

- #WATCH POKEMON THE FIRST MOVIE PIKACHU SHORT FREE SERIES#
- #WATCH POKEMON THE FIRST MOVIE PIKACHU SHORT FREE TV#
Her sad story is handled with a fair amount of sensitivity during the course of the film (rather touching is how Delia grows genuinely fond and protective of her “daughter”), but–and I am not giving away anything surprising here–Molly’s incredibly sunny disposition after Ash and company bring her back down to reality doesn’t quite sit right there’s not one lingering trace of sadness.

The tots won’t be disappointed.Īdults, on the other hand, will be disappointed with how the Molly story ultimately plays out.
#WATCH POKEMON THE FIRST MOVIE PIKACHU SHORT FREE TV#
Of the three films, this one weaves this staple of the TV show into the fabric of the main story the most effectively as Ash and friends Brock and Misty attempt to penetrate Molly’s fantasy prison and free both her and Delia, it’s only natural that there be various conflicts that have to be settled with a good ol’ pocket monster tussle. It’s all unusually weighty stuff for this franchise, but lest we forget the reason why kids really want to see this film, there’s plenty of the series’ bread and butter: Pokémon battles. The now-completely abandoned Molly’s grief and loneliness attracts the Unown, a mysterious alphabet-like Pokémon, who turn her home into an isolated crystal fortress in which all her wishes are made reality–including a new father in the form of a legendary Pokémon called Entei, who kidnaps Ash’s mother Delia and “gives” her to Molly.

Molly, whose mother had disappeared years before, loses her father in a similarly mysterious fashion as the film opens. Ash Ketchum, trainer of Pikachu and other Pokémon, is still the hero here, but the more or less central character in the film is Molly Hale, young daughter to Pokémon researcher Spencer Hale.

While this was hinted at in the opening moments in “The First Movie–Mewtwo Strikes Back,” “Spell of the Unown,” “Pokémon 3″‘s main feature, has an intriguing air of melancholy hanging over its entire run time.
#WATCH POKEMON THE FIRST MOVIE PIKACHU SHORT FREE SERIES#
In its journey from Japan to the States, the “Pokémon” series has undergone some degree of sanitizing reportedly, the original television series and movies are a bit darker in tone. Of course, only the wee ones will fully understand all that goes on, not to mention know who the characters outside of Pikachu and the Pichu brothers are, but for older viewers, “Pikachu and Pichu,” while not exactly compelling, is at least somewhat watchable. Not only is the slight story here more engaging than that in “Rescue Adventure” (or, for that matter, the nonexistent story in “Pikachu’s Vacation,” which preceded “The First Movie”), this short wisely employs a voiceover narration to clarify the action–quite welcome when all the main characters can say are their names. But it’s all too little, too late for the phenomenon to gain a second wind, or for it to make converts out of any “Pokémon” haters.Īs with the other two films, things get rolling with a solo short for the most popular Pokémon, the electric shock-powered Pikachu, called “Pikachu: The Movie 2001–Pikachu and Pichu.” Picking up on the advancement presented in “Pokémon: The Movie 2000″‘s accompanying “mini-movie” “Pikachu’s Rescue Adventure,” “Pikachu and Pichu” attempts to tell some kind of story as the ever-cute Pikachu and the equally adorable Pichu brothers get lost in the big city and get into all sorts of trouble. obviously rushing to strike while the iron is still lukewarm, “Pokémon 3: The Movie” is likely to be the final hurrah for this fading fad and this third two-films-in-one package is without question the best of the series. In some respects, this is a good thing: with Warner Bros. Less than two years have passed since the release of “Pokémon: The First Movie”, and already hitting screens is the third big screen installment of the kiddie TV franchise.
