Pokémon Heroes (Japanese: 劇場版ポケットモンスター 水の都の護神 ラティアスとラティオス, Hepburn: Gekijōban Poketto Monsutā Mizu no Miyako no Mamorigami Ratiasu to Ratiosu, trans. lit. "Pocket Monsters the Movie: Latias and Latios, the Guardian Gods of the Water Capital") is the fifth movie in the Pokémon series, complimenting the subtitle Pokémon: Master Quest in the dub. The original Japanese version was released in theaters on July 13, 2002, and the English adaptation saw NY/LA theatrical release on May 16, 2003, before making its way to video and DVD in January 2004. It was distributed by Miramax Films, not Warner Bros. Pictures.
Heroes is the shortest Pokémon film, and just under 20 minutes for Camp Pikachu. In America, it is also the lowest-grossing of all the Pokémon films, and the only one not to make one million dollars at the American box office. This is likely because it was only released in 196 theatres (compared with 3,043 theatres for the first movie, and 2600+ theatres for the second and third movie) and was as much of a disastrous flop as Super Mario Bros. As a result, the films in the Ruby and Sapphire series and beyond were direct-to-D.V.D. in the U.S. and Europe.
Although Cartoon Network had numerously aired the film, it also aired on Toon Disney (now known as Disney XD) on November 27, 2007, being the fourth Pokémon film to air on Toon Disney (the first three being Jirachi: Wish Maker, Pokémon: Destiny Deoxys, and Pokémon 4Ever). This may be due to the fact that The Walt Disney Company owned Miramax Films until 2010.
Plot[]
Camp Pikachu[]
The story behind this short revolves around the Pichu brothers as they attempt to find a train back to the big city via railway. Along the way, they are helped by seven of Ash Ketchum's and Misty's Pokémon (Pikachu, Cyndaquil, Totodile, Phanpy, Corsola, Togepi, and Psyduck), and a Wynaut. Meanwhile, Meowth and Wobbuffet are hiking in the back country.
Along the way, they sit around a campfire, where the older Pichu brother, along with Wynaut, scare the younger brother with the help of a Duskull. They also encounter a Volbeat, who guides them to a mill where they could stay the night.
Heroes: Latios and Latias[]
The main film's setting is in the water-themed Johto city of Alto Mare (which means "High Sea"), based on Venice, Italy. The city is watched over by two legendary Pokémon, Latias and Latios. The story behind the two involves a Pokémon Trainer using a Kabutops and an Aerodactyl to terrorize the citizens, until the original Latios came to the city, using his powers to drown the evil Pokémon and turning the streets into canals. However, Latios died and his children were left orphans. His soul is within a special jewel, the Soul Dew, a small, blue glowing orb.
The Soul Dew is sought by Annie and Oakley, two members of Team Rocket (in the original dub they worked alone). The Soul Dew controls the Defense Mechanism of Alto Mare, a special device built in case of disaster. Meanwhile, Ash Ketchum, Misty, and Brock are visiting Alto Mare on their travels, as well as Jessie, James, and Meowth. Ash and Misty participate in the Tour de Alto Mare, a water chariot race. Misty wins, after Ash takes a wrong turn thanks to an invisible Latias and Latios. Ross, the former champion of the race gives the friends a tour of the city in his gondola and tells them of the city's guardians. Annie and Oakley are in the city
now and stalk Latias, who has disguised herself as a human girl. Latias is saved by Ash and Pikachu. Team Rocket are also in the city and decide to stalk Annie and Oakley.
The trio of heroes later visit the city's museum where they meet Lorenzo, the curator, who explains the city's legendary past and also introduces them to the Defense Mechanism of Alto Mare (DMA for short). Ash then spies a girl, Bianca, who is identical to Latias' disguise. Ash pursues her, and then Latias in disguise, across the city, eventually discovering a beautiful hidden garden where Latias and Latios live. Lorenzo arrives to clear up all the tension between Ash, Bianca and Latios. Latias and Latios play with Ash and Pikachu, and later Lorenzo reveals to Ash the Soul Dew. However, Annie and Oakley's spy robot is watching this and later the two villains steal the Soul Dew and capture Latios. They use both to control the DMA. Latias flees to Ash for help, and later the two and Pikachu race across the gridlocked city to the museum. Oakley goes power hungry and revives the dead evil Pokémon to capture Latias, but are killed again. The heroes arrive at the museum to find the DMA going haywire and Latios badly injured. The Soul Dew turns dark red, due to its power getting drained from the DMA. Annie goes to the Soul Dew to see what has happened, but Lorenzo warns her not to touch it in its current state. Annie ignores him, and the Soul Dew emits black lightning, and the DMA goes out of control. All the water in the city leaves suddenly and returns as a giant tidal wave. Latios and Latias use their psychic powers to destroy the tidal wave, but Latios dies in the process, due to being greatly weakened when he was used to control the Defense Mechanism. The water returns to the city, washing away Team Rocket in the process. The evil Pokémon return to their fossil states, and Annie and Oakley end up trapped inside the DMA.
Latios becomes a new Soul Dew and is placed as the new guardian of Alto Mare. Ash, Misty, and Brock head off to leave Alto Mare, but Bianca/Latias (it is unknown who it actually is however seeing as she doesn't speak it's quite probable that it's Latias, but it could be Bianca because it showed that Bianca's hat was in her room) stops them before they leave and hands Ash a drawing of him and Pikachu, and then she gives Ash a kiss before disappearing. As the group leave on a boat, they see three forms of two Latios and Latias in the air. The end-credits show Annie and Oakley are let out of the DMA and put in prison where they examine the possessions of Lawrence III.
Characters[]
Humans[]
Pokémon[]
- Latias
- Latios
- Aerodactyl
- Kabutops
- Pidgey
- Starmie
- Lapras
- Misty's Corsola
- Ash's Pikachu
- Ash's Totodile
- Wailmer
- Misty's Togepi
- Natu
- Xatu
- Azumarill
- Caterpie
- Scyther
- Seel
- Aipom
- Dewgong
- Slowbro
- Team Rocket's Meowth
- Oddish
- Rapidash
- Ponyta
- Rhyhorn
- Misty's Politoed
- Oakley's Ariados
- Annie's Espeon
- Jessie's Wobbuffet
- Onix
- Gengar
- Vaporeon
- Vulpix
- Murkrow
- Yanma
- Poliwag
- Butterfree
- Wooper
- Remoraid
- Chinchou
- Quagsire
- Brock's Crobat
- Mantine
Cast[]
Character | Japanese voice | English voice |
---|---|---|
Ash Ketchum | Rica Matsumoto | Veronica Taylor |
Misty | Mayumi Iizuka | Rachael Lillis |
Brock | Yūji Ueda | Eric Stuart |
Pikachu | Ikue Ōtani | |
Togepi | Satomi Kōrogi | |
Latias | Megumi Hayashibara | Megumi Hayashibara (speaking voice)
Madoka Kimura (singing voice) |
Latios | Masashi Ebara | Megumi Hayashibara |
Jessie | Megumi Hayashibara | Rachael Lillis |
James | Shin-ichirō Miki | Eric Stuart |
Meowth | Inuko Inuyama | Maddie Blaustein |
Wobbuffet | Yūji Ueda | Kayzie Rogers |
Zanner | Uno Kanda | Annie |
Megan Hollingshead | ||
Rion | Yumiko Shaku | Oakley |
Lisa Ortiz | ||
Rossi | Kōichi Yamadera | Ross |
Michael Sinterniklaas | ||
Vongole | Gutch Yuzou | Lorenzo |
Wayne Grayson | ||
Kanon | Fumiko Orikasa | Bianca |
Tara Sands | ||
Older Pichu Brother | Yumi Tōma | |
Younger Pichu Brother | Satomi Kōrogi | |
Narrator | Unshō Ishizuka
Yūka (Camp Pikachu) |
Rodger Parsons |
Additional voices[]
- Rachael Lillis
- Carlos Alazraqui
- Tara Strong
- Brian Drummond
- Danny Mann
- Jim Cummings
- Tom Kane
- Bob Bergen
- David Kaye
- Jason Marsden
- Bill Farmer
- Rodger Bumpass
- Richard Ian Cox
- Brian Dobson
- Jim Ward
- Mona Marshall
- Kerry Williams
- Maddie Blaustein
- Jess Harnell
- Mike Pollock
- Nika Futterman
- Janice Kawaye
Trivia[]
- Venice is the first location where director Kunihiko Yuyama and staffs traveled abroad to establish ideas for the movie franchise.
- For the English dub's home video release, an intense blue palette was added to the film to make it darker than in the original. Fans often criticized this decision because they felt the palette "ruined" a particular scene during the film.
- The film contradicts a practice set by 4Kids that characters do not die on-screen or are mentioned as having passed away.
- This is the last Pokémon film to debut in nationwide in American and non-Japanese theaters and (for so far) the last one to be rated G by the MPAA. The following animated Pokémon films from Pokémon: Jirachi, Wish Maker onwards would no longer receive MPAA ratings at all, especially due to many of them being released either direct-to-video or straight-to-television. However, the live-action film Pokémon: Detective Pikachu became an exception with a PG rating received from the MPAA.[1] The Power of One was also another exception as it had limited theater showings in the United States from November–December 2018, the same went with Pokémon: Mewtwo Strikes Back—Evolution, as that film was released in Los Angeles theaters during the 4th of July in America in 2019 until in 2020, it went to streaming services on Netflix.
- For the English version several things are changed including the original prologue, Annie and Oakley being members of Team Rocket (they are not in the Japanese version).
- This is the last film to be recorded at TAJ Productions that was dubbed by 4Kids Entertainment.
- Recent UK DVD releases of this film have excluded all its special features including "Camp Pikachu", even though they are still listed on the DVD cover and a still shot from "Camp Pikachu" still remains on the back of it.
- This was also the last Pokémon VHS to be released in the U.K.
- Bianca is the second person to kiss Ash, but this is unconfirmed as it could have been Latias.
- This was Misty's last full appearance in a Pokémon film until the fully computer-animated remake of the first film entitled Pokémon: Mewtwo Strikes Back—Evolution.
Reception[]
The film received negative reviews upon its release in the United States, and was a box-office bomb, due to facing competition with The Matrix Reloaded (since the film has opened the day before it's American release), even worse, the film lost half of its audience for the premiere of Finding Nemo. On Rotten Tomatoes it has a 16% "rotten" rating and at Metacritic it has a 27 out of 100 stating: Generally unfavourable reviews.