A ragtag crew of bounty hunters chases down the galaxy's most dangerous criminals. They'll save the world--for the right price.A ragtag crew of bounty hunters chases down the galaxy's most dangerous criminals. They'll save the world--for the right price.A ragtag crew of bounty hunters chases down the galaxy's most dangerous criminals. They'll save the world--for the right price.
- Nominated for 1 Primetime Emmy
- 1 win & 2 nominations total
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This is all you need in times of corona if you like action, but also good laughs and humor. Great actors too! I like how they didn't choose the conventional white guy as the main character. The story and acting doesn't feel forced the serie is relaxed too. The actor John Choo is sexy too, women will also like this series.
Also, if you like movies or series in space, this is also for you.
Also, if you like movies or series in space, this is also for you.
Good acting, the actors have swag. It's a good serie it's anything you have seen before. Right amount of humor and action. You will like this series if you like anything surrounding sci fi space movies/series. Interesting story to follow too, this will not disappoint. Usually asian actors are the bad guys in action movies/series, but not in this one.
I won't make comparisons with the original animation.
I think this show in general is an excellent production. The actors are ok and have great chemistry together.
But this show takes a bold approach to the way it tells the story.
It tries, perhaps excessively, to be faithful to an Anime narrative structure.
It's a western. It's a space opera. It's a buddy cop comedy. It has a noir atmosphere mixed with ultra-over the top action scenes. All mixed in a crazy colored juice.
This cocktail isn't easy to make into a live series.
And the end result is a highly stylized TV show that is beautiful to watch, well interpreted, but not everything blends in very well.
This will certainly work for many people, but for many it won't.
So, in the end, what counts is a matter of taste.
Try it and you may like it or not.
I personally enjoyed some episodes more than others, but I wouldn't mind seeing more.
A solid 7 out of 10 for me.
I think this show in general is an excellent production. The actors are ok and have great chemistry together.
But this show takes a bold approach to the way it tells the story.
It tries, perhaps excessively, to be faithful to an Anime narrative structure.
It's a western. It's a space opera. It's a buddy cop comedy. It has a noir atmosphere mixed with ultra-over the top action scenes. All mixed in a crazy colored juice.
This cocktail isn't easy to make into a live series.
And the end result is a highly stylized TV show that is beautiful to watch, well interpreted, but not everything blends in very well.
This will certainly work for many people, but for many it won't.
So, in the end, what counts is a matter of taste.
Try it and you may like it or not.
I personally enjoyed some episodes more than others, but I wouldn't mind seeing more.
A solid 7 out of 10 for me.
I was skeptical about the cast at first, but John Cho was surprisingly pulling Spike off very well. Now, I can't seem to find any other actors to play Spike other then John Cho. Jet Black, on the other hand, the beard on him looks too artificial. It just doesn't sit well on the guy. They could have styled the beard as its own since they changed the character to a black guy, but then somehow they attached the original character's beard on him which seems to be the general issue in this show. They changed some elements in the animation and adopted new things to a live action show, but then they somehow applied original elements back to new things. They don't get along well together, and often produces some silly chuckles and eye sores just like Jet Black's beard. Overall, the show is interesting as its own. It could have been better if they have made it as a standalone show instead of making a carbon-copy version of the original animation.
Cowboy Bebop is a live adaptation of a popular anime featuring a group of space bounty hunters nicknamed 'cowboys' who roam the now-populated solar system a few centuries in the future. The tone of the series is light-hearted, featuring typical down-on-their-luck yet likeable main characters who stumble their way into victories against equally incompetent bad guys. It's basically all in good fun.
It's universe is a combination of Americana influences from the '50's up to the '70's, Japanese mafia tropes and old-skool visceral science fiction, with a film noir-detective glue that holds it together. It consist of over-the-top but well designed set pieces with characters that find themselves in absurd situations, mostly created by their own antics. Fair warning, it can get pretty bloody at times between all the sarcasm, true to anime heritage.
The music is excellent, especially the jazz pieces from all the greats that seem hand-picked to fit the scenes. It's general feel is reminiscent of comic books, with lots of different color schemes, shots from strange angels and short, witty comebacks that could've just as easily been dropped in captions. Blood doesn't drip, it flashes over the screen, that sort of thing.
My main criticism are the predictable plot-lines, with one or two nice surprises. Also, not all the jokes land because the editing can be off beat, slowing down the comedic timing of the actors. On these review pages it has been compared to the original, well-loved anime, which I didn't do. Without the comparison, the end-result is a production that could have had a sharper finish, but that doesn't take away much from this futuristic noir-detective that got stuck in the seventies.
Don't expect the world and you'll root for these cowboys.
It's universe is a combination of Americana influences from the '50's up to the '70's, Japanese mafia tropes and old-skool visceral science fiction, with a film noir-detective glue that holds it together. It consist of over-the-top but well designed set pieces with characters that find themselves in absurd situations, mostly created by their own antics. Fair warning, it can get pretty bloody at times between all the sarcasm, true to anime heritage.
The music is excellent, especially the jazz pieces from all the greats that seem hand-picked to fit the scenes. It's general feel is reminiscent of comic books, with lots of different color schemes, shots from strange angels and short, witty comebacks that could've just as easily been dropped in captions. Blood doesn't drip, it flashes over the screen, that sort of thing.
My main criticism are the predictable plot-lines, with one or two nice surprises. Also, not all the jokes land because the editing can be off beat, slowing down the comedic timing of the actors. On these review pages it has been compared to the original, well-loved anime, which I didn't do. Without the comparison, the end-result is a production that could have had a sharper finish, but that doesn't take away much from this futuristic noir-detective that got stuck in the seventies.
Don't expect the world and you'll root for these cowboys.
Did you know
- TriviaComposer Yôko Kanno, who scored the music for Cowboy Bebop (1998), returns to score the music for this series.
- Crazy creditsThe show opens with a live-action version of the Cowboy Bebop (1998) title sequence (with a few scenes removed/added).
- ConnectionsFeatured in AniMat's Crazy Cartoon Cast: Body Odor Penalty (2019)
- How many seasons does Cowboy Bebop have?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- صائدو جوائز بيبوب
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime58 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.00 : 1
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