is a Japanese manga series created by writer Tsugumi Ohba and manga artist Takeshi Obata. The series centers on Light Yagami, a university student who discovers a supernatural notebook, the "Death Note", dropped on Earth by a shinigami (death god) named Ryuk. The Death Note grants its user the ability to kill anyone whose face they have seen, by writing the victim's name in the notebook. The story follows Light's attempt to create and rule a world cleansed of evil using the notebook, and the complex conflict between him, his opponents and a mysterious detective known to the world only as L.
Death Note was first serialized in 108 chapters by
Shueisha in the Japanese manga magazine
Weekly ShÅnen Jump
from December 2003 to May 2006. The series was also published in
tankÅbon format in Japan
starting in May 2004 and ending in October 2006 with a total of
twelve volumes. The series was adapted into
live-action films released in Japan on June 17,
2006, on November 3, 2006, and on February 2, 2008. The
anime series aired in Japan from October 3, 2006, to
June 26, 2007. Composed of 37 episodes, the anime was developed by
Madhouse and directed by
Tetsuro Araki. A
light
novel based on the series, written by
Nisio Isin, was released in Japan. Additionally,
various video games have been published by
Konami for
Nintendo
DS.
Viz Media licensed the
Death Note
manga in North America and has published all the twelve volumes
from the series as well as the light novel. The episodes from the
anime first appeared in North America as downloadable by
IGN. Viz later licensed the anime series and it aired on
Bionix. The live-actions briefly played in
certain North American theaters since 2008. However, none of the
video games titles have thus far been published in North
America.
Several publications for manga, anime and other media have added
praise and criticism on the
Death Note series. The plot
and violence from the story have been praised, noting it to be very
entertaining. However, the series was banned in China due to
various problems people had with children altering their notebooks
to resemble the Death Note.
Plot
Light Yagami is an extremely
intelligent young man who resents what appears to be a relentless
increase of crime and corruption in the world around him. His life
undergoes a drastic change when he discovers a mysterious notebook,
known as the "Death Note", lying on the ground. The Death Note's
instructions claim that if a human's name is written within it,
that person shall die. Light is initially skeptical of the
notebook's authenticity, but after experimenting with it, he
realizes that the Death Note is real. After meeting with the
previous owner of the Death Note, a
shinigami named Ryuk, Light
seeks to become "the God of the New World" by passing his keen
judgment on those he deems to be evil or who get in his way.
Soon, the
number of inexplicable deaths of reported criminals catches the
attention of the International
Police Organization
and a mysterious detective known only as "L". L quickly learns that the serial
killer, dubbed by the public as , is located in Japan. He also
concludes that Kira can kill people without laying a finger on
them. Light realizes that L will be his greatest nemesis, and a
game of psychological
cat and mouse
between the two begins.
Misa Amane, another Death Note owner,
finds Light. Obsessed by Kira after the death of her parents'
murderer, she devotes herself to helping Light, but is captured by
L. Light makes a plan involving renouncing ownership of both Death
Notes, and all of his memories of them, and turns himself in to L
for surveillance. Together, Light and L investigate eight people
from the company "Yotsuba" who are using Light's Death Note for
their own profit. While arresting them, Light recovers all his
memories when he touches the Death Note. He remembers and continues
his plan of compelling the former owner of Misa's Death Note, the
shinigami Rem, into killing L and his aide Watari.
After L's death, Light is given the position of the "new L" by the
Japanese Task Force. Four years later, Near and Mello - two
children who were raised to be successors to L - appear, with the
goal of finding Kira. In the meantime, Kira has gained much public
support, and has contacts. Mello, one of L's successors, kidnaps
Sayu Yagami, Light's little sister, as a bargaining chip to get the
Death Note. The Japanese Task Force plan to go to Los Angeles to
rescue Sayu but end up losing the Notebook. The task force later
attempts to retrieve it and succeeds in doing so; but, as a result
of an explosive that Mello uses to cover his escape, Soichiro
Yagami, Light's father, dies.
Near begins to suspect the second L of being Kira thus causing some
members of the Japanese task force to also openly suspect him.
Realizing the risk of being caught, Light has Misa give up
ownership of her Death Note. He then finds his next successor, Teru
Mikami, a strong, almost crazed Kira supporter. Mikami later
recruits a new spokesman for Kira, Kiyomi Takada, a newscaster and
one of Light's former college girlfriends. Teru Mikami and Kiyomi
Takada continue killing criminals while Light is unable to do so
himself. Kiyomi is later kidnapped by Mello and is forced to kill
him with a hidden piece of the Death Note. Light kills Kiyomi to
avoid her implicating him after she uses the note to kill Mello. In
a final confrontation between Light and Near, the latter reveals
that the former is Kira. Light's name is then written in a Death
Note by Ryuk, as he stated he would at the beginning of the series.
Light suffers a
heart attack
and dies.
Production
The
Death Note concept did not derive from any single
source but rather a general concept involving Shinigami and
"specific rules." Tsugumi Ohba wanted to create a suspense series
because he did not feel that he could have created a fight-style
series and that the genre had few suspense series. After
publication of the pilot chapter the series was not expected to be
approved as a serialized comic by the author who did not consider
it to "fit with
Jump." Ohba said that when he learned that
Death Note received approval and that Takeshi Obata would
create the artwork he "couldn't even believe it." Due to positive
reactions to the series
Death Note became a serialized
manga series.
"Thumbnails" were created incorporating dialog, panel layout, and
basic drawings, and were sent to the illustrator. The editor
reviewed the thumbnails and sent them to back to the illustrator
(Obata) with the script set in stone and the panel layout "mostly
done." Obata then determined the expressions and "camera angles"
and created the final artwork. Ohba concentrated on the tempo and
the amount of dialogue, making sure that the text was as concise as
possible. Ohba commented that he believed "reading too much
exposition" would be tiring and would negatively affect the
atmosphere and "air of suspense." Significant artistic license was
given to the illustrator who worked on basic descriptions, such as
"abandoned building", and this extended to the design of the Death
Notes with Obata possessing free rein. Obata originally thought of
the books as "'
Bible-like'...something you
would automatically think was a Death Note." He also felt this
design would seem "difficult to use" and instead opted for an
easy-to-use college notebook. At a later point the concept of Death
Notes looking different from one another, depending on the human
era (such as Death Notes in ancient Japan looking like scrolls and
Death Notes in
medieval Europe
looking like
The Old Testament)
was conceived.
When Ohba decided on the plot he internally visualized the panels
while being on his bed, drinking tea, or walking around his house,
needing to feel relaxed while visualizing the panels. On many
occasions the original draft was too long and needed to be refined
various times before the desired "tempo" and "flow" for the chapter
was finalised. The writer remarked on his preference for reading
the previous "two or four" chapters carefully to ensure consistency
in the story.
The typical weekly production schedule consisted of five days for
creating and thinking and one day using pencil to insert dialogue
into rough drafts; after this point the writer faxed any initial
drafts to the editor. The illustrator's weekly production schedule
involved one day with the thumbnails, layout, and pencils and one
day with additional penciling and inking. Obata's assistants
usually worked for four days and Obata spent one day to finish it.
Obata said that sometimes he took a few extra days to color pages
and that this "messed with the schedule." In contrast, the writer
took three or four days to create a chapter on some occasions,
while on others he took a month. Obata said that his schedule
remained consistent except when he had to create color pages.
Ohba and Obata rarely met in person during the creation of the
serialized manga; instead the two met with the editor. The first
time they met in person was at an editorial party in January 2004.
Obata said that, despite the intrigue, he did not ask his editor
about Ohba's plot developments as he anticipated the new thumbnails
every week. The two did not discuss the final chapters with one
another and they continued to talk with the editor. Ohba said that
when he asked the editor if Obata had "said anything" about the
story and plot the editor responded '"No, nothing"
[
laughs].'
Ohba claims that the series ended more or less in the manner that
he intended for it to end; he considered the idea of
L defeating Light Yagami with Light dying but
instead chose to use the "Yellow Box warehouse" ending. According
to Ohba the details had been set "from the beginning." The writer
wanted an ongoing plot line instead of an episodic series because
Death Note was serialized and its focus was intended to be
on a cast with a series of events triggered by the Death Note.
13: How to Read states that the humorous aspects of
Death Note originated from Ohba's "enjoyment of humorous
stories."
Ohba said that he did not have a theme that he wished to express
throughout the series but that, had he been required to choose one,
it would be that "Humans will all eventually die and never come
back to life, so let's give it our all while we're alive." He said
that he did not intend for
Death Note to push an ideology
or make a statement about good and evil, and that Near's statement
in Volume 12 about deciding right and wrong is closest to his own
personal belief. Ohba also remarked that he understands how debate
can form from the story; the answers to the questions raised become
"ideological" and he believed this development would be "dangerous"
and not "interesting in a manga." This aspect was ultimately
omitted from
Death Note.
When the writer was asked, during an interview, whether the series
was meant to be about enjoying the plot twists and psychological
warfare, Ohba responded by saying that this concept was the reason
why he was "very happy" to place the story in
Weekly ShÅnen
Jump. He said that because
Death Note is aimed at
"the young" the reader can "push back ideology" and focus on "pure
entertainment." He also said that if the series was aimed at an
older audience he would expect "more debate over the issues" and
therefore believed the story would have had to develop in that
direction.
Death Note 13: How to Read states that debate
about good and evil "sometimes" appears in the series and that the
"answer" to the debate is left for the reader to decide.
Ohba was also asked what he considered the most important thing in
Death Note, and he responded by saying, "the human whose
name is written in this note shall die"; in contrast, Obata
responded to the same question by answering "impossible to
say."
Pilot chapter
The
Death Note process began when Ohba brought thumbnails
for two concept ideas to
Shueisha; Ohba
said that the
Death Note pilot, one of the concepts, was
"received well" by editors and attained positive reactions by
readers. Ohba described keeping the story of the pilot to one
chapter as "very difficult" and he said that he remembered it took
over a month to begin writing the chapter. He added that the story
had to revive the killed characters with the Death Eraser and that
he "didn't really care" for that plot device.
Obata said that he wanted to draw the story after he heard of a
"horror story featuring Shinigami." According to Obata, when he
first received the rough draft created by Ohba, he "didn't really
get it" at first and he wanted to work on the project due to the
presence of Shinigami and because the work "was dark." He also said
he wondered about the progression of the plot as he read the
thumbnails, and if
Jump readers would enjoy reading the
comic. Obata said that while there is little action and the main
character "doesn't really drive the plot" he enjoyed the atmosphere
of the story. He stated that he drew the pilot chapter so that it
would appeal to himself.
Ohba brought the rough draft of the pilot chapter to the editorial
department. Obata came into the picture at a later point to create
the artwork. They did not meet in person while creating the pilot
chapter. Ohba said that the editor told him he did not need to meet
with Obata to discuss the pilot; Ohba said "I think it worked out
all right."
Adaptation
Tetsuro Araki, the director, said that he wished to convey aspects
that "made the series interesting" instead of simply "focusing on
morals or the concept of justice." Toshiki Inoue, the series
organizer, agreed with Araki and added that, in anime adaptations,
there is a lot of importance in highlighting the aspects that are
"interesting in the original." He concluded that Light's presence
was "the most compelling" aspect; therefore the adaptation
chronicles Light's "thoughts and actions as much as possible."
Inoue noted that, to best incorporate the manga's plot into the
anime, he "tweak[ed] the chronology a bit" and incorporated
flashbacks that appear after the openings of the episodes; he said
this revealed the desired tensions. Araki said that, because in an
anime the viewer cannot "turn back pages" in the manner that a
comic reader can, the anime staff ensured that the show clarified
details. Inoue added that the staff did not want to get involved
with every single detail, so the staff selected elements to
emphasize. Due to the complexity of the original manga, he
described the process as "definitely delicate and a great
challenge." Inoue admitted that he placed more instructions and
notes in the script than usual. Araki added that because of the
importance of otherwise trivial details, the notes became crucial
to the development of the series.
Araki said that when he discovered the
Death Note anime
project, he "literally begged" to join the production team; when he
joined he insisted that Inoue should write the scripts. Inoue added
that, because he enjoyed reading the original comic, he wished to
use his effort.
Media
Manga
The
Death Note manga series was first serialized in the
Japanese manga magazine
Weekly ShÅnen Jump published by
Shueisha in December 2003. The series has
since ended in Japan with a total of 108 chapters. Later, the
individual chapters were collected into twelve separate
tankÅbon. In April from 2005
Death Note was
licensed for publication in North America by
Viz Media, and the first
English-language volume was released on
October 10, 2005. In February 2008, a
one-shot special was released. Set two
years after the manga's epilogue, it sees the introduction of a new
Kira and the reactions of the main characters in response to the
copycat's appearance. Several
Death Note yonkoma (four-panel comics) appeared in
Akamaru Jump. The yonkoma were written to
be humorous. The
Akamaru Jump issues that printed the
comics include 2004 Spring, 2004 Summer, 2005 Winter, and 2005
Spring. In addition
Weekly
ShÅnen Jump Gag Special 2005 included some
Death
Note yonkoma in a
Jump Heroes Super 4-Panel
Competition.
In addition, a guidebook for the manga was also released in October
13, 2006. It was named
Death Note 13: How to Read and
contained data relating to the series, including character profiles
of almost every character that is named, creator interviews, behind
the scenes info for the series and the pilot chapter that preceded
Death Note. It also reprinted all of the yonkoma
serialized in
Akamaru Jump and the
Weekly ShÅnen
Jump Gag Special 2005. Its first edition could be purchased
with a Death Note themed diorama which includes five finger puppets
inspired by Near's toys. The five finger puppets are Kira, L,
Misa,
Mello, and
Near. In North America,
13: How to
Read was released in February 19, 2008.
Live-action films
Death Note was adapted into a series of live-action films
in 2006.
The films were directed by Shūsuke Kaneko, produced by Nippon
Television
, and
distributed by Warner Bros., Pictures
Japan. The first film, simply titled
Death Note, premiered in Japan on
June 17, 2006 and topped the Japanese
box
office for two weeks, pushing
The Da Vinci Code into second
place. The first movie briefly played in certain North American
theaters on May 20–21, 2008 The film was broadcast in Canadian
theaters for one night only on September 15, 2008. The DVD was
released on September 16, 2008, one day after the Canadian showing.
The sequel,
Death Note:
The Last Name, premiered in Japan on November 3, 2006. It
was featured in U.S. films on October from 2008. A spinoff from the
films named
L: Change the
World was released in Japan on February 9, 2008. It is
focused on the final 23 days of L's life, as he solves one final
case involving a bio-terrorist group. Two dubbed versions of the
film were shown in the United States on April 29 and 30,
2009.
Death Note has been optioned for a live-action Hollywood
remake.
A
2007 article in The
Star (Malaysia
) states that
more than ten film companies in the United States expressed
interest in creating a remake. Vertigo Entertainment is
currently set to develop an American
Death Note remake. In
April 2009, it was announced that WB had acquired the rights to
make a live-action version of the manga, and had hired Charley and
Vlas Parlapanides to adapt the script. The new film will be based
upon the original manga series rather than the existing live-action
films.
Soundtracks
There have been several soundtracks released for this series, such
as the ones for the film adaptations and also for the anime
adaptation.
Sound of Death Note is a soundtrack featuring
music from the first
Death Note film composed and arranged
by
Kenji Kawai. It was released on June
17, 2006 by
VAP.
Sound
of Death Note the Last name is the soundtrack from the second
Death Note film,
Death Note the Last name. It was
released on November 2, 2006.
Death Note Tribute is a
tribute album dedicated to the
live
action movie for the
Death Note film. Published by
BMG Japan on June 21, 2006 Japan, it
contains 15 tracks performed by various artists, such as
Shikao Suga,
M-Flo,
Buck-Tick and
Aya
Matsuura. The soundtrack came with a
cosplay Death Note notebook. Another tribute album
is
The Songs for Death Note the movie~the Last name
Tribute dedicated to the second film. Published by
Sony Music Entertainment
Japan on December 20, 2006, it contains 14 tracks performed by
various artist, such as
Orange Range,
abingdon boys school,
High and Mighty Color,
Doping Panda and
Galneryus.
The music from the anime was composed by
Yoshihisa Hirano and Hideki Taniuchi, while
the CDs were also published by VAP. The first one was
Death
Note Original Soundtrack, which was released in Japan on
December 21, 2006. It contains music from the series with the first
opening and ending themes sung by the Japanese band
Nightmare in the TV size format.
Death
Note Original Soundtrack II was first released in Japan on
March 21, 2007. It features the new opening and closing themes by
Maximum the Hormone in the TV
size format. The third CD,
Death Note Original Soundtrack
III was released on June 27, 2007. The tracks 1-21 were
composed and arranged by Taniuchi, while the tracks 22-28 were
composed and arranged by Hirano. The album features one track sung
by
Aya Hirano, who was also the
seiyū of
Misa Amane in the anime series. Also appearing on
this soundtrack is the ending theme
Coda~Death Note, which
can be heard at the end of the final episode of the anime as the
credits are shown.
Light novels
A
light novel adaptation of the series
has been written by
Nisio Isin, called .
The novel was released by Shueisha on August 1, 2006. It serves as
a prequel to the manga series, with Mello narrating the story of
L's first encounter with Naomi Misora during the Los Angeles "BB
Serial Murder Case" mentioned in volume 2 of the manga. Beside
Naomi's character, the novel focuses on how L works and one of the
criminals L has to chase down. Insight was given into Watari's
orphanage and how the whole system of geniuses such as L, Mello,
Beyond Birthday, Matt and Near were put to work. Viz released the
novel in English on February 19, 2008. The film
L: Change the World was also
adapted into a light novel with the same name on December 25, 2007
by "M", While the novel is similar to the movie, there are many
siginifgant changes to the plot (for example, Near is not a Thai
boy, but the same Near that appears in the manga). It also reveals
more information about L and his past. Viz released it on October
20, 2009.
Anime
The
Death Note anime, directed by
TetsurÅ Araki and animated by
Madhouse, began airing in Japan on
October 3, 2006, and finished its run on June 26, 2007, totaling 37
twenty-minute episodes. It is set in the year 2007, instead of
starting at the year 2003.
The series aired on the Nippon
Television
network
"every Tuesday at 24:56". The series was co-produced by
Madhouse, Nippon Television,
Shueisha,
D.N. Dream Partners and
VAP.
In North America, the series has been licensed by Viz for residents
in the United States to use "Download-to-Own" and
"Download-to-Rent" services while it was still airing in Japan.
This move is seen as "significant because it marks the first time a
well known Japanese anime property will be made legally available
to domestic audiences for download to own while the title still
airs on Japanese television." The downloadable episodes contain the
original Japanese audio track and English subtitles, and is
available through
IGN's
Windows-only Direct2Drive service. DVDs of
the series are also being released, containing both an English
dubbed audio track, produced by
The
Ocean Group, and the original Japanese audio track with
optional English subtitles. Viz announced at
Anime Expo 2007 that the first DVD was officially
released on November 20, 2007, in both regular and special
editions, and also confirmed at
Comic-Con International 2007 that
the first 15,000 copies of each DVD contains collectible
figures.
Death Note was slated to make its North American
television premiere in Canada on
YTV's Bionix
programming block on September 7, 2007; however, the show was
removed from the schedule at the last minute. The Canadian premiere
was pushed back to October 26, 2007, at 10:00 p.m., when it finally
premiered.
Death Note premiered in the U.S. on October 20,
2007, at 11:30 p.m. on Cartoon Network's
Adult Swim. The last episode aired on Canada's
YTV channel on July 4, 2008, with
Adult
Swim airing it 2 days later. YTV took away the show on July 5,
2008, with the last airing being the last episode rerun @ 1:30am
ET, as part of YTV moving the
Bionix block to a 2-hour only block on Saturdays. The show also
streams online for free on Adult Swim Video, with a new episode
uploaded every Saturday afternoon, on the day of its broadcast
premiere.
A two-hour animated TV special aired on Nippon Television in Japan
on August 31, 2007, at 8:00 PM. It is a recap which takes place
after the series end, where a Shinigami approaches Ryuk in the
Shinigami realm in order to learn more about the human world.
Instead, Ryuk tells him of all the events leading up to the last
story arc, about Light Yagami and his rival L. Originally, this
special was advertised as a retelling told from Ryuk's point of
view, but it does not give a different point of view from what was
originally told. However, it contains updated dialog, as well as a
few new scenes.
The Japanese broadcaster NTV has aired the special on August 22,
2008. Like the first special, this new compilation summarized a
part of the 2006–2007 television anime series. Specifically, it
recounted the final half of the suspenseful supernatural story,
including the investigators Near and Mello's confrontations with
the vigilante Kira. This version notably features more updates than
the previous one, most notably omission of the mafia plot, moving
Light's meetings with Mikami and Takada to earlier and having them
be the ones to kill the SPK.
Video games
A
Death Note video game
developed and published by
Konami for the
Nintendo DS, titled , was released on
February 15, 2007.
Kira Game is a
strategy game where the player takes on
the role of Kira or L. These are just titles, as any character can
be Kira or L. The player will attempt to deduce who their enemy is
(Kira will try to uncover L's identity and vice versa). This will
play out in 3 phases: Investigation, where the player will discuss
the case and clues with other characters; Voting, where each member
of the investigation team casts a vote on who they suspect is L or
Kira based on the player's performance in the previous phase;
L/Kira, where the player can either focus their investigation on
one member to see if they are Kira (L part) or force a member off
of the team (Kira part).A sequel to the game, , was released in
Japan on July 12, 2007. The storyline is based on the second part
of the manga, featuring characters such as Mello and Near.
A third game, , was released for the Nintendo DS in Japan on
February 7, 2008. The player assumes the role of a rookie FBI agent
who awakens in a strange hotel and attempts to escape with the help
of L, who provides assistance via an in-game PDA. The story is set
before the Kira investigation in the original series.
Several characters from
Death Note appear in
Jump Super Stars and
Jump Ultimate Stars, a
fighting game featuring a plethora of
characters from
ShÅnen
Jump titles. Light, Ryuk and L appear in
Jump Super
Stars as support characters. In
Jump Ultimate Stars
Misa, Near, and Mello are added as support characters as
well.
Reception
, Death Note has sold around twenty million copies in Japan. On December 31, 2008, Comipress reported that the twelve volumes from the series had sold 26,500,000 copies. It was also nominated for Best Manga at the 2006 American Anime Awards but lost. In 2007, the first three volumes of Death Note were on the American Library Association's 2007 Great Graphic Novels for Teens Top Ten list. On ICv2's "Top 10 Shonen Properties Q2 2009", Death Note was the third best manga property from North America. During January from 2007, Oricon made a poll in which they asked Japanese fans from manga and anime which characters from any series they would most like to see in spinoff series. The overall winner from the poll was L, who also ranked first in the women's poll and second in the men's poll.
Various publications for several types of media have commented on
the
Death Note manga, adding praise and criticism.
Anime News Network (ANN) writer
Zac Bertschy noted that the difference between
Death Note
and other manga from the same genre was very big due to the murders
the main character (
Light Yagami)
commits as well as how he hides his identity of Kira. Although
Bertchy mentioned some readers from other
shonen would be
surprised with the dark themes of
Death Note, he praised
the series for its "great art, great story, compelling characters."
Julie Rosato from Mania Entertainment found the story to be very
entertaining, having liked Light's development in the story and L's
introduction as well as how the latter starts suspecting of the
former's identity. Additionally, he praised the story as it is
"building a climax" with each detail introduced in the first
chapter, making the reader to look forward to upcoming chapters.
Briana Lawrence from ANN liked the series' ending as most of the
characters from the story were "given a chance to shine" and due to
the fact the notebook and other aspects from the series had little
importance in the focus of
Death Note and now they play a
more important part. However, she did not like how the epilogue
made no mention of what happens with
Misa
Amane and how Near and Mello were still treated like parts of
L.
Shūsuke Kaneko, director of
the film versions of the series, said that the manga series "barely
touches" pain felt by the Death Note's victims, so he decided to
use a different focus with the film series.
Douglas Wolk of
Salon said
that a rumor circulated stating that the creators intended to
create
Death Note to last half as long as its actual run;
according to Wolk the rumor stated that Ohba and Obata had been
persuaded to lengthen the storyline when
Death Note's
popularity increased. In addition he said that fans wrote
"thousands" of
Death Note fan
fiction stories and posted them on the internet. Carl
Kimlinger, in
Protoculture
Addicts, called
Death Note "morally repellant"
and said it "presents a worldview that is both shallow and
repulsively misanthropic."
The anime was also commented with Tom S. Pepirium of IGN saying
that
Death Note s "heavy serialized nature" is what "makes
the show so engaging and discussion worthy." Pepirium, saying that
translating
Death Note is "no small task," said that
Stephen Hedley created a dub with "nothing clunky." Pepirium added
that Karl Willems, director of the dub, assembled a "stunning voice
cast of professionals" with a "solid tone minus some of the cheesy
yelling and screaming of other dubs." John Powers of the
NPR show
Fresh Air
finds the show "addicting" and equates its similarity to the
American TV series
Lost.
It was also listed as the 51st best animated show in IGN's Top 100
Animated Series.
"Running over thirty-seven 20 minutes episodes, the
anime sticks much closer to the manga so takes a far more languid
approach to storytelling, better fleshing out the fantastic
characters of Light and his nemesis, L.
Light in particular is one of the most layered
characters to appear in anime in a long time.
-Hyper
The novelization
L: Change the World became the second top
selling light novel in Japan during 2008. A.E. Sparrow of IGN
reviewed the novel
Another Note and gave it a 9.5 out of
10. Sparrow said that the author understood "what made these
characters click so well" and "captures everything that made the
manga the compelling read that it is." Sparrow said that fans of
Death Note who read
Another Note will "find a
welcome home" in the Nisio Isin's work that "adds a few more fun
layers" to the
Death Note franchise.
Banning by People's Republic of China
Early in
2005, school officials in Shenyang
, the capital
of Liaoning
Province
(People's
Republic of China), banned Death Note. The
immediate cause was that students had been altering notebooks to
resemble Death Notes and then writing the names of acquaintances,
enemies, and teachers in the books. The ban was designed to protect
the "physical and mental health" of students from horror material
that "misleads innocent children and distorts their mind and
spirit."
Jonathan Clements has
suggested that the Chinese authorities acted partly against
"superstition" but also against illegal, pirate publishers of
Death Note.
The ban has been extended to other Chinese
cities including Beijing, Shanghai and Lanzhou
in Gansu
Province. Legally published Chinese language versions of
Death Note are published in Hong Kong and in Taiwan.
Copycat crimes and imitations

A Death Note.
There have been various copycat crimes around the world which were
based on
Death Note. On September 28, 2007, two notes
written with
Latin characters stating
"Watashi wa Kira " (ç§ã¯ã‚ラã§ã™, meaning "I am Kira" in Japanese) were
found near the unidentified remains of a
Caucasian male in Belgium. Nothing was found
on or near the victim besides these two notes.
A senior at the
Franklin Military Academy in Richmond, Virginia
, United States was suspended after being caught
possessing a replica "Death Note" notebook with the names of fellow
students.
In
South
Carolina
, U.S. in
2008, school officials seized a "Death Note" notebook from a
Hartsville Middle School student. District officials linked
the notebook to the anime/manga. The notebook listed seven
students' names. The school planned a disciplinary hearing and
contacted the seven students' parents. The principal, Chris Rogers,
sent letters to all the students' parents saying "Regardless of the
origin of the book, we take the situation very seriously. The
safety of our school family is always our top priority. We treat
situations like this the same as if a student called in a bomb
threat or brought a weapon to school. While there may not be any
serious intent to do anyone harm, we cannot and will not take that
chance with our students. We will take all steps necessary to
ensure our students' well-being."
In
Gadsden,
Alabama
, U.S. two sixth grade boys were arrested for
possessions of "Death Notes" that listed names of several staff
members and fellow students. According to Etowah County
Sheriff's Department Sgt. Lanny Handy, the notebook was found the
previous afternoon by a staffer. The students were suspended from
the county's schools. The students, their parents, and school
officials had met with Handy and a junior probation officer.
In
Gig Harbor,
Washington
, U.S. one middle school student was expelled and
three were suspended on May 14, 2008 for having their own "Death
Note" books. A father of one of the students said that the
notebook was "an outlet for frustration from about two years of
bullying."
References
External links