Of course, there’s a burden to that thought, too. The creative team at Wit wants very badly to get everything just right, as the new behind-the-scenes look at The One Piece above shows. That’s not always easy when the series you’re adapting has been running for 27 years, evolving both Oda’s style and the characters themselves. So how exactly do they capture what “One Piece” really is after all this time?
The answer to that contains multitudes: There’s props animators consulting real-life weapons and French food magazines; there’s the character designer who focused only on diligently recreating One Piece character sketches for 2 months; there’s the animator in charge of landscapes who practices Oda’s clouds on the reg to capture the “softness.”
Ultimately they are all trying their hardest while trying to take Oda’s notes on The One Piece to heart — namely that he wanted them all “to express” rather than copy and paste. It’s all quite cool to see, complete with behind-the-scenes looks at how they 3D render the town to explore angles and try to really capture the essence of One Piece.
One Piece certainly exists in rarefied air, and it’s cool that juice is being put into giving us the sort of behind-the-scenes look at anime production we’re not often afforded. Plus it’s just neat to hear why certain artists love certain characters — even if the answer is just: “Characters that smoke have really good poses.”
The One Piece is follow the same story as the manga, starting with the East Blue saga. The show will also be made in partnership with Shueisha, Fuji Television Network, and Toei Animation Co. (Toei makes the current anime series as well). The show still has no release date.