Cowboy Bebop Creator's Next Anime is 'His Masterpiece'
by MrAJCosplay,
Lazarus. Anime News Network attended a preview for the first episode of this 13-episode action sci-fi series that Watanabe considers his masterpiece and something he hopes will contribute to his legacy.
The first episode starts with an exposition of this sci-fi future. A scientist developed a perfect drug with no side effects that everyone started taking over time. That scientist mysteriously disappeared until a few years later when a video was published of that same scientist, announcing that everyone who took the drug would die in thirty days. There is no way to develop a cure in time unless they find this man. Cut to jail, where we find our protagonist, Axel Gilbert, a young man who makes it a regular habit to break out with his incredibly versatile footwork and parkour skills. He takes advantage of a mysterious woman coming to visit him as another opportunity to escape. Over the entire episode, colorful characters chase him, utilizing different skills to corner Axel. He eventually gets caught and wakes up in a barbershop with the same people who tracked him down, only to realize that they were rallied together by the mysterious woman who visited him in jail and explained that they are part of a group called Lazarus. The episode ends with a timer that notes twenty-nine days left on the clock until humanity starts to die.
I could not shake the vibe that this felt like a spiritual successor to Blade Runner: Black Out 2022 got him back into the mood to do sci-fi action.

This project has an ambition that we don't often see. There was the sheer fluidity and creativity of the parkour and action choreography. Axel has very long legs and knows how to use them, disarming people creatively and maneuvering around the terrain like he's trying to go viral on Chad Stahleski, credited as action supervisor for the series.
Stahleski did not work on all the action in Lazarus but was heavily involved in the creative action sequences. The episodes that don't feature that Stahleski will instead feature top-notch action animators Watanabe wanted to work with.
Watanabe highlighted who he wanted to work with on the series, including the music. The soundtrack featured different styles of music, from atmospheric to jazz. Watanabe also reached out to people who worked on the sound for major blockbusters like Dune and Game of Thrones. There was a worry about the show's budget, but it turns out that many of these people wanted to work on this series because they grew up on Watanabe's works. They saw this as a way to thank him for his creative influence.
People who grew up with these shows don't always get the opportunity to give back to the creators who made them, so that sounded like a very nice gesture. Based on its first episode, there is so much to love about this series, and according to Watanabe, this will be a complete story in thirteen episodes. I am more than excited to see what Watanabe considers to be his next masterpiece.
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