Afro Samurai and Afro Samurai Resurrection. After not seeing either shows in a while, I decided to watch them back to back. The original I consider the best as it told a simple revenge story and the consequences of such actions. For those that don't know, the AS series is about black samurai's father who is killed by an old friend of said father. Justice, the one who did the killing, killed Afro's father for the #1 Headband to become God. Since only a #2 can challenge a #1, that gave Justice the right to duel Afro's father. Once Afro's father was killed, he takes the #2 headband and seeks revenge...no matter the cost. Afro is voiced by Samuel L. Jackson, and his buddy, Ninja Ninja. The latter acts the silly man to Afro's straight man. It's a foil dynamic that works and Samuel was clearly having fun.
The color palette and action scenes are good, and nice seeing anime from 2007 that is mostly hand drawn with little to no obvious CGI. I noticed that Afro Samurai's color palette is a bit muted intentionally, but it's not to the obnoxious degree in what we would see in a lot of console games in the 7th generation and certain movies from that era. The show is only 5 episodes, so you'll be done in no time.
Resurrection (A sequel that acts as a 100 minute movie), when I first saw it back in 2009, my feelings for it were between it okay to I don't like it. My feeling softened up overtime, and while the film is somewhat of a repeat in some areas, I've come to respect the film for what it was doing. My only problem for the story to work on this one is that it throws in a retcon to say that someone from Afro's past, Jinno, had another little sister (named Sio) who lived far a way with her foster parents/retainers, now wants revenge for the pain Afro caused to everyone. She voiced by Lucy Liu, and the lady puts in a terrifying performance. I know at the end of the day, the creator of this, just loves doing cool action sequences, but I'll bite, they made me smile. What helps is despite the action, there clear passion behind the production. The artwork, while already great to begin with, gets a color upgrade, and you get to see a bit more of the world Afro lives in. Resurrection I enjoy more now compared to when it first aired, yet it's mainly because of how over-saturated most anime has become with the samey art style and design. This was before the new era and right about around the end of the old one.
Even though I had mixed feelings at the time, there were some critics that unfairly shat on both series for being " a Samurai Champloo clone". Despite having some minor similarities, most of which are coincidental, both shows go off in their own directions and have completely different focuses. I don't know what the hell critics were smoking 12 years ago.
The soundtrack in both shows are top notch. I am considering buying the soundtracks at a later time.