• About
  • Contact
  • Write For Us
No Result
View All Result
Donate
The Asian Cut
  • Home
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Essays
  • Director Retrospectives
  • Home
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Essays
  • Director Retrospectives
No Result
View All Result
The Asian Cut
No Result
View All Result

The Stars of ‘Ultraman: Rising’ Discuss the Iconic Asian Superhero

Rachel Ho by Rachel Ho
June 12, 2024
in Interview
0
(L-R) Tamlyn Tomita, Christopher Sean and Gedde Watanabe attend a special screening of Ultraman: Rising at Netflix Tudum Theater on June 01, 2024 in Los Angeles, California.

Photo by Tommaso Boddi / Getty Images for Netflix

Ultraman: Rising stars Gedde Watanabe and Tamlyn Tomita occupy an auspicious space in Asian American cinema history having starred in ‘80s classic Sixteen Candles and the landmark film, The Joy Luck Club, respectively. It’s without hyperbole to say that Watanabe and Tomita laid down the groundwork for the active role Asians play in Hollywood today, and with their voice performances in Netflix’s Ultraman: Rising, they continue to break ground.

“We get to see an Asian/Asian American superhero,” Tomita, who currently stars in another Netflix adaptation, Avatar: The Next Airbender, tells The Asian Cut over Zoom. “He is sexy and strong, funny — humble and very caretaking. [He’s a] father figure, as well as child and son.”

The Ultraman franchise has deep roots in Japan and across Asia. A character whose impact can be likened to the cultural standing Superman has in the West, Ultraman first made his debut in 1966 on a Japanese television show (aptly titled, Ultraman) that ran for 39 episodes. Since then, nearly 50 iterations of the character in television, film, and Manga series have appeared as sequels, prequels, remakes, and reboots, creating one of the most celebrated and successful superhero franchise in Japan.

Growing up in the U.S. during the ‘60s and ‘70s gave Watanabe and Tomita little access to the phenomenon developing overseas, though. “You got these weird little channels that you could possibly see [Ultraman], and it was the first time that you saw an Asian American or Asian hero,” Watanabe explains. “I was not familiar, [but] we knew of him.”

“But we didn’t grow up with him,” Tomita adds.

RelatedStories

Siyou Tan headshot and a still from the movie Amoeba

Siyou Tan Tackles Delinquent Behaviour in Singapore

April 21, 2026
Meaghan Rath as Anushka Bhattachera-Phister and Curtis Lum as Tim Kwan sitting at a table in The Audacity

Curtis Lum Discusses ‘The Audacity’ and the Thrill of Playing the Corporate Climber

April 14, 2026
A still of Ultraman raising a glowing fist in Netflix's Ultraman: Rising.
Photo Courtesy of Netflix

Conversely, for Christopher Sean, the latest actor to take up the Ultraman mantle, the superhero was a part of his childhood. “I knew Ultraman as a kid, I would buy his masks at the festivals in Japan, and I would see him on TV,” recalls the actor. “But after booking the role, I studied him and I learned that there is so much lore from Ultraman to Ultraseven to The Return of Ultraman, and so on.”

In Ultraman: Rising, Sean plays an unwilling Ultraman in the form of baseball superstar, Ken Sato. After moving to the U.S. from Japan as a young boy with his mother Emiko (Tomita), Ken grows up disconnected from his father, Professor Sato (Watanabe), who currently dons the Ultraman mask. But as Professor Sato grows old, Ken, who has returned to Japan to continue his professional baseball career, feels pressured to take up the role and protect Tokyo from the ever-present kaiju attacks.

A still of a dragon over a baseball field in Ultraman: Rising.
Photo Courtesy of Netflix

Ultraman: Rising will be the first exposure to the character for many in the West and around the world, and Sean hopes this will buoy the interest of the uninitiated and prompt them to understand the nuances of the character and the film. “I truly hope that [audiences] see what this movie is really about,” says Sean. “It’s about humanity. It’s about love. It’s about family. It’s about learning from your mistakes, and not living in the past. But looking at the same situation, using a positive perspective and looking towards making the future better.”

He continues, “This movie encompasses so many quips that we deal with: inter-generational relationships, your relationship with your parents, having the courage to battle through issues and as you get through the end of that issue, you find that you’re a better person in the end. These are the things that I hope that audiences will take from our movie.”

As Sean discusses his thoughts about the film and the character, Tomita and Watanabe look on with an almost parental pride. There’s a poignancy to Tomita and Watanabe playing Sean’s parents in the film — a generational passing of the torch from two actors who have meant so much to Asian American cinema to an actor who’s just getting started. 

Tomita and Watanabe’s generation fought battles on sets and in meeting rooms, and made sacrifices just to wedge their feet in the door. We’re currently experiencing a shift in Western society where stories are being told for us and made by us. Ultraman: Rising may just appear to be another Netflix animated film, but it denotes another step forward — another territory gained.

Now Streaming On

JustWatch
Tags: AnimatedGedde WatanabeJapanNetflixTamlyn TomitaUltraman: RisingUSA
ShareTweet
Rachel Ho

Rachel Ho

Rachel Ho is a freelance film critic, writer and edtor. Currently, she is the film editor at Exclaim! Magazine and has contributed to a variety of publications such as, The Globe and Mail, CBC Arts, POV Magazine, Slash Film, eliteGen Magazine and others. In 2021, Rachel received the Toronto Film Critic's Emerging Critic Award and has been a voter for the Golden Globe Awards since 2022.

Recommended For You

Jun Kunimura as Wada and Arata Iura as Hideki seated at a table in a cowboy bar opposite Robin Weigert as Peg in Tokyo Cowboy.
Review

‘Tokyo Cowboy’ Rides Off Into the Sunset with Goodhearted Intentions

H.P. Mendoza on the set of The Secret Art of Human Flight.
Interview

H.P. Mendoza Talks ‘The Secret Art of Human Flight’ and Being Unapologetically Queer and Filipino

June 28, 2023
Phillipa Soo and Simu Liu in One True Loves.
Review

‘One True Loves’ Is All Sugar and No Spice

Lilly Singh as Maya in Doin' It
News

AURA Entertainment Acquires Lilly Singh’s ‘Doin’ It’

June 26, 2025
An image of a copy of The Emperor and the Endless Palace with a headshot of its author, Justinian Huang, edited next to it.
Interview

Justinian Huang: From Film Studio Exec to Published Novelist — And Just Getting Started

June 4, 2024
Eddie Huang staring off in front of a playground in Vice Is Broke
Review

‘Vice Is Broke’ Breaks Down the Seduction of Cool

Next Post
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 01: (L-R) Shannon Tindle and John Aoshima speak onstage during a special screening of Ultraman: Rising at Netflix Tudum Theater on June 01, 2024 in Los Angeles, California.

‘Ultraman: Rising’ Directors Speak to the Family Values of Ultraman

Popular Stories

Kim Min-hee as Lady Hideko getting a foot massage from Kim Tae-ri as Sook-hee in The Handmaiden.

‘The Handmaiden’: Male Fantasies in a Doll House

2 years ago
Jeon Do-yeon as Gil Bok-soon choking Lee Yeon as Kim Yeong-ji in the movie Kill Boksoon

‘Kill Boksoon’: Queers and Contract Killers in the Closet

2 years ago
Max Eigenmann as Joy in Raging Grace.

‘Raging Grace’ Proves the Scariest Things in Life Are What’s Real

A tall box in a street alley from the movie The Box Man.

‘The Box Man’ Cannot Be Contained

Zaarin Bushra as Pooja in the car with her family in White Elephant film

Andrew Chung on Representation and Appropriation in ‘White Elephant’

4 years ago
  • About
  • Contact
  • Write For Us

Copyright © The Asian Cut 2026. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy | Terms of Use

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Essays
  • Director Retrospectives
  • Write For Us
  • Contact

Copyright © The Asian Cut 2026. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy | Terms of Use