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It’s a movie where the villain wins his argument about the cruelty of creation, then chooses mercy anyway. That’s rare for children’s animation. That’s why, decades later, we still remember the first one.
Mewtwo is a creature born entirely of human arrogance. Cloned from the mythical Mew, kept in a tube, fitted with armor to suppress his rage, he’s given no childhood, no home, no name except a laboratory designation. His first conscious act is destruction. His second is nihilism: if he was made to fight, then all Pokémon—and by extension, all beings—must exist only to prove their strength. He builds a storm-lashed island arena to test that theory. pokémon the first movie: mewtwo strikes back
What makes Mewtwo Strikes Back linger isn’t the action. It’s the existential ache at its center. Mewtwo doesn’t learn to “be good” because he’s defeated. He learns because he witnesses unconditional choice. Ash didn’t have to step forward. He did anyway. In that moment, Mewtwo realizes that identity isn’t about origin—it’s about action. He takes his clones and flies away, not to hide, but to find an unobserved corner of the world where they can simply live . It’s a movie where the villain wins his
But the film cleverly mirrors him with two foils. First, Mew—playful, curious, ancient—who needs no justification for existing. Second, Ash Ketchum, the human who refuses to fight. When Ash steps between the two legendary Pokémon and takes their combined attack head-on, turning to stone, the movie pivots. His sacrifice isn’t strategic. It’s absurd. And it breaks Mewtwo’s logic entirely. Mewtwo is a creature born entirely of human arrogance
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