‘Cowboy Bebop’ Canceled By Netflix After One Season


‘Cowboy Bebop’ Canceled By Netflix After One Season​


Exclusive: The streamer has canceled the anime adaptation of the space Western after its premiere less than a month ago.


By
James Hibberd, Borys Kit
December 9, 2021 3:11pm



Cowboy Bebop


Netflix's 'Cowboy Bebop' Netflix



That was fast: Netflix has canceled its ambitious, widely hyped and, ultimately, widely disappointing anime adaptation Cowboy Bebop, The Hollywood Reporter has learned.
The move comes less than three weeks after the show’s Nov. 19 debut on the streaming service.

The space Western had a rough reception. The 10-episode series garnered only a 46 percent positive critics rating on review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes. Fans seemed to agree, giving the show a 56 percent positive audience score on the site. According to Netflix’s Top 10 site, the series has racked up almost 74 million viewing hours worldwide since its debut – so it got plenty of sampling out of the gate – but it plummeted 59 percent for the week of Nov. 29-Dec. 5.


Insiders pointed out Netflix’s renewal rate for scripted series that have two or more seasons stands at 60 percent, in line with industry averages, and, like all Netflix renewal verdicts, the decision was made by balancing the show’s viewership and cost. The streamer also prides itself on taking big swings on projects like Cowboy Bobop and has many other genre shows on the air and in the works.
The project is the latest attempt to reinvent Japanese anime as a live action series that failed to draw viewers following titles such as 2009’s Dragon Ball Evolution, 2017’s Ghost in the Shell, and Netflix’s 2017 movie Death Note. The biggest success in the space so far was arguably 2019’s Alita: Battle Angel, which pulled sizable foreign dollars ($319 million) if not domestic ($85 million).
Cowboy Bobop series starred John Cho, Mustafa Shakir and Daniella Pineda as three bounty hunters, aka “cowboys,” all trying to outrun the past. From the show’s description: “They form a scrappy, snarky crew ready to hunt down the solar system’s most dangerous criminals — for the right price. But they can only kick and quip their way out of so many scuffles before their pasts finally catch up with them.”
The Hollywood Reporter‘s Angie Han wrote that Cowboy Bobop was “faithful to a fault” with “leaden pacing” and “the sharp [anime] visuals [were] reduced to muddy CG, the playful humor translated as phony laughter, the lived-in grittiness replaced with shoddy-looking sets” and that the remake “seems to have no point at all.”
The show was based on the popular 1998 Japanese anime TV series and the 2001 anime film. Netflix first ordered the project direct to series back in 2018. A live-action feature film version starring Keanu Reeves was also previously in development at Fox.

André Nemec (Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles) serve as showrunner, with original anime series director Shinichirō Watanabe as a consultant on the series and original composer Yoko Kanno returning for the live-action adaptation.
 
Pray 🙏
One piece
Yu Yu hakusho
Gantz
Akira
Evangelion
My hero academia

Pray they all disappear into limbo hell.
They better stay the fuck away from my Gantz. The anime couldn't handle what the Manga did; and even though the Manga wasn't even close to being finished, the anime had a WTF/shit ending. I'm not going to pretend it's high art or something it's not; but at the same time I know they'd fail to get everyone's derangements right, and God knows what they'd do to diversify the characters.
 
Now I won't feel so bad about contributing to Netflix's metrics as I'm kind of curious to watch it just to see how bad it can possibly be.
 
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I still don't know who the show was even for. Netflix loves to burn money.
It didn't work this time, but there was a very long period of time (say 10-15 years) where this level of "negative" advertising could see a bad product having good returns on profit. Talk radio worked that way for nearly 3-4 decades (and you could make an argument that it still does, just for Podcasts) and movies, books, etc, have all intentionally courted controversy to drive sales.

This show was just too mediocre for anyone to care all that much about. The people that were supposed to "love" it could stand to watch it and the people that were supposed to "hate" it just ignored it.

It also probably didn't burn money, from what everyone said, it looks and feels cheap as dirt. The licensing probably didn't cost all that much either as there isn't much interest in Anime properties and the last time Cowboy Bebop was super relevant was Cartoon Network's reruns 20 years ago.

Netflix probably just ran the numbers saw how many people fell off episode by episode and couldn't be bothered to waste the near $0 on a Season 2.
 
This show was just too mediocre for anyone to care all that much about. The people that were supposed to "love" it could stand to watch it and the people that were supposed to "hate" it just ignored it.
Any adaptation would have been very difficult for fans to buy into. Its not like Game of Thrones' adaptation where the property was effectively unknown to the wider population, Cowboy Bebop has about 20 years of people watching the show and it was lightning in a bottle. I bet even if you had most of the original staff on hand as part of this Live Action adaptation it would fail, there was just something about the late 90s ennui that telegraphs through the various media properties like Cowboy Bebop, The Matrix, or Office Space, the feeling of "This is it? This is all life is going to surmount to?" invaded a lot of media between '97-'01. Its not something easily replicated, just like the feeling of urban decay that permeated most films from 1975-1985, though I will admit that Joker came very close to it, perhaps because it adapted real life events of the era like the Bernie Goetz subway shooting.
 
Anyway, I am not surprised it was cancelled. This was the preordained fate of this mess. I'm sure the whining campaign has already begun. They'll blame those evil gate keeping white males who couldn't fap to Faye anymore and were soooo transphobic against that abomination they decided was Gren.
It's actually, apparently, even dumber.

They're blaming the original anime, from 1998, for the show's failure because IT, not the new show, THE ORIGINAL MATERIAL "deviated too much" from the Netflix version.

Yes, they're blaming a show for not knowing that in 20 years someone would make an in-name-only adaption that it should have tried harder to be more like.....
 
Any adaptation would have been very difficult for fans to buy into. Its not like Game of Thrones' adaptation where the property was effectively unknown to the wider population, Cowboy Bebop has about 20 years of people watching the show and it was lightning in a bottle. I bet even if you had most of the original staff on hand as part of this Live Action adaptation it would fail, there was just something about the late 90s ennui that telegraphs through the various media properties like Cowboy Bebop, The Matrix, or Office Space, the feeling of "This is it? This is all life is going to surmount to?" invaded a lot of media between '97-'01. Its not something easily replicated, just like the feeling of urban decay that permeated most films from 1975-1985, though I will admit that Joker came very close to it, perhaps because it adapted real life events of the era like the Bernie Goetz subway shooting.
I disagree, there are adaptations that work and work well - even if the source material is kind of crazy. Some of the Marvel adaptions are good, the DC ones can be, The Witcher is doing well.

This show failed because it contained exactly 0% heart and that was readily apparent from the first cast interviews and seeped into every single pre-production thing that they made. The funniest thing about any of the trailers is the idea that cast/crew/execs watched it and all thought "this is excellent, release it at once!" instead of going "this doesn't feel right" and re-figuring it all out.

Specifically I'd point at "The Mandalorian" as a show with not a huge scale but made with a lot of noticeable heart that drastically elevated the show's reception. Considering the very similar themes and scale, making something similar out of Cowboy Bebop would be pretty simple, if only a few people gave a very real shit about it.
 
Funny how cho getting injured managed to make shit worse. They waited so long to resume its how Gren got in the show (no seriously)

Also Netflix is notorious for canceling shows lol

The dutch angles were fucking annoying too. Whoever decided they needed to be constantly in the show deserves to be shot.
 
At least they won't get to fuck up the heavy shit in later episodes, thank God.
Some of the best parts. Shit, they'd probably do something stupid like have Spike survive.
I regret to inform you that Netflix was way ahead of you there, because that's exactly what happens.

Haven't watched the abomination, but from what people were saying in the thread related to this trainwreck they just shuffled up all the content. Yes, they didn't introduce Ed until the very end, but by the end of that first season they'd had the big Final Battle between Spike and Vicious... except I think Julia kills Vicious so she can be the real Antagonist, and Spike survives?

Idk, it's all very confusing and generally A Bad Move. Kind of funny they decided to completely rewrite the iconic ending of a very beloved series because they decided they could do it better and milk more seasons out of it... and then get canceled. You get what you fucking deserve.
 
This was doomed as soon as it was announced. By the time they announced the cast, everyone with a brain knew it was buried. The trailer was the headstone. How anyone even watched this garbage is beyond me. I've seen Cowboy Bebop about 10 times and I, or anyone I know, ever seriously considered watching it. I find modern day decisions about entertainment largely baffling.
 
If you want to know why it failed, this sums it up better than any review ever could:
View attachment 2787738
Haven't watched the adaptation, but what the fuck is this? They manage to make a sitcom and make everyone who was cool in the anime seem really lame.
I regret to inform you that Netflix was way ahead of you there, because that's exactly what happens.

Haven't watched the abomination, but from what people were saying in the thread related to this trainwreck they just shuffled up all the content. Yes, they didn't introduce Ed until the very end, but by the end of that first season they'd had the big Final Battle between Spike and Vicious... except I think Julia kills Vicious so she can be the real Antagonist, and Spike survives?

Idk, it's all very confusing and generally A Bad Move. Kind of funny they decided to completely rewrite the iconic ending of a very beloved series because they decided they could do it better and milk more seasons out of it... and then get canceled. You get what you fucking deserve.
How do you fuck up such an iconic ending? It's such an easy premise to get right, getting Spike to go on a revenge rampage through a building ending with a final fight and this ending where it appears he dies. Oh right, they wanted season 2.
 
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Kind of surprised they did this. It was absolute garbage, but I figured they'd try to keep it going just for woke reasons.
Pray 🙏
One piece
Yu Yu hakusho
Gantz
Akira
Evangelion
My hero academia

Pray they all disappear into limbo hell.
While I wouldn't want Netflix to do it, I'd like to see a good live-action of Gantz since the anime dropped off way before it ended in the manga.
 
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