Think you know Astro Boy? Think again. In 2003, Naoki Urasawa (Monster, 20th Century Boys) updated original creator Osamu Tezuka's hugely influential "The Greatest Robot on Earth" story arc for his manga Pluto, opting for a more adult approach. The focus shifts from the heroic boy robot to grizzled cybernetic detective Gesicht as he investigates a series of murders of both humans and robots, each victim left with makeshift horns crammed into their heads. Meanwhile, Atom (Astro's Japanese name) is recast as a former peace ambassador, effectively a propaganda tool rolled out at the end of the 39th Central Asian War, still dealing with trauma from the experience. This adaptation is not only a faithful recreation of Urasawa's retelling, but is stunningly animated to a standard rarely seen in Netflix's original anime productions. With eight episodes, each around an hour long, this is as prestigious as any live-action thriller the streamer has produced, and a testament to both Tezuka and Urasawa's respective geniuses.

Talking about sex with your parents is always awkward, but for teenager Otis (Asa Butterfield) it's even worse: His mother Jean (a captivating Gillian Anderson) is a renowned sex therapist who won't stop talking about sex, leaving Otis himself ambivalent toward it. Still, something must have sunk in, and after helping a fellow student navigate a sexual conundrum, Otis finds himself almost accidentally running his own sex therapy clinic on campus. While the situations are often played for laughs, over its four seasons Sex Education thoughtfully explores intimacy, sexuality, and relationships in tender and even profound ways. With a fantastic ensemble cast including incoming Doctor Who star Ncuti Gatwa as Otis' best friend Eric and Emma Mackey as love interest Maeve, this UK-set and Welsh-filmed coming-of-age dramedy has proven itself one of Netflix's best series.


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Producers for the show say they hope the series can help those who may be struggling with thoughts of suicide. However, the series, which many teenagers are binge watching without adult guidance and support, is raising concerns from suicide prevention experts about the potential risks posed by the sensationalized treatment of youth suicide. The series graphically depicts a suicide death and addresses in wrenching detail a number of difficult topics, such a bullying, rape, drunk driving, and slut shaming. The series also highlights the consequences of teenagers witnessing assaults and bullying (i.e., bystanders) and not taking action to address the situation (e.g., not speaking out against the incident, not telling an adult about the incident).

What the series does accurately convey is that there is no single cause of suicide. Indeed, there are likely as many different pathways to suicide as there are suicide deaths. However, the series does not emphasize that common among most suicide deaths is the presence of treatable mental illnesses. Suicide is not the simple consequence of stressors or coping challenges, but rather, it is most typically a combined result of treatable mental illnesses and overwhelming or intolerable stressors.

"(Animation) series shaped our childhoods and to know young Zambians get to see what they've never seen on TV before is Amazing!!" Zambian singer Sampa the Great, who worked on the theme song, wrote on Instagram this month.

Running for two seasons was the fantasy Brazillian series Invisible City (also known as Cidade Invisvel); one of the main actors took to Instagram months after the release of season 2 in March 2023 to announce that he had said farewell to his character.

First debuting on Netflix in March 2019, it took four years before we finally spotted that the creator of the documentary series confirmed via X that the show would not be returning for any additional seasons.

Serving as a spin-off to On My Block and having very little to do with the mothership series beyond its location, Freeridge barely registered on the Netflix top 10s and, as a result, was quietly canceled by Netflix in April 2023.

The series was the first major title to come out of the David Benioff and D.B. Weiss overall deal and followed Sandra Oh as a woman who becomes the chair of a failing English department at a University.

The animated series Inside Job had been initially given a season 2 renewal order back in June 2022. Still, in January 2023, the creator confirmed rumors that Netflix had reversed the decision to renew.

Hilda is a franchise that originally started with an award-winning British graphic novel series created by Luke Pearson, but gained worldwide popularity when it was adapted into a British-Canadian Netflix Original animated television series. The television series in turn was adapted into a book series. The franchise contains various other tie-ins like additional books and a game.

The series is produced by Silvergate Media and Mercury Filmworks and directed by Andy Coyle. Set in a world greatly influenced by Scandinavian mythology, the franchise follows the adventures of fearless Hilda, a blue-haired girl who, along with her deerfox Twig, travels to the city of Trolberg, where she makes new friends and conquers even the most dangerous of monsters.

The first season of the series was released on September 21, 2018 on the streaming service Netflix, and the second season was released on December 14, 2020. A movie was released on December 30, 2021. A third and final season was released on December 7, 2023.

While I'd heard the name of the series in passing, to me, it was just one of many semi-popular Netflix series that had been canceled in recent months. I was more disappointed in 1899 and Inside Job being axed, as I'd heard good things about both series and had them high on my "To Watch Eventually" list (Note: I have a very long list, so "high" translates to ~50 shows away). Warrior Nun was, believe it or not, somewhere on that list, but far down enough that I probably wouldn't have gotten to it until after the end of the world.

But then I began to write about it over on Screen Rant. While not directly about Warrior Nun itself, my first article to mention the series did cover the myriad of shows that Netflix had canceled in recent months. The new co-CEO of the streaming company, Ted Sarandos, claimed that Netflix had "never canceled a successful show." Within the article, I briefly mentioned Warrior Nun, as well as the fan campaign that had been building around saving the series. It wasn't long before a few people involved on Twitter began thanking me for the article. Nothing like this had happened before for anything else I'd written...well, ever, really. I was incredibly thankful and glad that I could be of service to fans of the series. After all, every story deserves to be told to its conclusion, no matter what that story is about.

And then, on January 27, 2023, I wrote about Warrior Nun fans' efforts to get the series renewed by streaming services other than Netflix. In this instance, it was Apple TV+, the streaming service behind the incredible sci-fi drama Severance. Sourcing from a multitude of fan tweets, I wrote about how it seemed inevitable that, because of how many people were vocalizing their hopes for a third season of Warrior Nun, the series would be renewed elsewhere. The article was a hit, with so many passionate Warrior Nun fans thanking me for writing the article that it made me realize just how special of a series this must have been. So, I decided to begin documenting my journey watching the series for the first time on Twitter.

What I didn't expect were the hundreds of people who would join me on my journey. The Warrior Nun community--many of whom are reading this right now (hi!)--followed me for many weeks as I wrote my episode-by-episode thoughts on the 2-season fantasy action series. I was floored by the amount of support I was getting over and over again. But I was also enthralled by a series that, with every new episode, excelled at the story it was telling. A series with such a niche premise was always going to have something that made it special. But I wasn't anticipating just how well-developed the show was.

Season 1 was imperfect. Don't get me wrong, I still liked it. But it very much felt like a season that was more interested in laying the groundwork for the rest of the series than telling the story that was happening in the present moment. That isn't necessarily a bad thing, though, because without the context for the first season, Season 2 wouldn't make any sense. Even so, there were some episodes that didn't engage me as much as the second season of the show did. But I think most of this had to do with my expectations surrounding the series. I expected the show to be what Season 2 was in its 10-episode debut season. And while I would have liked Season 1 to have a faster pace, the slower burn presented in Season 1 when compared to Season 2 still needed to happen.

What makes books and music different from TV, movies, and even short films on YouTube, is that you can make them on a micro-budget, if any budget at all. But TV and film are different. Cameras, crews, casts, writers, editors, computers. All requirements for making a movie or TV show in the current age. They require money. And the best way to get money, is through funding. And funding requires a profit to be made. While a movie makes money directly thanks to the people who pay money to see it in theaters, TV series are a little bit different. Because when you watch something like Warrior Nun, you're not paying with your money, even if you have a subscription. You're paying with your viewership. If people are watching Warrior Nun on Netflix, and that number justifies the amount of money being spent on the series, then it would make sense for the show to get renewed. Right?

Sadly, it's a little more complicated than that, and I'm not an expert. In fact, it's difficult to say how Netflix decides to renew series that aren't massive hits like the late House of Cards or the current Stranger Things. What it sounds like to me (person who is not an expert) is that Netflix looks at the number of new subscribers a series is able to draw in, thus justifying its renewal because more people are subscribing and the company is making more money. It's like how a weekly TV series is liable to get renewed if there are more people watching--because the TV network is able to charge more for advertisers who want to put their ads on the show. More, new subscribers watching a show like Warrior Nun means more justification for the series to be renewed. ff782bc1db

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