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Lunch » Tags » Books » Reviews » Death Note Volume 12:Finis » User review

I wonder why the trip never felt long.

  • Oct 18, 2011
Rating:
+5

Completely bored with his everyday life. Straight A high school student Light Yagumi is about to experience excitement he has never dreamed of. After class, Light comes upon a black book lying on the ground titled Death Note. The user instructions describe if a persons name is written in the book, then that person would die from a heart attack in a certain amount of time.

After testing the book on an armed man during a hostage situation. Light learns that the book is far from a hoax. Now with the new power that was given to him. Light embarks on his one man quest to change the world. His plan is to rid society of all criminals, and make himself the God of the new world.

Previous Volumes:

Death Note Volume 1: Boredom
Death Note Volume 2: Confluence
Death Note Volume 3: Hard Run
Death Note Volume 4: Love
Death Note Volume 5: Whiteout
Death Note Volume 6: Give and Take
Death Note Volume 7: Zero

Death Note Volume 8: Target
Death Note Volume 9: Contact
Death Note Volume 10: Deletion
Death Note Volume 11: Kindred Spirits




Death Note Volume 12: Finis

The cat and mouse game between Light/Kira and Near is over. Meeting face to face for the first and quite possibly the last time. The two geniuses are now prepared to face the consequences should either of them become the loser in this battle of wits. The showdown is taking place inside of an abandoned warehouse with The Japanese Task Force and the SPK(Special Provisions for Kira) as witnesses. Does Near really possess the proof needed to defeat Light? Or will Light once again emerge victorious, and become the God of the new world?-summary

Well here it is, the final volume in one of the best Japanese Manga series I've read in the last ten years or so, and could make my top ten(should I ever get around to making one). Death Note volume 12 continued at what it did best, which was deliver very strong storytelling, by keeping the reader in the dark with its suspense. This final volume made the trip worth it for me.

Author Tsugumi Ohba once again stuck to his guns, and didn't fumble in his execution to me. The volume begins with its build up leading to the final confrontation. But, on the way there, Ohba continues to keep the reader aware of the current situation taking place with the public. A majority of people are firmly on Kira's side, and their fanatical behaviour when supporting their god can be very disturbing in its realism. This is made obvious when an enemy of their god is dealt with.

Ohba also continues to move in the right direction with character development. Light Yagumi continues to display his determination on changing the world. His motives clearly proves that he's willing to use any means necessary. However, Light's development went through too much of a dramatic change. His tactics seem to push him away from being a savior into a complete villain, but I felt his tactics were necessary, more on that later. As far as the side characters are concerned, I felt most of the them fulfilled their roles, and none appeared to have been wasted to me.

The final volume also ties up the loose ends. The last couple of chapters takes the time to explain all of the elements that lead to the climax. However, a small amount of fans didn't quite appreciate the direction, because it took the route of being dialogue heavy, which to me is kind of strange, becauseDeath Note was never really action driven. I actually find this gripe to be very stupid.

I think the attempt to provide closure was successful. Many anime and some manga have the notorious reputation of providing too little closure or none at all. For the most part, I find a majority of open endings to be creative laziness at its best. Thankfully, Death Note doesn't fall into this, and the series has satisfied many readers with myself being one of them.

The series is jam packed with suspense up to the closing moments. The tension had the right amount of build up with great pacing. Some panels contained little to no dialogue, instead, only artwork consisting of facial expressions displaying the tension, fear, and even confidence of the characters. The writing which remained very well done can keep many gripped with its unpredictability. The artwork by Takeshi Obata remained consistent, and on the same level as the previous volumes, with very good attention to detail from facial expressions to firearms.

Now the one issue some fans are divided on happens to be the ending. Without giving away the outcome, I'll say that the ending does work from my point of view. Some felt that Light's motivation and his goals for world conquest were childish at best, and he was nothing more than a mass murderer with childish ideals. In which, numerous times throughout the series, this is exactly how he was described by both L and Near, and they're somewhat right. However, as childish as his beliefs may have been to some(even though I can't imagine a child thinking this way), one still can't overlook the fact that Light did change the world for the better, with war and crime being almost non existent, to include, criminals were afraid to commit crimes. I think people simply don't feel comfortable with one man wielding so much power. In many people's minds, I think it just boils down to the opinion no man has the right to play god.

Personally, I think Ohba's direction with the ending can be debated forever, because it leaves things up to your own interpretation. Therefore, the way I see it, Light didn't have a twisted sense of justice. He simply had a vision that some people didn't agree with. Once he was given the tool to make the changes he believed necessary, he took the route that was morally wrong to some. Perhaps on the way, his judgment became clouded the closer he came to his goal, and in the process, he may have became corrupted. Ohba plays on another age old theme "Absolute power, corrupts absolutely". However, this can be debated in Light's case. In order to create a new world or destroy a threat people have to die: family, friends, innocents, whatever. That's just the way it has to be sometimes. I can't think of one nation that has been built with no bloodshed. Light must have seen this at one point. In fact, he actually did question his motives. But he saw the bigger picture, a world full of hard working people free of crime, war, and terrorism. He actually achieved that, so perhaps his vision wasn't as flawed as some would like to believe.

In closing, Death Note to me is an excellent cat and mouse thriller that examined numerous themes up to the end. In addition, the series definitely overachieved in its suspense, plot, and tension. I have read the series several times, and it hasn't really gotten old to me. I definitely recommend the series for at least a check out, to fans of graphic novels and suspense filled thrillers. Death Note may not be the best manga in existence, but I feel it makes a strong case in being a contender. Volume 12 is 209 pages, through 10 chapters.

Chapter 99:The Two
Chapter 100:Face to Face
Chapter 101:Inducement
Chapter 102:Patience
Chapter 103:Declaration
Chapter 104:The Answer
Chapter 105:Impossible
Chapter 106:Intent to Kill
Chapter 107:Curtain
Chapter 108:Finis


Pros:
-Gripping and suspenseful to the end, major players are the complete focus, good ending...

Cons:
- ... yet the jury is in the air on it, dialogue heavy for some


 

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October 22, 2011
Amazing reviews man
 
October 19, 2011
wonderful coverage of the whole series. Was there a point that the anime series really diverted from the manga series? I kinda remember talking about that with someone (not sure if it was you)
October 20, 2011
Yeah it was, when Mello and Near were introduced; their motives for catching Kira was nowhere as well covered in the anime like it was in the manga, and they actually began to work as a team in the manga and was damn near picking Kira apart. Their character development was much better in the manga.
 
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More Death Note Volume 12:Finis reviews
review by . June 30, 2010
After eleven successful volumes, the Death Note series comes to a bittersweet close. Megalomaniac Light Yagami and L's successor, Near, go head-to-head in a final battle of wits. Surrounding them are other key players in the series, including the shinigami (or "death god") Ryuk, who is responsible for the notebook having been placed on earth.      Spoiler alert...            As it turns out, the one responsible is the wild …
Quick Tip by . July 02, 2010
For lots of people series ended when "L" died. I am not one of them. Yes, Near and Mello are not L, but the last plans by both Light and L's students provided a pretty interesting plot.
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Wiki

Death Note (デスノート, Desu Nōto?) is a Japanese manga series created by writer Tsugumi Ohba and manga artist Takeshi Obata. The series centers on Light Yagami, a university student who discovers a supernatural notebook, the "Death Note", dropped on Earth by a shinigami (death god) named Ryuk. The Death Note grants its user the ability to kill anyone whose face they have seen, by writing the victim's name in the notebook. The story follows Light's attempt to create and rule a world cleansed of evil using the notebook, and the complex conflict between him, his opponents and a mysterious detective known to the world only as L.

Death Note was first serialized in 108 chapters by Shueisha in the Japanese manga magazine Weekly Shōnen Jump from December 2003 to May 2006. The series was also published in tankōbon format in Japan starting in May 2004 and ending in October 2006 with a total of twelve volumes. The series was adapted into live-action films released in Japan on June 17, 2006, on November 3, 2006, and on February 2, 2008. The anime series aired in Japan from October 3, 2006, to June 26, 2007. Composed of 37 episodes, the anime was developed by Madhouse and directed by Tetsuro Araki. A light novel based on the series, written by Nisio Isin, was released in Japan. Additionally, various video games have been published by Konami for Nintendo DS.

Viz Media licensed the Death Note manga in North America and has published all the twelve volumes from the series as...

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Details

ISBN-10: 1421513277
ISBN-13: 978-1421513270
Author: Tsugumi Ohba
Genre: Manga, anime
Date Published: December 2003 – May 2006
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"A Great Conclusion"
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