Much of Bebop seems archetypical to me - the themes and characters are pretty universal. Jet as the wise teacher, Spike as the tragic hero, etc. The themes are handled well tho - how crap would it have been if super-dog Ein could talk, instead of just being a smart dog, or if they couldn't pass smokes around the bridge in zero-g?
Durran, could you see part of the Spike/Vicious relationship as a part of world change which takes place during the series? The consummate bounty-hunter and the bloodthirsty crimeboss destroying each other, and being unable to change to fit the world?
I share a loathing for overanaylsis (theology ahoy), but since CB is obviously well thought-out and detailed, I'm interested to see how everyone else reacts to it. In particular, the second time I saw Hard Luck Woman, I noticed that as Ed decides to leave with Ein, that is the only time her face is drawn in an 'adult' style, without the Japanimation kiddie look. Thats not too much of a stretch, is it?
And further reinforcement for the end of the syndicates would be Black Dog Serenade, where the escaped Syndicate assassin (one whom an elaborate plot was enacted to protect in the past) was disowned and denied support by his old Syndicate. I imagine they agree with Mao and the (former) Red Dragon elders, in that such characters are no longer what the Syndicates need.
How closely does this echo the end of the 'frontier' in the actual old west? Didn't peace and commerce replace the freelance bounty hunters and nomadic criminals, as the frontier disappeared?
EDIT - stupid oops