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Samurai Champloo: The Complete Series [Blu-ray]
Availability: In Stock
Price:
$79.98 $41.45*
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| Part No: | B002KYIAKG |
| Manufacturer: | Funimation Prod |
| MFG Part: | FMABRGN08655 |
| Customer Rating: | 4.0 / 5.0 |
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Studio: Funimation Prod Inc Release Date: 12/15/2009 Run time: 625 minutes
Shinichiro Watanabe's film noir-ish sci-fi adventure Cowboy Bebop set a new standard for cool in anime in 1998, and Samurai Champloo, an edgy mix of Edo-era martial arts and hip-hop irreverence, is a worthy follow-up. A string of coincidences brings together three misfits in a two-bit tea house: Mugen, a rebellious vagabond; Jin, a taciturn ronin; and Fuu, a nutty waitress. The sardonic Mugen lacks the polish that distinguishes a classic martial artist--he uses break dance spins and flips against his foes. Jin moves with a polish that approaches iciness: When he unsheathes his sword, he becomes a lethal work of art in motion. Fuu forces Jin and Mugen to help her find a mysterious samurai "who smells of sun flowers." As the ill-assorted trio wanders towards Nagasaki, Watanabe treats the audiences to a string of outrageous, anachronistic adventures. In Episode 18, Mugen belatedly learns to read at a smackdown elementary school, while Jin tries to settle the rivalry between the heirs to the dojo of his former sensei. The seemingly unrelated storylines collide in a no-holds-barred graffiti contest featuring Tokugawa rap lyrics, ink-brush tagging, Hiroshima homeboys, and a caricature of Andy Warhol. But Watanabe reveals the hidden significance of these nutty interludes when he brings his picaresque adventure-comedy to a close. Like Cowboy Bebop, Samurai Champloo leaves the viewer wanting more. (Rated 16 and older: violence, violence against women, profanity, brief nudity, sexual situations, alcohol and tobacco use) --Charles Solomon
| One of the best series out there | 2010-07-27 | 5 / 5 |
| As a relatively hard core Anime fan, Samurai Champloo really does it for me. Anyone who is a fan of Cowboy Bebop, Samurai Champloo was directed by the same man, Shinichiro Watanabe, and you can definitely see the similarities.
Champloo draws a lot on the musical aspect of the underground hip hop scene and break style dancing, just as Bebop was influenced by the jazzy blues. It brings a lot of humor into play, slapstick and tasteful, so there is plenty to offer up a laugh or two the whole series long. I also have to gush about the characters in this series, cause there is just too much good stuff going on with them not to mention it. The dynamics between Jin, Mugen and Fuu offer up some quality entertainment and touching human relationships. I love them to death.
Also, just throwing out there, Samurai Champloo is one of the few Anime series out there in which an actual GOOD English dub was made. Champloo is enjoyable to watch whether you're in the mood to listen to the talented English voice cast or flip on the subtitles and enjoy the native Japanese speakers, and that is a huge selling point in my opinion. |
| Had a great time watching this.. | 2010-07-14 | 5 / 5 |
| | Being a big fan of Cowboy Beebop , i was eager to discover what the people of that series could bring to the table And the answer is amazing story telling and pack of fun , like beebop this series has great replay value. Also the blu-ray version is priced a couples dollar higher than the DVD . Highly recommended for anime fans.. |
| The Best Of It's Kind... | 2010-06-18 | 5 / 5 |
| | Samurai Champloo is arguably the best samurai based anime ever made. Directed by ShinichirĂ´ Watanabe, the genious behind anime greats like Cowboy Bebop and the Animatrix, Samurai Champloo is sure to take you on an action packed ride! I first witnessed this anime at the age of nine, when it was aired on Cartoon Networks Adult Swim block, and I instantly fell in love with it. The soundtrack, the animation, the voice acting, everything was perfect to the point that I was over influenced by the anime. I used to record each episode on a VHS tape, and watch them over and over again. But now, almost seven years later, my love for Samurai Champloo hasn't changed a bit, and I decided to buy Samurai Champloo The Complete Series on Blu Ray. The box and cases are amazing, with glossy art, and stylistic design. The discs also resemble old records, with different logo art in the middle of each disc. All of it was perfect, but the real suprise, was when I inserted the disc, and pressed play. The picture was completley stunning!! I have never seen anything like it! It's like watching the series for the very first time. Everyhting is so clear and vivid, its mind bogling especially at 1080p!! Now, I can't compare it with the picture of the DVD box set, which I do not own, but I know that the DVD doesn't show nearly as good as this. The audio is also in dolby 5.1 TrueHD, so everything sounds fantastic! My surround sound speakers have taken a beating from the opening song, hip-hop beats that play during the episodes, and the constant sword clanging, that goes on in every single episode. Anyone debating on rather they should buy this or the DVD, I strongly recommend the Blu Ray, just to keep up. After all, Blu Ray is the future my freind, don't get left behind! Anyways, Samurai Champloo The Complete Sereis Blu Ray gets a full 5/5 from me, and I will be buying more Blu Ray's in the future. Peace. |
| Great Show in HD | 2010-05-04 | 5 / 5 |
| | This is one of the best anime's ever made. It is eclipsed only by Cowboy Bebop. I had been wanting to get it on DVD for a while, and recently got a Blue Ray player. Saw this for a great price and could not pass it up. If you are a fan you know this show is worth getting on Blue Ray. If you have never seen it before, do yourself a favor and pick it up and join the search for the samurai that smells of sunflowers. |
| Samurai Champloo Blu Ray Collection | 2010-03-22 | 3 / 5 |
| Good series. Crisp introduction by Funimation for the blu ray release. Stories are intact, uncensored, and are episodic in format. Music is intact, Nujabes whom isn't with us anymore did a great deal of the soundtrack. Layered with hip hop ambient texture, wandering samurai vibe, and a touch classical with a major hint of modernism, is clever. The show produced in 2004 released dually in both Japan and the United States. Geneon released these separate singles, which I didn't get to complete because Geneon and the anime industry collapsed. 2010 finally brings these three discs, sheathed inside 3 plastic bays, housed within a cardboard box.
Screen size for optimum viewing is 32 inch LCD. Anything larger one could start to have issues with blurring, anti aliasing, and screen artifacts. Not sure about the DVD release, but upscale for High Definition is nice, and I hope Funimation figures out how to properly address the blu ray technology encoding process. Problem with blu ray titles with older works is scaling, and the process of which they were made with.
Otherwise if your a fan of Cowboy Bebop, episodic framework, and crazy hip hop house ambient music, this set is a must.
Thanks for reading.
B. |
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