Netflix drops epic official trailer for ‘Cowboy Bebop’ live-action series

Netflix drops epic official trailer for ‘Cowboy Bebop’ live-action series

At long last, “Cowboy Bebop” is popping.

A week after tantalizing anime audiences with a quickie teaser, Netflix has finally dropped the official trailer for its new live-action series.

“If you need to find me — I go by Spike Siegel these days,” star John Cho, 49, intones at the beginning of the epic trailer.

Based on the 1998 anime of the same name, the 10-part “action-packed Space Western” series follows bounty hunters Spike Spiegel (Cho), Jet Black (Mustafa Shakir, 45), and Faye Valentine (Daniella Pineda, 34) as they pursue the “solar system’s most dangerous criminals” – while trying to escape their troubled pasts, per the trailer’s hyped up description.

Think “The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly” meets “The Mandalorian.”

From the looks of the trailer, the live-action “CB” will be remarkably faithful to the source material. Shot in the same same snappy style as last week’s teaser, the preview sprinkles in even near-perfect recreations of scenes from the original show.

'Cowboy Bebop' is based on the 1998 Anime of the same name.‘Cowboy Bebop’ is based on the 1998 Anime of the same name. the 10-part “action-packed Space Western” series follows bounty hunters Spike Spiegel (John Cho), Jet Black (Mustafa Shakir), and Faye Valentine (Daniella Pineda) as they pursue the “solar system’s most dangerous criminals”GEOFFREY SHORT/NETFLIXA week after tantalizing Anime audiences with a thrilling teaser, Netflix has finally dropped the official trailer for its live action A week after tantalizing anime audiences with a teaser clip, Netflix has finally dropped the official full-length trailer for its live action “Cowboy Bebop” series. GEOFFREY SHORT/NETFLIX

It also gives us a closer look at the villains Pierrot Le Fou and Vicious, and more scenes of the bounty-hunting trio exchanging the snarky banter that made the cartoon iteration such a hit.

After getting waylaid twice — once because of an injury leading man Cho suffered on set and then due to the the coronavirus lockdown — “Cowboy Bebop will finally debut on Netflix on November 19.

John Cho as Spike Spiegel.John Cho as Spike Spiegel.KIRSTY GRIFFIN/NETFLIX

The much-anticipated adaptation has experienced delays over the course of production due to Cho’s on-set injury, which put the show out for seven to nine months.

Production wrapped in March, which original anime series director Shinichirō Watanabe working as a consultant on the series, and original composer Yoko Kanno returning to score the live-action action.

John Cho in Cowboy BebopThe much-anticipated Netflix adaptation has experienced delays over the course of production due to John Cho’s on-set injury, which put the show out for seven to nine months.Netflix

The classic series originally premiered in Japan in 1998, and ran as a 26-episode show. It later aired on Cartoon Network’s Adult Swim, growing its popularity in the United States.

Cowboy Bepop“Cowboy Bepop” follows a group of intergalactic bounty hunters fighting evil.Samuel Goldwyn Films/Everett Collection