Scissor Seven Is Getting a Theatrical Movie in 2028
The hit Chinese animated series confirmed a big-screen film is on the way, with a 2028 theatrical window but no firm date yet.
What was announced
Scissor Seven, the breakout Chinese animated series, is heading to the big screen. In a post on July 10, 2026, the show's official account confirmed that a theatrical film is on the way, telling fans, "A familiar world is returning. But this time, we're headed for the big screen," and signing off with "see you in theatres in 2028!" The message arrived with a short teaser clip and a note of thanks to longtime viewers and newcomers alike.
What we know
The announcement is deliberately spare. The official post commits to a 2028 theatrical window but stops short of a specific release date, and no cast, staff, or plot details were shared alongside the teaser. Scissor Seven has followed its assassin-turned-hairdresser hero across five television seasons, and a movie has been in the cards for a while: a sequel film was first teased at the close of the fourth season. This new post reaffirms that project and, for the first time, pins a 2028 target to it.
Background
Created, directed, and voiced by Xiaofeng He, Scissor Seven premiered in 2018 and quickly became a landmark for Chinese animation. In 2020 it debuted internationally on Netflix, billed as the first Chinese animated series to launch as a Netflix original. Produced by Sharefun Studio, the show built a devoted following across five seasons, roughly 50 episodes plus a handful of specials, with a blend of slapstick comedy, kinetic fight choreography, and surprisingly tender character writing. At its center is Seven, a bumbling would-be killer who moonlights as a hairdresser while piecing together his lost memories. Originally produced in Mandarin and Cantonese, the series has traveled well beyond China, and its Netflix run helped introduce a global audience to a style of homegrown animation that had rarely broken out internationally before.
Why it matters
A theatrical feature is a meaningful step up for a series that began as scrappy, low-budget web animation before growing into one of the most recognizable names in the Chinese donghua scene. With the film still roughly two years out and details under wraps, fans will be watching for the specifics the teaser withheld, chief among them a concrete release date and where the movie will pick up after the television run. For now, the studio's promise is a simple one: Seven's story is not finished, and its next chapter is built for the cinema.
