‘Cowboy bebop’ did it three years earlier and much better. But then I’m very partial to jazz and film noir. Then got remade by the same people much grittier as a period piece set in immediately post-feudal police state Japan.
Edit: in kind of the same way a lot of Kurosawa films got remade as westerns
Bebop is very different from Firefly imo. They’re both good, but I wouldn’t say to watch one over the other. I can’t directly compare them like that.
Bebop is smooth and classy, more focused on music and choreography. Firefly is way more grounded and physical; lots of greebled grimy tools, machinery, carts.
You can see a similar divide in the themes. Firefly is way more rural, frontier type western. They get rid of small-town despots and help trading outposts under siege, because they’re the only help around. Bebop is the end of the wild west: they all have stories about the real west, but that era is over. Cities are growing, the government starts playing a role, outlaws are on the run. The heroes are struggling to let go of the past and find their place in this new world.
I also want to shout out Outlaw Star, released in the shadow of Bebop. It’s not western at all, a bit messier in its theme, but still a lot of fun.
‘Cowboy bebop’ did it three years earlier and much better. But then I’m very partial to jazz and film noir. Then got remade by the same people much grittier as a period piece set in immediately post-feudal police state Japan.
Edit: in kind of the same way a lot of Kurosawa films got remade as westerns
Bebop is very different from Firefly imo. They’re both good, but I wouldn’t say to watch one over the other. I can’t directly compare them like that.
Bebop is smooth and classy, more focused on music and choreography. Firefly is way more grounded and physical; lots of greebled grimy tools, machinery, carts.
You can see a similar divide in the themes. Firefly is way more rural, frontier type western. They get rid of small-town despots and help trading outposts under siege, because they’re the only help around. Bebop is the end of the wild west: they all have stories about the real west, but that era is over. Cities are growing, the government starts playing a role, outlaws are on the run. The heroes are struggling to let go of the past and find their place in this new world.
I also want to shout out Outlaw Star, released in the shadow of Bebop. It’s not western at all, a bit messier in its theme, but still a lot of fun.
What’s the remade show? Samurai champloo?
Yep. Same characters, secondary characters shuffled slightly.