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"Yu Yu Hakusho Manga Gets
Live-Action
Series on Netflix".
Anime News Network. Archived from the original on December 15, 2020. Retrieved December 16, 2020. ^ King, Aidan (November 9, 2021). "'YuYu Hakusho' Live Action Series Coming to Netflix in 2023". Collider. Archived from the original on November 9, 2021. Retrieved November 10, 2021. ^ a b Hazra, Adriana (November 9, 2021). "Netflix Schedules Live-Action Yu Yu Hakusho Series for December 2023".
[36] The English language adaptation features a deaf voice actress named Lexi Cowden playing one of the lead characters. [37] Reception[edit] The first tankobon
volume sold 31,714 copies within the first week of release, ranking number 19 on the Oricon manga chart. [38] Its second volume ranked 12 selling 60,975 in its first week. [39] As of March 2014, the tankobon volumes sold 700,000 copies in Japan;[8] and over 2. 5 million copies in Japan by April 2016. [40] In France, A Silent Voice sold 131,000 copies in 2015[41] and 85,000 copies in 2016,[42] adding up to 216,000 copies sold in France as of 2016. Awards and nominations[edit] A Silent Voice received an award for "Best Rookie Manga" in 2008. [43] The vector of the
content made it difficult for publication on any manga magazine until it was picked up after months of legal dispute by the February edition of Bessatsu Shounen Magazine, where it won first place. Due to the subject matter, the serialization has been reviewed and supported by the Japanese Federation of the Deaf. [44] It was nominated for the 8th Manga Taishō. [45] In February 2015, Asahi Shimbun announced that A Silent Voice was one of nine nominees for the nineteenth annual Tezuka Osamu Cultural Prize.
[10] The author clarified
that there are other activities besides fighting which are
important for the protagonist. Should Inoue make Miyamoto constantly follow fights, the main character would die. Rather than tell a story, Inoue wants to shows the life of Miyamoto which he considers poetry. When Musashi comes face to face with Sekishūsai, Inoue tried to make the artwork appealing to the readers. [11] In contrast to popular belief, Inoue's Musashi does not follow bushido but instead a more unique path with a growth path that he finds realistic. [9] He does not consider Musashi a samurai, but instead as a ronin. [6] Other changes Inoue put when writing the manga was to make the supporting characters have different personalities from the novel. Inoue also expressed difficulties when drawing scene were the characters are wounded, most notably when Musashi battles the 70 Yoshioka which took a lot of energy to properly make. This scene was also a new idea he had when writing the manga as he felt that Musashi required a major challenge than in the novel. [12] In April 2009, Inoue told Nishinippon Shimbun that he suspected Vagabond would be ending "within one or two years". Claiming that he did not know how it would end, but that it had entered its final stages.