16/Black Dog Serenade
The second Jet episode, good but not as good. Con Air But In Space should be a winning combo but the episode doesn't do much with that. It's nice enough that Jet gets more attention and gets to be a part of the action and all but it just doesn't have the emotional grip of Ganymede Elegy. First because it's super obvious what went down exactly that fateful night Jet lost his arm, so the twist doesn't do anything for me. Second and most importantly, Jet is robbed from making the character-defining decision the whole episode has been building towards. First when Fad shoots Udai, then when Fad tricks Jet into shooting him. This is all pretty anticlimactic. Imagine if Ganymede Elegy ended with his ex and her lover simply running into the police instead of letting Jet act out a crucial choice, even if it boils down to letting go. Nevertheless it goes to show once more that Jet is capable of closure, unlike Spike. And Spike's barely in the episode for once. This is probably the least Spike in all the series. He appears exactly in once scene, 13 minutes in and past the eyecatch.
17/Mushroom Samba
The trope namer. The Bebop crashlands in a wasteland (not sure where) and Ed and Ein go looking for food. The big conceit of the episode is that Ed goes bounty-hunting for once while everybody else stays behind tripping balls from hallucinogenic shrooms. It's a very funny episode and the only one to be outright comedic I think (Cowboy Funk, also very funny, works a bit more like the norm). Ed and Ein are a great comedy act.
Something I never quite understood about the ending. Domino gives Ed his bag of special shrooms (worth 100,000 each he says) but when a cop analyzes one of them he clears it as a regular shiitake mushroom. Meaning the Bebop are left eating shrooms for days. So was Domino doing his big escape with a bag full of regular mushrooms? Did he switch them with another bag when he gave them to Ed? And if the cop clears them, why does Ein have a reaction like he just ingested a 'special' mushroom again at the end (like he did earlier)?
18/Speak Like a Child
Faye-centric episode, although she doesn't do much in it. Actually nothing much happens in this one. The Bebop gets an old videocassette in the mail so Spike and Jet go spelunking for a video player deep in the ruins of Earth. The joke is they get a VHS machine instead of a Betamax player, so all that effort is for naught. The double irony is they get a Betamax player in the mail later, so they didn't even have to go to the trouble in the first place (that's the ironic intent anyway; they do get something useful out of the trip - an old CRTV where they can watch the tape).
Again, Faye herself isn't much involved in uncovering her past (maybe there's a point in that) and mostly stays away from the Bebop, afraid any debt-collectors might come knocking. In the end the tape is a home video she made as a time capsule for herself. It's a great sequence: everyone watches in silence. It's already emotional to receive a message from your kid self, probably remembering simpler and happier times while reflecting on who you are now. And maybe that's affecting Faye a little bit as she watches, but the main gut punch is she literally can't even recognize herself anymore because of the amnesia.
The second Jet episode, good but not as good. Con Air But In Space should be a winning combo but the episode doesn't do much with that. It's nice enough that Jet gets more attention and gets to be a part of the action and all but it just doesn't have the emotional grip of Ganymede Elegy. First because it's super obvious what went down exactly that fateful night Jet lost his arm, so the twist doesn't do anything for me. Second and most importantly, Jet is robbed from making the character-defining decision the whole episode has been building towards. First when Fad shoots Udai, then when Fad tricks Jet into shooting him. This is all pretty anticlimactic. Imagine if Ganymede Elegy ended with his ex and her lover simply running into the police instead of letting Jet act out a crucial choice, even if it boils down to letting go. Nevertheless it goes to show once more that Jet is capable of closure, unlike Spike. And Spike's barely in the episode for once. This is probably the least Spike in all the series. He appears exactly in once scene, 13 minutes in and past the eyecatch.
17/Mushroom Samba
The trope namer. The Bebop crashlands in a wasteland (not sure where) and Ed and Ein go looking for food. The big conceit of the episode is that Ed goes bounty-hunting for once while everybody else stays behind tripping balls from hallucinogenic shrooms. It's a very funny episode and the only one to be outright comedic I think (Cowboy Funk, also very funny, works a bit more like the norm). Ed and Ein are a great comedy act.
Something I never quite understood about the ending. Domino gives Ed his bag of special shrooms (worth 100,000 each he says) but when a cop analyzes one of them he clears it as a regular shiitake mushroom. Meaning the Bebop are left eating shrooms for days. So was Domino doing his big escape with a bag full of regular mushrooms? Did he switch them with another bag when he gave them to Ed? And if the cop clears them, why does Ein have a reaction like he just ingested a 'special' mushroom again at the end (like he did earlier)?
18/Speak Like a Child
Faye-centric episode, although she doesn't do much in it. Actually nothing much happens in this one. The Bebop gets an old videocassette in the mail so Spike and Jet go spelunking for a video player deep in the ruins of Earth. The joke is they get a VHS machine instead of a Betamax player, so all that effort is for naught. The double irony is they get a Betamax player in the mail later, so they didn't even have to go to the trouble in the first place (that's the ironic intent anyway; they do get something useful out of the trip - an old CRTV where they can watch the tape).
Again, Faye herself isn't much involved in uncovering her past (maybe there's a point in that) and mostly stays away from the Bebop, afraid any debt-collectors might come knocking. In the end the tape is a home video she made as a time capsule for herself. It's a great sequence: everyone watches in silence. It's already emotional to receive a message from your kid self, probably remembering simpler and happier times while reflecting on who you are now. And maybe that's affecting Faye a little bit as she watches, but the main gut punch is she literally can't even recognize herself anymore because of the amnesia.