Petition to boycott Netflix's 'whitewashed' Death Note nears 10,000 supporters - Action News
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Petition to boycott Netflix's 'whitewashed' Death Note nears 10,000 supporters

A petition calling for a boycott of Netflix's upcoming movie Death Note is getting close to its goal of 10,000 signatures.

Film based on Japanese manga series sparks backlash online after white actors cast in lead roles

LaKeith 'Keith' Stanfield and Nat Wolff star in the Netflix film Death Note, which is receiving backlash for not casting Asian actors in the lead roles. (James Dittiger/Netflix)

A petition calling for theboycott of Netflix's upcoming movie Death Note because ofcasting decisionsis getting close to its goal of 10,000 signatures.

The move comes after a trailer for the film, which is based on thepopular Japanese manga series with the same title, was released earlier this week and revealed white actors in the lead roles. Three of the film's producers are of Asian descent.

The teaser shows The Fault In Our Stars actor Nat Wolff cast in the mainrole of Light Turner, a student who gets his hands on a supernatural notebook that allows him to kill anyone he can identify by name and face. The character in the original series is named Light Yagami.

Playing the private detective chasing himis black actor LaKeith"Keith"Stanfield. The Leftovers' Margaret Qualleyplays the female lead.

The revelation sparked backlash from some people on social media and prompted an online petition.

"Death Note shouldn't be cast with all white actors as it goes against the very soul of the story," wrote the petition's instigator on Care2, Sarah Rose, who referred to the American adaptation as "whitewashed."

Numbers don't lie

While the petition itself might not hold a lot of power, it points to an ongoing problem in the entertainment industry.

The lack of representation when it comes toAsian actors in particular washighlighted in a recent report from the University of Southern California.

Between 2007 and2015, the study foundonly a 3.9 per cent increasein the number of Asian characters in Hollywood'smost popular films.

Another study from the same university pointed out that Asian actors accounted for5.1 per cent of speaking or named roles in 2014, making themsignificantlyunder-represented on screen.

Actors speak out

The issue has also been cited by actors in the industry.

Constance Wu, known for her role on the series Fresh Off The Boat, slammed the casting of Matt Damon in the epic film The Great Wall, about a European warrior in China during the Song Dynasty.

Actress Constance Wu was critical of the casting of Matt Damon in the epic film The Great Wall. (Christopher Polk/Getty Images)

"We have to stop perpetuating the racist myth that a only [sic]white man can save the world," she wrote in a Twitter message last year.

Edward Zo, an up-and-coming actor, posted a video messageon YouTube in 2015 claiming he was told told not to audition forthe American adaptation of Death Notebecause he was Asian.

A spokesperson saysNetflixisn't commenting on the film, which is set to be released in August.

Whitewashing in film and television | Sunday Talk

8 years ago
Duration 11:09
Is it okay for Hollywood to take whatever they want from other cultures and make it their own? The Sunday Talk panel debates where the line is between homage and appropriation.