"Futurama" has been renewed for two more new seasons at Hulu, Variety has learned.
“Futurama” has been renewed for two more new seasons at Hulu, Variety has learned.
The revival of the beloved adult animated series has been picked up for an additional 20 episodes at the streaming service. Hulu had picked the show up for 20 episodes back in February 2022, the first 10 of which were released starting in July. The premiere date for the second batch of 10 from that order has yet to be announced, though it is expected to debut in 2024. The new order will bring the show to Seasons 13 and 14 (or 10 and 11 depending on how you break it down).
Hulu’s revival of the series marks the second time the show has been brought back since it originally launched in 1999. After its initial four-season run on Fox, reruns of the show found new life as part of the Adult Swim lineup on Cartoon Network and on DVD. Four direct-to-video films were then produced, which were later re-edited into a fifth season that aired on Comedy Central starting in 2008. Comedy Central would go on to air two more seasons consisting of 26 episodes each between 2010 and 2013.
The official description for the new season states, “After a brief ten-year hiatus, ‘Futurama’ has crawled triumphantly from the cryogenic tube, its full original cast and satirical spirit intact. The ten all-new episodes of season eleven have something for everyone. New viewers will be able to pick up the series from here, while long-time fans will recognize payoffs to decades-long mysteries – including developments in the epic love story of Fry and Leela, the mysterious contents of Nibbler’s litter box, the secret history of evil Robot Santa, and the whereabouts of Kif and Amy’s tadpoles. Meanwhile there’s a whole new pandemic in town as the crew explores the future of vaccines, bitcoin, cancel culture, and streaming TV.”
The entire main cast of the original series — John DiMaggio, Billy West, Katey Sagal, Tress MacNeille, Maurice LaMarche, Lauren Tom, Phil LaMarr, and David Herman — returned for the new Hulu episodes. “Futurama” is created by Matt Groening and developed by Groening and David X. Cohen. Executive producers include Groening, Cohen, Ken Keeler, and Claudia Katz. 20th Television Animation is the studio.
“Futurama” is a key part of Hulu’s recently launched “Animayhem” brand, a hub on Hulu that serves as the home to the streamer’s expansive library of adult animation and anime content.
If they had 26 episodes then it would have evened out and there'd be more gems. It can't be easy write, get the episodes thru the board, get the actors to do it well, and still have good content after composing with executives and panels. But if they made more it'd be easier to overlook.
I'm only a few episodes in, but so far it doesn't feel like the same show. I don't want any more of this. Maybe some day I'll finish this season... maybe not.
I felt the same. Felt like a different show. Dropped it after 2-3 episodes. It’s OK for things to end. I don’t know why they always try to milk series until they are just no good anymore. This idea that they need years and years of seasons just because some fans are asking for it is the wrong way to go about creating good original content.
tbh the futurama fanbase has started to become annoying. Same memes/sad episodes referenced over and over, constantly memeing to bring back the show etc.
There's 2 or 3 good episodes in the season, mostly near the end. I stopped after the first 2 and waited until they were all out, then binged it. I'm glad I pushed through for the good ones, but I'm hoping for better next season
I watch like ine episode a month and it feels just weird. It looks the same, it's not simpsons bad, the jokes land sometimes, but i would be totally fine to not finish the season
Felt the same way. The soul was gone, the delivery felt off and stilted. The show just felt different. I kept on thinking to myself “they would have never done that or done it like that in the old show”.
Charm just isn’t there and I really wanted to like it. I even watched every episode twice and while there are some enjoyable moments the tone just is off-key enough it becomes frustrating because it’s close but not the same.
In particular as one example the universe simulation episode and particularly Bender’s actions (in the face of what he and the characters thought they meant would happen to him) just seemed out of character and random, like forced for the sake of delivering the point. As a speculative what-if machine episode it would have worked.
The first two episodes were sorta alright... It gave me hope. That only made the rest of the season more of a letdown. It just got too wacky and topical without the subtlety and cleverness it used to have
It is really hard to stop and start something like this... Forget a writing team getting back in the groove of things, it's like writing season one over and over again, but without the energy and freedom of building something new. Instead, you have a room still working out their dynamic, a ton of preexisting baggage, and a high bar to meet to live up to the height of the show's quality + years of nostalgia
With 4 seasons in a row, the next one could be much stronger now that they have space (and hopefully learned we don't want such direct modern references), and the next might be good enough to keep it going
Or, maybe Hulu will force them to pump it out on a shoestring budget and it'll become a hollow cash grab using beloved IP until it's so painful I avoid even the originals. That is Disney's style these days, and I hear they just bought out Hulu...
I'm not hopeful, but I want to see how this next season goes before signing petitions to stop. If nothing else, I want to give the original creators one last shot. The show was always jerked around by studios and the reboots had a terrible structure (they got more shows with the movie ready structure, but
Disney is such a massive conglomerate at this point that you never know how it'll go. Long term, most things will get broken down and digested into slop, but Futurama is loved enough that they might get enough breathing room to hold it together for a while - at best long enough to give us a few solid seasons before ending things on their terms
I'm not an optimist, but I like to leave room for good things to happen. Every once in a while, something good comes out of our shitty systems