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The 13-time Emmy-winning animated anthology series Love, Death + Robots will return with 10 brand-new stories on May 15, exclusively on Netflix. The streamer today revealed the Volume 4 official trailer, voice cast details and roster of directors brining these tales of terror, technology and the human experience to life.
Highlights of the announcement include the return of executive producer David Fincher (Bad Travelling) as a director, helming the episode Can’t Stop featuring the Red Hot Chili Peppers. The marquee names on this season’s cast list also include MrBeast, Kevin Hart, John Oliver, Niecy Nash, John Boyega, Rhys Darby and more.
Jennifer Yuh Nelson (Kung Fu Panda 2 & 3, LDR Pop Squad and Kill Team Kill) returns as supervising director for Volume 4. Executive producers are Tim Miller, David Fincher, Jennifer Miller and Joshua Donen,
Vol. 4 Synopsis: Dinosaur gladiators, messianic cats, string-puppet rock stars, it can only be Love, Death & Robots. The fourth volume, presented by Tim Miller (Deadpool, Terminator: Dark Fate) and David Fincher (Mindhunter, The Killer), sees Jennifer Yuh Nelson (Kung Fu Panda 2, Kill Team Kill) return as supervising director for ten startling shorts showcasing the series’ signature, award-winning style of bleeding-edge animation, horror, sci-fi and humor. Buckle up.
Episode List
Can’t Stop: A unique take on the Red Hot Chili Peppers’ legendary 2003 performance at Slane Castle, Ireland, with band members Anthony Kiedis, Flea, Chad Smith and John Frusciante recreated as string-puppets. Directed by David Fincher, who originally made his name with music videos in the 1980s and early ’90s, before segueing into unforgettable feature films.
- Director: David Fincher
- Music, Lyrics, & Performance: Red Hot Chili Peppers
- Animation Studio: Blur Studio
- Voice Cast: Anthony Kiedis, Flea, John Frusciante, Chad Smith
Close Encounters of the Mini Kind: Tiny terror is unleashed in this mini alien apocalypse as directors Robert Bisi and Andy Lyon pay loving tribute to classic sci-fi stories of alien invasion and human stupidity using tilt-shift techniques that make the end of the world look almost cute.
- Directors/Writers: Robert Bisi & Andy Lyon
- Animation Studio: BUCK
Spider Rose: A return to the fantastic cyberpunk universe of Swarm (Vol. 3), created by visionary sci-fi author Bruce Sterling and directed by Jennifer Yuh Nelson. On a remote asteroid mining operation, a grieving Mechanist gets a new companion and has a chance to avenge herself against the Shaper assassin who killed her husband.
- Director: Jennifer Yuh Nelson
- Writer: Joe Abercrombie, based on the short story by Bruce Sterling
- Animation Studio: Blur Studio
- Voice Cast: Emily O’Brien, Feodor Chin, Piotr Michael & Sumalee Montano
400 Boys: In a post-apocalyptic city where warring gangs follow a bushido-like code of honor, a new gang, the 400 Boys, forces them to unite. A blend of beauty and brutality from Canadian director Robert Valley, whose LDR episode Ice won the Emmy for Outstanding Short Form Animation.
- Director: Robert Valley
- Writer: Tim Miller, based on the short story by Marc Laidlaw
- Animation Studio: Passion Animation, a Division of Passion Pictures
- Voice Cast: John Boyega, Ed Skrein, Sienna King, Dwane Walcott, Rahul Kohli, Pamela Nomvete & Amar Chadha-Patel
The Other Large Thing: From the mind of prolific writer John Scalzi comes the story of a cat who plans world domination. Sanchez, as his puny human “pets” know him, is helped by a new robotic butler (voiced by Last Week Tonight host John Oliver) who can hack into the World Wide Web and is eager to help his new master.
- Director: Patrick Osborne
- Writer: John Scalzi
- Animation Studio: AGBO
- Voice Cast: Chris Parnell, John Oliver, Fred Tatasciore & Rachel Kimsey
Golgotha: In a rare live-action entry in Love, Death + Robots, a conscientious vicar — played by Rhys Darby (Our Flag Means Death) — plays host to an emissary of an alien race who believes their messiah has been reborn on Earth … as a dolphin. So, uh … yeah, Dolphin-Jesus.
- Director: Tim Miller
- Writer: Joe Abercrombie, based on the short story by Dave Hutchinson
- VFX Studio: Luma Pictures
- Cast: Rhys Darby, Moe Daniels, Graham McTavish, Phil Morris, Michelle Lukes & Matthew Waterson
The Screaming of the Tyrannosaur: On a space station orbiting Jupiter, decadent aristocrats gather to witness a brutal contest of genetically modified gladiators — fierce combatants riding deadly, engineered dinosaurs. A tale of visceral violence and unlikely emotion, directed by Tim Miller, based on a short story by Stant Litore.
- Director: Tim Miller
- Writer: Tim Miller, based on the short story by Stant Litore
- Animation Studio: Blur Studio
- Voice Cast: MrBeast & Bai Ling
How Zeke Got Religion: B-17 Flying Fortress Liberty Belle has the oddest mission of World War Two: a journey into occupied France to bomb a church before the Nazis can raise an ancient evil. John McNichol’s short story of blood, fallen archangels, occult magic, and ultraviolence is directed by Diego Porral (lead animator on previous LDR classic Kill Team Kill).
- Director: Diego Porral
- Writer: J.T. Petty, based on the short story by John McNichol
- Animation Studio: Titmouse
- Voice Cast: Keston John, Braden Lynch, Roger Craig Smith, Gary Furlong, Bruce Thomas, Andrew Morgado & Scott Whyte
Smart Appliances, Stupid Owners: From an angry toothbrush to an overworked smart showerhead and an intelligent toilet, various household appliances divulge tales of bemusement, scorn and wonder about their human owners. Directed by Patrick Osborne, of Vol. 3 favorite Three Robots: Exit Strategies.
- Director: Patrick Osborne
- Writer: John Scalzi
- Animation Studio: Aaron Sims Creative
- Voice Cast: Melissa Villaseñor, Ronny Chieng, Amy Sedaris, Kevin Hart, Josh Brener, Nat Faxon, Niecy Nash-Betts & Brett Goldstein
For He Can Creep: London, 1757. A poet confined to an insane asylum believes Satan wants him to write a verse that will end the world. And the only thing standing between him and the Prince of Darkness (voiced by Dan Stevens) is his cat, Jeoffry. Emily Dean directs this wildly inventive period adaptation of Siobhan Carroll’s short story.
- Director: Emily Dean
- Writer: Tamsyn Muir, based on the short story by Siobhan Carroll
- Animation Studio: Polygon Pictures Inc.
- Voice Cast: Dan Stevens, JB Blanc, Jim Broadbent, Nika Futterman, Jane Leeves & Dave B. Mitchell
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