This looks perfect.
Cowboy from being bounty hunters and outlaws and so on Bebop for jazz which gives you the “noir” I suppose. I don’t know if that’s the actual reason for the name but close enough. It has some martial arts, some comedy, some outlandish. Worth a spin I’d say. The anime is on Netflix, give it a spin.I have no idea what this is I just stumbled across it randomly. The name sounds Space Western, but the trailer seems like space noir that's also silly?
Ed doesn't appear until a fair way into the anime, of course. She's definitely in this adaptation - I think I spotted a picture of her in one of the publicity stills - not sure though.OK, that trailer is a way better presentation then the last one. That said . . . I don't know why exactly but it's still just not doing it for me. In theory they're hitting most of the right notes, but there's something about it that to me just feels stilted, almost stiff. Like they're trying to go for a hyper-stylised Edgar Wright type of thing (which is clearly the right way to go), but the elements just aren't meshing smoothly.
Who knows, maybe it's fine and I'm just bitter about the lack of Ed?![]()
Holy crap, that's awesome! I'm gonna watch both versions.Just for fun here’s the trailer dubbed in Japanese.
EDIT: Some of the translated comments seem to suggest this may be the same voice actors from the anime which would be interesting. Maybe I need to check out those subtitled anime as I was saying.
EDIT2: https://collider.com/cowboy-bebop-anime-cast-dubbing-live-action-series-netflix/
There's also the acceleration vector under thrust to take into consideration. Designing the plumbing for the ship's head must have been ingenious.Ok, so I'm rewatching the anime since Netflix added it in preparation for this.
And every time I watch this show (which is excellent), I have the same question. The Bebop uses a centrifuge drum to simulate gravity while flying in space. You can see one section of the outside of the ship rotating, and several times during the course of the series we visit the collar hallway where the drum meets the static portion of the ship and see the characters move through it or walk along it.
But it's also designed to land on planetary bodies. I mean, it's half fishing trawler, for heaven's sake. And we see it land more than once. But, how the heck do the rooms in the drum handle planetary gravity? During rotation, "down" would always be out towards the skin of the ship. So when you hit planar gravity half the rooms should be wildly skewed or outright upside down. Do the rooms pivot independently to account for the new "down?" How do they handle the transition? I have questions.
Spike Spiegel is more a poacher turned gamekeeper as the trailer implies.So that trailer gave me a better sense of the show - Veteran bounty hunter comes out of retirement under a new name and teams up with other bounty hunters?
Ok, so I'm rewatching the anime since Netflix added it in preparation for this.
And every time I watch this show (which is excellent), I have the same question. The Bebop uses a centrifuge drum to simulate gravity while flying in space. You can see one section of the outside of the ship rotating, and several times during the course of the series we visit the collar hallway where the drum meets the static portion of the ship and see the characters move through it or walk along it.
But it's also designed to land on planetary bodies. I mean, it's half fishing trawler, for heaven's sake. And we see it land more than once. But, how the heck do the rooms in the drum handle planetary gravity? During rotation, "down" would always be out towards the skin of the ship. So when you hit planar gravity half the rooms should be wildly skewed or outright upside down. Do the rooms pivot independently to account for the new "down?" How do they handle the transition? I have questions.
I have no idea what this is I just stumbled across it randomly. The name sounds Space Western, but the trailer seems like space noir that's also silly?
EDIT: Some of the translated comments seem to suggest this may be the same voice actors from the anime which would be interesting.
Maybe I need to check out those subtitled anime as I was saying.
So that trailer gave me a better sense of the show - Veteran bounty hunter comes out of retirement under a new name and teams up with other bounty hunters?
Yeah. For me as a hard-SF guy, CB's treatment of shipboard gravity is infuriatingly inconsistent and illogical. I can live with such things in live action, but it's frustrating to see animated shows failing to take advantage of the potential of the medium to get low and microgravity correct.
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