The Animated Series Inspired This Classic Anime From Cowboy Bebop’s Creators
In the 25 years since “The Big O” premiered, it’s commonly been described as “What if Batman had a mecha?” Jason DeMarco, co-creator of Cartoon Network programming block Toonami (where “The Big O” premiered stateside and exploded in popularity), also compared the series’ animation style to “Batman: The Animated Series.”
Roger Smith himself is based on Bruce Wayne — a well-dressed man who rides in a sleek black car and investigates strange happenings or bad actors working in the city. When it’s time to fight, Bruce/Roger changes into his other self. In an interview with Anime Play magazine, Sato once admitted the influence of Batman on “The Big O.” Writer Chiaki J. Konaka also cited both Batman and Dick Tracy as influences.
As for the mid-century New York, half urban noir, half art deco look of Paradigm City? “I did have Manhattan and stuff in mind but felt if we specified the location we would be bound to and restricted by reality,” Sato said, so better to make a fictional location. That, right there is basically the ethos of Gotham City too; it is simultaneously every city in America and none of them. In “Batman: The Animated Series,” Gotham City looked more like a 1930s metropolis than a 1990s one, adding to the timeless feel that “The Big O” shares.
Roger’s supporting cast is quite Batman-esque too. Most obviously, he has a butler (Norman Burg) who is his closest confidant and helps him maintain his equipment. The only difference between Norman and Alfred Pennyworth is that the former has an eyepatch. Roger’s other partner is R. Dororthy Wainwright, an android girl made in the image of her creator’s late daughter. (Konaka claims credit for designing and characterizing Dorothy beyond “Roger’s android sidekick.”) While she dresses like a red-headed Wednesday Addams, Dorothy is Roger’s Robin: a vulnerable orphan adopted by the hero who becomes his partner.
Roger has a special relationship with police Major Dan Dustan, like Batman’s with Commissioner Gordon, and often crosses paths with an enigmatic blonde named Angel, who is half Catwoman, half Faye Valentine from “Cowboy Bebop,” another femme fatale with memory problems. Cementing the comparison, both Faye and Angel were dubbed by Wendee Lee in English.
Paradigm City faces not only villains of the week, but Roger’s small rogues gallery as well: hapless gangster Jason Beck, the twisted former journalist Schwarzwald/Michael Seebach (whose mask of bandages resembles the Scarecrow), and the sadistic cyborg Alan Gabriel (who has a pale white face and smile that could easily fit on the Joker).
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