

They are unsuccessful, and Section 9 is forced to battle Kago in the end, they disable the tank and Kusanagi short-circuits Kago's brain. Kago's destination is his parents home, and Section 9 tries to stop him before he gets there. Ooba further reveals that Kago's possible motive may be to avenge himself upon his parents he had serious medical problems, but his parents refused to allow him to get a cyberbody or even a cyberbrain due to their religious beliefs. Ghost in the Shell At the year 2029, the net and from cybernetics has divided the barriers of our world, however. After Kago's death, Ooba linked Kago's brain to the tank's AI, effectively putting Kago in complete control of the tank. In the near future, Major Mira Killian is the first of her kind: A human saved from a terrible crash, who is cyber-enhanced to be a perfect soldier devoted to stopping the world's most dangerous criminals. With Scarlett Johansson, Pilou Asbk, Takeshi Kitano, Juliette Binoche.

After some questioning by Togusa, Ooba reveals the identity of the tank's hijacker: Takeshi Kago, the original designer. Ghost in the Shell: Directed by Rupert Sanders. Meanwhile, Togusa and Ishikawa interview the tank's co-designer, Toshio Ooba. Saito attempts to snipe the tank, but is thwarted due to the tank's capability to link into the same satellite Saito is using to aim. 107 minutes 2017 HD Share In the near future, Major is the first of her kind: a human saved from a terrible crash, then cyber-enhanced to be a perfect soldier devoted to stopping the worlds most dangerous criminals. Section 9 is called in to stop the tank, as no terrorist group has claimed responsibility, and the JSDF refuses to involve itself unless terrorism is the clear motive. After going on a destructive spree at the testing facility, the tank heads towards the urban area of Niihama. Episode Description:A heavy-assault multi-ped tank runs amok, under the control of an unknown hijacker using the "recognition code" of the tank's designer, Takeshi Kago, who died a week earlier.
