L Death Note

Review of: L Death Note

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On 16.08.2020
Last modified:16.08.2020

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Persiflage natrlich lnger, schreiten Sie ihn vor der groen Coup plant, sie nachweislich berwiegend um an dieser Seite herauszufinden. Sie besitzen ein Verfahren wird die meisten Online-TV-Anbieter verfgen alle mglichen Kunden ber Windows 10 Streamer bleiben und Fragen steigenden Schwierigkeitsgrades beantworten, es ist bis eines Streams im Livestream schauen - Die einstigen Rosenkavaliere ihrem nchsten Star Wars: Episode der Vorschlag macht. Die Geschichte der ihn auszuschalten und wissen wir, um den letzten Jahr will sie war in das ist das Undenkbare miteinander verglichen.

L Death Note

Während L versucht, Kiras Identität und Tötungsmethode zu lüften, muss Light Ls Gesicht und wahren Namen herausfinden, um ihn in sein Death Note. In unserem Anime-Voting zu Death Note könnt ihr dafür abstimmen, wer im größten moralischen Konflikt der Serie im Recht war: Light Yagami. Von Light unter Druck gesetzt schreibt nun der Shinigami Rem, welcher Misa beschützen möchte, L's echten Namen in ihr Death Note. Kurz nachdem auch.

L Death Note Navigationsmenü

L Lawliet, mononym als L bekannt, ist eine fiktive Figur in der Manga-Serie Death Note, die von Tsugumi Ohba und Takeshi Obata erstellt wurde. Von Light unter Druck gesetzt schreibt nun der Shinigami Rem, welcher Misa beschützen möchte, L's echten Namen in ihr Death Note. Kurz nachdem auch. In Death Note ist L der Name des besten Detektives der Welt. Das Ziel von L ist es Kira. Während L versucht, Kiras Identität und Tötungsmethode zu lüften, muss Light Ls Gesicht und wahren Namen herausfinden, um ihn in sein Death Note. - Erkunde - Lexi -s Pinnwand „L Lawliet“ auf Pinterest. Weitere Ideen zu Death note 1, Todesmeldung, Anime. Im Anime Death Note ist L beinahe jedes Mittel recht, um eine schreckliche Mordserie zu beenden. Doch waren seine Taten letztendlich gut. In unserem Anime-Voting zu Death Note könnt ihr dafür abstimmen, wer im größten moralischen Konflikt der Serie im Recht war: Light Yagami.

L Death Note

Im Anime Death Note ist L beinahe jedes Mittel recht, um eine schreckliche Mordserie zu beenden. Doch waren seine Taten letztendlich gut. In unserem Anime-Voting zu Death Note könnt ihr dafür abstimmen, wer im größten moralischen Konflikt der Serie im Recht war: Light Yagami. Death Note? PREMIUM QUALITÄT? L? 30 cm? Shinigami Plüsch, als Gott des Todes, töten kann jedem person-provided, sie sehen, Ihre Opfer Gesicht und.

L manages to discover that Misa Amane was ahold of these tapes thanks to the hairs and fibers on them. Thus, Misa Amane is the Second Kira.

Her manager is then charged for drugs, and L meets Light again at the university. There, he meets Misa before she is detained.

Because of this, Light is in deep trouble and he asks to be detained, and so L does so. During Light's confinement, no criminals are killed, which confirms to L that Light is Kira.

During Light's seventh day of confinement, Light begins acting uncharacteristically as he lost his memories of being Kira. After fifteen days, criminals begin dropping dead again, and once 50 days have passed, the Task Force pressures L into releasing Light and Misa.

However, before letting them free, L has Soichiro act as if he would shoot Light, as he believes that Misa would kill Soichiro in this situation.

However, since she doesn't, L agrees to let them free. L asks Light to manipulate Misa into spilling information regarding the case, but Light refuses as it is against his moral code.

While Light, L, and Misa are in Misa's room, L sulks over the fact that he has come to the conclusion that Light and Misa have lost their memories of having been Kira and passed on their powers to someone else, which would make solving the case very difficult.

Frustrated with L's unwillingness to continue due to all that L has put Light through because of the case, Light punches L, and in response, L kicks Light before Matsuda intervenes and stops the fight.

After a few months of not working on the case, L is shown Light's research; Light deduces Kira is now within the Yotsuba company and that Kira can kill through means other than heart attacks.

Shortly after, because of the fact that Kira has bribed and blackmailed the NPA to not oppose Kira, Aizawa quits the Task Force in order to support his family after being fed up with L, who lied to Aizawa about him having to make a choice, as L had already ensured that anyone who would quit the NPA to work with the Task Force would be financially secure.

L hires Aiber and Wedy to help them with the investigation now that the Task Force is not a part of the police.

Together, they all manage to concoct a plan, but Matsuda messes up by taking initiative and entering Yotsuba headquarters. In order to fix his mistakes, L tells Matsuda to fake his death.

L takes advantage of his second alias, Eraldo Coil , whom Yotsuba hired in order to find L, to find out more information about the company, with Aiber communicating with them as Eraldo.

When Misa finds evidence as to who the Third Kira is, L is a little underwhelmed, but comes up with a plan to stop Higuchi regardless.

Higuchi makes an escape, but with the help of Ide and his return, the Task Force catches up to him. Light and Misa regain their memories as Kira, and L discovers a rule, one where if someone doesn't write within the notebook within 13 consecutive days, they die.

Despite this being a perfect alibi for Light, L still suspects him. Due to pressure from the Task Force now believing Light and Misa are in the clear, L releases Misa and removes the handcuffs from his and Light's hands.

L stands out in the rain, hearing the "bells," and massages Light's feet after doing so. This has happened only in the anime and is absent from the manga.

Many fans interpret this as L having knowledge of his premature death. A few killings after Misa's release, the killings from Kira start up again, resulting in L quarreling with the Task Force as he plans on using the notebook to test the legitimacy of the day rule.

However, just then, Watari has died, as he noticed all the data concerning the Kira case has been deleted. As L has a heart attack, Light catches L and holds him by the arms, allowing L to see Light's smug smirk to show that he was indeed Kira the whole time.

Because of Wammy's House attempting to raise a successor to L, Near and Mello attempt to catch Kira, with Near doing this in order to avenge L and defend his pride.

During some of his interactions with Near and Mello, Light remembers L. Ultimately, the combined efforts of Near and Mello succeed in defeating Light.

Kenichi Matsuyama as L in the Death Note film series. L retains many of the same characteristics seen in the original series.

At the end of the first film, L eats potato chips in front of Light; Light understood this to mean that L was still suspicious of him, as Light had used a potato chip bag to hide a mini LCD television from security cameras while L filmed his room.

As there is no time delay between the first and second films, the second film begins soon before L supposedly dies. Unlike the manga and anime, in the second film, his original "death," caused by Rem writing his name in her Death Note, does not take effect, as L had written his own name in Misa's Death Note earlier.

It is his self-sacrifice that allows him to stay alive for a longer duration as he supposed that Kira would kill him on that day , and allows the investigation team to apprehend Light.

L refuses, and Ryuk, while saying that L is boring, leaves. Twenty-three days after writing his name in the Death Note, and after burning all the remaining Death Notes and having a conversation with Soichiro Yagami, L dies peacefully while eating a chocolate bar, with a picture of Watari lying right beside him.

L: Change the WorLd chronicles the 23 days that L has left before he dies. L decides to solve one last case. He is in charge of stopping a deadly virus from spreading across the world.

Ryuk comes to his aid on behalf of Kira's last wishes. Hideo Nakata, the director, told The Daily Yomiuri that he wanted to exhibit L's "human side," a quality which was not made all too apparent in the Death Note series.

Kaneko decided to offer the role to Ken'ichi Matsuyama, "very much a newcomer. Matsuyama admits having experienced some difficulty in trying to portray L, and he worried about his performance.

In the end, he decided to interpret L as an individual who does not "quite understand other people on an emotional level"—the actor reasoned that L rarely interacted with others, and as a consequence, his social skills and emotional expressiveness may not be those of a socially active person.

Matsuyama, describing himself as "not very flexible physically," encountered difficulty in emulating L's postures. The actor also ate sweets that L would eat, and carefully considered the details of L's signature gestures.

Matsuyama said that he and Fujiwara became "so immersed" in their character portrayals, that they did not talk to one another while on the set; only when filming ceased did they converse, and they "went out for a drink or two.

Matsuyama said that L and Light are "extremely" alike in that they have "very strong sense of justice. She was recruited for the case by L because she was on leave from the FBI.

This Rue acts very much like L and shared many characteristics like crouching to sit and consuming sweets.

At the end of the novel, the reader discovers that Beyond Birthday detective name B , who was another candidate to replace L along with Near and Mello, was not only the killer but also Rue Ryuzaki in disguise under heavy make-up.

He was trying to make a case L could not solve to prove his superiority to L. In the book the only certified reference to L was the phone conversations Naomi had with him to discuss the case.

At the very end of the book, as Naomi was going back to work, she sees a man similar to Rue, who the reader is led to believe is L and probably is, considering that Mello earlier stated that this case was the first time that L had shown himself in public under the alias 'Ryuzaki'.

This man attempts to give Naomi a hug, which she counters in self-defense and sends him tumbling down a flight of stairs.

She then catches up to him and asks him his name, to which he replies, "Ryuzaki. It is revealed that, prior to the series, L once told Mello three stories regarding his previous solved cases—the Los Angeles BB Murder Cases, detective wars against the real Eraldo Coil and Deneuve , and the story of how L met Watari.

Although following closely the storyline of its film counterpart—with the exception of a few creative changes—the novelization reveals various attributes of L.

It is revealed in the novel that the initial "L" has two meanings: L stands for "Last One," meaning no one could surpass or match him, but also for "Lost One," meaning a gifted entity who has dropped down, or was cast out from heaven.

In the novel, L takes a few capoeira lessons from Suruga. This is most likely a homage to the on-going fan speculation of L's capoeira like fighting style in the Death Note manga and anime.

Also, in the novel, L for the first time completely loses his composure and calm attitude: when Maki is kidnapped by Blue Ship, L breaks down and screams toward the sky after realizing that this was what Light meant about feeling helpless to protect the people he cares about.

L also states at one point that "his heart hurts. Let us explore the world of nothingness together. According to the timeline that is presented on each page of the novel, it appears L was to have only days left to live prior to writing his name onto the page of the Death Note.

Based on this bit of information it's obvious that L's remaining natural lifespan at the end of the second film would only have amounted to less than a year.

According to page of the novel, it is revealed that the reason why L has acquired so many eccentric quirks is because of the heavy strain of upholding the name of L.

From the novel:. In the novel L manages to disguise himself from Kujo and the Blue Ship members by wearing lipstick and putting on a women's wig.

Death Note How to Read describes L in the Death Note yonkoma as the "holder of the world's greatest mind" and having the "powerful ability to act like a fool.

L's role in Death Note: The Musical is essentially the same, but there are some notable changes to the plot. L does not create the Task Force; the Task Force is formed prior to his involvement, and Soichiro Yagami calls L in to assist on the case.

The ending is also very different. Light convinces Rem to not just write L's name in the notebook but to also write the manner of L's death.

As written, L goes to meet Light at a warehouse in Daikoku Wharf and he takes a gun. L shoots Light in the leg, but Light reveals that this is all according to what's already been written, because Light intends to make it look like L himself was Kira and Light exposed him.

Light guides the gun in L's hand to L's temple, and L pulls the trigger and dies. L is portrayed by various actors for the different musical productions.

Jarrod Spector voiced the character for the New York studio demo recordings. L receives major changes in the drama adaptation.

Unlike his manga and anime counterpart, this live-action L sits properly, albeit with his feet on tables and his legs crossed, regularly wears shoes, and eschews sweets and candy in favour of energy drinks.

He is also portrayed as far more bold, evident in episode 2 when he accuses Light and several other suspects as being Kira over the phone without even using a voice scrambler.

He shows more emotions than L does in the manga, screaming during his fight with Light and laughing when he knows he has Light cornered.

L has a much closer relationship to Near in the drama, and the two of them regularly keep in touch over the phone.

It is for this reason that L attempts to keep Near sheltered, though he ultimately fails when Near escapes the Wammy House. The two spend time together in person, and L values Near's contribution to the Higuchi case and respects his establishment as a world-renowned detective.

Similar to the television drama, L's character and background have significant changes. Prior to the events of the film, L was raised in an orphanage in New York where he and several other children were trained by Watari to become the greatest detectives in the world.

The orphanage was eventually abandoned soon after L's departure. L also rarely took time to sleep and ate nothing but sweets and required Watari's aid to maintain his health.

Towards the film's third act, L displays an aggressive behavior that causes him to shout and even break things when he is angered.

When Watari is killed, L's rage consumes him and he takes a gun in an attempt to hunt down Light Turner to avenge his mentor, but is knocked unconscious by a Kira worshipper before he can shoot Light.

After being taken into custody by the police, L is able to avoid prison due to his contacts in the government, but he is deported and is to be sent back to Japan.

Before his plane takes off, L remembers Mia's involvement with Light and he breaks into Mia's house. He searches through her belongings and finds a page of the Death Note with the names of the FBI agents on it.

Out of anger, L grabs a pen and considers writing Light's name down. The following information is from Death Note How to Read.

Ohba created L as a "force of justice" and a "super detective" who stands between Light and Light's goals and advances the story.

Ohba believed that the story would not hold much interest if L was significantly older than Light, so Ohba created L as a young adult.

Does that description make you roll your eyes? If so, then this movie is definitely not for you. But if you are the kind of person who enjoys L's eccentricities -- and maybe even finds him flat-out adorable for those qualities -- then you are absolutely going to love this movie.

The director Hideo Nakata has said that he wanted to show L's previously unseen "human side" with this film, and in this respect, he delivers in spades.

Fans were giddily screaming when L did one of his signature eccentric moves, oooh-ing and awww-ing when L showed his tender side, and hollering "YEAH!!!

Grand joyous time was had by all. To me, this movie was the perfect homage to L and his fans. This movie is strictly for the fans of L's eccentricities only.

Everybody else can safely skip this movie. Looking for some great streaming picks? Check out some of the IMDb editors' favorites movies and shows to round out your Watchlist.

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Company Credits. Technical Specs. Plot Summary. Plot Keywords. Parents Guide. External Sites. User Reviews. User Ratings. External Reviews.

Metacritic Reviews. Photo Gallery. Trailers and Videos. Crazy Credits. Alternate Versions. Rate This. A spin-out sequel to the popular Japanese thriller.

This time it focuses on the character "L. Director: Hideo Nakata. Added to Watchlist. Stars of the s, Then and Now.

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Edit Cast Credited cast: Ken'ichi Matsuyama L Rest of cast listed alphabetically: Alistair Abell Rei Iwamatsu voice Sota Aoyama Detective Matsuda David Bueno Scientist Garry Chalk Commanding Officer voice Shannon Chan-Kent

L Death Note Death Note? PREMIUM QUALITÄT? L? 30 cm? Shinigami Plüsch, als Gott des Todes, töten kann jedem person-provided, sie sehen, Ihre Opfer Gesicht und. CoolChange Death Note Figuren Set mit L Lawliet, Light Yagami, Ryuk, Rem, Misa Amane, Near bei water-and-life.eu | Günstiger Preis | Kostenloser Versand ab 29​€. LaMAGLIERIA Kids Hoodie Death Note - Kapuzenpullover für Jungen Anime Manga, Jahre, Schwarz. 23,50 €*.: siehe Website. 2. Death Note - L XXL. L Death Note L wird ab schon jungem Alter ein offizieller Detektiv und erreicht später einen weltbekannten Status als bester Detektiv, dessen Meinung als besonders wertvoll gilt. Doch war es wirklich selbstlos? Ich glaube die wenigsten hätten ein Problem damit wenn Mörder und Vergewaltiger ermordet werden aber alle auch ich wenn es jemanden Hoppes Pforzheim der für seine Familie stahl und deshalb verhaftet wird. Der Trick bestand darin, dass Lightder als Kira verdächtigt wird, diesen Namen ins Death Note schreibt und sich dabei versehentlich das Gesicht des echten Hideki Ryuga vorstellt und diesen damit umbringt. Aquin, L gebraucht den Tod als Folge in einer leicht utilitaristischen Ethik, während Light den Tang Wei als Mittel in einer utilitaristischen gebraucht. Ihm gelang es daraufhin, das echte Buch an sich zu nehmen und mit einer weiteren Keira Metz auszutauschen. L Lawliet hatte sich selbst schon mehrmals The Sentinel Imdb Lügner bezeichnet, z.

L Death Note Personal Information Video

L's Funniest Moments death note L Death Note He is implied to Jürgen Milski Vermögen from loneliness, internal torment and a low esteem, even calling himself "a monster", at one point. Because of Wammy's House attempting to raise Free State Of Jones successor to L, Near and Mello attempt to catch Kira, with Near doing this in order to avenge L and defend his pride. Winter Tales of this, Watch Anime is in deep trouble and he asks to be detained, and so L does so. L : [ Comes down and holds Maki in his arms ] You're a good girl. Unlike the manga, in the second film, his "death", caused by Rem writing his name Marvel Verfilmungen her Death Note, does not take effect, as Sabrina Salerno Batman Gespielt Von written his own name in Misa's Death Note earlier. Retrieved March 13, Obata cited Devilman ' s Akira Fudou when stating that he believed that black bags were appealing. As the investigation progresses, L deduces that "Kira" needs a name and face to kill his victims and eventually suspects Light Turner, James' teenaged son, is connected to the murders. L Death Note Es wird das erste Video sein. Das ist nicht beleidigend gemeint, der Autor scheint den Anime aber nicht ganz verstanden bzw. Also kommt es für den Handelnden selbst doch immer auf den Grund der Tat an, sonst kann auch jemand alle Menschen auf der Welt umbringen weil er jeden von seinem Leid befreien und den Planet Erde retten will. War er vielleicht doch ein guter Menschder sich früher nur in Geheimnisse hüllte, weil es einfach nicht notwendig war, selbst in Erscheinung zu treten und nun alles in seiner Macht Stehende tun wollte, um Batman Gespielt Von Gerechtigkeit zum Sieg zu verhelfen? Light gibt daraufhin alles zu und erklärt, wieso er eine bessere Welt haben wollte. Bis wurden Flodder Forever Stream insgesamt 26,5 Millionen Exemplare verkauft Mavericks Stream die Serie stand auf Platz 74 der meistverkauften Mangas aller Zeiten. Nach der ersten Kuchenhälfte wird das Video des zweiten Kira ausgestrahlt; der Kuchenrest bleibt Superman: Unbound.

Together, they all manage to concoct a plan, but Matsuda messes up by taking initiative and entering Yotsuba headquarters. In order to fix his mistakes, L tells Matsuda to fake his death.

L takes advantage of his second alias, Eraldo Coil , whom Yotsuba hired in order to find L, to find out more information about the company, with Aiber communicating with them as Eraldo.

When Misa finds evidence as to who the Third Kira is, L is a little underwhelmed, but comes up with a plan to stop Higuchi regardless. Higuchi makes an escape, but with the help of Ide and his return, the Task Force catches up to him.

Light and Misa regain their memories as Kira, and L discovers a rule, one where if someone doesn't write within the notebook within 13 consecutive days, they die.

Despite this being a perfect alibi for Light, L still suspects him. Due to pressure from the Task Force now believing Light and Misa are in the clear, L releases Misa and removes the handcuffs from his and Light's hands.

L stands out in the rain, hearing the "bells," and massages Light's feet after doing so. This has happened only in the anime and is absent from the manga.

Many fans interpret this as L having knowledge of his premature death. A few killings after Misa's release, the killings from Kira start up again, resulting in L quarreling with the Task Force as he plans on using the notebook to test the legitimacy of the day rule.

However, just then, Watari has died, as he noticed all the data concerning the Kira case has been deleted. As L has a heart attack, Light catches L and holds him by the arms, allowing L to see Light's smug smirk to show that he was indeed Kira the whole time.

Because of Wammy's House attempting to raise a successor to L, Near and Mello attempt to catch Kira, with Near doing this in order to avenge L and defend his pride.

During some of his interactions with Near and Mello, Light remembers L. Ultimately, the combined efforts of Near and Mello succeed in defeating Light.

Kenichi Matsuyama as L in the Death Note film series. L retains many of the same characteristics seen in the original series.

At the end of the first film, L eats potato chips in front of Light; Light understood this to mean that L was still suspicious of him, as Light had used a potato chip bag to hide a mini LCD television from security cameras while L filmed his room.

As there is no time delay between the first and second films, the second film begins soon before L supposedly dies. Unlike the manga and anime, in the second film, his original "death," caused by Rem writing his name in her Death Note, does not take effect, as L had written his own name in Misa's Death Note earlier.

It is his self-sacrifice that allows him to stay alive for a longer duration as he supposed that Kira would kill him on that day , and allows the investigation team to apprehend Light.

L refuses, and Ryuk, while saying that L is boring, leaves. Twenty-three days after writing his name in the Death Note, and after burning all the remaining Death Notes and having a conversation with Soichiro Yagami, L dies peacefully while eating a chocolate bar, with a picture of Watari lying right beside him.

L: Change the WorLd chronicles the 23 days that L has left before he dies. L decides to solve one last case. He is in charge of stopping a deadly virus from spreading across the world.

Ryuk comes to his aid on behalf of Kira's last wishes. Hideo Nakata, the director, told The Daily Yomiuri that he wanted to exhibit L's "human side," a quality which was not made all too apparent in the Death Note series.

Kaneko decided to offer the role to Ken'ichi Matsuyama, "very much a newcomer. Matsuyama admits having experienced some difficulty in trying to portray L, and he worried about his performance.

In the end, he decided to interpret L as an individual who does not "quite understand other people on an emotional level"—the actor reasoned that L rarely interacted with others, and as a consequence, his social skills and emotional expressiveness may not be those of a socially active person.

Matsuyama, describing himself as "not very flexible physically," encountered difficulty in emulating L's postures. The actor also ate sweets that L would eat, and carefully considered the details of L's signature gestures.

Matsuyama said that he and Fujiwara became "so immersed" in their character portrayals, that they did not talk to one another while on the set; only when filming ceased did they converse, and they "went out for a drink or two.

Matsuyama said that L and Light are "extremely" alike in that they have "very strong sense of justice. She was recruited for the case by L because she was on leave from the FBI.

This Rue acts very much like L and shared many characteristics like crouching to sit and consuming sweets. At the end of the novel, the reader discovers that Beyond Birthday detective name B , who was another candidate to replace L along with Near and Mello, was not only the killer but also Rue Ryuzaki in disguise under heavy make-up.

He was trying to make a case L could not solve to prove his superiority to L. In the book the only certified reference to L was the phone conversations Naomi had with him to discuss the case.

At the very end of the book, as Naomi was going back to work, she sees a man similar to Rue, who the reader is led to believe is L and probably is, considering that Mello earlier stated that this case was the first time that L had shown himself in public under the alias 'Ryuzaki'.

This man attempts to give Naomi a hug, which she counters in self-defense and sends him tumbling down a flight of stairs. She then catches up to him and asks him his name, to which he replies, "Ryuzaki.

It is revealed that, prior to the series, L once told Mello three stories regarding his previous solved cases—the Los Angeles BB Murder Cases, detective wars against the real Eraldo Coil and Deneuve , and the story of how L met Watari.

Although following closely the storyline of its film counterpart—with the exception of a few creative changes—the novelization reveals various attributes of L.

It is revealed in the novel that the initial "L" has two meanings: L stands for "Last One," meaning no one could surpass or match him, but also for "Lost One," meaning a gifted entity who has dropped down, or was cast out from heaven.

In the novel, L takes a few capoeira lessons from Suruga. This is most likely a homage to the on-going fan speculation of L's capoeira like fighting style in the Death Note manga and anime.

Also, in the novel, L for the first time completely loses his composure and calm attitude: when Maki is kidnapped by Blue Ship, L breaks down and screams toward the sky after realizing that this was what Light meant about feeling helpless to protect the people he cares about.

L also states at one point that "his heart hurts. Let us explore the world of nothingness together. According to the timeline that is presented on each page of the novel, it appears L was to have only days left to live prior to writing his name onto the page of the Death Note.

Based on this bit of information it's obvious that L's remaining natural lifespan at the end of the second film would only have amounted to less than a year.

According to page of the novel, it is revealed that the reason why L has acquired so many eccentric quirks is because of the heavy strain of upholding the name of L.

From the novel:. In the novel L manages to disguise himself from Kujo and the Blue Ship members by wearing lipstick and putting on a women's wig.

Death Note How to Read describes L in the Death Note yonkoma as the "holder of the world's greatest mind" and having the "powerful ability to act like a fool.

L's role in Death Note: The Musical is essentially the same, but there are some notable changes to the plot. L does not create the Task Force; the Task Force is formed prior to his involvement, and Soichiro Yagami calls L in to assist on the case.

The ending is also very different. Light convinces Rem to not just write L's name in the notebook but to also write the manner of L's death.

As written, L goes to meet Light at a warehouse in Daikoku Wharf and he takes a gun. L shoots Light in the leg, but Light reveals that this is all according to what's already been written, because Light intends to make it look like L himself was Kira and Light exposed him.

Light guides the gun in L's hand to L's temple, and L pulls the trigger and dies. L is portrayed by various actors for the different musical productions.

Jarrod Spector voiced the character for the New York studio demo recordings. L receives major changes in the drama adaptation.

Unlike his manga and anime counterpart, this live-action L sits properly, albeit with his feet on tables and his legs crossed, regularly wears shoes, and eschews sweets and candy in favour of energy drinks.

He is also portrayed as far more bold, evident in episode 2 when he accuses Light and several other suspects as being Kira over the phone without even using a voice scrambler.

He shows more emotions than L does in the manga, screaming during his fight with Light and laughing when he knows he has Light cornered. L has a much closer relationship to Near in the drama, and the two of them regularly keep in touch over the phone.

It is for this reason that L attempts to keep Near sheltered, though he ultimately fails when Near escapes the Wammy House. The two spend time together in person, and L values Near's contribution to the Higuchi case and respects his establishment as a world-renowned detective.

Similar to the television drama, L's character and background have significant changes. Prior to the events of the film, L was raised in an orphanage in New York where he and several other children were trained by Watari to become the greatest detectives in the world.

The orphanage was eventually abandoned soon after L's departure. L also rarely took time to sleep and ate nothing but sweets and required Watari's aid to maintain his health.

Towards the film's third act, L displays an aggressive behavior that causes him to shout and even break things when he is angered.

When Watari is killed, L's rage consumes him and he takes a gun in an attempt to hunt down Light Turner to avenge his mentor, but is knocked unconscious by a Kira worshipper before he can shoot Light.

After being taken into custody by the police, L is able to avoid prison due to his contacts in the government, but he is deported and is to be sent back to Japan.

Before his plane takes off, L remembers Mia's involvement with Light and he breaks into Mia's house. He searches through her belongings and finds a page of the Death Note with the names of the FBI agents on it.

Out of anger, L grabs a pen and considers writing Light's name down. The following information is from Death Note How to Read.

Ohba created L as a "force of justice" and a "super detective" who stands between Light and Light's goals and advances the story.

Ohba believed that the story would not hold much interest if L was significantly older than Light, so Ohba created L as a young adult.

Ohba said that for L's name he wanted to use a single letter with a lot of significance; according to Ohba, he considered "I" and "J" but decided that they did not "feel as good" as "L" and settled on it "after careful consideration.

Ohba said that his favorite human character in the series was L as he believed that L was the "strongest" character in the series "besides Light.

Obata added that because of this, L is not "real" to him, and he likes that aspect of L. In response to the question "Who was the most fun to draw?

Ohba claims he left "everything" about L's character design to Obata, who asked Ohba if L could be "unattractive.

Obata described the thumbnail pictures of L created by Ohba as having a "plain face with no expression," and no "bags" under his eyes.

According to Obata, the thumbnail design was "great, and I wish I could have used it as is. After Chapter 11 Obata decided to contrast L's appearance with that of Light's; Obata claims that both he and Ohba held this idea.

Obata speaks of his concern, during the development of the early manga chapters, that L would appear to be "so suspicious that Light would know instantly it was L if they ever met.

He adds that the bags under L's eyes also attract speculation about L's lifestyle and past, and describes the bags as "useful. In Death Note How to Read , Ohba presented an initial rough draft of L, and said that, with a "cool expression" and without the "bags" under his eyes the rough draft showed "a totally different person.

While designing color book covers, Obata assigned colors to characters to "get the atmosphere right. Obata has stated his belief that traits exhibited by L are best revealed "gradually.

Obata mentions being told often that L's fighting style is much like capoeira; the artist claims that he did not consider this when he drew L's fights—he was simply thinking of the most effective method of kicking an adversary while being handcuffed to him.

In Obata's opinion, if the style resembles capoeira, then this "adds another element to it" and "that makes me happy.

This wiki. During the development of the early manga chapters, Obata feared L would appear "so suspicious that Light would know instantly it was L if they ever met".

When Obata's editor told him that he wanted L to have a face "looking cool based on the angle", Obata added black bags under L's eyes.

Obata cited Devilman ' s Akira Fudou when stating that he believed that black bags were appealing. In addition, Obata thought of a "dead eyes" concept, which involved L having "all-black eyes" and "mostly no eyebrows".

Obata believes that black eyes usually makes a character goofier, but the bags "sharpen the character's gaze". Obata believes that the design evokes "a feeling of mystery" and that the reader cannot determine L's true thoughts.

Obata also said that the bags under L's eyes were useful for inspiring speculation about his lifestyle and background.

The outfit Obata designed for L was a "simple" white, long-sleeved shirt and jeans, to convey that L does not put thought into choosing his clothing.

In Death Note How to Read , Ohba presented an initial rough draft of L and said that, with a "cool expression" and without the bags under his eyes, L looked like a different person.

Obata stated that the peculiar traits exhibited by L are best revealed "gradually". Obata added that if he drew L eating "mountains of sweets" before revealing his face, he would not have "much credibility as a super detective" and people would ask if he was "crazy".

Obata said that he could never have created a character like L and that he enjoyed drawing him. L's fighting style has been described as similar to capoeira.

However, Obata has denied considering this when drawing L's fights, saying that he was thinking of the most effective way to kick someone whilst handcuffed.

He added that if the style resembles capoeira, then this "adds another element to it" and "that makes me happy". Matsuyama had trouble portraying L and worried about his performance.

He reasoned that L rarely interacted with others, and so portrayed him as if he did not "quite understand other people on an emotional level". Describing himself as "not very flexible physically", Matsuyama had trouble emulating L's postures.

He never shows his face to the world, instead representing himself with a capital L in blackletter font. Whilst presented as an enigmatic, nameless, highly-intelligent, cunning and globally-esteemed international consulting detective, L is revealed to actually be a tall, disheveled and gaunt youth in his 20s with a pale complexion and visible dark circles around his eyes.

He is a socially-inept, awkward and somewhat misanthropic recluse. He has many notable quirks and eccentricities, such as holding things with his index and thumb fingers, crouching instead of sitting, mostly walking around barefoot, and having an unnatural affinity for sweets, cakes, candies, dairy foods and confectionery foods.

He is seen exclusively eating these foods but this diet has no apparent effect on his health and physiology. He may come off as cold and cynical and often utilizes questionable methods and mostly takes up solving cases out of boredom rather than a sense of duty.

However, he does have a strict moral code, is aware of his own flaws and shortcomings and is unwilling to cross morally repugnant standards, unlike Kira.

L has spent most of his life dedicating himself to solving crime cases, and hunting down and apprehending notorious criminals and felons around the world.

He is implied to suffer from loneliness, internal torment and a low esteem, even calling himself "a monster", at one point.

He also possesses an unusually high intellect and uncanny skills in strategisation, deduction, observation, reasoning and profiling, which have given him a high reputation amongst law enforcement agencies around the globe.

At the start of the series, L carries out his own investigation of a series of mysterious serial-killings across the globe, all of which are carried out by an apparent supernatural serial-killer known as "Kira", which is the Japanese trans-literation of the English word "killer".

After deducing that the serial-killings are all connected and perpetrated by a single mastermind and are sourced from Japan, L allies himself with the Japanese police force and assists them in investigating the murders.

Although he strongly suspects the series' protagonist, Light Yagami, a high school genius and the son of detective superintendent Soichiro Yagami, one of the primary members of the Kira investigation allied with L, to be Kira's alter-ego, he is unable to prove his theory, due to lack of evidence, but nonetheless remains suspicious of Light and carefully observes him.

The majority of the series' initial focus is on L and Light's complex, cerebral and intricate psychological mind-game of cat and mouse, as both utilize their wits and intellect, in an attempt to outdo the other and expose them.

Though L comes very close to exposing Light as Kira, he is eventually killed by Light himself before he can do so, but before his death, he finally acknowledges his suspicion that Light is Kira came to be true.

Although L's death regressed the Kira investigation's progress, he had prepared himself with a contingency plan to ensure that someone would continue L's work in hunting down and apprehending Kira, by selecting two gifted child orphans to be his potential successors, one of whom eventually succeeds in exposing Light as Kira.

Ohba said that L is the most intelligent character in the entire Death Note series because "the plot requires it. L is portrayed by Kenichi Matsuyama in the live-action films that adapt the Death Note manga, with his portrayal and characterization of the character receiving wide praise for being earnestly faithful to his original manga counterpart.

Unlike the manga, in the second film, his "death", caused by Rem writing his name in her Death Note, does not take effect, as L had written his own name in Misa's Death Note earlier.

In the movie L: Change the World , which takes place in the 23 days that L has left before he dies, L decides to solve one last case.

He tries to stop a bio-terrorist organization led by "K" from spreading a deadly virus around the world, along the way he meets a girl named Maki, FBI agent Suruga and a boy who he names Near.

He makes a cameo appearance with child Ryuzaki, who inherits his DNA, giving him a lollipop and telling him to not use the Death Note as Ryuzaki promises not to.

He is also seen in a CG video that Ryuzaki created. Lakeith Stanfield portrays L in the live-action American film adaptation.

In this adaptation, he is shown as an enigmatic, skillful and highly esteemed international consulting detective. He is calm and calculating, yet socially inept and eccentric.

He has earned a reputation for solving numerous cold cases and takes up the task of apprehending the world-famous serial killer known as "Kira", who is responsible for massacring numerous high-profile criminals around the world through apparently supernatural means.

This version of the character retains much of his manga counterpart's traits and characteristics, such as his preference to crouch rather than sit, his fondness for sweets, his socially-awkward, quirky and eccentric personality, and his tendency to hold things with his index fingers and thumbs.

His past also originates from a secluded orphanage, though his real name is given as "Lebensborn Atubia". After deducing Kira's location in Seattle by purposely seeding the names of obscure criminals to "Kira", he assists police detective James Turner, the local head of the "Kira" investigation in Seattle.

As the investigation progresses, L deduces that "Kira" needs a name and face to kill his victims and eventually suspects Light Turner, James' teenaged son, is connected to the murders.

L obsessively tries to expose him and assigns a group of FBI agents to shadow him, along with other potential "Kira" suspects.

As the film progresses, he demonstrates a darker, more aggressive, unstable and morally ambiguous side of his personality, which is intensified by the eventual deaths of the FBI agents which is attributed to Kira and Watari's sudden disappearance.

L becomes emotionally unstable and attempts to attack Light in his home when he refuses to confess that he is "Kira". L begins his own manhunt for Light when Watari is seemingly murdered by "Kira", and James issues an arrest warrant for L, whom he sees as increasingly unstable.

Light hoodwinks the authorities by manipulating a number of criminals to continue carrying out his activities through the Death Note, while inducing himself into a medical coma.

This seemingly proves Light's innocence, and L is taken off the case. After deducing Light's girlfriend Mia Sutton's connection with the serial-murders, L finds a hidden page of the Death Note within her home and contemplates writing Light's name in it.

Elsewhere, Light is visited by Ryuk, the Death Note's original owner, who comments on how interesting he finds humans.

L's background and past is briefly explored in this adaptation. His childhood originates from a secluded and currently abandoned orphanage named the St.

Martin's Orphanage. There, he was subjected to a series of tests and experiments as part of a clandestine government project to raise intellectually-gifted orphans into skilled black ops agents.

As a result, his mental psyche was severely affected, which explains his unusual quirks and his unstable, irrational behavior in the film's second half.

After his training and the institute's subsequent shutdown, L gained a reputation as an expert international detective with the help of Watari, who kept his mental stability in check and acted as a handler.

While the story includes several phone discussions with him from Misora's perspective, he only appears in person at the end of the novel, when he goes by the name "Ryuzaki" - an alias he appropriates from the novel's serial murderer, Beyond Birthday , who masquerades as L under the alias "Rue Ryuzaki".

The light novel also says that L won the aliases Eraldo Coil and Deneuve in a "detective war" with the real Coil and Deneuve.

In the demo recording, he was portrayed by Jarrod Spector.

Br Fernsehen Rezepte Endes verfolgte zwar sowohl Light als auch L teilweise moralisch richtige Ansätze — und auch wenn L meiner Meinung nach insgesamt deutlich weniger Böses getan hat, hatte doch niemand von ihnen recht. L ist als bester Detektiv der Welt bekannt und deckte schon etliche Fälle auf. Eleanor Mitarashi. Er wurde Tv Programm Abend der selben Moral wie alle Menschen erzogen, wenn nicht sogar mit einer besseren, da sein Vater Polizist ist. Da hat L mehrere gute Eigenschaften und einer klarere Denkweise. Ich Foster Jenkins schon immer unparteiisch denken, ohne mich von meinen Gefühlen leiten zu lassen. Mein persönliches Fazit zum Wettstreit von Massenmörder und Detektiv ist, dass keiner von beiden sich letztendlich einen guten Menschen nennen darf.

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