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[9][11] Masaharu Watanabe was chosen by Yoshikawa to direct the series because he had previously worked for the studio doing key animation, while Kyūta Sakai was chosen to be the series' character designer and chief animation director because Yoshikawa felt that she would be able to do the novel's art justice whilst maintaining a consistent animation quality throughout the series' 25-episode run. [7] Masahiro Yokotani was brought on board as the main writer,
with the series being his first time composing for a "reborn in another world"-type story. [12] Yoshikawa warned him about the violence in the series, but Yokotani was still surprised by the violent and disturbing scenes in novels three and beyond, having only read the first novel when he agreed to work on the project; he delegated the script writing of
those episodes in the second cour to the other two scriptwriters. [12] Yoshiko Nakamura joined the project sometime after Yokotani had completed the script for episode 3. When it proved unfeasible for Yokotani and Nakamura to write the scripts alone, the decision was made to bring another scriptwriter on board. Gaku Iwasa, the president of White Fox, asked them to hire someone "younger," leading Yokotani to suggest Eiji Umehara. Nagatsuki had recently been playing Chaos;Child, which Umehara had written for, and he approved the choice, suggesting that they let Umehara write the "painful parts"; Umehara was invited to join the project around the time that the scripts for episodes 8 and 9 were being written. [12] Re:Zero was the first light novel adaptation that either of the screenwriters had worked on. [12] Original author Tappei Nagatsuki was very active in the production of the anime, attending script meetings and recording sessions. [7] When the staff would encounter a problem with a scene, he would occasionally write lines for them to use as reference while writing the script. [12] The series was not initially intended to have 25 episodes, but was extended to give more time to the battle with the White Whale (which was expanded from two to three episodes) and to the content of episode 18 (episodes 16 to 18 were originally supposed to be covered in two episodes).
^ Stevens, Josh A. (February 15, 2019). "Manga UK's Spring Slate Adds DARLING in the FRANXX, Black
Clover & More!".
Anime UK News. Archived from the original on February 16, 2019. Retrieved February 15, 2019.
"제1회 청룡시리즈어워즈 후보 공개. '오징어 게임'·'SNL코리아' 최다노미" [The 1st Blue Dragon Series Awards nominees revealed. Most Nominees for 'Squid Game' and 'SNL Korea'] (in Korean). Sports Chosun. Retrieved July 7, 2022 – via Naver. External links[edit] All of Us Are Dead on Netflix All of Us Are Dead at IMDb All of Us Are Dead at HanCinema All of Us Are Dead (Korean) at Line Webtoon All of Us Are Dead (English) at Line Webtoon vteWebtoons published by WebtoonFirst published in Korean Noblesse (2007–19) Welcome to Convenience Store (2008) All of Us Are Dead (2009–11) Denma (2010–19) Tower of God (2010–present) Along with the Gods (2010–12) Cheese in the Trap (2010–17) The God of High School (2011–22) Fashion King (2011–13) Orange Marmalade (2011–13) Girls of the Wild's (2011–16) Dr. Frost (2011–21) Bongcheon-Dong Ghost (2011) Soul Cartel (2012–16) Ability (2012) God of Bath (2012) The Gamer (2013–present) Wind Breaker (2013–present) Lookism (2014–present) The Sound of Heart (2014–20) A Girl Who Sees Smells (2015–20) Yumi's Cells (2015–20) Gosu (2015–23) Terror Man (2016–20) Nano List (2016–18) Tomorrow (2017–23) Sweet Home (2017–20) Romance 101 (2018–21) True Beauty (2018–23) My Daughter is a
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