The coolest mech the world has ever known is finally making its big-screen, live-action debut. Bandai Namco and Legendary Entertainment announced a deal on Wednesday to co-finance the film together, with Sweet Tooth showrunner Jim Mickle set to direct. Iām praying it wonāt be as terrible as some of the other live-action anime adaptations weāve been cursed with.
For anyone living under a White Base-sized rock, Gundam is a sprawling sci-fi military epic that originated in 1979, spanning multiple universes and timelines with one thing in common: soldiers piloting giant robots that fight with big guns and laser swords. The production agreement was signed last month and the movie is tentatively called simply Gundam. Bandai Namco and Legendary didnāt share any information beyond that. We have no idea when the movie will come out, what parts of the mech warfare anime it will adapt, or if thereās even a script yet. The only other detail the two companies confirmed is that it will release in theaters worldwide when it arrives.
LEGENDARY and Bandai Namco Filmworks Sign Agreement to Co-Finance First-Ever Live Action āGundamā Film https://t.co/HmwoEzkjAW
Directed and written by Jim Mickle.
Bandai Namco Filmworks America, LLC will be established on April 1st for the production of Gundam pic.twitter.com/kfIxjxkTgx
ā Wario64 (@Wario64) February 5, 2025
This isnāt the first time weāve heard about a live-action Gundam project. One was first reported back in 2021 as a Netflix release with Y The Last Man comic series creator Brian K. Vaughn set to to write and produce it. Late last year, however, Deadline reported that the project had moved to Legendary with a new creative at the helm, Mickle. Heās been in charge of the Netflix sci-fi fantasy series Sweet Tooth about a post-pandemic world full of whimsical human mutants. Heās also currently working on an adaptation of the Western fantasy comic series God Country.
The official confirmation that a big-budget Gundam project is in the works will have long-time fansā heads swirling with questions and skepticism. Weāve seen how poorly this can go before, from 2009ās Dragonball Evolution to 2017ās Ghost in the Shell. Netflixās live-action remake of Cowboy Bebop didnāt impress many fans either, though the recent One Piece series has found a warmer reception. The closest thing weāve had to a Gundam movie with real people are Guillermo del Toroās Pacific Rim movies, so there is at least an existing blueprint to make the formula not suck.
In the meantime, thereās been no shortage of ongoing Gundam anime series and movies. The newest, called Mobile Suit Gundam GQuuuuuuX (thatās actually the name) released in Japan last month and has seemed unexpectedly decent so far.