Cowboy
Bebop,
Knockin'
on Heaven's Door (2003)
A common criticism of theatrical adaptations
of animated TV series is that they are mere
"extended episodes". Audiences
do not go into the theater wanting more
of the same; they expect something bigger,
better. Sometimes the desire is fulfilled
(End of Evangelion, Tenchi Muyo in Love),
more often it is not (Rurouni Kenshin, Dragonball
Z). Then there's Cowboy Bebop. Watching
Cowboy Bebop is like hanging out with old
friends, viewers watch not for the standard
pulp-fiction plots but just to see what
Spike and the crew are up to this week.
You're guaranteed a lot of action, a laugh
or two, and a real good time. It works so
well, it leaves you wanting more....of the
same. Knockin' on Heaven's Door is not bigger
or better than the series it's based on.
It's a mere "extended episode."
And that's exactly as it should be.
One of the most anticipated anime movies
of recent years, "Heaven's Door"
will please veteran fans of Cowboy Bebop
and newcomers alike. No startling revelations
about Faye's past are revealed, and Vicious
and Julia are brought up only in a passing
reference. Taking place in-between episodes
22 and 23 of the TV series, the movie presents
"just another case" for the Bebop
crew, albeit with all the action and panache
that made "just another case"
so much fun on the show. There is some foreshadowing
of events from the end of the TV series,
but beyond that nothing that would go over
the head of someone unfamiliar with what
has gone before. This is a great movie for
Bebop fans to show their uninitiated friends
so they can finally see what all the fuss
is about.
In typical Bebop style, the story is very
pedestrian but very well told. Crazed bio-terrorist
Vincent feels he is a lost soul who has
already "died", and that if he
kills everyone else he might speed along
Judgment Day. Spike, knowing what it feels
like to "have died once", senses
a kindred spirit and puts forth an extra
effort to subdue him. He's aided by his
usual crew of weirdos as well as a new character
named Electra, who is after Vincent for
reasons both professional and personal.
Like the best episodes of the television
series, "Heaven’s Door"
finds ample room for quiet, introspective
moments and laugh-out-loud humor amidst
various action sequences, making for a thoroughly
entertaining joyride of a movie.
The animation in Cowboy Bebop has always
been of very high quality, so the animators
had little to improve upon in bringing Bebop
to the big screen. Still, they manage to
outdo themselves in a few select scenes.
Faye's Zipcraft and Spike's Swordfish maneuver
thorough the Martian cityscapes with a complex
grace, and Spike's final mano-a-mano bout
with Vincent has a furious zest which surpasses
the excellently-animated fights against
Andy and Vicious in the television show.
The voice actors for the new characters
are all capable, and of course the original
cast is back for the movie. One of the unique
things about Cowboy Bebop as far as American
audiences are concerned is that the English
cast is actually superior to the Japanese
originals. People only familiar with the
dubbed version will likely find Spike's
voice too deep, Faye's too nasal, and Ed's
doubly annoying. Columbia-Tristar has just
recently announced it has snatched the license
for this film out from under Bandai's nose;
it would be in their interest to procure
Bandai's vocal cast for Bebop as well.
Of course one can't talk about Cowboy Bebop
without mentioning the music, and like the
TV series the music in "Knockin' on
Heaven's Door" is as important an element
as the story or characters. Yoko Kanno,
the Mozart of Anime, returns to the Bebop
universe with her usual Oscar-worthy compositions.
The best piece is the retro-70s "What
Planet is this?", and it accompanies
the best scene in the film, a tour-de-force
of animation in which Spike, in the Swordfish,
takes on a squadron of military fighter
planes ("I don't have time to play
with you guys!" he casually remarks).
Other highlights include the hard-rock "Pushing
the Sky" and the blues-choir "Gotta
Knock a Little Harder" which closes
the film. In fact, the music of Cowboy Bebop
has proven so popular that the release of
the movie was accompanied by a two-disc
soundtrack and even a concert of Bebop tunes
performed by Kanno and her band, The Seat
Belts.
The only problem to be found with this
movie is that it has trouble fitting all
the Bebop cast into the story. Faye is quickly
captured and spends the bulk of the movie
handcuffed on the floor. Ed and Ein are
given a small bit of business in tracking
down one of Vincent's henchmen in a short
scene reminiscent of the "Mushroom
Samba" episode of the TV series. Jet
does little more than sit at home and worry
about what everyone else is doing. Only
Spike is crucial to the main thrust of the
story, and at times it seems the movie could
get along fine without even him. The true
main characters of "Heaven's Door"
are the villain, Vincent, and Electra, the
mysterious agent who teams with Spike to
catch him. It's not the first time the Bebop
cast had relinquished center stage to guest
stars; it just seems odd that they would
do so in their first (and probably only)
movie.
All in all, Cowboy Bebop: Knockin' on Heaven's
Door has the feeling of an encore performance
by a talented and popular acting troupe.
Bebop was a series that probably could have
run for another full season, and Heaven's
Door provides us one last visit with Spike
and company. It's nice to see things haven't
changed.