Death Note 2
Photo: Google

Netflix, the American production company and streaming giant has been endeavoring to corner the market with anime, yet additionally with live-action variations of the absolute greatest anime establishments around, and it appears as though the live-action feature is running after returning to the surprisingly live-action universe of the worldwide famous anime Death Note as continuation author Greg Russo remarks on how it will be more similar to the original source of the manga.

The first film was directed by Adam Wingard, and was met with blended surveys among anime fans and general film watchers the same, however it unquestionably had the option to consummately interpret a few components of the incredible establishment.

HOT: Tokyo Revengers Releases First Live-Action Trailer

Willem Dafoe was starring as Ryuk and Lakeith Stanfield as L at the first film, which took in excess of a couple of takeoffs from the story that was put on the map by both the manga and the anime. It additionally ended up finishing on something of a cliffhanger, so a spin-off surely has a lot of material to plunge into with regards to the narratives of Light and the otherworldly scratch pad that has caused in excess of a couple of passings.

The worldwide famous writer Greg Russo talked with the news outled We Got This Covered about the thing he’s expecting the sequel that is presently underway and how his longing to return to the source material which will be a major piece of the Death Note continuation:

“It’s funny because it sounds like a shift in genre but really, it comes down to the same things. It’s about adapting IP. It’s about bringing over an amazing piece of fan property and trying to do it right. And Death Note, I’m a huge fan of the manga, I’m a huge fan of the original source material and I think it’s one of the greatest mangas ever written. And so for me, I didn’t play any role in Death Note, the first film that Netflix did, but I came in with kind of a point of view with what I wanted to do in a sequel. And part of that is I wanted to go back to the source material. Hopefully, there will be more info on it soon, but it’s going to be… it’s not going to be exactly what you’re expecting. And I mean that in a very enticing way.”

Photo: Madhouse

Death Note is a Japanese manga arrangement composed by Tsugumi Ohba and represented by Takeshi Obata. The manga was first serialized in Shueisha’s manga magazine Weekly Shōnen Jump from December 2003 to May 2006. The 108 sections were gathered and distributed into 12 tankōbon volumes between April 2004 and July 2006. An anime TV adjustment publicized in Japan from October 3, 2006, to June 26, 2007. Made out of 37 scenes, the anime was created by Madhouse and coordinated by Tetsurō Araki. A light novel dependent on the arrangement, composed by Nisio Isin, was additionally discharged in 2006, also, different computer games have been distributed by Konami for the Nintendo DS. An American film adjustment was discharged on Netflix on August 24, 2017.


ALSO READ: 7 Anime Heroes That Can Easily Become Criminals In Real Life