If not, then it also looks like Tusker will die for a second time.

The idea of doing an Astro movie at all dates back to the mid-90's, when studio suits and ties saying "We gotta get in on this 'Japanimation' thing the young kids are into!" resulted in pre-production on a live-action Speed Racer, Astro Boy, and Gigantor.Randall wrote:That'd be too bad, but we do all know they were on shaky financial ground already. Gee, and I was looking forward to Gatchaman. Of course, if Astro Boy couldn't find an audience, imagine how Gatchaman would have fared.
Randall wrote:That'd be too bad, but we do all know they were on shaky financial ground already. Gee, and I was looking forward to Gatchaman. Of course, if Astro Boy couldn't find an audience, imagine how Gatchaman would have fared.
Same here: It's definitely trying hard for that Meet the Robinsons vibe, but that gives it a little more charm than a few of the more recently charmless third-parties (ahemmeatballs51)estefan wrote:Saw the film today and I thought it was pretty good. Not great, but a nice way to spend ninety minutes.
THe 60's B/W version played the US in the 60's, which is why a lot of old parents and studio executives remember it (think of Astro as the Japanese Mighty Mouse, that everyone remembers watching, but can't remember liking)--Bill1978 wrote:Out of curiosity is Astro Boy the cartoon series not very well known in the US. I'm from Australia and I remember watching the series in the 80s (the updated version) as a kid, my brothers and I loved it.
Actually, audiences would like an anime-adaptation series, if we could actually get one--estefan wrote:However, there's also the whole deal that adaptations of anime series don't seem to fare well unless Pikachu is on the poster. Even Dragonball, which still has a fairly big audience today was a massive flop of epic proportions (in North America anyway, its success over-seas has led to a sequel being green-lit).