The new series will reportedly be a continuation of the original 1970s show, and is being described as a deconstruction of the buddy cop genre, according to The Hollywood Reporter. It seems Gunn managed to find time to develop the idea between writing Guardians 3 and starting preproduction on the Marvel threequel. The director may also helm the show's pilot if his busy schedule allows him to. It's still early days, so there's no word on who will assume the lead roles, made famous by David Soul and Paul Michael Glaser.

Amazon's latest win sees it aping the strategy of a streaming rival by resurrecting an iconic TV series. Last year, Netflix unveiled Fuller House, its spinoff of the '80s family sitcom. The VOD giant also cashed in on its subscribers' collective nostalgia by rebooting the classic children's animation Voltron: Legendary Defender.

In case you're too young to remember, Starsky and Hutch followed the exploits of two street-smart cops (Detective Ken 'Hutch' Hutchinson' and Detective Dave Starsky). Accompanied by their red 1974 Ford Torino (and with the aid of police snitch Huggy Bear) the two buddies went around busting criminals. A film reboot, starring Ben Stiller and Owen Wilson, was released in 2004. And, the show even spawned a video game the previous year.

Gunn seems a solid choice for the revival. The director cut his teeth on reboots and remakes before making the jump to the Marvel fold -- his screenplay credits include Scooby Doo and Dawn of the Dead. He also happens to be a sucker for '70s tunes, as evidenced by the Guardians soundtrack.