My Friend Pedro is being made into a television series by the writer of John Wick

YouTube YouTube
Watch On

My Friend Pedro is an extremely violent sidescrolling shooter about a hyperkinetic ballet dancer driven to mass murder by a talking banana. (I don't know if they're actually a ballet dancer, but the talking banana part is 100 percent real.) Earlier this year John Wick writer Derek Kolstad mentioned that he'd like to turn the game into a television series, and according to The Hollywood Reporter, it's actually going to happen.

The series will be "an R-rated half-hour dramedy" series, written and produced by Kolstad in partnership with DJ2 Entertainment and 87North Productions. John Wick and Deadpool 2 director David Leitch, and Deadpool 2 producer Kelly McCormick, are also onboard as executive producers.

A weird indie action-platformer might not be the most obvious source for a television series, especially one built around a soft fruit with murderous intent, but this might actually be a good fit. My Friend Pedro is all about fast, acrobatic gunplay with plenty of splattered blood, which should be right up Kolstad's alley, and the presence of Leitch and McCormick only reinforces that impression. It may not turn out to be the most compelling narrative experience ever, but let us never forget that John Wick is a genre-defining action film that's entirely style over substance: You could even argue that John Wick is My Friend Pedro, except with a banana instead of a dog.

Game-based television projects seem to be all the rage these days: DJ2 Entertainment announced last week that it's also looking to pitch a television series based on Disco Elysium, and earlier today Amazon revealed that it's working on a series based on Fallout.

Andy Chalk
US News Lead

Andy has been gaming on PCs from the very beginning, starting as a youngster with text adventures and primitive action games on a cassette-based TRS80. From there he graduated to the glory days of Sierra Online adventures and Microprose sims, ran a local BBS, learned how to build PCs, and developed a longstanding love of RPGs, immersive sims, and shooters. He began writing videogame news in 2007 for The Escapist and somehow managed to avoid getting fired until 2014, when he joined the storied ranks of PC Gamer. He covers all aspects of the industry, from new game announcements and patch notes to legal disputes, Twitch beefs, esports, and Henry Cavill. Lots of Henry Cavill.

Latest in Action
Two rising ronin facing each other
Rise of the Ronin is another crappy PC port, performance patch coming 'soon'
GTA 5 characters
GTA 5 publisher takes legal aim at account-selling site for allegedly raking in 'millions in revenue', while recruiting hackers to keep its cogs turning
Monster Hunter Wilds palico
One of the biggest victories of Monster Hunter Wilds' streamlining is I don't have to deal with those awful gimmick fights anymore
A young witch watering a smiling mushroom in a magic garden
Here's a roguelite dungeon crawler Steam reviewers call 'a botanical Diablo' and 'like Cult of the Lamb' except you manage a mystical garden
Chatacabra from Monster Hunter Wilds
The latest Monster Hunter Wilds event quest gives piles of Armor Spheres for hunting a Chatacabra, making this a very bad week to be a frog in the Forbidden Lands
A hunter posing with an absurd Blangonga outfit in Monster Hunter Wilds.
Attention, fashion hunters: There's a Monster Hunter Wilds mod to disable all those obnoxious glowing buff effects that distract from your fits
Latest in News
Inzoi - A Zoi's face in three graphical presets showing a progression from a slightly blurry minimum specs to a higher fidelity recommended specs.
Oh great, the full Inzoi system requirements are posted and I'm barely above the minimum specs so I guess my Zois will be beautifully blurry
Mark Darrah
BioWare veteran says a big delay is better than lots of little ones, because sometimes you just gotta 'burn it down and take the other fork in the road'
Two rising ronin facing each other
Rise of the Ronin is another crappy PC port, performance patch coming 'soon'
Defiance players
A dead MMO that launched with a now-cancelled TV show in 2013 is coming back 4 years after servers were shut down
The OpenAI logo is being displayed on a smartphone with an AI brain visible in the background, in this photo illustration taken in Brussels, Belgium, on January 2, 2024. (Photo illustration by Jonathan Raa/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
OpenAI is working on a new AI model Sam Altman says is ‘good at creative writing’ but to me it reads like a 15-year-old's journal
Alma, the handler from Monster Hunter Wilds, closes her eyes and looks a little disappointed.
This impractical method of getting a 1-second capture time in Monster Hunter Wilds can make you the fastest hunter alive—on paper