Spirited Away Wins Award; Cowboy Bebop Opening Soon
May Kasahara writes "Hayao Miyazaki's Spirited Away just won the Best Animated Feature award from the Los Angeles Film Critics Association. Note that last year's winner in this category was Shrek, which then went on to win the Best Animated Feature Oscar. The article says it's still too soon to detect a pattern, but IMHO, Spirited Away is the best film among this year's eligible Oscar selections, and at any rate, it's good karma :)" And rnb writes "I'm not sure when the listing was created, and unfortunately, I don't have much more information, but imdb has a January 2003 release date for the Cowboy Bebop: Knocking On Heavens Door. Yahoo also has a listing that seems to indicate this limited release may only be in LA and NY, but I'm still hoping to get it in at least one theater here in Philadelphia."
A very well written review.
Actually, TV Tokyo determined that the series was, as a whole, too violent to air entirely, and picked 12 episodes to show. WOWOW later picked it up and aired all of it.
I have a big node on Everything2 under Cowboy Bebop all about that.
But generally, even for a TV series/OAV, the budget for the show was incredibly high, and it paid of well for Sunrise.
Oh, and for fans of the music, a new show called "Wolf Rain" is coming, with Yoko Kanno and the Seatbelts at the helm of the soundtrack.
They all made it.
At least, the second run through. The first time at least two episodes were skipped, namely:
Sympathy for the Devil
Cowboy Funk
If any others were dropped, I don't know because I didn't watch more than the first few. I had bought the dvds almost a year earlier and prefer subs, anyways.
I could be completely off base (which happens frequently) but isnt disney distributing this movie?
So far, it's won every animation award offered for this year.
I don't know that it'll win the Oscar, but it's certainly a lock to be a nominee.
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Funny how you refer to Akira (This one is borderline), GitS (released in the mid 90's) and VHD: Bloodlust (released a coupe years ago!) as "classics."
Clearly, you my friend, have no idea what the classics truly are.
Most "anime" fans don't even know what the classics are. Try GIANT ROBO, BUBBLEGUM CRISIS, RUPAN SANSEI (or "Lupin," if you prefer), ARCADIA OF MY YOUTH (now THERE's a classic), and pretty much anything Matsumoto ever put out. And then there's the usual dose of MACROSS, and LEGEND OF GALACTIC HEROES.
Ever heard of Nausicaa: Valley of the Wind?
Of course, you probably don't even know half of those shows exist. Because judging from your obviously incorrect appraisal of GitS, VHD: Bloodlust and Akira as "classics," you have no idea what you're talking about.
Pretentious tripe (GitS/Akira) and otherwise average offerings (VHD: Bloodlust) do NOT equal classics.
Mr. Miyazaki has a nice explanation. It's basically a story about keeping in touch with one's past, and it's nicely told IMHO.
Ita erat quando hic adveni.
Not really.
It was created for the explicit purpose of creating the music for Bebop, and was done so months before production of the animation had even begun.
The Seatbelts, however, exist beyond Bebop. I believe they _did_ do an album after Bebop, but information on that is sparse.
Regardless, they are not solely a part of Bebop and will be returning to do Wolf Rain.
And I'm going to burn my f#$%@ comma key off I swear...
For those of you in the Southwestern Ontario region, the annual Waterloo Festival for Animated Cinema has titles like ones listed, or rather had in this specific instance.
Editor Emeritus and Senior Writer, TeleRead.org