If they do it right it could be badass though. But the probability of fukking it up is astronomically high. It won't ruin the original but
Netflix's Live-Action Cowboy Bebop Show Plans Season 2, Teases Yoko Kanno's Music
posted on
2020-04-19 03:01 EDT by Egan Loo
Writer/producer
Jeff Pinkner updates on production during COVID-19 shutdown
The online newspaper
Observer posted an update on
Netflix's live-action adaptation of Sunrise's
Cowboy Bebop anime on Friday.
Observer spoke with writer and executive producer
Jeff Pinkner before he took a "notes call" on a season 2 script. The production on the first season is on hold in New Zealand after lead actor
John Cho's on-set knee
injury in October, followed by a shutdown due to the new coronavirus disease (COVID-19).
Pinkner said that the staff and cast are excited to get back in production as soon as they can. He added that the project's one-hour episode length allows them to "really tell stories set in that world in a way that hopefully will not only delight the fans of anime but expose a whole bunch of new people to the world of Cowboy Bebop, the awesome work of
Yoko Kanno."
The production had not previously announced that a second season is possibly planned, nor that Yoko Kanno, the musical composer of the original Sunrise anime series and film, is involved in the live-action series. While Japan is under a
state of emergency this month, Kanno
gathered her Cowboy Bebop musicians online to collaborate on music while staying at home.
Netflix describes the series:
Based on the worldwide phenomenon from
Sunrise Inc., Cowboy Bebop is the jazz-inspired, genre-bending story of Spike Spiegel, Jet Black, Faye Valentine and Radical Ed: a rag-tag crew of bounty hunters on the run from their pasts as they hunt down the solar system's most dangerous criminals. They'll even save the world…for the right price.
The series stars Cho as Spike,
Mustafa Shakir as Jet,
Daniella Pineda as Faye,
Alex Hassell as Vicious, and
Elena Satine as Julia. Netflix posted a "Behind the Scenes" video on October 7 to mark the start of production:
The series is a co-production between Netflix and
Tomorrow Studios, with Netflix handling physical production. Tomorrow Studios is a partnership between producer
Marty Adelstein (Prison Break, Teen Wolf, producer for the live-action
One Piece project) and ITV Studios.
Shinichiro Watanabe, the original anime's director, is serving as consultant for the project.
Andre Nemec,
Josh Appelbaum, Jeff Pinkner, and
Scott Rosenberg of Midnight Radio are credited as showrunners and executive producers.
Tomorrow Studios' Marty Adelstein and
Becky Clements;
Yasuo Miyakawa,
Masayuki Ozaki, and
Shin Sasaki of Sunrise (the studio that animated the original series); and
Tetsu Fujimura and
Matthew Weinberg are also credited as executive producers.
Chris Yost (Thor: The Dark World, Thor: Ragnarok) is writing the series, and is also credited as executive producer.
The original anime series follows the motley crew of the spaceship Bebop as it travels throughout the solar system in search of the next job. The anime inspired
Cowboy Bebop: The Movie in 2001.
Funimation released the series on Blu-ray and DVD in North America in 2014, and
screened the film in the United States in 2018, the 20th anniversary of the original series.