Difference between revisions of "The Phantom of Baker Street"
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{{EpLangItem|flag=Basque Country|Basque|Baker Street-eko mamua}} | {{EpLangItem|flag=Basque Country|Basque|Baker Street-eko mamua}} | ||
{{EpLangItem|flag=Catalonia|Catalan (Catalan dub)|El fantasma de Baker Street|The Phantom of Baker Street}} | {{EpLangItem|flag=Catalonia|Catalan (Catalan dub)|El fantasma de Baker Street|The Phantom of Baker Street}} | ||
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{{EpLangItem|flag=France|French (Subbed)|Le Fantôme de Baker Street|The Phantom of Baker Street}} | {{EpLangItem|flag=France|French (Subbed)|Le Fantôme de Baker Street|The Phantom of Baker Street}} | ||
{{EpLangItem|flag=Galicia|Galician|A pantasma de Baker Street|The Phantom of Baker Street}} | {{EpLangItem|flag=Galicia|Galician|A pantasma de Baker Street|The Phantom of Baker Street}} | ||
{{EpLangItem|flag=Germany|German|Das Phantom der Baker Street|The Phantom of Baker Street}} | {{EpLangItem|flag=Germany|German|Das Phantom der Baker Street|The Phantom of Baker Street}} | ||
{{EpLangItem|flag=Italy|Italian|Il fantasma di Baker Street|The Phantom of Baker Street}} | {{EpLangItem|flag=Italy|Italian|Il fantasma di Baker Street|The Phantom of Baker Street}} | ||
+ | {{EpLangItem|flag=China|Simplified Chinese|贝克街的亡灵|The Phantom of Baker Street}} | ||
{{EpLangItem|flag=Spain|Spanish (Castilian sub)|El fantasma de Baker Street|The phantom of Baker Street}} | {{EpLangItem|flag=Spain|Spanish (Castilian sub)|El fantasma de Baker Street|The phantom of Baker Street}} | ||
{{EpLangItem|flag=Thailand|Thai|ปริศนาบนถนนสายมรณะ|Mystery on the Deadly Street}} | {{EpLangItem|flag=Thailand|Thai|ปริศนาบนถนนสายมรณะ|Mystery on the Deadly Street}} | ||
+ | {{EpLangItem|flag=Republic of China|Traditional Chinese|貝克街的亡靈|The Phantom of Baker Street}} | ||
{{EpLangItem|flag=Vietnam|Vietnamese|Bóng ma phố Baker|The Phantom of Baker Street}} | {{EpLangItem|flag=Vietnam|Vietnamese|Bóng ma phố Baker|The Phantom of Baker Street}} | ||
{{EndTable}} | {{EndTable}} |
Revision as of 19:54, 29 August 2020
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Contents
Cast
Case
Situation
Child prodigy Hiroki Sawada is introduced by a TV program running in the background, while Hiroki himself is working on a computer. The program host explains that by the age of ten, he is already a MIT graduate school student and has developed a DNA Tracker software and is now in the final stage of his second major project, an artificial brain dubbed Noah's Ark. The program host goes on to explain that Hiroki has been under the guardianship of Thomas Schindler, owner of the software giant Schindler, Inc., since his mother died, and that he has been put under a rigorous study program and has had a somewhat deprived childhood. After turning the TV off, Hiroki finishes Noah's Ark, and sends the software through the telephone lines, which causes his computer to show the message "Noah's Ark Sailed Out", simultaneously triggering an alarm in the guardroom. The security guard calls Thomas Schindler and both try to enter Hiroki's room. When they finally break into Hiroki's room, they find that Hiroki is not in the room. Schindler finds Hiroki's shoes on the balcony; He jumped from the top of the building to his death.
Suicide (Past) | |||||||||||||
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The image on his computer screen shows an ark sailing in water and the words "Good-bye Hiroki."
Two years later, at the Beika City Hall, Schindler, Inc. holds a demonstration of a virtual reality game system called Cocoon. Many kids, including the Detective Boys, are invited to the demonstration. However, only the kids with badges are chosen for the demonstration. Professor Agasa and Yusaku Kudo arrive at the City Hall. Agasa gives Conan Edogawa a badge and tells Conan that his mother, Yukiko Kudo, would not be there because of an alumni reunion. The rest of Detective Boys trick a few kids by exchanging badges for the Premium Golden Yaiba Cards. They all use the badges and participate in the demonstration.
In another room, Schindler kills Kashimura, one of his top employees, and Kashimura types in a dying message: the letters J, T and R.
Murder | |||||||||||||
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Conan discovers the murder and decides to participate in the demonstration, hoping that the game would lead him to an answer. Yusaku, having worked with Kashimaru on the game, recognizes that J-T-R stands for "Jack The Ripper".
Murders (Past) | |||||||||||||
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When the demonstration begins, Hiroki's artificial intelligence system, Noah's Ark takes control of the game system Cocoon. When two of the parents try to get the children out, the parents get shocked by a sudden burst of electricity. Noah's Ark then warns the audience that if all fifty kids in the demonstration lose the game, it will kill the kids with a large electromagnetic burst.
Hostage taking | |||||||||||||
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The kids in the demonstration are given a choice of five stages in the game, and Conan and the Detective Boys choose the final stage, a re-creation of an 1800 London mystery. In the beginning of the game, Conan discovers that Agasa's inventions don't work. After receiving a hint from Prof.Agasa they decide to go to Sherlock Holmes for help. As they near 221B Baker Street they meet a strange accordion playing vagrant who sings a strange song, but they shrug it off. Conan and his friends arrive at 221b Baker Street, only to find that Holmes and Watson are at Dartmoor. Mistaken for the Baker Street Irregulars by Mrs Hudson, they are invited inside. Ran finds Sherlock's investigation notes on Jack the Ripper, which implies that Jack is highly likely to have a connection to Professor Moriarty. Since finding the Professor is next to impossible, the kids decide to talk to his right hand man Colonel Moran at his favorite hang-out to find out the Professor's location. After causing a brawl and losing Mitsuhiko, Ayumi and Genta, Conan forces the Colonel into a standoff by holding Moriarty's wine hostage. It is at this moment an elderly gentleman comes and announces that Professor Moriarty requests an audience with the group. After being led to another gentleman in a carriage, Conan calls out Moriarty for testing them; Moriarty was the gentleman who led them there. After explaining their situation, Moriarty reveals that he found and trained Jack the Ripper when Jack was a street urchin. The professor promises the children an opportunity to bring Jack down by posting a message in the next day's newspaper to kill someone, but refuses to name the victim-to-be, telling them they'd find out by reading the paper. The next day after reading the paper they realize the next victim is to be Irene Adler, the only woman Holmes ever loved.
Attempted Murder (Virtual Reality) | |||||||||||
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People
Game characters
Resolution
In other languages
Language | Title | Translation |
---|---|---|
Basque | Baker Street-eko mamua | |
Catalan (Catalan dub) | El fantasma de Baker Street | The Phantom of Baker Street |
French (Subbed) | Le Fantôme de Baker Street | The Phantom of Baker Street |
Galician | A pantasma de Baker Street | The Phantom of Baker Street |
German | Das Phantom der Baker Street | The Phantom of Baker Street |
Italian | Il fantasma di Baker Street | The Phantom of Baker Street |
Simplified Chinese | 贝克街的亡灵 | The Phantom of Baker Street |
Spanish (Castilian sub) | El fantasma de Baker Street | The phantom of Baker Street |
Thai | ปริศนาบนถนนสายมรณะ | Mystery on the Deadly Street |
Traditional Chinese | 貝克街的亡靈 | The Phantom of Baker Street |
Vietnamese | Bóng ma phố Baker | The Phantom of Baker Street |
Gallery
Trivia
- This is the last Detective Conan movie to be made using traditional animation.
- Currently, this is the final movie to be dubbed in english by Funimation Entertainment. No new movies have been announced thus far, though another dubbing company has since done an English dub of Zero the Enforcer.
- This movie is notable for having a screenplay written by a famous Japanese screenwriter and mystery novelist Hisashi Nozawa. Kazunari Kochi had written all previous movies and most of the later movies up until Dimensional Sniper.
- Hiroki Sawada is possibly modeled after Doctor Zell, a former Nazi officer and mad experimental scientist in episode 50-51 of the anime Lupin III: Part II, a source of inspiration for Detective Conan. Indeed, before death, Zell uploaded his mind into a computer and created an artificial intelligence system.
- Thomas Schindler's limousine is a silver Cadillac Fleetwood Limousine.
- Yusaku Kudo and Professor Agasa's limousine is dark blue Cadillac Fleetwood Limousine.
- The date in London is declared to be September 30, 1888 which is a Sunday, yet Moriarty says that the following day is to be Sunday.
- Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson are said to be away on business at Dartmoor in reference to The Hound of the Baskervilles case, however this case did not take place until a year later in 1889.
- Noah's Ark may be a reference to HAL 9000 from 2001: A Space Odyssey, or Ultron from Marvel Comics, who is shown as backing himself up and traveling through the internet to create chaos.
- This is the first movie to use a virtual reality game as the main setting.
- Conan plays Pac-Man in the last scene.
- The gun picked up by Genta at Sherlock Holmes' house is a Tranter 54-bore self-cocking revolver.
- This is the first movie where Conan's gadgets are primarily absent, as in the game, they are converted to a normal accessories, rendering them useless. The next movie where Conan is unable to utilize them is The Fist of Blue Sapphire, though he gains them back later on.
- Gin and Vodka make appearances in the introduction sequence of the movie as always, but are also featured in a cameo where Yukiko and Yusaku Kudo are disguised as the pair cornering Conan in an alley way.
- Yukiko, aside from appearing in the introduction sequence and her in game portrayal of Irene Adler, is absent in the film itself, with Agasa explaining to Conan that she had a high school reunion, and was unable to attend, meaning that she technically hasn't appeared in the movie herselves.
- This is the only movie where either of Shinichi's parents are directly involved with the storyline. Yusaku make a cameos appearance in The Fourteenth Target and the two appear in the introduction sequences for Countdown to Heaven and Crossroad in the Ancient Capital, but not in the movie themselves, though Yusaku is mentioned later on in Countdown to Heaven
- The version of the main theme used in the film is a slightly modified version of the one from Countdown to Heaven and would again later be reused and modified again for Strategy Above the Depths.
See also
Detective Conan Movies | ||
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Movies | Movie 01: The Time-Bombed Skyscraper • Movie 02: The Fourteenth Target • Movie 03: The Last Wizard of the Century • Movie 04: Captured in Her Eyes • Movie 05: Countdown to Heaven • Movie 06: The Phantom of Baker Street • Movie 07: Crossroad in the Ancient Capital • Movie 08: Magician of the Silver Sky • Movie 09: Strategy Above the Depths • Movie 10: The Private Eyes' Requiem • Movie 11: Jolly Roger in the Deep Azure • Movie 12: Full Score of Fear • Movie 13: The Raven Chaser • Movie 14: The Lost Ship in the Sky • Movie 15: Quarter of Silence • Movie 16: The Eleventh Striker • Movie 17: Private Eye in the Distant Sea • Lupin III vs. Detective Conan: The Movie (crossover) • Movie 18: Dimensional Sniper • Movie 19: Sunflowers of Inferno • Movie 20: The Darkest Nightmare • Movie 21: The Crimson Love Letter • Movie 22: Zero the Enforcer • Movie 23: The Fist of Blue Sapphire • The Scarlet Alibi (compilation) • Movie 24: The Scarlet Bullet • Movie 25: The Bride of Halloween • The Story of Ai Haibara ~Black Iron Mystery Train~ (compilation) • Movie 26: Black Iron Submarine • Detective Conan vs. Kid the Phantom Thief (compilation) • Movie 27: The Million-dollar Pentagram • Movie 28 | |
Related cases | 16 Suspects!? (movie 4) • Conan, Heiji, and the Vanished Boy (movie 7) • Time Travel of the Silver Sky (movie 8) • Follow the Vanished Diamond! Conan & Heiji vs. Kid! (movie 10) • A Challenge from Agasa! Agasa vs. Conan and the Detective Boys (movie 11) • Magic File 2: Shinichi Kudo, The Case of the Mysterious Wall and the Black Lab (movie 12) • Lupin III vs. Detective Conan (crossover) • Magic File 3: Shinichi and Ran, Memories of Mahjong Tiles and Tanabata (movie 13) • Magic File 4: The Osaka Okonomiyaki Odyssey (movie 14) • Magic File 5: Niigata~Tokyo Souvenir Capriccio (movie 15) • Bonus File 1: Flower of Fantasista (movie 16) • The Missing Sweets in the Old Shop (movie 17) • The Coded Invitation (movie 18) • Promise with a J-Leaguer (movie 16) • Munch's Missing Scream (movie 19) • The Shadow Approaching Amuro (movie 20) • The Mystery of the Vanished Black Belt (movie 21) • The Melting Cake! (movie 22) • The J League Bodyguard (movie 16) • Intrigue at the Food Court (movie 23) • The Beika City Shopping Center Garbage Bin Mystery (movie 24) • The Flying Jack-o'-lantern (movie 25) • The Cameras Targeting Haibara (movie 26) • Behind the Scenes of the J League Finals (movie 16) • Mystery of the Lost Treasure (movie 27) |