Netflix Releases First Trailer for 'Erased' Live-Action Series

Erased was a well received anime series from fans and critics alike, and a live-action adaptation [...]

Erased was a well received anime series from fans and critics alike, and a live-action adaptation will hit Netflix this Winter.

The Japanese trailer for the Netflix series will adapt original creator Kei Sanbe's original manga and will feature the epilogue from the manga for the first time as it was not featured in the 2016 anime series. It also reveals the ending theme song "Akane" by Kanojo in the Display.

The live-action series will debut in Japan on December 15, with an expanded release to 190 countries later this Winter. Ten Shimoyama - who directed the live-action adaptation of SHINOBI - Heart Under Blade - will direct the series, helped along by scripts from Tomomi Okubo. For an extra added layer of authenticity, the series will be filmed in 4K in Hokkaido's Tomakomai City, the setting of the original manga.

The live-action cast includes the 29 year old Yuki Furukawa, who shares the same age as the main character Satoru, who has appeared in Itazura na Kiss and Laughing Under the Clouds. Other notable leads include Mio Yuki - who will portray Satoru's co-worker Airi Katagiri - who has appeared in Death Note and As the Gods Will.

For those unfamiliar with Erased, the story follows 29 year old Satoru Fujinuma, a struggling manga artist working a dead-end pizza delivery job. He's unhappy with his current life until it's thrown completely into disarray when his mother uncovers the activities of a serial killer and is murdered for it. He then discovers a mysterious latent power: the ability to turn back time 18 years before any life-changing event. When he figures out that the events of the past - the disappearance and death of his classmate Kayo Hinazuki - have a connection to his current trouble, Satoru tries his best to change his future.

Kei Sanbe's original manga ran from 2012 until 2016, with a spin-off Boku dake ga Inai Machi Re running June until November that year. A feature-length live adaptation also debuted in Japan last year. The anime adaptation of the series premiered in January 2016 and ran for 12 episodes. Aniplex of America licensed the series in the West with Crunchyroll, Daisuki, and FunimationNow, simulcasting the series with English subtitles. You can currently find an English dub of the show streaming on Hulu.

Are you interested in the live-action Erased series? Talk to me @Valdezology.

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