Cowboy Bebop - The Perfect Sessions (Limited Edition Complete Series Boxed Set) | 
| Director: Shinichiro Watanabe Actors: Aoi Tada, Gara Takashima, Norio Wakamoto, Miki Nagasawa, Tsutomu Tareki Studio: Bandai Category: DVD
List Price: $199.98 Buy New: $29.99 You Save: $169.99 (85%)
New (1) Used (6) from $29.99
Rating: 422 reviews Sales Rank: 11012
Format: Color, Ntsc, Subtitled Languages: English (Subtitled), English (Original Language), Japanese (Original Language) Rating: Unrated Region: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Number Of Discs: 6 Running Time: 650 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.2 Dimensions (in): 7.9 x 6.4 x 4.7
UPC: 669198129698 EAN: 0669198129698 ASIN: B00005QCW4
Release Date: November 20, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: Brand New, Factory Sealed. 3 DVD import Box Set. #1-26+Extras. English/Japanese Audio, English Subtitles. The entire uncut series. We ship FAST.
| |
| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com essential video Each of the snazzy 25-minute installments from the most popular Japanese animated TV series of 1998 is a satisfying adventure tale about a futuristic hipster bounty hunter. This is an elegant action-comedy anime, with smoothly integrated CGI space-flight elements, gorgeous graphics, blues harmonica and sax riffs on the soundtrack, and a no-sweat post-Tarantino attitude. Despite occasional eruptions of gun-fu Asian-action violence, and some intimations of heavy-duty drug use (in the first of 26 episodes, one especially noxious narcotic is administered as an aerosol spray straight onto the user's eyeballs), the tone is surprisingly convivial. None of the generic tough elements are grim or mean-spirited. Lanky antihero Spike Spiegel is a planet-hopping freelance hunter with an ex-cop sidekick named Jet, a loopy fellow hunter named Faye, a teenage computer hack, and a genetically enhanced Welsh corgi assistant in tow. The emphasis is on clever twists of plot in an episodic short-story format with as many wisecracks as punches being thrown. --David Chute
Description Meet Spike and Jet, a drifter and a retired cyborg cop. They've formed a partnership in a bounty hunting enterprise that specializes in adventure and cash. Using an old converted fishing ship called the Bebop, with the help of the intelligent data dog, Ein, the mysterious and vexing femme fatale, Faye Valentine, and Ed, the genius hacker -- Spike and Jet scour the galaxy to clean up space, one bounty at a time. * Considered one of the best anime of all time in both Japan AND the United States. * Cowboy Bebop is now available as a special DVD collection box set that contains all six DVD's from Cowboy Bebop packaged with the Cowboy Bebop Original Soundtrack CD in a collectors box.
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 417 more reviews...
Limited Sessions March 11, 2004 E. Kim (Austin, TX USA) 438 out of 469 found this review helpful
Just a side note: This item is a limited edition. When it hit the shelves, you could buy it for about $120. It came with 6 dvds, a special box, a soundtrack, and all of them were numbered. Since they were limited, Bandai stopped making them a long time ago. Unfortunately, if you're a fan of the series and don't own the Perfect Session box set, you're stuck with buying them individually if you want a NTSC region 1 version that has good quality video. You will find two different price range sets in the "New and Used" section. The first range from about $200-$300, this is someone or some store that has an actual Perfect session box set and since it's now a rarity, has raised the price. The other is a 3-disc "bootleg" and the price usually ranges $30-$60. The video quality is horrible and unless you just want a copy of the series and don't mind the poor quality, I really wouldn't reccomend it. I know the price tag is very appealing, but if your looking for a quality copy, you're going to have to buy a Bandai version, either by spinging the money for the Perfect session or by purchasing them individually.
The Greatest October 23, 2001 114 out of 123 found this review helpful
I have never written a review before, nor do I plan to often in the future, but I felt that I ought to give it a shot here. I'll leave out a lot of preliminary posturing and tell you straight up. As a long-time anime fan who has seen it all, from two-bit pulp series like Pokemon and Dragonball to art-house favorites like Akira and Princess Mononoke, I can say that Cowboy Bebop is, hands down, the finest anime ever produced for the small screen. As with all creative works that are based on words (or a combination of words and images) the most important thing in a television series, be it anime or otherwise, is the writing. Needless to say, the writing in this series (Keiko Nobumoto receives the "Screenplay" credit, which I can only assume means that she was the head writer) is utterly fantastic and the translators have done a great job of conveying the real meaning and feel of the Japanese dialogue in English, rather than just translating word for word [Note: this applies to the subtitles, I NEVER watch dubbing; and yes, I do speak Japanese]. The individual episodic plots are well constructed and there is always the spectre of the overarching "uber-plot" mysteriously tantalizing you in the background. The characters are well-realized, interesting and three-dimensional, with the notable exception of Ed, the hacker, whose annoying presence is a result of the production company's desire to pander to a particular demographic of Japanese viewer. Fortunately, this character is not much used and the other three, Spike, Faye and Jet, are so cool and so interesting that the series could consist solely of the three of them sitting around, playing Mah Jongg and there would still be enough sexual tension and biting wit to keep it enthralling. The show also has a great deal of variety in the flavor and character of its episodes, demonstrating the writers' versatility. Some installments are funny, others action-packed and others quietly introspective, or a combination thereof. The sci-fi (the anime takes place in a world that is both futuristic and retro) is very tight, and one of the show's real strengths is the realization of the world it takes place in. All the little details are in place and watching the show really can transport you. Aside from the writing, the direction and overall look of Cowboy Bebop are beautiful and utterly cool. If you are at all a fan of jazz music or the jazz era in general, you'll love the color scheme, the inking and the lines. Director Shinichiro Watanabe does a fantastic job of creating the feel of coolness from days gone by while keeping you all the while, decidedly in the future. He plays with angles, rapid cuts, stills with voiceover, extreme close-ups and many other techniques, some of which can only be accomplished in an animated medium. He also makes great use of computer graphics, which not only helps bolster the futuristic feel, but gives Cowboy Bebop access to effects that few other animes have. All in all, the direction and production values, from the opening credits on, is totally top-drawer. It's not surprise that Cowboy Bebop was one of the more expensive anime series ever produced. As for the music, what can I say? It features the compositions of perhaps the most-talented, versatile and interesting composer in Japanese show-business and certainly the greatest composer of music for animes alive today: Yoko Kanno. Her score to Cowboy Bebop takes all the best elements of jazz, pops, rock, classical and blues and wraps it all up in a score so wonderful that it is impossible that any TV series anywhere ever had a better one. If you're interested in the feel of the series, but don't want to commit to a DVD, try one of the OST Albums and I guarantee you'll pick up the DVD the next day. I could go on, I could talk about the series itself, let slip some small details or give you a taste of the show's dynamic, but I think I've said enough. This is one of the few animes that I have ever seen that really is cool, fun and never, ever insults your intelligence. If more animes were like this our dates would perhaps not walk out on us upon the mention of our membership in the anime club. This is the epitome, the entelechy, the exegesis of all that is good about anime. Get it. One final thing. ... likes to put what other people have bought as a recommendation underneath a product description, but this really does not provide any kind of meaningful help in most cases. Therefore, if you like(d) Cowboy Bebop I recommend the following: 1. Macross Plus: The Movie - Done by largely the same team as Bebop, utterly brilliant mecha series, the best of the Macross shows. (Also available as a 4 part mini-series) 2. Trigun - Fun anime series that may have been the inspiration for The Matrix. Only slightly less engrossing or cool as Bebop, it has some great characters and develops them to a great degree. 3. Gasaraki - Utterly fantastic political/fantasy/sci-fi drama. One of the best plots ever in an anime. A slow starter, but worth the wait. Also uses CGI, great production values. 4. Outlaw Star - A very poor man's Bebop. Nowhere near the production values or writing quality, but has it's moments and can be very funny. Fun if you don't expect too much.
Not Really a "boxed set" December 24, 2002 48 out of 54 found this review helpful
Everyone knows that Cowboy Bebop is good, and that if you don't own it already, you better get off your ... and buy the DVD's. That's a given. I just wanted to let people know that this "boxed set" is really just all 6 individual DVD's bundled together. Nothing new...no fancy box...no extras. If you missed the real boxed set or have just been holding out for the discs, you should pick this set up. ...you're getting a very good deal and it's worth the investment.
|
|
|