‘Gannibal’: How a Series About Eating Children Became Disney+’s Biggest Live-Action Hit in Japan

The hit horror-thriller series Gannibal, which centers on a remote village’s secret tradition of eating children alive, was always an unlikely choice as Disney‘s first big-budget, live-action streaming series produced in Japan, a country with deep ties to the House of Mouse’s classic, family-friendly brand. Production of the show’s first two seasons also ran significantly over schedule and over budget — but Disney’s big bet on the series appears to be paying off.

Gannibal has become Disney+’s most-viewed title in Japan since the launch of its second season on March 19, and it surpassed 1 million hours streamed within just nine days of release, a new record for the service in the country (in the U.S., Gannibal streams exclusively on Hulu).

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