Let’s not make this another Pacific Rim.
Graphic: Polygon | Source images: HBO; Netflix/Legendary Entertainment/Bandai NamcoNetflix’s live-action Gundam movie has a lot to live up to, but so far it’s hard to tell what exactly it wants to be. According to an announcement from Bandai Namco on Tuesday, the film assembles a surprisingly high-profile cast, including Noah Centineo, Jason Isaacs, Shioli Kutsuna, and perhaps most controversial to anyone breathing in steady doses of internet discourse, Euphoria's Sydney Sweeney. Seated in the cockpit is director and writer Jim Mickle, whose previous credits don’t immediately signal experience with large-scale, big-budget anime adaptations — horror like We Are What We Are and pulpy thrillers like Cold in July — but he'll shoot his shot, as production is underway.
At the moment, it’s easy to compare the Gundam movie to the ill-fated Cowboy Bebop live-action series. A few notable Bandai and Sunrise figures are attached to the project as producers, such as Naohiro Ogata and Makoto Asanuma, which is slightly reassuring. An early description of the film’s original story also adds a bit of optimism:
As shifting allegiances and a growing threat set them on a collision course for one another, Earth and its former space colonies are pulled into a high-stakes race across the stars that could define the fate of humanity. With awe-inspiring battles, intimate human emotion, and an epic cinematic scale, this is Gundam like it’s been seen before.
Still, it’s hard to say whether that’s enough to excite Gundam fans. Mobile Suit Gundam first debuted in 1979 and has since grown into one of the most recognizable anime franchises in existence. While it remains the quintessential mecha series, the mobile suits themselves are often secondary in the series’ most gripping moments.
Image: Netflix/Legendary/Bandai NamcoAt its core, Gundam is all about politics. More specifically, its stories focus on how political systems, ideological divides, and warfare shape individuals, and how those same individuals perpetuate cycles of conflict. Even the franchise’s long-running legacy is built on this bleak but consistent idea: the cycle never ends.
Mobile Suit Gundam Hathaway serves as the cleanest modern distillation of Gundam’s continuous “cycle of conflict” idea. It flips the traditional hero narrative on its head through Hathaway Noa, who becomes a terrorist leader opposing the Earth Federation’s corruption. But Hathaway is also a product of the very system he’s trying to dismantle. His violence provokes retaliation, and that retaliation, in turn, justifies the system he opposes.
In Gundam, even rebellion can become part of the machine.
The live-action Gundam film needs to capture these themes in a way that feels organic rather than forced. It can’t simply function like another Michael Bay-style Transformers spectacle or even a straight Pacific Rim-style action film. Gundam works best when the human drama drives the scale, rather than the other way around. That’s a difficult balance to strike, especially given the series’ dense political foundation, but the early signs suggest the live-action Gundam movie may be aiming in the right direction.
Casting Sydney Sweeney in a key role makes the whole thing more loaded. Sweeney spent much of 2025 and early 2026 caught in an internet-fueled political tug-of-war: her viral “great genes/jeans” American Eagle campaign sparked accusations of coded race-driven messaging, while reports of her Republican voter registration only intensified the discourse. Sweeney largely stayed silent through it all, though in a recent Cosmopolitan interview sidestepped rather than shot down any particular accusation. “I’m not a political person," she said. "I’m in the arts […] I became an actor because I like to tell stories,” while pushing back on labels like “MAGA Barbie” as something others have projected onto her. It's a tension that feels like it'd inevitably come back into play when the live-action Gundam reaches American shores.
Image: Sunrise/Bandai NamcoRaw emotions and themes like these are where a live-action Gundam film could find its success. The new movie's emphasis on “intimate human emotion” is particularly interesting, and makes me wonder how that will manifest on screen. Ideally, it should lean into the kind of psychological and emotional intensity seen in works like Mobile Suit Gundam Thunderbolt or Mobile Suit Gundam: Iron-Blooded Orphans; series where the human cost of war often outweighs the spectacle of the mobile suits themselves.
Gundam has never been about the machines alone. It has always been about the systems that build them, and the people trapped inside those systems. Strip that away, and you don’t get Gundam — you just get metal moving through empty space.
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