Their Tweet was captioned with the phrase "no matter how hard or how impossible it is, never lose sight of your goal", a quote from One Piece protagonist and self-proclaimed "king of the pirates" Monkey D. On Friday, the NetflixGeeked Twitter account shared the first official logo for the series.
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RELATED: Netflix Is Making A Live-Action Pokémon TV Series But news of the series has been slow, with the few updates released between then and now only serving to confirm that it was still in production. So it came as no surprise when Oda announced in 2020 that Netflix had sealed the deal on a live-action adaptation of the manga, ordering a single ten-episode season. The One Piece anime has aired more than 950 episodes to date. One Piece has been published consistently for almost 25 years and is the best-selling manga series of all time. These include an official logo and a script photo, both of which hold many clues to what the show's creative team has in store. The sound comes from a 30-second phrase of guitar that was digitized and reversed.Netflix's live-action One Piece series is finally moving forward, as the streaming giant has revealed several new details about it on Twitter. That came from Bender’s colleague Charlie Campagna (“Blade Runner 2049”), who took the “blossom” out of a longer recording he made in the 1990s.
The sound still needed something else to create a “lean-in” feeling, something that became the final tonal swell in the signature - which he calls the “blossom.” Those other sounds are a deeper anvil sound and some muted hits. “In order to add different qualities to it, I sweetened it with other things, which is normal for us in the film-sound industry.” “It’s a combination of music and of the sound effects of these knocks, which are my wedding ring, which I’m wearing, knocking on the side of a cabinet in our bedroom,” he said. Here’s how Bender made it the two percussive sounds. For a while we were stuck on it.” The goat was eventually scrapped, but the “ta-dum” remained. It was our version of (MGM’s) Leo the Lion. “If we were going to do that call-and-response, that creating tension and then resolving it really quickly, I liked the sound of the goat,” Yellin said. For a time, one of the finalists was a version of the “ta-dum” that resolved with a goat bleating. He tried a bunch of sounds, ones based on music boxes, ones that expressed the passage of time, doors opening, using strange instruments, and actual sounds from filmmaking.
And it should make the audience think “Netflix” without actually saying the company’s name, a la the PlayStation sonic signature.Īfter many unsuccessful attempts for such a tall order, Yellin tapped Oscar-winning sound editor Lon Bender (“Braveheart,” “Drive”).
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Despite Netflix’s straddling of the tech and entertainment industries, it couldn’t be too electronic, like the Xbox sound or the Mac startup chime. But he still wanted something that would build up tension and release it. Unlike those comparatively lengthy cinematic examples above, Yellin said in the “age of click-and-play,” Netflix’s sound needed to be short.
Plus, their second sonic logo by that you may have never heard. The never-before-told story behind the most recognizable sonic logo in the world.