I was actually fixing to make my own Matsumoto thread......good thing I found this one first.
Yes, Leiji Matsumoto is one of the living legends of the manga/anime world. The man is pure genius incarnate. The guy pretty much ran the entire anime/manga industry from the late seventies until the early 80s. His Leijiverse (the far future universe where many of his science fiction takes place) is a wonderful, unique place which Matsumoto uses as his proverbial sandbox, creating various characters, machines and planets in order to convey his philosophy of humanity, with intruiging allegory and social commentary.
And it's his philosophy that I find truly intruiging. Unlike the traditional, collectivist philosophies of old Japan, Leiji Matsumoto instead conveys a rather individualist, Ayn Rand-like philosophy of Libertarianism and self-reliance. Captain Harlock himself is pretty much John Galt (read
Atlas Shrugged) in a spaceship. Furthermore, although Matsumoto often uses his work to convey his vision of 'manhood', his work is in no way mysogynistic. In fact, the women in his works are often beacons of wisdom and stability, whereas men are often the bringers of chaos. All of this is of course combined with his strongly anti-war sentiment.
To those intrested, there is currently both a newer
Captain Harlock anime, as well as the original
Star Blazers (aka
Space Battleship Yamamoto) available on DVD in the States. Furthermore, the
Galaxy Express 999 manga available in the States is quite enjoyable, and in fact can be enjoyed even without reading the original.
Anyway, as you guys can see, I'm rather passionate about Matsumoto.