IMDb >
"Samurai champloo" (2004)
Watch It
Adquirir en Amazon
Rent it at
blockbuster.com
Discutir en los foros More at IMDb Pro Add to My Movies Update Data
blockbuster.com
BETA
Discutir en los foros More at IMDb Pro Add to My Movies Update Data
Enlaces
Principales Enlaces
trailers and videosreparto y equipo completostrivialidadesofficial sitesfrases célebresRevisión
información principalinformación combinadareparto y equipo completoscréditos de compañíasLista de episodiosreparto de episodioscalificación de episodios...por clasificación... por votostv schedulePremios y críticas
comentarios de los usuarioscríticas externascríticas de grupos de usuariosawardsCalificacionesrecomendacionesforoArgumento y citas
argumentopalabras clave del argumentosinopsis Amazon.comfrases célebresCosas divertidas
trivialidadespifiastemas musicalescréditos extravagantesotras versionesenlaces entre películaspreguntas frecuentesOtro tipo de información
enlaces a productostaquilla/negociofechas de estrenolugares de rodajeespecificaciones técnicasLaserdiscDVDlecturas relacionadasNoticieroMaterial promocional
frases comerciales trailers and videos carteles y enlaces photo galleryEnlaces externos
enlaces a cinesofficial sitesmisceláneosfotografíassound clipsvideo clips"Samurai champloo" (2004) Más información en IMDbPro »Series de televisión 2004-2005
| Fotos (ver todos los 11 | slideshow) | Videos |
Revisión
Calificación de los usuarios:
Fecha de Lanzamiento:
11 enero 2005 (USA) másFrase comercial:
Death, betrayal, and... hip hop!Plot:
Fuu, a waitress who works in a teahouse, rescues two master swordsmen, Mugen and Jin, from their execution to help her find the "samurai who smells of sunflowers."Comentarios de los usuarios:
Kickass anime neoclassic másReparto
(Resumen del Reparto de la Serie - 6 de 41)| Kazuya Nakai | ... | Mugen (26 episodios, 2004-2005) | |
| Ginpei Sato | ... | Jin (26 episodios, 2004-2005) | |
| Ayako Kawasumi | ... | Fuu (26 episodios, 2004-2005) | |
| Steve Blum | ... | Mugen (26 episodios, 2004-2005) | |
| Kirk Thornton | ... | Jin (26 episodios, 2004-2005) | |
| Kari Wahlgren | ... | Fuu (26 episodios, 2004-2005) |
Más detalles
Duración:
Japan:23 min | Japan:30 minPaís:
JapanColor:
ColorRelación de Aspecto:
1.78 : 1 másSonido:
StereoCosas divertidas
Trivialidades:
The series was only allowed to be aired past 12:00 am in Japan for the network deemed it too graphic for prime time television. másCitas:
Fuu: [Mugen and Jinn are about to fight] Alright, enough you two! You two made me a promise. You haven't forgotten, have you? Until we find "the Samurai who smells of Sunflowers", you two are not allowed to kill each other!Mugen: Oh yeah, this smelly guy, I been meaning to ask ya about that.
Fuu: Huh?
Jin: Who is this "Samurai who smells of Sunflowers"?
Mugen: And what the hell is a sunflower anyway?
Jin: You don't know?
Fuu: It's a flower!
Mugen: So, what do they *smell* like?
Jin: [Both turn toward Fuu] Do you have any other leads?
Mugen: Like a picture or something?
[...]
más
Banda de Sonido:
Pekambe Uk máspreguntas frecuentes
The FAQ is empty.más
más
Foros
Discutir película con otros usuarios en Foro de IMDb para "Samurai champloo" (2004) másRecomendaciones
Si disfrutó este título, nuestra base de datos también recomienda:
Mostrar más recomendaciones
|
|
|
|
|
| "Afro Samurai" | "Gantz" | "Ikki tôsen" | "Kaubôi bibappu" | "Girls Bravo" |
|
IMDb Calificación de los usuarios:
|
IMDb Calificación de los usuarios:
|
IMDb Calificación de los usuarios:
|
IMDb Calificación de los usuarios:
|
IMDb Calificación de los usuarios:
|
Enlaces Relacionados
| Guía del episodio | Reparto y Personal Completos | Créditos de la compañía |
| Críticas externas | Sección de TV de IMDb | IMDb Animación section |
| IMDb Japan section | Add this title to MyMovies |













With 1998's "Cowboy Bebop", one of the most acclaimed anime TV series ever (go read the comments index for it here on IMDb if you don't believe me!), Shinichiro Watanabe became a creative force to watch out for. The innovative energy, drama and beauty of "Bebop" are carried forward in his second original series, "Samurai Champloo". Fans have been quick to look for similarities between "Bebop" and "Champloo" (even the titles have clear parallels), and it's true there are some: the assembly-of-rootless-loners cast of characters, the dramatic and cinematic visual style, and especially the importance and integration of music into the storytelling mix--in SC's case, everything from hip-hop beatboxing to Ainu and Okinawan folksong. But "Champloo"'s differences from "Bebop" are much more interesting than its likenesses. "Bebop" is drenched in melancholy and regret, dreams of the lost past and the future that couldn't be. "Champloo" is all about facing the future, the wave of change, the onrush of history that can't be stopped, and how three kids from widely diverse backgrounds--not even friends when they set out-- find themselves right on the crest of that wave. We're in Edo Period Japan; since 1638 the Tokugawa Shogunate has banned contact with all countries except China and Japan, a ban that lasted two centuries. The outside world can't be kept outside forever. Even the long-respected samurai class is losing its power, and there's restlessness in the land plus accompanying pressure from the Shogunate on all sides. Through this uneasy landscape (rendered in lushly beautiful watercolors that might remind you of Miyazaki) wander our cast of characters: outlaw ronin Jin, a gifted swordsman, stoic, disciplined and heartbreakingly gorgeous, devoted to the bushido code but exiled for killing his sensei; Okinawan wild-boy Mugen, orphan, former pirate and brilliant innovator, whose fighting style mixes everything from Brazilian capoeira to break-dancing, and whose feral-child innocence faces the toughest tests in the series; and teahouse waitress Fuu, spunky, compassionate and packing a lot of secrets, who rescues the two swordsmen from the executioner's block and enlists them on her quest to avenge her mother's death. On their long walk from Edo to Nagasaki they'll see a lot, face a lot of trials, starve, quarrel, save each other's lives, break up, re-bond, and become inseparable. Except that Jin and Mugen still swear they'll fight to the death one day, and no one (not even Fuu) is saying anything about the Sunflower Samurai, the object of Fuu's quest.
Have I made this sound like a straight historical drama? I ought to mention that it can be hysterically funny as well as vividly bloody, contains knockout fight scenes and anachronisms by the carload (the aforementioned break dancing and beatboxing, Jin's Armani glasses, the appearance of landmarks not built till the 1900s...), has made me cry more times than any anime since "Bebop", and has sharp things to say about the heavy hand of authority and tradition on groups as diverse as gay men, married women, foreigners, aboriginal natives and illegal aliens. It's unfailingly beautiful to look at (well, 95% unfailingly) and listen to, delectably well-written, and simply brilliant. When it gets to America, go find it.