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Cowboy Bebop is a 1998 Japanese anime series developed by Sunrise. It featured
a production team led by director Shinichirō Watanabe, screenwriter Keiko Nobumoto,
character designer Toshihiro Kawamoto, mechanical designer Kimitoshi Yamane,
and composer Yoko Kanno. The twenty-six episodes (sessions) of the series
are set in the year 2071. It follows the adventures, misadventures and
tragedies of a bounty hunter crew travelling on the Bebop, their starship. Cowboy
Bebop explores philosophical concepts including existentialism, existential
ennui, loneliness, and the past's influence.
The series premiered in Japan on TV Tokyo from April 3 until June 26, 1998,
broadcasting only twelve episodes and a special due to its controversial content.
The entire twenty-six episodes of the series were later broadcast on WOWOW from
October 24 until April 24, 1999. The anime was adapted into two manga series
which were serialized in Kadokawa Shoten's Asuka Fantasy DX. A film was later
released to theaters worldwide.
The anime series was dubbed in the English language by Animaze and ZRO Limit
Productions, and was licensed by Bandai Entertainment in North America. For
English releases in the United Kingdom, it was licensed by Beez Entertainment
and is now licensed by Anime Limited. Madman Entertainment has licensed it for
releases in Australia and New Zealand. In 2001, Cowboy Bebop became the first
anime title to be broadcast on Adult Swim in the United States. Since then, the
series has aired continuously in rotation due to its success.
Cowboy Bebop received universal critical acclaim and is often considered to be a
masterpiece. The series became a commercial success both in Japanese and
international markets, most notably in the United States. The series has become
a cult classic and garnered major science fiction awards and international
praise for its characters, story, voice acting, animation and soundtrack.
Plot
Setting
The series is set in the year 2071, when the entire Solar System has been made
accessible through hyperspace gates. In 2022, an explosion of an experimental
hyperspace gateway severely damages the Moon, resulting in a debris ring and
meteor bombardments that eradicate a large portion of the Earth's population. As
a result, many survivors abandon the barely habitable Earth to colonize the
inner planets, the asteroid belt and the moons of Jupiter.
Mars has become the new central hub of human civilization, and interplanetary
crime syndicates exert influence over the government and the Inter-Solar System
Police (ISSP), limiting their effectiveness. As a result, a bounty system
similar to that in the Old West is established to deal with fugitives,
terrorists, and other criminals; the bounty hunters involved are frequently
termed "cowboys". The standard currency is the woolong, which is roughly
equivalent to the present-day Japanese yen.
The technology in Cowboy Bebop's world is a mixture of futuristic (cybernetics,
jump gates, energy weapons) and modern (wheeled cars, handguns, zippo-styled
lighters). Yet, even technology often looks a bit older and battered.
The three main classes of vehicles present are ground vehicles, air vehicles and
space vehicles. Ground vehicles are wheeled automobiles not much different from
modern automobiles. Aircraft are mostly jet-powered, although helicopters are
also seen. Spaceships range in size from small one-man fighters to immense
passenger liners and cargo ships.
Story
The series revolves around the adventures undertaken by the crew of the
spaceship Bebop. The crew is made up of five main characters: Spike Spiegel, an
exiled hitman of the ruthless Red Dragon Syndicate; Jet Black, a former ISSP
officer who retired following a mob hit that cost him his arm; Faye Valentine,
an amnesiac con artist who awakened in the future after a lengthy period of
cryogenic hibernation; "Radical" Edward, a barefooted preteen girl who is a
prolific computer hacker; and Ein, a hyper-intelligent, genetically-engineered
Welsh Corgi dog.
Throughout the series, Bebop crew members deal with unresolved issues from their
pasts, and the show regularly utilizes flashbacks to illustrate the history of
the main characters. The day-to-day life of the crew is also explored throughout
the series.
Characters
Spike Spiegel is a former member of the Red Dragon Crime Syndicate. Spike is a
master in firearms and hand-to-hand combat, practicing Jeet Kune Do, and is also
a skilled pilot. He flies a red customized Mono Racer, an atmosphere-capable
spacecraft called Swordfish II. His right eye is cybernetic. He is haunted by
the memory of his time in the syndicate, and particularly by his romantic
relationship with a mysterious woman named Julia, and his conflict with arch-rival
and former syndicate partner, Vicious. He is also a pickpocket. He is the first
bounty hunter to debut.
Jet Black is a former ISSP (Inter-Solar System Police) detective and is the
owner of the Bebop. Once called The Black Dog by his fellow officers, he left
the ISSP in disgust due to its corruption and red tape, and turned to bounty
hunting as a way to apply justice. Although medical science could replace his
lost arm, he voluntarily wears a cybernetic prosthetic as a reminder of the
consequences of rushing into danger. He also owns a small yellow utility ship
called Hammerhead. The Hammerhead has been equipped with a mechanical claw, and
a harpoon that can be used as a tow cable. Like Spike, he too is haunted by the
memory of a woman, Alisa, his longtime girlfriend who left him without reason.
He is the second bounty hunter to debut.
Faye Valentine is a novice bounty hunter with a gambling addiction. She joins
the crew of the Bebop uninvited, to the consternation of Jet and Spike. Though
she abandons the ship several times during the course of the series, her
attachment to the crew always brings her back. These feelings are apparently
reciprocated, as Jet and Spike always allow her to return despite claiming they're
pleased to see her leave. She pilots a generic heavy spacecraft called Red Tail,
which gets its name from the red flap on the back of the otherwise pale blue
ship, and has been heavily modified with armament and tracking sensors. Her
gambling, cheating, and competitive skills are unrivaled except by Spike. Much
of her past and her real last name are a mystery, however it appears that she
was severely injured in a space shuttle accident and was then cryogenically
frozen until she could be healed. This expensive medical procedure left her
deeply in debt, made worse when she inherited the debts of her husband (a man
who married her shortly after her surgery, then later faked his death in an
automobile accident). She emerges from the cryonic sleep in an amnesiac state,
from which she eventually recovers. All vestiges of her past — home, family,
possessions — are gone. She is the fourth bounty hunter to debut.
Edward is a young computer genius and master hacker. She uses the alias Radical
Edward when hacking. Ed is a girl, though her name and androgynous appearance
suggest otherwise. She had followed the travels of the Bebop before encountering
the ship, and agrees to help the crew track down a bounty-head in exchange for
becoming a member of the crew. Although extremely intelligent, Ed is still a
child, and looks up to the crew of the Bebop as members of her family. She uses
the fanciful name Edward Wong Hau Pepelu Tivruski IV, but an odd encounter with
her father reveals that her real name is Françoise Appledelhi. She spends much
of her time with Ein. She is the fifth and last bounty hunter to debut.
Ein is a Pembroke Welsh Corgi, a former lab animal identified as a "data dog" by
the scientists who reared him. The scientists used him for unspecified
experiments, enhancing him to give him extraordinary data-sniffing and pattern-recognition
abilities. It is suggested that he possesses enhanced intelligence, which he
subtly displays throughout the series, including showing the ability to speak to
other animals (and possibly Ed), and perfectly hacking the Scratch website in
session #23. The rest of the Bebop crew, with the exception of Ed, often fail to
notice these qualities and treat Ein as an average pet. He is the third bounty
hunter to debut.
Vicious is a grim enforcer of the Red Dragon Crime Syndicate, a former friend of
Spike and now his nemesis. Vicious wields a katana for a weapon and is always
accompanied by a strange, crow-like bird perched on his shoulder. He lives up to
his name both through his violent actions and his treacherous scheming within
the syndicate. Vicious is the series' only recurring antagonist, appearing in
five episodes.
Production
In the late 1990s the space adventure genre was a very popular TV theme in Japan.
Notable examples of such include Sunrise's Outlaw Star and Madhouse's Trigun.
Sunrise became very enthusiastic to create a series of the same genre and
consequently assigned its top talents towards its development.
The leader of the creative team was director Shinichiro Watanabe, most notable
at the time for directing Macross Plus, the futuristic adventure anime OVA
series, and Mobile Suit Gundam. Other leading members of Sunrise's creative
team were screenwriter Keiko Nobumoto, character designer Toshihiro Kawamoto,
mechanical art designer Kimitoshi Yamane and composer Yoko Kanno. Most of them
had previously worked together, in addition to having credits on other popular
anime titles. Nobumoto had scripted Macross Plus, Kawamoto had designed the
characters for Gundam, and Kanno had composed the music for Macross Plus and The
Vision of Escaflowne. Yamane had not worked with Watanabe yet, but his credits
in anime included Bubblegum Crisis and The Vision of Escaflowne.
Watanabe wanted to create a program that would also appeal to adults, exploring
a number of philosophical concepts and themes in the process. The most important
of the many elements of Cowboy Bebop were its existentialist and philosophical
concepts. The dialogue of the series was kept "clean", but its level of
sophistication was appropriate to adults in a criminal milieu. Themes such as
drug dealing and homosexuality were key elements of some episodes.
The series' art direction centers on American music and counterculture,
especially the beat and jazz movements of the 1940s–1960s and the early rock and
roll era of the 1950s–1970s, which the original soundtrack by Yoko Kanno and the
Seatbelts defines.
The atmospheres of the planets and racial groups in Cowboy Bebop mostly
originate from Watanabe's ideas, with some collaboration from set designers
Isamu Imakake, Shoji Kawamori, and Dai Satou. The staff of Cowboy Bebop
established the particular atmospheres early in the production. In early
production, ethnic groups were not fully established. Watanabe wanted to have
many racial groups appear in Cowboy Bebop.
Mars was the planet most often used in storylines in Cowboy Bebop. Satoshi Toba,
the cultural and setting producer, explained that other planets "were
unexpectedly difficult to use". Toba explained that each planet in Cowboy Bebop
had unique features, and in the plot the producers had to take into account the
characteristics of each planet. Toba explained that it was not possible for the
staff of Cowboy Bebop to have a dramatic rooftop scene occur on Venus, so "we
ended up normally falling back to Mars".
Analysis
Style and appeal
Several planets and space stations in the series are shown to be made in the
Earth's image. The streets of celestial objects such as Ganymede resemble a
modern port city, while Mars is replete with shopping malls, theme parks,
casinos and cities. Cowboy Bebop's universe is filled with video players and
hyperspace gates, eco-politics and fairgrounds, spaceships and Native American
shamans. Futuristic elements are combined with the modern elements, "allowing
audiences to easily connect with the Cowboy Bebop world".
In his review of Cowboy Bebop, Miguel Douglas, editor-in-chief of iSugoi.com,
describes the style of the series:
the series distinctly establishes itself outside the realm of conventional
Japanese animation and instead chooses to forge its own path. With a setting
within the realm of science fiction, the series wisely offers a world that seems
entirely realistic considering our present time. Free from many of the elements
that accompany science fiction in general — whether that be space aliens, giant
robots, or laser guns — the series delegates itself towards presenting a world
that is quite similar to our own albeit showcasing some technological advances.
Certainly not as pristine a future we would see in other series or films, Cowboy
Bebop decides to deliver a future that closely reflects that of our own time.
This aspect of familiarity does wonders in terms of relating to the viewer, and
it presents a world that certainly resembles our very own.
Daryl Surat of Otaku USA commented on the series' "broad-ranging" appeal due to
its style:
Cowboy Bebop was that rare breed of science-fiction: "accessible". Unlike many
anime titles, viewers weren’t expected to have knowledge of Asian culture —
character names, signs, and the like were primarily in English to begin with —
or have seen any other anime series prior.
Susan J. Napier argues, in her book Anime from Akira to Princess Mononoke:
Experiencing Contemporary Japanese Animation, that anime increasingly "exists at
a nexus point in global culture…an amorphous new media territory that crosses
and intermingles national boundaries". Napier goes on to point out that many
Japanese commentators refer to anime with the term mukokuseki, meaning "stateless".
This implies that much anime is not specifically Japanese and therefore lacks a
distinct national identity. Napier states that this "very quality of 'statelessness'
has increasing attraction in our global culture". It is said that Cowboy Bebop
reflects this and it is a great part of the show's appeal.
Genre and cultural references
Watanabe's main inspiration for Cowboy Bebop was Lupin III, a crime anime series
from the late 1970s through the mid-1980s. According to Watanabe, the series
paid subtle tribute to his favorite American films and series, which were shown
in Japan during that time, including Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Bruce
Lee films, films with blues or jazz soundtracks, as well as Blaxploitation films.
Individual movies from Alien to Midnight Run were pastiched.
The series covered genres such as comedy, detective caper, action and thriller.
The musical style was emphasized in many of the episode titles, which were in
English, such as: Asteroid Blues, Honky Tonk Woman, Ballad of Fallen Angels,
Heavy Metal Queen, etc. The anime draws heavily on Western sources, such as
pulp detective stories, film noir, and American Westerns. There are also strong
Hong Kong influences, mainly of the heroic bloodshed mold which includes films
such as The Killer or Hard Boiled.
These continual borrowings from other genres and cultural products create a
familiar access point for a western audience and perhaps in some part explain
Cowboy Bebop's popularity. The sense of the familiar is emphasised and
reinforced by popular culture references throughout the series. Kung fu films
are an obvious influence. In Stray Dog Strut the final fight between Spike and
Hakim is influenced by Bruce Lee's Game of Death while in Waltz for Venus, Spike's
kung fu lesson is similar to a scene from Lee's Enter the Dragon.
Big Shot, the fictional news source within Cowboy Bebop which provides
information on various bounty heads.
The genre of the western is another influence on Cowboy Bebop. The most obvious
reference is in the title of the show, immediately suggesting a lawless society.
There are further examples throughout; a show called Big Shot informs the
characters of the current bounties, the crew continually come across saloons and
desert worlds and engage in gunfights and stand-offs. The show has a perpetual
sense of lawlessness – both from the bounties they chase and from within the
crew of the Bebop itself.
Similarly science fiction is another key influence, not only in the spaceship
and the futuristic setting. A homage of the Alien films is made in the episode
Toys in the Attic when an unseen predator stalks the crew. In Wild Horses the
influence of Star Wars pervades throughout.
The flavor of film noir permeates Cowboy Bebop. This is especially prevalent in
the character of Jet Black, a former cop who rails against the corruption of the
police force but is thrown into a semi-lawless state of bounty hunting. As in
film noir, characters are morally ambiguous – none more so than Faye Valentine
who betrays her allies in the pursuit of a big bounty. The big-city rain-slicked
settings of film noir are continually used, especially in the episode Ganymede
Elegy. Other visual and aural cues are also taken from film noir, in Pierrot Le
Fou for instance, Spike battles an enraged homicidal clown across a fairground,
accompanied by lighting and camera angles film noir would use.
Music
Music of Cowboy Bebop
One of the most notable elements of Cowboy Bebop is its music. Episodes follow a
different musical theme, and episode titles are borrowed from notable album
or song names (e.g. Sympathy for the Devil and Bohemian Rhapsody) or make use of
a genre name (Mushroom Samba and Heavy Metal Queen).
Performed by Yoko Kanno and The Seatbelts, a band Kanno assembled to perform
music for the series, the jazz and blues themed soundtrack helps define the show
as much as the characters, writing, and animation. Cowboy Bebop was voted by IGN
in 2006 as having the greatest soundtrack for an anime.
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.
Distribution
Broadcast
Cowboy Bebop almost did not appear on Japanese broadcast television due to its
depictions of graphic 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
until June 26, 1998, on TV Tokyo, broadcasting only episodes 2, 3, 7 to 15, 18
and a special. Later that year, the series was shown in its entirety from
October 24 until April 24, 1999, on satellite network WOWOW. Because of 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.
The full series has also been broadcast across Japan by anime television network
Animax, which has also aired the series via its respective networks across
Southeast Asia, South Asia and East Asia.
In the United States, on September 2, 2001, Cowboy Bebop became the first anime
title to be shown as part of the U.S.Adult Swim Launch. It was successful
enough to be broadcast repeatedly for four years. It was rerun again in 2007,
2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, and 2013. In the United Kingdom it was first broadcast
in 2002 as one of the highlights of the ill-fated "cartoon network for adults",
CNX. From November 6, 2007, it was repeated on AnimeCentral until the channel's
closure in August 2008. In Australia, Cowboy Bebop was first broadcast on pay-TV
in 2002 on Adult Swim in Australia. It was broadcast on Sci Fi Channel on Foxtel.
In Australia, Cowboy Bebop was first broadcast on free-to-air-TV on ABC2 (the
national digital public television channel) on January 2, 2007. It has been
repeated several times, most recently starting in 2008. Cowboy Bebop:
The Movie also aired again on February 23, 2009, on SBS (a hybrid-funded
Australian public broadcasting television network). In Canada, Cowboy Bebop was
first broadcast on December 24, 2006, on Razer.
Home media DVD name Content Release date
Session One Episodes 1–5 April 4, 2000
Session Two Episodes 6–10 May 2, 2000
Session Three Episodes 11–14 July 13, 2000
Session Four Episodes 15–18 April 4, 2001
Session Five Episodes 19–22 May 2, 2001
Session Six Episodes 23–26 July 13, 2001
The Perfect Sessions Episodes 1–26
Cowboy Bebop OST 1
Collectors Art Box November 6, 2001
Best Sessions Various Nov 19, 2002
Cowboy Bebop has been released in three separate editions in North America.
The first release was sold in 2000 individually, and featured uncut versions of
the original 26 episodes. In 2001, these DVDs were collected in the special
edition Perfect Sessions which included the first 6 DVDs, the first Cowboy Bebop
soundtrack, and a collector's box. At the time of release, the art box from the
Perfect Sessions was made available for purchase on The Right Stuff
International as a solo item for collectors who already owned the series.
The second release, The Best Sessions, was sold in 2002 and featured what Bandai
considered to be the best 6 episodes of the series remastered in Dolby Digital 5.1
and DTS surround sound.
The third release, Cowboy Bebop Remix, was also distributed on 6 discs and
included the original 26 uncut episodes, with sound remastered in Dolby Digital
5.1 and video remastered under the supervision of Shinichiro Watanabe. This
release also included various extras that were not present in the original
release. Cowboy Bebop Remix was itself collected as the Cowboy Bebop Remix
DVD Collection in 2008.
A fourth release in Blu-Ray format was released on December 21, 2012 exclusively
in Japan.
In December 2012, Anime Limited announced via Facebook and Twitter that they had
acquired the home video license for the United Kingdom. Part 1 of the Blu-Ray
collection will be released on July 29, 2013, while Part 2 and the standard DVD
Complete Collection will be released on September 23, 2013.
Related media
Manga
Two manga series adaptations were published by Kadokawa Shoten and serialized in
Asuka Fantasy DX. The first manga series titled Cowboy Bebop: Shooting Star
Shūtingu sutā bibappu - kaubōi bibappu ?, lit. "Shooting Star Bebop - Cowboy
Bebop") was written and illustrated by Cain Kuga, distributed in North America
by Tokyopop and was collected into two volumes.
The second manga series simply titled Cowboy Bebop written by Hajime Yatate and
illustrated by Yukuta Nanten. The manga was released in Japan by Kadokawa Shoten,
in North America by Tokyopop and in Australia by Madman Entertainment. It was
collected into three volumes.
Video games
Bandai released a Cowboy Bebop video game in Japan for PlayStation in 1998. A
PlayStation 2 video game, Cowboy Bebop: Tsuioku no Serenade, was released in
Japan, and the English version had been set for release in North America during
the first quarter of 2006. However, in November 2007, GameSpot reported that the
release had been cancelled, likely due to the Bandai-Namco merger.
Films
An anime film titled Cowboy Bebop: The Movie (also known as Cowboy Bebop the
Movie: Knockin' on Heaven's Door (劇場版 カウボーイビバップ 天国の扉 Gekijōban
Kaubōi Bibappu: Tengoku no Tobira?, titled Cowboy Bebop: Heaven's
Door in English) was released in Japan on September 2001 and in the United
States in 2003.
On July 22, 2008, If published an article on its website regarding a rumor of a
live-action Cowboy Bebop movie 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". Keanu Reeves had been confirmed to play the
role of Spike Spiegel. Variety confirmed on January 15, 2009, that
production company Sunrise Animation would be "closely involved with the
development of the English language project". The site also confirmed Kenji
Uchida, Shinichiro Watanabe, and series writer Keiko Nobumoto as associate
producers, series producer Masahiko Minami as a production consultant, and Peter
Craig as screenwriter. This was lauded by various sources as a promising move
for the potential quality of the film. At the time it was slated to release
in 2011, but problems with the budget delayed its production. The submitted
script was sent back for rewrite to reduce the cost and little has been heard
about it since an interview with producer Joshua Long on October 15, 2010;
the project currently languishes in development hell. On May 31, 2013, Watanabe
stated the film is currently "underway" but the "details are a secret."
Other
An official side story titled Cowboy Bebop: UT tells the story of Ural and
Victoria Terpsichore (V.T. from the episode Heavy Metal Queen) when they were
bounty hunters. The story was available in its own official site, however the
site was closed and is currently available at the site mirror hosted by jazzmess.com.
Reception
Cowboy Bebop received universal critical acclaim and won the renowned Seiun
Award in 2000. It was named Best Media of the Year by the Science Fiction
Convention.
Christina Carpenter of T.H.E.M Anime Reviews rated the series five stars and
said the series has "sophistication and subtlety that is practically one-of-a-kind",
touting it as a masterpiece that "puts most anime...and Hollywood, to shame".
Mike Crandol, an industry writer for Anime News Network praises the series
stating, "Like the best works of film, it has a universal appeal that transcends
cultures and personal tastes. It is an anime that will be remembered long after
many others have been forgotten". He goes on to refer to the series as "simply
one of the greatest anime titles ever, showcasing brilliant characterization,
animation, and music", giving the series an overall A+ rating.
In 2006, the Japanese MiniTokyo review claimed, "To say nothing more, it is a
masterpiece, a genre defining series that has a right to be held in such high
confidence. Not many series can do even one of the elements as well as Cowboy
Bebop does, and even fewer can actually get every single solitary aspect of
themselves to such a high degree of excellence".
Legacy
Cowboy Bebop is considered to be an anime masterpiece. A 2004 poll in Newtype
USA, the US edition of the Japanese magazine Newtype, asked its readers to rank
the "Top 25 Anime Titles of All Time"; Cowboy Bebop placed second on the list (after
Neon Genesis Evangelion), placing it as one of the most socially relevant and
influential anime series ever created.
The American Anime magazine Anime Insider (No. 50, November 2007) ranked the 50
Best Anime by compiling lists of industry regulars and magazine staff, with
Cowboy Bebop ranked as #1 of all time.
In 2009, IGN published a list of the "Top 100 Animated Series", on which Cowboy
Bebop placed 14th, making it the second highest ranking anime on the list and
one of the most influential series of the 1990s.
On May 16, 2006, IGN listed Cowboy Bebop in its article "Top Ten Anime Themes
and Soundtracks of All-Time", as the number one soundtrack: "Yoko Kanno strikes
again. From beginning to end this may be one of the best anime ever and
certainly is tops when it comes to music".
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 medium of anime as a whole.
American film director Rian Johnson has cited Cowboy Bebop as a visual influence
on his film Brick.
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".
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".