….
February 17, Sunday.
....
The shows began.
Lines outside theaters stretched onto sidewalks. Online debates boiled. Film pages flooded with early reviews, reactions, and predictions.
Some people watched one. Few watched both. But everyone had an opinion.
And slowly, the picture began to form.
[Mastor], for all its polish, was... fine.
It was a high-concept sci-fi epic set in a dystopian future, following an elite enforcer known only as The [Mastor], a human-augmented officer torn between order and conscience in a collapsing, AI-governed society.
Sleek, stylish, and emotionally driven, [Mastor] was less philosophical than [Death Note], but bigger in scope, grand set pieces, neon-drenched cityscapes, and themes of control vs. chaos.
The visuals were stunning. The performances were solid. The world-building, expansive and expensive. But something in its heart felt hollow. Critics described it as 'ambitious, but emotionally distant', 'technically impressive', but 'thematically safe'.
[Death Note], on the other hand….
Received a strong critical response. Gritty, moody, cerebral. Audiences praised its visual storytelling, the unsettling tone, and the cold beauty of its narrative. Regal's direction was called 'unflinching', 'surgical', and 'haunting'.
It was clear that audiences left the theater in stunned silence, the haunting narration echoing in their minds, the moral ambiguity pressing like a weight. Ryuk's voice became meme-worthy.
The trailer tagline [Not A Story Of A Hero], turned into a Twitter slogan.
….
By Sunday night, the numbers were in.
[Mastor] had a strong opening. Box office receipts reflected the marketing push, the theater count, the blockbuster appeal.
But [Death Note]?
It had traction.
With much less screens and a budget.
Streaming pre-orders shot up. International buzz exploded, especially in Japan, where audiences embraced the cultural callbacks with open arms. Fan art, essays, MeTube breakdowns, it all surfaced within 48 hours.
Critics weighed in. Aggregators showed [Death Note] pulling ahead with a quiet but undeniable lead.
…and soon, a pattern emerged.
The comparisons began.
And the whispers grew louder.
"It's good… but [Death Note] hits harder."
"[Mastor] looks amazing, but [Death Note] lingers."
"If [Mastor] is a spectacle, [Death Note] is an experience."
….
And then came the report.
Early Monday morning. A feature-length analysis by ScreenGauge Weekly, titled simply
[The Whisper That Roared: Regal's Victory at the Box Office]
The article broke it down clearly-
While [Mastor] had more viewers, [Death Note] had more impact.
More repeat viewings.
Higher audience scores.
A longer tail in streaming projections.
And most importantly, more cultural imprint.
It ended with one, chilling line-
"Regal hasn't just won this weekend - it's his second."
….
Pixy Studios Headquarters – Boardroom
Silence.
Brad Carter sat hunched over his phone, scrolling through the fallout. Memes. Jokes. A GIF of Regal walking into a theater with the caption: 'Not even worth a conversation'.
He didn't speak.
No one did.
The studio's CEO finally broke the silence.
"Find me someone who understands what the audience actually wants." She said coldly. "And tell Brad he won't be doing press for a while."
….
Pixy's executive producer released a brief statement.
"We are proud of [Mastor]. It found its audience. These are two different films, and comparisons are inevitable but ultimately unfair."
Privately? There was tension. Boardroom tension. And someone was already whispering about Brad's future.
….
The Composer - Tweeted a short clip of the [Death Note] score's main theme, layered over a silent shot of the Tokyo skyline.
Caption -"For those who heard the whisper in the dark." A love letter to the opening moment.
As the dust settled, the numbers were clear.
[Death Note] didn't just survive the competition.
It defined the weekend.
And while [Mastor] found its fans, its world, its character, its world-building, Regal's film had started something deeper.
It hadn't won with noise.
It had won with a whisper.
And that, perhaps, made it all the louder.
….
Next Day.
February 18th, 2011 - Monday.
[Death Note] was released a couple of days ago, and is currently making waves.
And just his film, Regal is already onto the next wave.
That is the launch of - the second volume of [Harry Potter] series:
[Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets]
It is being launched today, shocking many people around him how he juggled in between while working on a film.
However, in actuality Regal and EverLeaf Press had already compromised the launch date of the book which was supposed to happen a week ago according to the schedule.
But since Regal is busy with the release of [Death Note], the date had to be pushed forward.
…..
New York City.
The line stretched around the corner of Barnes & Noble on Fifth Avenue, a serpentine queue of bundled-up fans clutching laminated posters of Harry Potter's lightning bolt.
Snowflakes clung to their hoods as they shifted impatiently, breath visible in the predawn chill.
Inside, the bookstore buzzed with the kind of electric energy reserved for once-in-a-generation phenomena.
Employees in crimson vests adjusted stacks of [Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets] - gold-embossed hardcovers shrink-wrapped in plastic, as if the books themselves were relics.
Regal stood backstage, his reflection taunting him in a floor-length mirror.
Dark circles pooled under his eyes like inkblots, and his suit jacket was rumpled from three days of nonstop interviews for [Death Note].
The film's neon-lit posters still haunted his dreams: L's gaunt silhouette looming over a cityscape, Nightlight's enigmatic smile bleeding into static.
He had barely slept since the premiere on the 15th, his nights a blur of red carpets and soundstages, his days consumed by back-to-back junkets.
Now, here he was, hours after a [Death Note] Q&A in Tribeca, swapping director's caps for author's glasses.
"Five minutes…" Called his publicist, Marisol, thrusting a flask of black coffee into his hand. "And Regal? Smile. The fans didn't wait three hours to see you look like you've been dug up from concrete."
He grimaced but took a sip, the bitterness searing his throat. "Tell EverLeaf they owe me a kidney."
The compromise had been brutal.
A week prior, the book's original February 11th release had been set in stone - until [Death Note]'s release and promotions box collided, forcing Regal to choose between promoting his film or his franchise.
In the normal senior EverLeaf Press had every right to take a legal action… but of course they didn't.
In the end, they had settled on a Hail Mary - push the book forward to the 18th, sandwiching Regal between two coasts, two careers, two realities.
The crowd erupted as he stepped onto the stage, a glass-enclosed platform erected in the bookstore's atrium.
Flashbulbs popped like fireflies, and the roar of "Regal! Regal!" drowned out the classical music piped overhead.
He waved, the motion mechanical, and perched on a leather armchair beside a blow-up of Platform 9 3⁄4.
A young boy in a homemade Sorting Hat thrust a copy of [Philosopher's Stone] toward him. "Is Hermione gonna die this time?!"
Regal laughed, the sound weary but warm. "If she does, it won't be in this book."
The first question came from a reporter from - Publishers Weekly - her microphone emblazoned with their silver owl logo. "Mr. Regal, how did you manage to write [Chamber of Secrets] while directing a major motion picture?"
He leaned forward, elbows on knees, the pose practiced but the fatigue genuine. "Let's just say I am barely hanging in there too…"
The crowd tittered. "But honestly? Harry's world is an escape hatch. When I am knee-deep in neon-lit dystopias, Hogwarts feels like coming up for air."
A girl in a Gryffindor scarf shouted. "What's Harry's biggest challenge this time?!"
Regal's smile tightened. The book's embargo prohibited spoilers, but the thrill of the secret still hummed in his chest. "Huh… The Chamber isn't the only thing opening."
Behind him, a screen flickered to life, streaming the event to bookstores in London and Tokyo. EverLeaf's marketing team had insisted on the global feed, billing it as 'the first transcontinental book launch of the decade'.
Regal wondered how J.K. Rowling would have handled the spectacle. He had never met her, of course, this was his world now.
….
By 12 a.m., he had signed 500 copies, his hand cramping into a claw.
Samantha herded him backstage, where a spread of croissants and orange juice awaited. "Sales are tracking 12% higher than [Philosopher's Stone] at this hour."
She said, consulting her tablet. "But your film's social media is tanking. Fans are mad you're 'splitting focus.'"
He stared at the screen-
#DeathNoteOrHarryPotter - trending, tweets accusing him of "chasing legacy over art."
"Tell the studio to leak that deleted scene with L and the strawberry cake." He muttered. "That always trends."
Samantha snorted. "Okay. Now eat. You have got a red-eye to L.A. at noon."
As he forced down a danish, a security guard ushered a woman through the crowd - a wiry figure in a peacoat, her auburn hair streaked with gray.
Regal stiffened. It was Elena Voss, the 'New York Times' book critic whose review of [Philosopher's Stone] had called him 'a cinematic genius with a pedestrian prose problem.'
She handed him a leather-bound copy of [Chamber of Secrets], the pages ribbon-marked. "First 50 pages are genius." She said, voice low. "But your dialogue still reads like it's being translated from Japanese."
He opened his mouth to retort, but she was already gone, melting into the throng.
….
The [Chamber of Secrets] launch broke records, selling 1.5 million copies in 24 hours.
That same evening, in a quiet Los Angeles hotel room, he stood at the foot of the bed, staring at two neatly stacked piles…
…and the woman lying there, scrolling silently through her phone.
He didn't say a word.
Instead, he let his body collapse face-first into the mattress, sinking into the soft sheets with a muffled exhale.
A few seconds passed in stillness.
Then, gently, without a word, a soft hand moved to rest on his head.
"You are tired, Reg..." She said softly.
"Huh, not anymore…" His voice was muffled by the blanket.
She raised an eyebrow, amused. "Is that so?"
"Yep." Still muffled, still unmoving.
….
Somewhere, a printer in New York spat out the first copies of [Chamber of Secrets] second printing.
Somewhere else, a projectionist loaded [Death Note]'s reels into a theater.
Regal closed his eyes.
For a moment, the noise faded.
Just the hum of two worlds spinning, and him somewhere in between, trying to breathe.
….
.
[To be continued…]
★─────⇌•★•⇋─────★
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