runtime: 84 Minutes. In this movie, the legendary Pokémon Lugia is the focus.
    • 'Pokémon 3: The Movie – Spell of the Unown' (2001) Release Date: April 6, 2001. Runtime: 74 Minutes. A girl named Molly Hale is left alone after her father Professor Spencer Hale is sucked into the dimension of the Unown after doing research on it.
    • 'Pokémon 4Ever: Celebi – Voice of the Forest' (2002) Release Date: October 11, 2002. Runtime: 80 Minutes. The Pokémon at the focus of the fourth Pokémon movie is Celebi, a Mythical Pokémon.
    • Other Posters and Logos
    • Blurb
    • Plot
    • Major Events
    • Characters
    • Scenes in Episodes
    • Alternate Versions
    • Trivia
    • External Links
    Pikachu the Movieposter
    Final Mewtwo's Counterattackmovie poster
    English theatrical poster
    Japanese poster featuring Mewtwo and Mew

    Giovanni, the leader of Team Rocket, had ambitious plans to take over the world, involving his latest experiment, a powerful clone of Mew—Mewtwo. Mewtwo is very powerful, and also very smart—smart enough to not want to be controlled by Giovanni. It escaped from the lab, and now Mewtwo begins to concoct its own scheme, clandestinely inviting a numbe...

    Dr. Fuji, wanting to find a way to restore life by cloning, leads an expedition to Guyana after finding evidence of a shrine dedicated to Mew, the world's most powerful—but now said to be extinct—Pokémon. Giovanni, the leader of Team Rocket, funds Fuji's research in return for an enhanced, living replica of Mew. Finding a fossil of Mew, Fuji and hi...

    Ash's Squirtle is revealed to know Bubble Beam.
    Ash, Misty, and Brock meet Mewtwo and Mew, but Mewtwo later makes them forget about the encounter.
    Ash sees Mew again, but does not recognize it since his memory has been erased.

    Humans

    1. Ash 2. Misty 3. Brock 4. Jessie 5. James 6. Gary Oak(cameo) 7. Giovanni 8. Nurse Joy 9. Officer Jenny 10. Dr. Fuji 11. Neesha 12. Fergus 13. Corey 14. Miranda 15. Raymond 16. Amber (Kanzenban version only) 17. Team Rocket Grunts 18. Announcer 19. Trainers 20. Scientists

    Pokémon

    1. Pikachu (Ash's) 2. Meowth (Team Rocket) 3. Togepi (Misty's) 4. Bulbasaur (Ash's) 5. Charizard (Ash's) 6. Squirtle (Ash's) 7. Staryu (Misty's) 8. Psyduck (Misty's) 9. Vulpix (Brock's) 10. Weezing (James's) 11. Nidoking (Gary's) 12. Arcanine (Gary's) 13. Persian (Giovanni's) 14. Donphan (Raymond's) 15. Machamp (Raymond's) 16. Golem (Raymond's) 17. Venomoth (Raymond's) 18. Pinsir (Raymond's) 19. Gyarados (Fergus's) 20. Seadra (Fergus's) 21. Nidoqueen (Fergus's) 22. Golduck (Fergus's) 23. Tent...

    The episodes The Battle of the Badge, It's Mr. Mime Time, and Showdown at the Po-ké Corral feature Mewtwo in scenes that prelude this movie. These episodes were supposed to air before the movie premiere, but due to the animated series's four-month hiatus after the seizures caused by the banned episode EP038, the episodes ended up airing on Septembe...

    Kanzenban version

    In Japan, the theatrical version had only two home video releases (VHS, February 12, 1999; LaserDisc, July 17, 1999) and was never shown on TV. A new version of the movie, known as the kanzenban (Japanese: 完全版 full version), has been shown in all television airings in Japan (the first one being on July 8, 1999) and in the Japanese home video releases from the third one (VHS, November 12, 1999) onward: this version contains additional scenes and CGI edits.

    Digitally remastered version

    Similar to Pokémon - I Choose You! and Holiday Hi-Jynx, the Kanzenban version of this movie was digitally remastered to HD, complete with slight color correction. An error is also corrected where Raymond's Machamp now comes out of its Poké Ball only once. It was released on Blu-Ray in Japan on November 28, 2012 with a boxset containing all the movies up to M13, and aired on May 3, 2013 on TV Tokyo. The dub (which retains the 4Kids audio) aired on Cartoon Network January 4, 2014, and was re-re...

    Remake

    1. Main article: Pokémon: Mewtwo Strikes Back—Evolution The movie was remade as a 3D-animated film titled Mewtwo Strikes Back—Evolution. It debuted in Japanese in July 2019 and in English in February 2020.

    This movie was released between EP054 and EP055 in Japan. However, it chronologically takes place sometime after EP065, where Mewtwo is seen escaping from Team Rocket HQ. This mismatch was caused b...
    At ten minutes, this movie has the longest prologue. The prologue was further extended to 20 minutes in the Japanese extended version and twelve minutes in the international extended version.
    According to Takeshi Shudo's notes on the movie, Ash was petrified but not killed when Mewtwo and Mew's Psychicblasts collided with him, and the tears simply restored him.
    Some of the Pokémonon the poster did not appear in the movie.
    Pokémon: The First Movie - Mewtwo Strikes Back on Prime Video (English)
    Pokémon: The First Movie - Mewtwo Strikes Back on Google Play (English)
    Pokémon: The First Movie - Mewtwo Strikes Back on iTunes (English)
    Pokémon: The First Movieat IMDb
  4. Pokémon: The First Movie (Japanese: 劇場版ポケットモンスター ミュウツーの逆襲, Hepburn: Gekijōban Poketto Monsutā: Myūtsū no Gyakushū, trans. Pocket Monsters the Movie: Mewtwo's Counterattack), formerly stylized as Pokémon The First Movie - Mewtwo Strikes Back, is the first feature-length film of Pokémon the Series ...

  5. This 48-page interactive story features 24 video clips highlighting exciting scenes from the original cinematic adventure. Read and watch the events of the exciting first Pokémon movie starring Mew, along with Ash, Pikachu, and the Legendary Mewtwo!

  6. Oct 10, 2024 · Release. When they open in Japan, they usually gross a large amount of money, typically ranking first for their premiere weekend.

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