Naming her 'Alita' after his recently deceased cat, Ido revives and rebuilds the girl, discovering she possesses an instinctive knowledge of the martial art 'Panzer Kunst', although she has no other memories of a previous life.
Alita uses Panzer Kunst as a link to her lost past, evolving into a mercenary 'Hunter-Warrior', killing cyborg criminals in the 'Scrapyard' during the sport of 'Motorball'.
Then while pushing her limits in combat, Alita awakens memories of an earlier life on Mars.
Cameron's feature would be a live-action adaption of the first of three volumes of the manga series in a trilogy, lensed with the digital 3D system developed for "Avatar".
"...If people are familiar with the series at all, there’s something they call 'Motorball'", said "Alita" producer Jon Landau.
"That is something that Jim has always been dynamically excited about. It’s racing on a super track, with characters that are built and created in the cyborg world to race against each other in an arena. It’s almost like a gladiator match meets an Indy 500 race. It depends how they’ve been modified as cyborgs,. They’re not in cars – it’s their physical being that is out there. Some of them are on roller skates – and Alita participates in this, and she’s on roller blades, while other people might have different devices. It’s a wonderful, rich world to design and develop...
"'Battle Angel', I think, is a science fiction movie that begs the question 'What does it mean to be human?'...It takes place in a future world, a world that has cyborgs, but are you human if you have a mind, if you have a heart, if you have a soul? It's a journey of a young girl who tries to discover herself and what she learns upon that journey."
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