Cowboy Bebop
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Cowboy Bebop | |||
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Cowboy Bebop DVD Box Set |
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カウボーイビバップ (Kaubōi Bibappu) |
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Genre | Planetary romance Tragedy; Action-adventure; Comedy-drama Crime fiction | ||
TV anime | |||
Director | Shinichirō Watanabe | ||
Writer | Keiko Nobumoto | ||
Studio | Sunrise | ||
Licensor | Bandai Visual Bandai Entertainment Madman Entertainment |
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Network | TV Tokyo (1998-04-03 to 1998-06-19, 12 episodes only) WOWOW (1998-10-23 to 1999-04-23, full series) Animax (full series) |
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Original run | April 3, 1998 – April 23, 1999 | ||
Episodes | 26 | ||
Manga: Cowboy Bebop: Shooting Star | |||
Author | Hajime Yatate | ||
Illustrator | Cain Kuga | ||
Publisher | Kadokawa Shoten | ||
English publisher | Tokyopop | ||
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Demographic | Shōjo | ||
Magazine | Asuka Fantasy DX | ||
Original run | 1997[1] – ongoing | ||
Volumes | 2 | ||
Manga: Cowboy Bebop: A New Story | |||
Author | Hajime Yatate | ||
Illustrator | Yutaka Nanten | ||
Publisher | Kadokawa Shoten | ||
English publisher | Tokyopop Madman Entertainment |
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Demographic | Shōjo | ||
Magazine | Asuka Fantasy DX | ||
Original run | April 1998 – April 2000 | ||
Volumes | 3 | ||
Anime and Manga Portal |
Cowboy Bebop (カウボーイビバップ Kaubōi Bibappu ) is a Japanese anime series. Directed by Shinichirō Watanabe and written by Keiko Nobumoto, the series was produced by Sunrise in the late 1990s. Its 26 episodes comprise a complete storyline: the series, set in 2071, follows the misadventures and tragedies of a group of bounty hunters, or "cowboys", traveling on their spaceship, the Bebop.
Despite its title, the series only makes a nod to the western and space western genres. Cowboy Bebop's art direction centers around American music and counterculture, especially the beat and jazz movements of the 1940s-60s and the early rock era of the 1950s-70s, which the original soundtrack by Yoko Kanno and The Seatbelts recreates.[citation needed] Episodes are called "sessions", each episode follows a different musical theme,[2] and episode titles are borrowed from notable album or song names (i.e. "Sympathy for the Devil", "Bohemian Rhapsody", "Honky Tonk Women", "My Funny Valentine") or make use of a genre name ("Mushroom Samba", "Heavy Metal Queen").
Cowboy Bebop was a commercial success both in Japan and international markets, notably in the United States. After this reception, Sony Pictures released a feature film, Knockin' on Heaven's Door to theaters worldwide and followed up with an international DVD release. Two manga adaptations were serialized in Kadokawa Shoten's Asuka Fantasy DX. In 2004, it ranked second in Newtype USA's survey of their readers' favorite anime of all time.[3]
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[edit] Plot
The crew of the spaceship Bebop are a partnership of bounty hunters, called "cowboys", who travel the solar system trying to apprehend bounties. Jet Black is the owner of the Bebop, but has partnered with Spike for his diverse combat skills. Though he is reluctant to admit it, Jet has also come to rely on Spike for companionship in the normally solitary field of bounty hunting. The entire system is open to them via the Gates, but they regularly spend much of their time on Mars, the new hub of human civilization.
Most episodes revolve around attempts to bring in a specific bounty, but the show often shares its focus with the pasts of each of the main characters and of more general past events, which are revealed and brought together as the series progresses. Some of the Bebop's varied targets include small time thugs, gangsters, hackers (known as "Net Divers" in slang), religious leaders, psychopaths, genetic experiments, mutant creatures and petty thieves.
[edit] Characters
The series features a crew of distinct main characters. The first two introduced in the series are Spike Spiegel and Jet Black. The two pilot their former fishing trawler spaceship, the Bebop, and work as bounty hunters. As the series progresses, more characters are introduced and become members of the Bebop crew.
Antagonists include a variety of bounties that the crew hunt to collect funding, including Faye. Although the Bebop crew is typically broke, its members manage to keep themselves afloat financially by capturing the occasional bounty-head.
Spike Spiegel is a former member of the Red Dragon Crime Syndicate who is haunted by the memory of his time in the organization, namely his romantic relationship with a mysterious woman named Julia, and his arch-rival and former syndicate partner, Vicious.
Jet Black, a former Inter-Solar System Police (ISSP) officer and the owner of the Bebop. Once called "The Black Dog" by his fellow officers for his relentless nature, he bears a cybernetic arm as constant reminder of what happened when he rushed into trouble without looking first. Like Spike, he is haunted by the memory of a woman: Alisa, his longtime girlfriend who left him without notice.
Ein, a Welsh Corgi and former lab animal identified as a "data dog" by the scientists who created him. The reason for this title is never explained, but it is suggested that he possesses enhanced intelligence, which he displays in subtle ways throughout the series. Despite his enhanced intelligence and comprehension, the rest of the Bebop crew typically fail to notice these qualities.
Faye Valentine, an amnesiac awakened from a 54-year cryogenic slumber after being injured. She is tricked into assuming the massive debt of the man who woke her, and constantly attempts to gamble on quick cash as a solution to her debt. Her gambling and competitive skills are unrivaled as she has won every game in her life, except when playing Spike, when introduced in the series. Her past and her real name are a mystery as the name "Valentine" was given to her by a doctor. Her history is unraveled progressively throughout the series.
Edward, a young, eccentric computer genius and master hacker. Though she is a girl, there is a popular confusion as to Ed's gender due to her name and androgynous appearance. She gave herself the long and fanciful name "Edward Wong Hau Pepelu Tivrusky IV" after running away to an orphanage, but after her father is found it is revealed later on that her real name is Françoise Appledelhi. She goes by the name Radical Edward when hacking, and commonly spends the most time with Ein.
Vicious, Spike's former syndicate partner and the only recurring antagonist of the series. He is seen in several episodes grabbing for power within the organization by killing members of the organization's leadership. His relationship with Spike and Julia is displayed through flashbacks that Spike experiences, but never explained in detail.
Julia, a beautiful and mysterious woman from both Spike and Vicious' pasts. Despite being among the main driving points for the entire series, Julia only appears in flashbacks until the final two episodes of the series. She acts as a stark contrast to the world around her—her blond hair, bright red umbrella and automobile stand out in the otherwise drab environments that she inhabits.
[edit] Production
[edit] Staff
- Director: Shinichirō Watanabe
- Management: Noriko Kobayashi, Tetsuo Yamazaki
- Planning: Sunrise
- Original Concept: Hajime Yatate
- Series Composition: Keiko Nobumoto
- Character Design: Toshihiro Kawamoto
- Mechanical Design: Kimitoshi Yamane
- Set Design: Isamu Imakake
- Art Director: Junichi Higashi
- Color Coordinator: Shihoko Nakayama
- Director of Photography: Yoichi Ōgami
- Sound Director: Katsuyoshi Kobayashi
- Music: Yoko Kanno
- Music Production: Victor Entertainment
- Music Producer: Toshiaki Ōta
- Music Director: Shirō Sasaki, Yukako Inoue
- Stage Settings: Shōji Kawamori, Dai Satō
- Producers: Masahiko Minami, Kazuhiko Ikeguchi
- Production: Sunrise, Bandai Visual
[edit] Reception
This section needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding reliable references (ideally, using inline citations). Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (September 2007) |
[edit] Japan
Cowboy Bebop almost did not appear on Japanese broadcast television due to its depictions of violence. It was first sent to TV Tokyo, one of the main broadcasters of anime in Japan. The show had an aborted first run from April 3, 1998 until June 19, 1998 on TV Tokyo, broadcasting only episodes 2, 3, 7 to 15 and 18.
Later that year, the series was shown in its entirety from October 23 until April 23, 1999, on the satellite network WOWOW. With the TV Tokyo broadcast slot fiasco, the production schedule was disrupted to the extent that the last episode was delivered to WOWOW on the day of its broadcast. Cowboy Bebop won the Seiun Award in 2000.
The full series has also been broadcast across Japan by the anime television network, Animax, who has also aired the series via its respective networks across Southeast Asia, South Asia and East Asia. Cowboy Bebop was popular enough that the movie, Cowboy Bebop: Tengoku no Tobira (Knockin' on Heaven's Door), was commissioned and released in Japan in 2001, and later released in the United States as Cowboy Bebop: The Movie in 2003.
[edit] International
- In the United States, on September 2, 2001, Cowboy Bebop became the first anime title to be shown as part of the U.S. Cartoon Network's Adult Swim programming block.[4] It was successful enough to be broadcast repeatedly for four years. It was rerun again in 2007 and 2008 also in the first part of 2009
- In the United Kingdom, Cowboy Bebop was first broadcast in 2002 as one of the highlights of the ill-fated "cartoon network for adults", CNX. As of November 6, 2007, it is being repeated on AnimeCentral.
- In Australia, Cowboy Bebop was first broadcast in 2002 on Cartoon Network's Adult Swim, and began broadcasting on ABC2, a digital free-to-air network, on January 2, 2007. It has recently started broadcasting on the Sci Fi Channel on Foxtel. It has also recently started airing again on ABC2. Also, it aired "Cowboy Bebop: The Movie" on 23rd of February 2009 on SBS.
- In France, Cowboy Bebop was broadcast during summer 2000 on Canal+.
- In Germany, Cowboy Bebop was broadcast during 2003-2004 on MTV.
- In Poland, Cowboy Bebop was broadcast several times by Hyper and TVP Kultura.
- In Israel, Cowboy Bebop was broadcast during 2001-2002 on Bip's late-night anime block.
- In Spain, Cowboy Bebop was broadcast during 1999 in Cartoon Network, in the first Toonami version programming block, Thursday and Saturday's late-nights with Samurai Jack and Outlaw Star, during the early 2000s in K3's 3XL.net and the summer of 2006 on Cuatro's late-night show Cuatrosfera.
- In Canada, Cowboy Bebop was first broadcast on December 24, 2006, on Razer.
- In Italy, Cowboy Bebop was broadcast after November 1999 on MTV and again in 2007.
- In Singapore, Cowboy Bebop was broadcast on Arts Central at the 11 pm time slot, and had several scenes cut for violence and other graphic content.
- In Portugal, Cowboy Bebop was broadcast on SIC Radical in 2001, 2007 and started once again in May 2008.
- In The Netherlands, The first five episodes of Cowboy Bebop were broadcast by TMF in 2005.
- In Latin America, Cowboy Bebop was broadcast in 2001 on Locomotion.
- In The Philippines, Cowboy Bebop was first broadcast on 2004, on GMA Network. It was recently shown on TV5
- In India, Cowboy Bebop was broadcast several times since 2006 on Animax
[edit] Legacy
A poll in the Japanese magazine Newtype asked its readers to rank the "Top 25 Anime Titles of All Time"; Cowboy Bebop placed second (behind Neon Genesis Evangelion) on a list that included such anime as Mobile Suit Gundam.[3] In a recent poll by TV Asahi, Cowboy Bebop was 40th for Japan's Favorite Anime of 2006.[5] The American Anime magazine Anime Insider (No. 50, November 2007) ranked the 50 best anime (available in America) by compiling lists of industry regulars and magazine staff, with Cowboy Bebop ranked as #1.
In the U.S., Cartoon Network has regularly rotated Cowboy Bebop in and out of its Adult Swim block line-up several times.
T.H.E.M Anime Reviews say the series has "sophistication and subtlety that is practically one-of-a-kind" and that "puts most anime...and Hollywood, to shame."[6]
In March 2009, the print and web editions of The Onion's A.V. Club called Cowboy Bebop "rightly a huge hit", and listed it as a gateway series to understanding the entire anime genre.[2]
[edit] Influence on pop culture
At the conclusion of the final broadcast of Cartoon Network's long-standing Toonami block, the host character TOM (who had been voiced by Steven Blum, the American voice actor who played Spike Spiegel) uttered "Bang" right before the broadcast signed off for the final time, which was also the final line spoken by Spike in the final episode of Cowboy Bebop.
[edit] Soundtrack
One of the most notable elements of Cowboy Bebop is its music. Performed by Yoko Kanno and The Seatbelts, a band Kanno assembled to perform music for the series, the jazz and blues themed soundtrack helps to define the show as much as the characters, writing, and even animation. Cowboy Bebop was voted by IGN in 2006 as having the greatest soundtrack for an anime.[7]
[edit] Cowboy Bebop The Series
- Cowboy Bebop
- Vitaminless
- No Disc
- Blue
- Remixes: Music for Freelance sets itself in the Cowboy Bebop universe, and purports to be a broadcast from the pirate radio station Radio Free Mars. This album includes remixes of Seatbelts tracks from the previous 4 albums, remixed by popular American and British DJs.
- Box Set: CD box set - A compilation of tracks from the first 4 albums, and previously unreleased/live material as well as dialogue tracks.
- Greatest Hits: Tank! THE! BEST!
[edit] Cowboy Bebop The Movie
[edit] Theme songs
Opening themes | |||
# | Transcription/Translation | Performed by | Episodes |
1 | "Tank!" | The Seatbelts | 1-25 |
Ending themes | |||
# | Transcription/Translation | Performed by | Episodes |
1 | "The Real Folk Blues" | The Seatbelts feat. Mai Yamane | 1-12, 14-25 |
2 | "Space Lion" | The Seatbelts | 13 |
3 | "Blue" | The Seatbelts feat. Mai Yamane | 26 |
Tim Jensen produced lyrics on some songs:
- "Ask DNA" sung by Raj Ramayya
- "Gotta knock a little harder" sung by Mai Yamane
- "Call me, call me" sung by Steve Conte
[edit] Other media
- An official side story to Cowboy Bebop was released on the original website called Cowboy Bebop: UT. Taking place long before the series started, it features Ural and Victoria Terpsichore (V.T. from the episode "Heavy Metal Queen") when they were bounty hunters. The story is available at the site mirror hosted by Jazzmess.com.[8]
- Bandai released a Cowboy Bebop shoot 'em up video game in Japan for the PlayStation in 1998. A PlayStation 2 Cowboy Bebop video game was released in Japan, and the English version had been set for release in North America during the first quarter of 2006. However, as of November 2007, GameSpot reports that the North American release has been canceled.[9]
- Two short manga series based on the Cowboy Bebop property were released in the US by Tokyopop.
[edit] Live-action movie
On July 22, 2008, IF Magazine published an article on its website regarding a rumor of a live-action Cowboy Bebop movie that is in development by 20th Century Fox. Producer Erwin Stoff said that the film's development was in the early stages, and that they had "just signed it".[10][11] Keanu Reeves has been confirmed as playing the role of Spike Spiegel.[12][13] It has also been confirmed through Variety in a January 15, 2009 article, that the production company, Sunrise, Inc., will be "closely involved with the development of the English language project" and that Kenji Uchida, Shinichiro Watanabe, and series writer Keiko Nobumoto has been confirmed to be associate producers and that series producer Masahiko Minami has been confirmed as a production consultant. Variety also confirms that Peter Craig is currently attached as screenwriter.[14]
[edit] Continuation rumors
After the creation of the series, an interviewer asked Watanabe if he had any plans to create more Cowboy Bebop material. Watanabe responded by saying that he does not believe that he "should just keep on making Cowboy Bebop sequels for the sake of it". Watanabe added that ending production and "to quit while we're ahead when people still want more" is more "in keeping with the Bebop spirit".[15] In a more recent interview from 2006 with the Daily Texan Watanabe was asked if there would ever be more Cowboy Bebop. Watanabe's answer was "someday, maybe someday".[16]
[edit] References
- ^ It seems a manga adaptation was published before the anime premiered. The first Shooting Star volume was released on May 1998 (ISBN 4048529358) by Asuka Comics DX, so it's safe to say that the manga began on November 1997 at the latest [1]. It takes an average of six months to publish enough chapters to fill a tankōbon and the first volume was released on May 1998.
- ^ a b Tasha Robinson (March 5, 2009). "Gateways To Geekery: Anime". A.V. Club. http://www.avclub.com/articles/gateways-to-geekery-anime,24653/. Retrieved on 2009-03-10.
- ^ a b Newtype Press Release - Anime News Network
- ^ Cowboy Bebop on Cartoon Network - Cowboy Bebop Spoilers, Episode Guides, Message Board | TVGuide.com
- ^ Japan's Favorite TV Anime. Anime News Network (October 13, 2006). Retrieved on September 10, 2007.
- ^ THEM Anime reviews - Cowboy Bebop
- ^ IGN: Top Ten Anime Themes and Soundtracks of All-Time, IGN.
- ^ Dai Sato (2001-04-16). "Cowboy Bebop: UT". Bandai. http://www.cowboybebop.org/english/ut/index.html. Retrieved on February 11 2007.
- ^ "Cowboy Bebop for the PS2". GameSpot. http://www.gamespot.com/ps2/action/cowboybebop/index.html. Retrieved on February 28 2007.
- ^ IF Magazine: Live-Action 'Cowboy Bebop' Movie Is In The Works, IF Magazine.
- ^ FirstShowing.Net, Cowboy Bebop Movie
- ^ "Keanu Reeves Hopes to Star in Live-Action Cowboy Bebop". Anime News Network. 2008-12-17. http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2008-12-17/keanu-reeves-hopes-to-star-in-live-action-cowboy-bebop. Retrieved on 2009-01-07.
- ^ "Keanu Reeves To Play Spike Spiegel In Live-Action ‘Cowboy Bebop’ Movie". http://splashpage.mtv.com/2009/01/16/keanu-reeves-to-play-spike-spiegel-in-live-action-cowboy-bebop-movie/.
- ^ "Keanu Reeves set for 'Bebop' Actor to star in live-action adaptation of anime". Variety. 2009-01-15. http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117998641.html?categoryid=13&cs=1&query=Cowboy+Bebop. Retrieved on 2009-01-21.
- ^ "The Director's Voice Shinichiro Watanabe Interview." CowboyBebop.com.
- ^ McNamara, Jonathan (2006-02-14). "Cowboy Bebop director Watanabe talks anime". The Daily Texan. http://www.dailytexanonline.com/life_arts/1.971462-1.971462. Retrieved on February 23, 2009.
[edit] External links
Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Cowboy Bebop |
- Cowboy Bebop (anime) at Anime News Network's Encyclopedia
- Cowboy Bebop at the Internet Movie Database
- Cowboy Bebop at TV.com
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