'It combines my love of animation and amazing stories,' David Fincher on his Netflix venture, Love, Death & Robots

    David Fincher and Tim Miller express excitement for their unique, adult-oriented Netflix anthology series, 'Love, Death & Robots'.

    'It combines my love of animation and amazing stories,' David Fincher on his Netflix venture, Love, Death & Robots

    Visionary filmmakers David Fincher and Tim Miller have teamed up to transform the realm of animation for adults with their groundbreaking Netflix anthology series, 'Love, Death & Robots'. According to a 2019 Rolling Stone article, the creators were brewing an eclectic mix of science fiction, fantasy, horror, and comedy, all served up in 18 bite-sized chunks.

    "Sentient Dairy Products, Werewolf Soldiers, Robots Gone Wild..."

    Spanning a total of 185 minutes, each of these 18 stories—lasting between five and fifteen minutes—will be helmed by a different international filmmaking team, each employing their unique animation style. From traditional 2D to innovative 3D CGI, the anthology promises an array of peculiar characters and scenarios. “Sentient dairy products, werewolf soldiers, robots gone wild, garbage monsters, cyborg bounty hunters, alien spiders, and bloodthirsty demons from hell” are just a taste of the narratives that audiences can expect.

    "I'm So Fucking Excited That The Creative Landscape Has Finally Changed..."

    For 'Deadpool' director Tim Miller, 'Love, Death & Robots' is the "dream project" that encapsulates his "love of animation and amazing stories". He further expresses his excitement for this venture, acknowledging the shift in the creative landscape that now welcomes adult-themed animation into mainstream culture.

    "It Combines My Love of Animation and Amazing Stories,” he shared, giving voice to a sentiment that many fans of such fantastic fiction, once considered part of fringe geek and nerd culture, will undoubtedly resonate with.

    The collaboration between 'Gone Girl' and 'Fight Club' director David Fincher and Miller on 'Love, Death & Robots', even in retrospect, sparks anticipation and curiosity. While Netflix remained tight-lipped at the time about the specifics of the creative team and the release date, the series indeed went on to make waves among adult animation enthusiasts.

    (Several parts of the text in this article, including the title, were generated with the help of an AI tool.)