With Prey, director Dan Trachtenberg revitalized the Predator franchise and showed us all how wildly thrilling its central conceit could still be with just a little bit of reworking. Prey took the classic Predator story and made it feel new by focusing on the past and framing its alien characters’ excursions to Earth as part of a much older deadly tradition. Expanding the Predator series with even more Prey-like narratives seemed like a no-brainer for 20th Century Studios.
Though it’s a leaner, meaner feature, Hulu’s Predator: Killer of Killer takes everything that worked about Prey and condenses it into short and sweet exploration of other chapters from the franchise’s past. The animated anthology feature’s Arcane-inspired visuals are gorgeously gorey and its action set pieces are incredibly sharp. Killer of Killers isn’t exactly trying to reinvent the wheel, and if you’ve seen a Predator movie before, little of it will take you by surprise. But as a bloody amuse-bouche meant to whet our appetites before Predator: Badlands hits theaters later this year, Killer of Killers absolutely gets the job done.
Set at three different points in human history, Killer of Killers tells the familiar tale of how unsuspecting warriors from Earth encounter and find themselves being hunted by members of the alien Yautja race. Viking warrior Ursa (Lindsay LaVanchy), twin Japanese samurai Kenji and Kiyoshi Kamakami (Louis Ozawa), and American WWII pilot Torres (Rick Gonzalez) have very little in common. But in each of them, different Yautja see embodiments of humanity’s technological prowess and fighting spirit. The aliens have respect for their prey, and they make a point of studying the various ways in which humans have learned to wage war with one another. But the Yautja still see humans as animals meant to be killed for sport, and their targets have no idea what they’re up against when the two species make first contact.
While each of Killer of Killers‘ three chapters — “The Shield,” “The Sword,” and “The Bullet” — have their own narrative arcs, they all follow the same general beats that served Prey and other Predator movies well. After introducing their human heroes and showing us what they’re capable of in battles, Killer of Killers’ stories turn the tables in bloody, hyperviolent showcases of the Yautja’s brutal power. It’s not exactly a knock against screenwriter Micho Robert Rutare, but there’s an undeniable formulaic quality to Killers of Killers that’s rooted in the fact that there are only so many ways that Predator features can logically play out. Characters are always shocked when the Yautja turn off their cloaking technology because they’ve never seen anything like it before. And they’re understandably scared shitless when the aliens start dogwalking (read: eviscerating) them with weapons that seem almost like magic.
Though its stories aren’t exactly groundbreaking, Killer of Killers presents them beautifully and with a kind of heightened action that simply wouldn’t be as effective if this were a live-action project. These heavily-stylized Yautja are bigger, stranger, and more monstrous than any of their silver screen cousins. And they move with a sickening swiftness that makes you feel how terrifying it would be to see one materialize out of thin air. It’s also very nifty, but unnerving to see how the aliens have adopted certain human folkways (one of the cooler Yautja basically styles itself as a shinobi). But as alarming as the monsters are, Killer of Killers also does a stellar job of presenting its human characters as uniquely capable fighters who could manage to hold their own and win with a bit of luck and quick thinking.
If Killer of Killers were longer, its similarities to past Predator features would probably be a bit more of an annoyance. But Rutare’s script keeps things moving in a way that makes the movie’s hour-and-a-half runtime feel like a breeze. Right when things start getting full-on batshit (in a very good way), Killer of Killers tidily wraps things up and closes out with a swiftness that’s meant to leave you wanting more. It’s easy to imagine 20th Century greenlighting another anthology like this to keep Killer of Killers’ larger story about what the Yautja yearn for going. But whether we get a sequel is probably going to depend on how Predator: Badlands does when it hits theaters this fall.
Predator: Killer of Killers also stars Michael Biehn, Doug Cockle, Damien Haas, Lauren Holt, Jeff Leach, Piotr Michael, Andrew Morgado, Felix Solis, Britton Watkins. The movie is now streaming on Hulu.
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![New ‘Gundam Wing’ ‘Visual Project’ in the Works
By the time Cartoon Network syndicated the 1995 anime series Mobile Suit Gundam Wing in the United States in the summer of 2000, the Gundam franchise was already hugely popular in Japan. Mobile Suit Gundam Wing, however, was a watershed moment for the franchise in the West, introducing an entire generation of anime fans to Gundam specifically but also the mecha anime genre in general. It’s understandably something of a big deal to a lot of Western anime fans. But despite its massive influence, Gundam Wing had a relatively short run: just 49 episodes and four original video animations. There was a spate of manga adaptations in the ’90s, too, and a serial novel called Frozen Teardrop that ran from 2010 to 2015 in Gundam Ace, but for the most part, Gundam Wing has been content to let its legacy speak for itself. Until now, that is. During the spring 2026 Gundam Conference (via Comic Book), Bandai Namco announced that a new Gundam Wing “visual project” is in the works. When pressed for more details, Bandai Namco Filmworks producer Naohiro Ogata said, “I can’t say what the format is yet, but it is definitely something long.” The announcement on the official Gundam website is similarly light on details, but it’s still hugely exciting. [embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tX8NQa1WWic[/embed] Gundam Wing follows five teenage mech pilots sent to Earth to free their home space colonies from the oppression of the United Earth Sphere Alliance. It’s set in an alternate timeline from the original Mobile Suit Gundam series, which first aired in Japan in 1979. Alternate timelines are pretty common in the world of Gundam, so it’s possible that the new project could go that route, though it’d be hard to sell as a Wing series specifically rather than a separate Gundam series.
The new project could also simply pick up where the anime left off or follow the plot of Frozen Teardrop, which was essentially a sequel story. It could even be a prequel, for all we know. With so little information revealed, the possibilities are endless about what this new Gundam Wing could be. That’s not going to stop us from being unreasonably excited about it, though. Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who. #Gundam #Wing #Visual #Project #WorksGundam,Gundam Wing New ‘Gundam Wing’ ‘Visual Project’ in the Works
By the time Cartoon Network syndicated the 1995 anime series Mobile Suit Gundam Wing in the United States in the summer of 2000, the Gundam franchise was already hugely popular in Japan. Mobile Suit Gundam Wing, however, was a watershed moment for the franchise in the West, introducing an entire generation of anime fans to Gundam specifically but also the mecha anime genre in general. It’s understandably something of a big deal to a lot of Western anime fans. But despite its massive influence, Gundam Wing had a relatively short run: just 49 episodes and four original video animations. There was a spate of manga adaptations in the ’90s, too, and a serial novel called Frozen Teardrop that ran from 2010 to 2015 in Gundam Ace, but for the most part, Gundam Wing has been content to let its legacy speak for itself. Until now, that is. During the spring 2026 Gundam Conference (via Comic Book), Bandai Namco announced that a new Gundam Wing “visual project” is in the works. When pressed for more details, Bandai Namco Filmworks producer Naohiro Ogata said, “I can’t say what the format is yet, but it is definitely something long.” The announcement on the official Gundam website is similarly light on details, but it’s still hugely exciting. [embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tX8NQa1WWic[/embed] Gundam Wing follows five teenage mech pilots sent to Earth to free their home space colonies from the oppression of the United Earth Sphere Alliance. It’s set in an alternate timeline from the original Mobile Suit Gundam series, which first aired in Japan in 1979. Alternate timelines are pretty common in the world of Gundam, so it’s possible that the new project could go that route, though it’d be hard to sell as a Wing series specifically rather than a separate Gundam series.
The new project could also simply pick up where the anime left off or follow the plot of Frozen Teardrop, which was essentially a sequel story. It could even be a prequel, for all we know. With so little information revealed, the possibilities are endless about what this new Gundam Wing could be. That’s not going to stop us from being unreasonably excited about it, though. Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who. #Gundam #Wing #Visual #Project #WorksGundam,Gundam Wing](https://gizmodo.com/app/uploads/2026/05/Mobile-Suit-Gundam-Wing-1280x853.jpg)





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