Get ready for a sci-fi western genre mash-up – and lots of introspective jazz…

By Daniel Furn

Published: Tuesday, 24 August 2021 at 12:00 am


Live-action anime adaptations have been a very mixed bag – but new Netflix show Cowboy Bebop has one of the greatest animated shows of all time as its source material.

The original ’90s anime was a critical and commercial success not just in Japan but worldwide, with the highly praised English dub credited with introducing anime to a whole new wave of Western viewers in the early 2000s.

The Netflix adaptation looks to stick to the original premise, which follows the misadventures of a group of fututistic outlaws-turned-family, and has already generated much excitement with the casting of John Cho as effortlessly cool lead character Spike Siegel.

After quite the delay, Cowboy Bebop has finally revealed a release date – and it’s not far away. Here’s everything you need to know about the long-awaited live-action Cowboy Bebop.

Cowboy Bebop live action release date

Cowboy Bebop will be released on Netflix worldwide on Friday 19th November 2021.

The show was originally set to be released in 2020, but was delayed after star John Cho suffered a knee injury on set, which pushed production back by eight months. Filming eventually wrapped in March 2021.

See You Space Cowboy. Meet Spike Spiegel (John Cho), Jet Black (Mustafa Shakir), and Faye Valentine (Daniella Pineda) in Cowboy Bebop, premiering November 19, only on Netflix.  @bebopnetflix @netflix  @netflixgeeked  #COWBOYBEBOP pic.twitter.com/7kdwOt1Fou

— John Cho (@JohnTheCho) August 23, 2021

Cowboy Bebop live action cast

"COWBOY
NETFLIX © 2021

John Cho will be playing the lead role of Spike Siegel, a bounty hunter from Mars and a former member of the Red Dragon Crime Syndicate. Cho is best known for starring in the Harold and Kumar films opposite Kal Penn as well as playing Sulu in the Star Trek reboot. He grew his hair out long to replicate Spike’s signature anime look.

Luke Cage’s Mustafa Shakir is on board the Bebop also as Jet Black, an ex-policeman bounty hunter with a cybernetic arm. They’ll both be joined by Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom actress Daniella Pineda as Faye Valentine, a woman in excessive debt after spending 54 years in suspended animation.

The Boys star Alex Hassell will be playing Spike’s ex-partner and power-hungry gangster Vicious, while Revenge’s Elena Satine portrays Julia, a mysterious woman who has had complicated romantic relationships with both Spike and Vicious.

Geoffrey Stults (Wedding Crashers), Tamara Tunie (Law and Order: Special Victims Unit) and Mason Alexander Park (The Sandman) will appear in recurring roles also.

Oh and most importantly, a Welsh corgi actor – and not a husky as previously rumoured – will be playing super-intelligent, chess-playing dog, Ein.

Really hoping the entire season of Cowboy Bebop is shot in Corgi-Vision. #CowboyBebop pic.twitter.com/C42CLwYswa

— Netflix Geeked (@NetflixGeeked) October 7, 2019

Cowboy Bebop live action plot

Cowboy Bebop is based on the renowned anime series of the same name, which ran for 26 episodes between 1998 and 1999.

The series was a neo-noir space western that followed a ragtag group of bounty hunters who tracked down the galaxy’s most dangerous criminals in exchange for money – known as Woolong – while trying to escape their own dark pasts.

It’s unclear how much the plot of the adaptation will differ from its source material, but first-look photos have shown the characters, costumes and sets to be mostly faithful to its anime roots.

The show’s original director, Shinichirō Watanabe, is involved as a consultant, while Yoko Kanno will also be returning to score the series after her work on the anime was highly praised. So, it seems Netflix is trying hard to get this one right after facing criticism in the past for their previous live-action anime adaptations.

Yoko Kanno, the composer behind the iconic soundtrack of the original COWBOY BEBOP anime will be creating the soundtrack for the new Live Action Series. Also confirmed…Cowboy Bebop is coming this Fall. #GeekedWeek pic.twitter.com/6lHZQcoFR6

— Netflix Geeked (@NetflixGeeked) June 8, 2021

However, this does not mean the show will be an episode-for-episode remake as co-writer and executive producer Javier Grillo-Marxuach told Gizmodo.

“We’re not going to go one-to-one on all of those stories because we’re also trying to tell the broader story of Spike Spiegel and the Syndicate, Spike Spiegel and Julia, Spike Spiegel and Vicious, and all that,” Grillo-Marxuach said. “But we are looking at the show and saying, ‘Who are some of the great villains in this show, and how can we put them into this broader narrative?’ So that we are telling both of the big stories that Cowboy Bebop tells.”

The original anime ran for only 22 minutes an episode and used a villain-of-the-week formula, so it seems that Netflix’s ten-part series of hour-long episodes will opt for a more serialised approach – with fan-favourite enemies included, however.

A few elements will be changed for a modern audience though. The show’s famously over-the-top smoking will be toned down, while Faye’s revealing outfit has been scrapped in favour of a more practical getup. Jazz musician Gren has also been reimagined as non-binary for a more modern depiction of gender representation onscreen, with the role is also played by non-binary actor Mason Alexander Park.

Cowboy Bebop live action trailer

There’s no trailer for the live action Cowboy Bebop just yet – but with the show launching in November, we can expect one any week now. We’ll update this page as soon as the trailer drops.

Cowboy Bebop will be released on 19th November 2021. Looking for something else to watch? Check out the best series on Netflix or the best movies on Netflix. You can also plan your viewing with our TV Guide or visit our dedicated Sci-fi and Fantasy hub for the latest news.