Season 2 of Netflix’s live-action version of the manga series One Piece season 2 cast. But the introduction of characters like Nico Robin and Tony Tony Chopper pose a problem for the live-action adaptation, which becomes even bigger when another new face is thrown into the mix.

In the first season of One Piece, Luffy’s crew of Straw Hat Pirates consisted solely of four humans, Nami, Usopp, Roronoa Zoro and Sanji. This crew is about to get a new addition, though, with Netflix’s show on course to reach Drum Island in the coming season. There, the existing Straw Hats will be ed by Chopper, an anthropomorphic reindeer whose live-action appearance will have to be computer-generated. Meanwhile, Nico Robin could enter One Piece season 2 to fight the Straw Hats, with her ability to sprout body parts from any surface posing a new challenge for the show’s special effects team.

Franky Will Be Even More Difficult To Get Right In Live-Action Than Robin Or Chopper

His Appearance Is Humanlike But With Superhuman Features

With last September’s update from One Piece’s showrunners teasing Chopper in reindeer form, it’s clear that they’re prepared to overcome any problems the supernatural elements of the manga story may pose them. What’s more, Robin’s special powers aren’t radically different from the special effects that already appeared in season 1 of the show, with Luffy’s elasticated body requiring extensive CG graphics.

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Yet further down the line, One Piece’s visual effects team will find it even more difficult to portray other new of the Straw Hat Pirates as live-action characters. Take Franky, the crew member who s next after Chopper and Robin (who switches sides following the defeat of Baroque Works). Franky is a cyborg who’s mostly human in appearance, apart from his robotic legs, disproportionately humongous arms, and height of around eight feet. It doesn’t make sense for him to be entirely computer-generated, but it’s hard to see how his superhuman body parts could be designed to fit a human actor in a natural way.

One Piece’s Characters Will Only Get More Difficult To Get Right In Live-Action After Season 2

More Supernatural Characters Will Appear Throughout The Straw Hats' Grand Line Journey

The trend begun by Robin and Chopper of One Piece’s new characters becoming increasingly supernatural in appearance will only continue as the show’s Grand Line story arc develops. Far from being an exception, Franky is just one of the many supernatural beings the Straw Hat Pirates will meet during the course of their route, from the giants Dorry and Brogy to the devil-like member of One Piece’s Shichibukai Warlords, Gecko Moria.

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While One Piece’s first season received positive reviews for its nimble adaptation of the manga’s more cartoonish elements to a live-action setting, continuing to do so is going to get harder the more the show explores these original storylines. At the same time, it can’t abandon, divert from, or skip over too many of these storylines, which would risk alienating the core of its fanbase who came to it via the anime series or original manga..

Franky Is Not Even The Trickiest Straw Hat For Netflix’s One Piece To Pull Off

The Show Will Soon Have To Contend With Adapting Brook And Jinbe For Live Action

There are at least two more characters who will be absolutely essential to include in further seasons of the show, who are even trickier to adapt for live action than Franky. “Soul King” Brook and “Knight of the Sea” Jinbe complete the set of senior Straw Hat crew , in the manga’s Thriller Bark and Wano County arcs. Brook will be the second swordsman to the pirate crew alongside Roronoa, while Jinbe will be among One Piece’s most powerful characters in his role as Straw Hats helmsman.

It's probable that Netflix's live-action One Piece will skip certain arcs from the manga series, including Thriller Bark and Wano County, to focus on others in more depth. But skipping these arcs will simply mean introducing Brook and Jinbe in other ways, and likely sooner than in the original series.

It’s almost impossible to imagine how Netflix’s One Piece is going to turn these incredibly cartoonish figures into live-action characters, given that Brook is a giant skeleton and Jinbe is a fish-man who’s half-whale shark, half-human. They may have to solve at least one of these conundrums sooner rather than later, though, as a live-action Brook could well appear in One Piece season 2 during a flashback sequence. But judging by what Matt Owens and his production team have pulled off so far with characters like Arlong, there's good reason to be optimistic.

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One Piece (Live-Action)
Release Date
August 31, 2023
Network
Netflix
Showrunner
Matt Owens
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Iñaki Godoy
    Monkey D. Luffy
  • Headshot Of Emily Rudd
    Emily Rudd
    Nami

WHERE TO WATCH

Streaming

One Piece follows young pirate Monkey D. Luffy and his diverse crew as they embark on a daring quest for treasure. Released in 2023, the film brings the adventurous world of the popular manga to life, capturing Luffy's relentless pursuit of the legendary One Piece treasure.

Franchise(s)
One Piece
Streaming Service(s)
Netflix