Shinichiro Watanabe Couldn’t Watch Netflix’s Live-Action ‘Cowboy Bebop’: It Was ‘Tough to Continue’
“It was clearly not ‘Cowboy Bebop’ and I realized at that point that if I wasn’t involved, it would not be ‘Cowboy Bebop.'”
“It was clearly not ‘Cowboy Bebop’ and I realized at that point that if I wasn’t involved, it would not be ‘Cowboy Bebop.'”
“I put a lot of my life into it,” Cho said about the live-action Netflix anime adaptation, which was canceled in December after just one season.
3, 2, 1, let’s watch something else.
Kevin Hart gets serious, puppets put out an unprecedented feast, and yet the strangest thing on Netflix this November is still “Tiger King 2.”
Netflix’s adaptation of one of the most popular anime shows in the medium’s history is set to premiere in November.
This “lost session” of the series, set to debut next month on the streamer, plays like a mini-episode rather than a trailer.
Netflix is adapting one of the most beloved anime shows of all time into a live-action series.
Netflix showcased new footage of its live-action adaptation of the hit “Cowboy Bebop” anime on Sunday.
Cho turned 49 years old this summer. His “Cowboy Bebop” character is 27 years old in the anime.
The 10-episode first season debuts on Netflix November 19.
The live-action “Cowboy Bebop,” Ewan McGregor in “Halston,” and Ava DuVernay’s “Colin in Black and White” highlight the Netflix 2021 slate.
Mason Alexander Park will take on the fan-favorite, gender-bending role in Netflix’s forthcoming revamp.