"Samurai Champloo" may not have the same ring to it as "Cowboy Bebop,"
yet it is a title that has a similar function: to illustrate a
combination of multicultural pulp fiction sensibility. Where Cowboy
Bebop was a past + future fusion of jazz, rock, and blues, spaghetti
western, kung fu, and noir cinema genres, and a setting equating outer
space to the great frontier, Samurai Champloo is a more wildly
anachronistic mélange of Edo-period history and contemporary hip-hop and
bohemian culture. "Champloo" itself comes from the word "chanpurū,"
Okinawan for "something mixed," and a source of Okinawa's pride in
multicultural acceptance. Cowboy Bebop
was a trend-setting marriage of anime traditions and Tarantino-inspired
cultural hodgepodge — it could be said that Pulp Fiction influenced
Cowboy Bebop as much as Cowboy Bebop influenced Kill Bill — and Samurai
Champloo continues in this meta style, taking it even further.
Of course, Cowboy Bebop was not Shinichiro Watanabe's first foray into
resonant crossover in anime: Macross Plus was a monolithic amalgamation
of Top Gun's hot-headed romantic drama and sci-fi tropes including a
pop-idol hologram version of 2001: A Space Odyssey's HAL, in turn
influencing the famous cyberpunk writer William Gibson to write Idoru, a
novel about a Japanese virtual idol and her marriage to a real-life
rock star. Of course, all of this was before the invention of the
Vocaloid, though I suppose the future imagined by Watanabe and Gibson
was, in a way, not so far off.
Anyhow, now that I've finished my little history lesson — which I feel
is relevant, as having such a perspective may deepen your enjoyment of
Samurai Champloo as much as it did for me — let's continue on to the
review. In light of all the prescient futurism found in Watanabe's
other works, it's rather interesting that he decided to shift his focus
to the past and present. Of course, the world's future is always in its
past... and what we have here is, in a nutshell, Edo-period Japan: the
remix. Baseball, tagging/graffiti, Van Gogh, zombies, and Catholicism
are tossed into the "chanpurū" with a whole lot of revised Japanese
pseudo-history. As such the medley of influences and tangential
tale-spinning occasionally smacks of filler, but one would do well to
understand that this show is simply all /about/ the filler — and this is
all for the better, because Samurai Champloo is at its freshest and
most hilarious when it's veering off the rails. It even has the single
most entertaining recap episode I've ever seen. Even with all this
episodic improv, Fuu's journey in search of a "samurai who smells like
sunflowers" provides a compelling core to the story, much like a steady
hip-hop beat giving structure to the mix of samples and freestyle
verses. Her ronin traveling companions Mugen and Jin mingle like oil
and water, and there we have the perfect cast for hilarity and drama.
Samurai Champloo is one good-looking show, with its thick linework
giving an impression of manga blended with graffiti style. One episode
even takes a quick trip into the psychedelic, with a sudden burst of
colorful hallucination, Mind Game style — courtesy of episode key
animator Masaaki Yuasa, of course. A wide variety of such notable
animators were brought on board and thus the style occasionally varies
slightly from episode to episode or even scene to scene, but it's always
pleasing and completely in tune with the show's theme. Rural Japan has
never looked so urban; almost any given scene in Samurai Champloo would
be right at home spray-painted on the side of a city building or
underpass.
The music, likewise, blends hip-hop, rhythm & blues, and traditional
Japanese shamisen. Music often plays second fiddle to the look and
quality of the animation when it comes to my enjoyment of anime, but in
some cases it becomes just as important. This is one such anime, where
the music contributes so greatly to the feel of it that it defines it
and sets it apart from other anime — much like the soundtrack by Yoko
Kanno and the Seatbelts did for Cowboy Bebop. It's also worth
mentioning that rap and beatboxing sometimes enter the dialogue, and
it's always amusing. Admittedly, most younger people these days are far
more familiar with hip-hop than they are with the jazz, blues, and big
band genres; nonetheless, in the realm of anime this feels a bit
groundbreaking, especially with the theme songs featuring Japanese rap
lyrics. The world is getting bigger and smaller every day.
Samurai Champloo is a show for everyone. Plenty of great sword-slashing
action, clever comedy, and a good share of moments that will tug at
your heartstrings — often all at once. If you enjoy anime, this is one
you can't miss.
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