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COWBOY BEBOP (M)
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DETAILS:
DVDs $34.95 each
(Multilingual - English/Japanese)
Region 4.
Running time 125 mins
Videos - $24.95 each ( English language)
PAL VHS
Available in Australia from Madman.
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SYNOPSIS:
Warning! May
contain spoilers...
The year 2071 A.D. That future is now. Driven out of their
terrestrial eden, humanity chose the stars as the final frontier.
With the section-by-section collapse of the former nations
a mixed jumble of races and peoples came. They spread to the
stars, taking with them the now confused concepts of freedom,
violence, illegality and love, where new rules and a new generation
of outlaws came into being. People referred to them as Cowboy
Bebops…
Meet Spike and Jet, a drifter and a retired cyborg cop who
have started a bounty hunting operation. In the converted
ship The Bebop, Spike and Jet search the galaxy for criminals
with bounties on their heads. They meet a lot of unusual characters,
including the unusually intelligent dog, Ein, and the voluptuous
and vexing femme fatale, Faye Valentine.
Episodes
Session #1 - "Asteroid Blues"
Session #2 - "Stray Dog Strut"
Session #3 - "Honky Tonk Women"
Session #4 - "Gateway Shuffle"
Session #5 - "Ballad of Fallen Angels"
HEROIC-CINEMA'S REVIEW:
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Borrowing heavily from gangster and Noir film
for characterization, from the detective films of the 50's and
60's for some of its plot elements and from westerns, sci-fi
and jazz and blues for its style, not to mention a bit of Hong
Kong heroic bloodshed and kung-fu thrown in for good measure,
and Cowboy Bebop is quite obviously anything but
your conventional space ace anime! In the tradition of the best
works in Science Fiction, technology is an expansive yet unintrusive
backdrop framing the more personal issues at stake. Hyperspatial
afterimaging might be a fact of life, but it's far less important
than the decided absence of beef in tonight's Beef and Bell-peppers
Stew
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Predominantly, this is a light-hearted and comical adventure
series, shaping up in the first volume to be a fairly formulaic
series of start-to-finish plot-lines. Yet its episodic construction,
rather than being detrimental to enjoyment of it (half hour
episodes of my favourite anime never seem long enough),
actually helps emphasize the slightly cynical quirkiness of
the characters and the hair-raising, sometimes 'carnivalesque'
situations they find themselves in. One liners, smooth moves
and amusing ironies abound, keeping pace with a street savvy
soundtrack and a fast paced, die-hard sense of fun.
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main action of Episode One (Asteroid Blues) almost immediately
undermines that light-heartedness, positioning the main character
Spike Spiegel quite firmly in the realm of the anti-hero complete
with a dark and probably dangerous past. Violent snatches of
brooding action, abstracted in composition, Noir in colour and
construction, make an impact not likely to be forgotten even
in the midst of the comedies-of-error that follow. In many ways
these Noir elements are the only thing preventing the series
from becoming frozen by its own cool, adding a constant undertow
of emotional complexity that manages to balance out the often
casually frenetic action.
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The support characters (those introduced thus far) are potentially
three-dimensional, not yet as filled out as they could be
but give them time, especially in the case of the resident
bombshell Faye Valentine. Her appearance in the third episode
(Honky Tonk Women) isn't just legs and caliber weapons
(although it's mostly legs and caliber weapons), but
the first volume sees her on average mostly underused and
slightly stereo-typed for comic effect (the fate of many a
supporting anime babe). Jet Black, as Spike's best friend
and partner, is similarly peripheral in this collection of
episodes, but rather than having a comic presence he is a
more stabilizing element, a voice of reason and fore-thought
to contrast Spike's 'Act Now Think Later' approach.
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The series' consistent, jazzy aesthetic is a perfect articulation
of both the characters and climate. Jazz music at the time
of its invention was a result of a clash of cultures and musical
influences, not simply a borrowing. The heavy use of such
a genre of music in Cowboy Bebop similarly makes something
coherent and exciting out of what might have been utter mayhem.
It at once gives a sort of psychological context to the film's
reality of uncontrolled human progress. There is an almost
sunny, Blade Runner-esque look to the series' urban
landscape, a grab-bag of culture without geographical border
that the character of Spike seems to embody. The music acts
as the glue that enables a Bruce Lee loving, ex-hitman, bounty-hunting
space jockey in a decidedly 80's style suit to seem not just
believable, but unbelievably cool.
And maybe that's what appeals most about this series. Watching
a few episodes is like playing a game of 'Spot the Pop Culture
Reference', for example the Robert Rodriguez styled bar scene
in the first episode and the rather amusing appearance of
a Kareem-Abdul Jabbar look-alike in the second, and I have
by no means spoiled the entire range of referencing going
on. There's a deliberate sense of fun and irony, a purposefully
spectacular sense of spectacle, a constructed combination
of a hundred cultural influences and quotations that makes
Cowboy Bebop entirely irresistible. With the weight
of its more serious moments to keep it from spinning off into
space, this is a series that will delight from opening riff
to closing credits and every damn hep beat between!
Rating: 10 Crazy Chase Scenes With A Snappy
Soundtrack Out Of 10
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ABOUT THE DVD:
A remarkably cohesive continuation of the jazzy Cowboy
Bebop aesthetic and it must have been a pleasure to use
such a graphically dynamic source as the manga and anime series
for artistic inspiration. It's certainly a pleasure to navigate.
Features:
Launch
Setup
Sessions (episode/chapter selection)
Extras
- Character Intros: Short, video music style clips in
Japanese
- Spike's Profile: (text in English) A neat little bio to
bring you up to speed on Spike, with an image gallery
(screenshots + 1 sketch)
- TANK! Full Length Video: This is the full opening track
in all its mad, jazzy glory (although the video heavily
features the series' spaceships and action and not much
in the way of characters)
- Madman Trailers: Of course! (Vampire Hunter D
2000, Gundam Wing, Robotech, Love Hina,
Rurouni Kenshin)
FURTHER READING:
Places of interest:
The Jazz Messenger
Real Folk Blues
Other reviews:
Michael
Rosen-Molina @ Akadot
Reviewed by Deni Stoner
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H E R O I C * C I N E M A
http://www.heroic-cinema.com
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