
Adam Wingard next movie is Death Note,
a live-action adaptation of the hit manga series and according to Wingard, this
one will be less Blair Witch
than The Guest, at least
in terms of tone. Speaking about his upcoming project in an interview, Wingard
teased a return to something kind of
weird for Death Note, promising nudity, swearing, and a ton of violence.
Collider caught up with Wingard during
the Blair Witch press tour, and seized the opportunity to talk
about Death Note. Fans of Wingard’s who were mildly disappointed to see
him take on Blair Witch may be pleased to hear that Death
Note will veer a little less mainstream. He said “Blair Witch is very much a mainstream horror film, and I think Death
Note’s a return for me to go back to doing something kind of weird. It’s more
along the tone of The Guest but something completely different. It’s kind of a
genre mashup in a lot of ways, too, there’s lots of different types of movies
within the movie itself, so it’s going to be a fun, crazy movie.”
Death Note hit a speed bump earlier this year
when Warner Bros. kicked it to the curb, but fortunately, Netflix was there to
scoop it up. In fact, the switch in distributors may turn out to be a
blessing in disguise, since Netflix allows so much freedom. Wingard
promised Death Note would go hard saying “We can do whatever we want. And that was the cool thing about it,
because it’s an anime film, so, technically, it’s a cartoon that you’re bring
to life. To me, the thing about anime is that it’s so adult-oriented. I
remember going to Suncoast growing up and you see Akira there with the little
“Not for Kids” sticker on it. That always made an impact on me. So, doing my
first live-action anime thing, to me it was important that you have those adult
themes. So, it’s got nudity, it’s got swearing, it’s got a ton of violence.
Jason Eisener, who did Hobo with a Shotgun. I brought him on -– I’m good
friends with him –- as second-unit director. There’s basically like three good
Jason Eisner short films in there and they’re all very gory. I was able to just
turn him loose sometimes, and just do some crazy stuff. With the combined
efforts, I think we ended up with a really nasty and crazy film.”
As
previously reported, Nat Wolff plays the student and Willem
Dafoe voices the death god who unleashes the notebook in the first
place. Keith Stanfield, Margaret Qualley, Paul
Nakauchi, and Shea Whigham also star. Netflix has not
announced a release date but we can probably expect to see Death Note
sometime in 2017.
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