bruce wrote:I laughed so hard I almost beshat myself.
Good but am I spoiled to say I was expecting more? There was more lag time between belly-laughs than I typically expect from these guys. Like the scene on the balcony right before the hot p-on-p. That was like ten minutes where they didn't even
attempt a joke until the very end. And the montage song was blatant self-plager... wait a minute, when the fuck did I become a South Park fan? This is unnacceptable.
Ice Cream Jonsey wrote:I caught an episode of Cowboy Bebop last night. I don't know why I like it.
It's the jazz, baby. While their handling of plot and character is less than stellar (though still above-average for subway-gropers), the nips who made Bebop and currently make Champloo have just mastered the art of pacing a scene. It's like drinking Amaretto: A little saccharine and you kind of feel like a pussy for liking it, but it goes down
so smooth. Just be careful, Bepop pretty steadily declines in quality over the course of its run as it slowly descends into horrible, half-sensible melodrama (really, the same can be said for most anime).
Worm wrote:Though he watched it all in one weekend, which I think just effects quality.
I don't know where you derived that theory from. Anyway, Champloo is (thus far) better than Bebob in that it's more violent and hasn't (thus far) sharply plummeted in quality towards the end but worse in that it tries almost too hard to be playful sometimes and the characters tend to behave kind of nonsensically, even on their own wacky, anime terms.
The whole premise is that these two swordsman who want to kill eachother have both vowed to be this girl's bodyguard until she finds this guy she's looking for. On at least two occasions the episodes have opened with the characters deciding, essentially out of the blue, to ditch the girl and go their seperate ways only to just as arbitrarily decide to come back and save her from whatever menace towards the end.
Debaser Fun Fax: A year ago when I had longer hair, I looked
precisely like Jin, the melancholy disgraced Samrurai who is one of Samurai Champloo's three main characters.