1899 had a two-episode premiere on
47th Toronto International Film Festival on 12 September 2022. The series launched on
Netflix on 17 November 2022, along with a companion making-of documentary titled
Making 1899. Netflix announced a few days after release that
1899 was in 58 countries the most watched product of all the offerings available on Netflix at that time. Despite this, on 2 January 2023, the show was cancelled.
Plagiarism accusations Shortly after the release of
1899,
Brazilian comic book author
Mary Cagnin, through her
X account, claimed her comic book story
Black Silence (2016) had been plagiarized by
Baran bo Odar and
Jantje Friese. Cagnin mentioned that several elements of
Black Silence had been reproduced in
1899 and speculated that the series creators discovered her work at the 2017
Gothenburg Book Fair, in Sweden, where she had distributed copies of
Black Silence's English version. Cagnin said she was "heartbroken" and had "cried a lot" over the issue. Her thread speculating how
Black Silence had been plagiarized went viral in Brazil.
Decider observed that "[a]side from an affinity for pyramids, it's hard to find many similarities" between the two projects", and noted that even when reading
Black Silence with the specific goal of finding similarities to
1899, "the connections between the two properties were borderline nonexistent", concluding that "[c]reepy pyramids, suspicious suicides, weird codes, and outer space" are "incredibly common sci-fi tropes" and their appearance in both works is "not suspicious".
Jantje Friese responded to the allegations via her
Instagram account with a post that was later deleted, stating that "a Brazilian artist has claimed we stole from her graphic novel. To make it clear: we did not! Until yesterday we weren't even aware of the existence of that graphic novel".
Friese went on to say that "Over two years we have put pain, sweat and exhaustion into the creation of
1899. This is an original idea and not based on any source material. Nevertheless we've been bombarded with messages – some of them ugly and hurtful." The series creator also added that "someone cries wolf and everyone jumps on it, not even checking whether the claims make any sense. [...] Of course should this be a scheme to sell more of her graphic novels: well played, [...]".
Cancellation and response Writing in
Forbes about the cancellation of
1899 and other Netflix series, Paul Tassi said that "I feel like Netflix is almost actively stealing my time from me. [...] It's frankly exhausting, and if it's this exhausting for viewers, I have to imagine it's ten times as much for showrunners and actors. Netflix is becoming a graveyard stacked with dead series with unfinished conclusions. [...] Something has to change." Writing in
Digital Spy, David Opie said that "for all we know, there might be talks to save the show at
HBO or
Prime Video, plus there's a small chance that Netflix themselves might try and wrap things up in a one-off special or movie. That's exactly what happened after fans decried Netflix's decision to cancel
Sense8 a few years back [that is also an international genre show]." Fans took to social media to decry the decision, and a petition to save the show was started on
Change.org. As of July 2024, it had garnered over 100,000 signatures. == Reception ==