Samurai Jack

Samurai Jack

A breathtakingly artful cartoon with elegant action and an endlessly imaginative world

The Very Best

8.3

TV Show

United States of America
English
Action & Adventure, Animation, Sci-Fi & Fantasy, Western
2001
Greg Baldwin, Grey DeLisle, Phil LaMarr
22 min

TLDR

So good that it led to a generation of kids who were annoyingly pretentious about filmmaking (it's me, I'm kids).

What it's about

Before being able to defeat the powerful shapeshifting demon Aku, a nameless samurai is suddenly transported into a distant dystopian future where Aku has become ruler.

The take

It's a miracle that an animated series like Samurai Jack was ever made—much less allowed to endure—on a children's network: barely any dialogue, action that approaches the realm of the avant-garde, and storytelling that doesn't rely on jokes or moral lessons. For its first four seasons that aired from 2001 to 2003, it barely had a plot to speak of either, becoming a Sisyphean series of adventures through an increasingly strange universe that only emphasized Jack's determination to finish his greater mission. And the more that the titular samurai would face off against his stoic robot adversaries, the more visually expressive these fights would get, the show constantly finding new ways to communicate purely through gorgeous, minimalist animation.

Only in the show's unexpected fifth season (released much later in 2017) did Samurai Jack really commit to telling a story and developing the protagonist as an actual character—putting him through a crisis of faith and having him face his repeated failure through the show's previous seasons. The results weren't flawless, with a rushed conclusion and a romantic interest who never quite came into her own. But it would be difficult to overstate how ambitious this whole project was: a genuine sci-fi/fantasy epic that never compromised on its vision.

What stands out

Samurai Jack's 2017 comeback was so surprising not just because of the improved quality of its animation (while still staying true to its classic style) but also because of its maturity. Season five is incredibly violent and even more dynamic with its action, with Jack facing off against flesh-and-blood enemies in brutal fashion while sustaining injuries that actually feel like a cause for concern. Finally seeing our hero bend to all the pain he's endured is unexpectedly affecting, and for arguably the first time in the series, you truly begin to feel how powerful Aku has become in comparison.

Comments

Add a comment

UP NEXT 

UP NEXT 

UP NEXT 

Ethos

A level of attention to aesthetics usually reserved for the most elaborate films, mixed with a complex and relevant story, make this series from Turkey unmatched in its quality

9.9

Caliphate

A psychological thriller that provides insight on what drove so many young people to ISIS.

8.9

Escape at Dannemora

Based on a true prison escape story, this slow-burn suspense thriller features once-in-a-lifetime performances by a star-studded cast

9.3

The Hijacking of Flight 601

A hijacking drama that creates anxiety by curing it

8.0

Ghosts

A funny sitcom about a young couple who move into a house packed with ghosts

8.9

Patriot

This unique anti-spy drama is one of Amazon Prime's hidden gems

9.0

Conan O’Brien Must Go

As expected, talk show host Conan O’Brien is sidesplittingly funny in his latest travel show

8.6

Over the Garden Wall

In this charming animated miniseries, two half-brothers try to find their way back home after getting lost in a supernatural forest

8.6

The Last Kingdom

8.6

RIPLEY

A psychological thriller rich in tension and pristine camera work

9.0

Curated by humans, not algorithms.

agmtw logo

© 2024 agoodmovietowatch, all rights reserved.