Wed
Mar 17 2010 12:52pm
3...2...1 Let’s jam! Cowboy Bebop Re-watch, “Asteroid Blues”

Hi. I’m Madeline Ashby. After seeing so many re-watch posts, I asked Pablo if he would be interested in re-watch posts for quality anime titles, too. He responded enthusiastically, and here we are. Although posting here is new for me, writing about anime isn’t. I blogged for Frames Per Second, I’ve published a peer-reviewed article on anime, I’ve written for Mechademia and I’ve been a panelist at SF Signal, Anticipation, and elsewhere. I even wrote a Master’s thesis on anime, although I’m now a student in the Strategic Foresight and Innovation Program at the Ontario College of Art and Design. If you’re still curious, you can read some of my stories or follow me on Twitter.

 

“When I first heard that music, it was like someone put a gun to my head. I had to sit down. I had to watch.”

This is what a television producer told me, once, when we were talking about Cowboy Bebop. Director Shinichiro Watanabe’s 1998 masterpiece, about four bounty hunters and a dog shooting their way across the solar system in 2071, tends to elicit similar reactions in people. The last time I watched the series in full was during a holiday marathon two years ago. Early in the series my friend turned to me, his face framed in the eerie glow of frozen animation, and said: “This is a great series! Why can’t we make stuff like this here?”

Indeed. Bebop has what most live-action SF television from English-speaking countries does not: a definite end date, a genuinely compelling story, great production value, interesting speculations on technology and a merciful lack of deus ex machina. It’s a series set in the future, not about the future, and is thus liberated from making any sweeping statements regarding the future. Perhaps for that reason, the world of Cowboy Bebop is neither a sun-dappled utopia nor an unforgiving dystopia. We watch it from the point of view of bounty hunters, so we see the dirty cops and the crime syndicate lowlifes and the mom’s basement-terrorists with delusions of grandeur, but 2071 remains a recognizable iteration of our current world. Ganymede fishing trawlers can be converted to achieve escape velocity, bounties on cross-colony fugitives can be paid from ATM’s, hyperspace toll gates are vulnerable to bugs in proprietary software and need regular firmware upgrades. Its most optimistic prediction is also its most accurate: every colony from Io to Titan is full of signage in Chinese, Arabic, and Spanish. There are brown people, black people and pale people with dreds, turbans and mohawks. Watanabe’s future is off-planet, and everybody’s there.

All these elements shall become clearer as the re-watch progresses. For now, let’s concentrate on the first episode: “Asteroid Blues.” (You can watch here, if you don’t already own the DVD’s.)

Watanabe clearly subscribes to the “Exposition Is For Babies” school of SF. Those expecting a set of narrative training wheels like the opening titles of Blade Runner or Star Wars or the latter-day Galactica should just let go of that desire and move on. The episode drops us, context-free, into a rainy scene tinged with tinkly music box notes, and we watch a dropped rose slowly grow red in a puddle of water, announcing the opening of the story like lights gently brightening a stage. A tall man carrying a bouquet finishes his cigarette and enters a cathedral. Sudden bullets illuminate his face. The man smirks slightly as blood trails down past his lips from his scalp.

Then: jazz.

From the series’ title and the name of the first episode, it should be clear that Watanabe’s inspiration is rooted in jazz and blues. As with jazz, the strength of the series comes from the collaboration of true masters: Watanabe’s direction, Keiko Nobumoto and Dai Sato’s screenwriting, Shoji Kawamori’s environmental design, and Yoko Kanno’s music. And like with jazz, the series story is partially told in the notes not played. Much of the emotion is subtextual. Just in case the audience misses that point, there’s a prominent song on the soundtrack called “Words That We Couldn’t Say.” Music plays a huge role in establishing the mood and flavour of the series, and Yoko Kanno’s contribution as chief composer and music supervisor has never been more deeply felt. The woman is a savant, capable of creating within any genre she wants, from Texas twang to Motown soul to Venetian arias. Bebop is one of the few shows wherein brassy big band sound will punctuate a fistfight. And those notes, hard and fast as knuckles in your teeth, are part of what makes this episode (and the series as a whole) so special.

In this episode, we meet two of the main characters, Spike Spiegel (the man from the introduction earlier) and Jet Black. Spike is a tall, lanky man with an untamable mop of curly hair, and Jet is a thick, broad-shouldered chap with a bionic arm and a nasty scar down one eye. (Whenever I read “Burning Chrome,” I imagine Spike and Jet.) We quickly learn that Spike is the reckless one, and Jet is the responsible one. Jet calls Spike for dinner (interrupting his Jeet Kun Do practise, in the first of what are many homages to Spike’s hero, Bruce Lee), then explains that their next bounty is a drug dealer named Asimov, and that he’ll be a tough catch. Spike whines that there’s no beef in the bell peppers and beef, and Jet tells him that there would be beef, if Spike didn’t drive up their insurance premiums every time he rammed his foot up someone’s ass or parked his personal spacecraft in other people’s front yards.

You know these guys, already. You probably live with them. These guys just happen to kick more ass.

“Asteroid Blues” functions as a perfect introduction to the series as a whole, because it foreshadows the larger events that unfold across the entire narrative. From the start, Watanabe’s favourite themes are front and centre: lost people driven together by circumstance; women who are more than they seem; inevitability; the search for a better life in a distant, unknown somewhere. Visually, Watanabe and his team express these themes with a persistent focus on wheels. Throughout this episode and the series, the gravity generator turns endlessly, as do windmills (the same ones from his previous directorial effort, Macross Plus), toy pinwheels (like the ones in his following series, Samurai Champloo), and the hyperspace gates and colonies themselves, spinning and spinning, Fortune’s Wheel on an interstellar scale.

The episode focuses on two people at the bottom of that wheel, hoping to ride it up to the top. Asimov and his wife (she’s unnamed, so let’s call her Janet, or more appropriately, Juanita) have stolen a huge stash of a drug called Red Eye. It’s delivered as an aerosol directly to the eye and gives the user a brief-but-addictive power-up that turns him or her into a fighting force of nature. That makes it a favourite among crime syndicate thugs across the system. Asimov and Juanita’s plan is to head to Mars (crime syndicate central) with their stash, where they can sell it to the highest bidders and make a lot of quick cash. But like all the most pathetic dealers, Asimov has been dipping into his own supply. He’s a sweaty, twitchy maniac when we meet him, and after a shattering demonstration of his drug-fueled crazy-fu, we think that Spike and Jet might actually be in danger when they meet.

To begin his investigation, Spike finds his friend, a recurring Native American character called Old Bull. They smoke together in a tent full of old PlayStations, and Spike gets the munchies while Bull lets sand stream through his fingers. (“This is all real mystical and all, but got anything to eat?”) Bull then delivers a prediction about where the bounty will be that hinges on a woman trying to kill Spike.

“Just like the last time,” Spike says. “I was killed before, by a woman.”

“You take women too lightly, my friend.”

“On the contrary.”

Remember these words. They are very important.

Then Spike meets Juanita, bumping into her as an excuse to pick her pocket. (He steals some of the groceries from her bag; she lets him keep the hot dog. Meet-cute, thy name is theft.) They bond for a while as he re-fuels his Swordfish II, talking about Mars and how it’s the place to get rich. Spike reveals that he was born on Mars, and warns her that it’s not so great. Juanita is undaunted, stroking her massive dome of a belly, saying “I’m sure we’ll be very happy, there.”

Then Asimov arrives, realizes that Spike is a bounty hunter, and begins to choke Spike. At the last moment Juanita stops him, and they escape. Jet finds Spike, and we learn that Spike has stolen a vial of the Red Eye. He’s calm about the encounter, and tracks Asimov to another buy. He meets Asimov dressed as The Man With No Name. Revealing himself, he taunts Asimov and begins a quick, ugly fistfight. Here’s a clip. (The action starts at 1:55. Watch until the end.)

Remember when we were worried that Spike couldn’t handle himself? We were fools. And remember how Juanita looked pregnant? Well, now we know where Asimov’s been hiding his stash. Spike gives chase, but it’s all for naught: the police are already in place high above the colony’s surface, ready to catch Asimov. Juanita shoots him, whispers a goodbye to Spike, and lets police bullets tear her apart.

Spike and Jet are right back where they started, in Fortune’s middle parts, just as screwed as usual with no bounty and no beef. As with exposition, Watanabe has little use for the traditional Try, Fail —-> Try, Succeed model. There’s a lot of failure, here. But somehow it doesn’t feel that way, because there are moments of quiet understanding, like when Jet lets his cigarette float across the low-gravity room so that Spike can take a hit. Beyond the sharing of that cigarette, nothing more needs to be said. The two men stare at the stars. Their dinner burns in the other room. They are alive. The story continues.

SEE YOU, SPACE COWBOY.

Cowboy Bebop Rewatch: index | next ›
38 comments
Jason Henninger
1. jasonhenninger
I could write, in mile-high letters, how much I love this show, and still feel I've sold it short. I love everything about it, seriously. It has no weakness.
Eugene Myers
2. ecmyers
I really need to re-watch this show. I love the way the series plays with different genres and tones from episode to episode. Some are flat-out humor, others are deep psychological horror, and all of them are brilliant.
René Walling
3. cybernetic_nomad
Aaargh! another rewatch of a series I love. And this one with no warning whatsoever, kind of like a Watanabe plot development.
Dayle McClintock
4. trinityvixen
Oh man, Tor's doing a rewatch the best series I've ever seen. Like, ever! I will read this rewatch with great interest /Palpatine impression.
Irene Gallo
5. Irene
hmm...I just ran out and bought season one of Avatar...maybe I bought the wrong series....
Caroline Kierstead
6. ctkierst
Irene @ 5: No, they're both quite good, just very different. Bebop is quite a bit shorter, though :)

I have to admit, though, my all-time favourite anime is Patlabor, but I can't imagine too many people have seen it. Ghost in the Shell is also good.
john massey
7. subwoofer
Yeah, I have this series on DVD in my collection but I am thinking if it is out on Blu-ray, I gotta upgrade. When I first came to this I thought it was another Macross. Then I came to my senses. I am an old sckool Shadowrunner so some of the themes here clicked for me.

And yes, stuff just falls from the sky with no heads up.

I loved the JKD shout out here too, Bruce is the man and he owned everybody who stepped onto a mat with him.

Beautiful show. I'll do some moonlighting here. Hopefully won't break any ground rules... unless some safety-for-all Samaritan comes along with a book of code.

Yay! Good times:)

Woof™.
Jessica Reisman
8. jwynne
Hurrah! Love the Cowboy Bebop; I will break out my DVDs.
- -
9. heresiarch
"There’s a lot of failure, here."

If I recall correctly, they collect one bounty in the entire series. And that's part of a quick intro action sequence.
Kate Nepveu
10. katenepveu
I wanted to like _Bebop_ but I had a hard time coping with the fact that I loathed two of the major characters, the wild jumps in tone, and the complete disconnects between the filler episodes and the backstory arc episodes. Also, if anyone was able to parse what was going on with Spike's backstory, well, I salute you.

OTOH I liked _Samurai Champloo_ very much. But I get the impression that it's not as, hmmm, prestigious? a series.
Andrew Willett
11. AndrewWillett
Those new to Yoko Kanno's music and those who totally love it -- which oughtta cover just about everybody, really -- will enjoy this short comic, which really describes the Cowboy Bebop music experience better than anything else I've ever seen. Please join Alternate Universe John Williams in... John and Yoko.
Angel Banchev
12. Tiranas
Shinichiro Watanabe is awesome at wath he does as a director. Cowboy Bebop is slightly better than Samurai Champloo in my opinion though, so maybe that explains why some people may think the latter a bit less prestigious. That said those two series is by far superior to at least 95 % of live-action american productions. And though that number may seen high, i`ve no doubt that a lot of people would agree with me on that. To quote Ms. Ashby :

Bebop has what most live-action SF television from English-speaking countries does not: a definite end date, a genuinely compelling story, great production value, interesting speculations on technology and a merciful lack of deus ex machina.


Also i see that the re-watch started with the first episode in the series, but may i sujest that the OVA is also included in it ? It is just as good as the regular episodes, and it has bits in it in the spirit of the series, but more so.

Beautifully directed (and drawn), good story, engaging characters, incredible soundtrack. That is what excellent TV should be. Right, people ?
goodfellow_puck
13. goodfellow_puck
I gotta say the same thing about that intro. Bebop was one of the first anime I watched in the 90s. The trailer for it was bizarre and creepy and totally NOT what the show was, but the MUSIC! Oh man, Tank! was fantastic. I bought it immediately, even though the trailer had me thinking I was crazy (seriously, they pulled the few freaky clips that existed and made it look like Akira or something). It has remained my top fav anime ever since. Nothing comes close.

@Irene Agreed with ctkierst--they are both extremely good shows. Avatar is my fav western show as Bebop is my fav eastern.
goodfellow_puck
14. Solidmercury
This article was the highlight of my day. I could reminisce unendingly about the magic of discovering Cowboy Bebop. It completely changed my perception of anime, and started an unhealthy collection of Yoko Kanno's music. For me, the show has been a major metric for any anime, and even western action and sci-fi shows, since.

Thank you Madeline. I'm pulling out the DVD's tonight.
April Moore
15. aprildmoore
@1 - Well said, sir. I can add nothing to that, so I'm glad you snagged the pole position in the comments. :-)

@10 - I like Samurai Champloo a lot, but in most ways I consider it a paler imitation of the fantastic Cowboy Bebop (of course, the music definitely plays a role in that - I much prefer jazz/blues and the way that music was featured as a critical piece of the narrative in Bebop was awesome....but I digress). Watanabe actually set out with Champloo to do something completely different from Bebop, but his partner in the effort -- I believe it was the producer? -- and various other factors kept herding him in a similar direction. One of the interior cases of the Champloo DVDs carries an interview with him that talks about it, so please check that out sometime - I am doing a poor job remembering the gist of it.

And also - if you haven't, check out Ghost in the Shell, another great anime series and with a very sci-fi angle!
Brit Mandelo
16. BritMandelo
I love this show so much it hurts. I totally rewatch it once a year, at least, and still cry at the end every time. I'm not ashamed of that at all. *g*
Patrick Garson
17. patrickg
Oh hell to the yes, I love this show, and everything about it. So excited to see someone of your calibre writing on it! :D

“Asteroid Blues” functions as a perfect introduction to the series as a whole, because it foreshadows the larger events that unfold across the entire narrative.

It really, really does, doesn't it? I remember the first time I watched this episode it kind of slid into the background in light of the subsequent wild directions the series would take, but really, it's all right here, and what it all comes back to at the end.

Also, seconding recommendations for Ghost in the Shell (series!! series!! The Oshii film/s are in my opinion, nowhere as good); the soundtrack for Ghost in the Shell (also by Kanno) is freaking sublime.
April Moore
18. aprildmoore
@17 - Yep, good catch, Patrickg. I should have mentioned the Ghost in the Shell soundtrack, too - very highly recommended. One of the 2nd Gig soundtrack CDs holds the unique honor of being the only CD my husband ever literally wore out! He played it so much the label bonded into the CD completely disappeared. I believe that was the one that has "Run Rabbit Junk" on it. Great track.

@11 - Thanks for the link, space cowboy! I'm totally sending that little gem slithering through the Interwebs. :-)
Kate Nepveu
19. katenepveu
aprildmoore @ #15, we Netflix'ed _Champloo_ and so I don't have DVDs on hand.

As for the rest, YMMV.
Madeline Ashby
20. MadelineAshby
Wow, this is great! I was a little nervous that this post would be greeted by a chorus of crickets, but thankfully I was wrong! Thanks for taking the time to comment. I'm really excited to be sharing this with you.

For those of you who are curious, I plan on including "Knockin' On Heaven's Door" in my re-watch. I also hope to re-watch "Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex." Both series, and probably "Solid State Society" as well. So, really, you'll probably be sick of me by the time this is all over.

As for the differences between "Bebop" and "Champloo," I find myself coming to them for different reasons. For me, "Bebop" tells a deeply human story that focuses partially on personal identity and the narratives we build around ourselves to re-enforce that identity. "Champloo" expands that focus, and discusses the narratives we build around national identity and history.

That, and the fights are just breathtakingly beautiful. That show had me from the moment Mugen stopped Jin's katana with his geta.
goodfellow_puck
22. TRobertson47
Great another kick-ass series doing a rewatch at Tor.com central.

Can you not give a poor guy a break and let him savour one series at a time?

'Avatar:TLAB', Firefly and now Cowboy Bebop.

You're running me ragged Tor.
Kate Nepveu
23. katenepveu
TRobertson47 @ #22, I'm kind of . . . not hoping, exactly, but anticipating that people will find the pace they've set themselves to be too difficult to keep up (*ahem*), and that things will stagger themselves a little bit naturally.
goodfellow_puck
24. Thrillsville
A quick question: Are you watching with the dub or the subtitles? I originally watched it with the subtitles but after seeing the movie in the theatre I'm considering watching it again with the dub. (Full disclosure, I work for a company that dubs a lot of anime so I am curious to check out other studios' work.)
Estara Swanberg
25. Estara
1st: Yay for excellent anime reviews and re-watches
2nd: Cowboy Bebop rules! So does Yoko Kanno in general!
Madeline Ashby
26. MadelineAshby
@Thrillsville: I plan on watching the dub. That's how I first watched it, and for me the voices of Wendy Lee, et al are the voices of the characters. I feel safe in saying that the "Bebop" dub is probably one of the best in the industry's history. You might feel differently, though. I recommend watching your favourite episode dubbed and seeing which cast you enjoy more.
goodfellow_puck
27. RickSinanju
Great series - I have the soundtrack on my iPod. Have the entire series and movie on DVD - watch it at least once a year! Kinda sorry to see the way it ended, though. I really liked the characters.
Steve Downey
28. sdowney
There's no Blu-Ray release but the Cowboy Bebop Remix release on DVD, with the sound in 5.1 Dolby and the video remastered is excellent.

I'm another one who keeps the soundtrack on my iPod, too. Tank! is an amazing piece of hard bop. And the soundtrack version has an extended bridge, too.

I remember the first time I saw Cowboy Bebop and the music started. I just stopped and sat down.
goodfellow_puck
29. cymon smith
I am a huge fan of Bebop, Yokko, and GITS. Bebop, for me, is by far the best. I gathered an ad hoc anime panal at 6:00 AM at DragaonCon to discuss these anime (including Black Lagoon). We'll... after an hour with 6 well versed individuals we all came to an agreement that there is nothing like Bebop which doesn't 1) have 5 kids saving the univese 2) has exquisite music and 3) has a story that delves into very well thought out characters (leaving the angst at home since that is well... best left at home) still leaving questions about what has happeneed, is happening and what is going to happen with those characters.

BAH!!! AND NO SPOILERS!
goodfellow_puck
30. Crowbabe
Awesome idea for a re~watch! cowboy Bebop is one of the tightest, well~designed anime series ever! I taped every episode, and it was worth the effort! Watching them again here will be a nice, long ride! Let's jam!
Chris Meadows
31. Robotech_Master
I find it interesting that Cowboy Bebop and The Last Airbender are getting rewatches at exactly the same time, given that BryKe acknowledged Cowboy Bebop as a major influence on The Last Airbender (and even threw in a few homages here and there).
goodfellow_puck
32. Thisaliasisnotinuse
One thing to say: you just have to watch the anime with the Japanese voices and the English subtitles. It is so much better that way in my opinion. Thank you Madeline Ashby for doing this and thank You Tor for knowing what truly deserves attention.
goodfellow_puck
33. Thrillsville
Okay, I just watched the first episode with the dub (having previously watched the series with the original Japanese and English subtitles). I like Spike's voice but I'm not convinced on Jet's. It's okay but I think the Japanese is more suitable. That being said I thought it was well done.

As I mentioned earlier I work in the dubbing industry. I know that when translating and recording for fit (or mouth-sync, of which the original has no regard for) some stuff is lost and some stuff is made better. For example, the trailer at the end of the episode I found very hard to read and follow in the subtitled version but I didn't like how the dub changes the distance from 3/4 mile to 1/2 mile from 1 kilometre to 800 metres in the subtitles (which seems more likely in an multi-national future). I think the subtitles are a direct translation so they sometimes read a little choppy and not as smoothly as the interpretation that the dub has to make it sound natural.

There are always preferences but I think the series is so good that either choice, original audio or dub, is both valid and enjoyable.
Robert Kehl
34. idleprimate
I love this show, and just bought the discs for my own rewatch. looking forward to more reviews
Roman Ensley
35. romanempire
I think the last time I watched this show all the way through was shortly after it came out so this is a welcome addition to the re-watches on Tor for me.
goodfellow_puck
36. Jennmonk
Years and tons of anime have not at all diminished my love of Bebop. I must rewatch this now!

Thank you for doing a rewatch. Loving your analysis so far.
goodfellow_puck
37. Serp
Great re-watch, I'm gonna keep reading. :) I only got into Bebop in the past month or so and I really wish I'd found it sooner, I kind of missed the bandwagon. It really changed my perception of anime though, I'm so used to shows featuring teenagers, samurai and robot girls. Not that I didn't like anime before, but I did find myself wondering whether that was all it was. I ran into Samurai Champloo before Bebop, which I also thoroughly enjoyed, although not as much. I think the ending was less satisfying than Bebop's. Anyway, I'm looking forward to reading the rest of your analyses!
goodfellow_puck
38. JaniceG
As it happens, my brother is a voice actor and one of his very good friends is the voice of Spike. (My brother did one of the voices in the Cowboy Bebop movie.) Nice to see good reviews for the dub!
goodfellow_puck
39. Alex Shmalex
love the show. love the article. you nailed it. keep it up space cowgirl.

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