Violet Evergarden Season 2 release date on Netflix: New 2020 movie set for September! Violet Evergarden ending for Major Gilbert explained [Manga/Light Novel Spoilers]

Violet in the Violet Evergarden anime
Violet will definitely be returning, but will it be to TV screens or only movie theaters? Pic credit: Kyoto Animation

The release date for Netflix’s Violet Evergarden Season 2 might be coming much sooner than anyone expected. In fact, it could be argued that an anime sequel wasn’t expected at all.

The anime’s story was based on the relatively short Violet Evergarden novel series, but anime studio Kyoto Animation is well known for stretching a story way beyond its source material. Based on the first season, that’s the plan for the upcoming sequel.

The third 2018 Violet Evergarden novel officially confirmed that a “new project” was greenlit for production and then in July 2018 the Violet Evergarden movie was announced. The film was delayed due to the horrific KyoAni fire attack, and then again by the SARS-COV-2 coronavirus pandemic, but it was eventually announced that the movie would be coming out in the fall of 2020. (See below for more details.)

The official Violet Evergarden Twitter account also said that the anime movie will be “completely new work,” which presumably means it will be an anime original story. The only question remaining is whether a second season will be announced later, although at least one OVA episode was already released in mid-2018 (see below for more details).

The Violet Evergarden anime is based on a 2014 novel by author Kana Akatsuki which won the fifth Kyoto Animation Award. The original draft was rewritten to meet light novel standards and published in December 2015. The second volume of the book series released in 2016 and completed the main story, so the Violet Evergarden novel released in March 2018 was a Gaiden (side story).

Fans were hoping that the third book would contain an after story featuring Violet and Major Gilbert Bougainvillea, but it’s largely focused on side characters like Benedict, Cattleya, and Hodgins. So far, a Violet Evergarden manga adaptation has not been announced.

Violet Evergarden The Movie
A Violet Evergarden movie poster that was released in June 2020. Pic credit: Kyoto Animation

Fortunately, Kyoto Animation announced Violet Evergarden Volume 4, which could serve as the basis for a Violet Evergarden Season 2 anime. Published on March 27, 2020, Violet Evergarden Ever After was a direct sequel to the main storyline. Based on the way the second book ended, this continuation of the main story was more of an after story since it shows what happens to the main characters even as the world is changing around them.

Netflix’s Violet Evergarden dub in English was well-received, although there were legitimate concerns that the context of some scenes was changed by the way certain lines were worded. Unfortunately, no book publisher has licensed the official English translation of the Violet Evergarden novel, but there are completed fan translation projects for the first two volumes (English translations of the gaiden novel are currently in progress).

  • Updated June 25, 2020: Added Violet Evergarden movie release date and Violet Evergarden Ever After novel details.
  • Updated March 19, 2020: Added Violet Evergarden movie key visual.
  • Updated February 14, 2020: Added Violet Evergarden movie trailer.
  • Updated November 11, 2019: Added exact Violet Evergarden movie release date time.
  • Updated September 6, 2019: Added news of the Violet Evergarden movie postponement.
  • Updated April 23, 2019: Added Violet Evergarden movie trailer and adjusted related information.

This article provides everything that is known about Violet Evergarden Season 2 and all related news. As such, this article will be updated over time with news and rumors. Meanwhile, let’s delve down into what is known for certain.

Violet Evergarden Movie Key Art
A key visual released for the Violet Evergarden movie. Pic credit: Kyoto Animation

Violet Evergarden Anime Is Largely An Original Story

The first volume of the light novel series was critically well-received, with reviewers noting that the story structure (which was chronologically out of order) provided a memorable ending as a standalone story. The story purposefully was out of order since it introduced a mysterious main character and then slowly peeled back the layers of her history so her motivations became apparent.

In fact, the original novel didn’t even mention Major Gilbert or her involvement in the war until the last chapter. So for the anime to reveal her background right off the bat was quite a difference.

Violet Evergarden Volume 2 expanded the story with perspectives from other characters. It also expanded on her personal recovery after the war and provided more details about Major Gilbert. Overall, the books were about unraveling this mysterious character through stories related to the letters written as an Auto Memories Doll. The original sequence of events were designed to showcase her growth and development while also evolving how the readers view the main character.

Director Taichi Ishidate knew from the beginning that the structure of the two novels would not work well as a serialized story. During a 2017 Sakugabooru interview, the director noted that the “novels are structured in a very episodic format, where each story independently depicts Violet writing on behalf of a client,” but the issue was that “anime and novels are different mediums.”

“As such, it would be troublesome to use the same presentation techniques in the animated adaptation that were used in its original written form,” Taichi explained. “And so we reconstructed the story into a TV series.”

It was unavoidable that the anime adaption would be restructured since Violet Evergarden Volume 2 had many flashback chapters. In order to create an “entertaining serial tale,” Taichi worked with screenplay writer Reiko Yoshida to give the novel a chronological timeline (here’s a guide for reading the books in chronological order).

The director wanted Violet to be presented to audiences as “child-like innocent stage 0” only to grow emotionally as she met new people. Making this emotional development seem gradual was difficult since multiple anime episodes were being produced at the same time and there is “no tangible element that marks [Violet’s] gradual change.” Looking back, Taichi wished he had created  a “stats screen of Violet’s current growth stages, like Gentleness Level 5 and Empathy Level 4.”

“Violet is a lovely person on perhaps a primitive level, I think that’s her charm,” Taichi said. “I think the viewers will feel like they’re watching over their own daughters as they experience Violet’s growth.”

Anime adaptations will often boil down a light novel series to the essential elements due to lack of time. Slower paced anime will often need two books at the minimum, but oftentimes a director will rush through multiple novels. In the worst-case scenario, entire novels will be reduced into a single episode, but in the case of Violet Evergarden, the biggest problem was the relative scarcity of source material to draw upon.

Excluding the two author’s notes, the first novel was only six chapters and 348 pages long, while the second book was seven chapters and 376 pages. Violet Evergarden Gaiden extended the story by adding 370 pages of side stories and Chapter 1: Princess and Auto Memories Doll was adapted by Episode 5 of the anime.

Kyoto Animation apparently decided to transcend the source material rather than be limited by the scope of the novels. The Violet Evergarden ending in Episode 13 was different from the first novel since the anime version finished on a bittersweet note, but it left the door open for more stories to be told. (Please see the final section of this article for more detailed spoilers for Violet Evergarden Season 2.)

Even the beginning of the anime expanded on the basic premise of the emotionless wounded soldier by showing how Violet was transformed slowly by her new life as an Auto Memories Doll. In fact, the entire training school plot was an anime original story that introduced side characters and fleshed them out.

In the original version of the story, readers were already halfway done reading the book before Benedict Blue and Cattleya Baudelaire was ever introduced. In contrast, Cattleya’s mother-like role was emphasized by the anime version, although another side of the doll was shown by how she’d flirt with Claudia “Claude” Hodgins. Poor young Benedict misunderstands women and is rejected by them, so he cries tears of joy when an older man shares his meal with him.

The anime adaptation fleshed out all of these characters in comparison to the novel and also introduce two new original characters, Erica Brown and Iris Cannary. In a January 2018 interview with Shin-Q magazine, the director admitted that he initially “thought original characters were unnecessary,” but scriptwriter Reiko was convinced that having Cattleya as the only Auto Memories Doll employee at the CH Postal Company did not make sense. Giving Violet friends at her workplace would allow the main character to “contrast how she felt when she met all those outsiders.”

The new Violet Evergarden characters “would be the best way to manifest [Violet’s] incipient feelings” and serve as a story foil for Violet’s emotional development. However, the director did take into account how the new characters might influence Violet as a person.

“Just as the title says, the story itself is about the main protagonist, Violet Evergarden, so I felt figuring out her portrayal was key. Claiming that this title only focuses on her would be going overboard – it’s more akin to an omnibus of episodic tales, though in the end she’s always at their epicenter. The way you present characters in novels and film is different of course, so I worried that placing her in a new medium would alter the feel of her character from the original. Thinking about how I would visualize my impressions when I read the novels was my first worry.”

It could be said that the director’s second worry was ensuring that the central theme of the anime was Major Gilbert’s last words to Violet.

“By having Violet constantly searching for the meaning of a certain phrase that Gilbert told her as the axis of the show, we felt that we could delve into Violet herself and find out more about herself as she does,” Taichi explained. “We made that the core of this series.”

Violet Evergarden Anime
Violet’s journey may be mainly emotional, but she also travels to amazing locales

Violet Evergarden Novel Compared To The Anime: Could The Violet Evergarden Ever After Novel Be Adapted?

Critics can be overly harsh sometimes, especially when they’re fans of the original source material. Some cynical anime fans have even derided Violet as being “PTSD Saber Learns To Type” based on her resemblance to the Fate/Stay Night character. Kyoto Animation may have a history of creating critically-approved anime original stories based on a beloved manga and light novels, but there’s always the fear that original content will just be filler.

Director Taichi has not directly addressed fans’ fears about filler content, but he does seem to believe the pacing of the original content will meet the needs of fans of the light novels.

“I’ll say something frankly: Violet Evergarden feels like it’ll be a harsh work, but it’s also one that steadily becomes a worthwhile experience,” he said. “Please watch until the very end, and I hope you’ll be emotionally moved by sticking around with us.”

For fans wanting to compare the novel against the anime, here is a rough guide. The first chapter of Volume 1 was the main source material up until Episode 7, although Episode 2 pulled from Volume 2: Chapter 2 and Volume 1: Chapter 6.

As previously mentioned, Episode 5 was sourced from Violet Evergarden Gaiden and Episode 6 pulled stories from the middle of Volume 2. Episodes 8 and 9 mixed original content with material from near the end of Volume 1, while Episode 10’s plot was part of Chapter 2. Episode 11 adapted Chapter 3, Episode 12 adapted Chapter 6, and the season finale in Episode 13 adapted Chapters 6 and 7 from Volume 2.

While it sounds like the anime was skipping around out of order, keep in mind the novel was not in chronological order. All in all, the anime adaptation covered chapters 1 through 4, Chapter 6, and used parts from chapters 11 through 13.

What’s more, the Violet Evergarden Ever After novel provides five additional chapters which extends the story. The book is written in such a way that Kyoto Animation could work in original content without overly disrupting the progression of the narrative.

The good news is that this approach to adapting the novel should mean that it’s possible for Violet Evergarden Season 2 to be created based on original material.

Netflix’s Violet Evergarden: OVA Episode 14 In The Blu-Ray/DVD

The Violet Evergarden Blu-Ray/DVD was released as four volumes with all 13 episodes from the Japanese broadcast and Netflix streaming episodes. Volumes 2 and 4 include four episodes, while the others have three episodes each.

If you were counting episodes, that means that Kyoto Animation released Violet Evergarden Episode 14 on July 4, 2018. The promotional video calls it an “Extra Episode” and it was shipped on the series’ fourth Blu-ray Disc and DVD box set.

The story for the Violet Evergarden OVA episode takes place over several months between episodes 4 and 5 of the first season. The plot centers around a letter request from an opera house songstress.

In September 2018, Netflix announced that international audiences would receive the extra episode as a future bonus. OVA episode 14 began streaming exclusively on Netflix starting on October 4, 2018.

Violet Evergarden Movie Release Date Set For Fall 2020

If you look back at the history of Kyoto Animation, three things tend to stand out. One is that they have a tendency to create second and third seasons of anime. The other is that they excel at taking stories like Miss Kobayashi’s Dragon Maid (see our article on Miss Kobayashi’s Dragon Maid Season 2), K-On!, and Love, Chunibyo & Other Delusions and extending the premise successfully with original content.

Finally, many of their anime sequels tend to be movies in combination with second seasons. Recent examples include Sound! Euphonium and the Free! series. The first season of Violet Evergarden hasn’t adapted everything from the novels, but since the sequel project is going to be a “completely new” work then it logically follows that the Violet Evergarden movie is best suited to fill that role.

The Japanese release date for the Violet Evergarden movie was originally scheduled for January 10, 2020. In September 2019, it was announced the film’s release date was being postponed since production work on the movie is still ongoing in the wake of the horrific arson attack on Kyoto Animation. The premiere was set for April 2020 but the global pandemic slowed down their progress on the film.

The anime production committee eventually announced that the Violet Evergarden movie release date was rescheduled to September 18, 2020. The committee also thanked anime fans for all of their support after the tragedy and highlighted how the director and staff are working with all their hearts and strength on the project.

A U.S. release date was not exactly specified, although the movie will also be released internationally in the “same time period” as the Japanese release. Presumably, American audiences will receive an English dub although that detail hasn’t been confirmed yet.

The first video trailer did not show the plot for the Violet Evergarden movie since it only featured clips from the first anime season. The only thing we know for certain about the plot is that it won’t be a recap movie since the Twitter account said the “new Violet Evergarden anime will be completely new.”

Another movie trailer released in February and June 2020 provided one critical detail: the focus will somehow be on Violet’s love for Major Gilbert.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A95e5aTiDsY

Therefore, it’s uncertain whether the movie will finish adapting the central theme of Volume 2. Fortunately, even if they do, the Violet Evergarden Ever After novel leaves an opening for the second season (for more detailed spoilers see the major spoilers section below).

Violet Evergarden Netflix English Dub Prosthetic Arm
It seems very likely that the anime will receive a sequel. Pic credit: Kyoto Animation

Violet Evergarden Season 2 Release Date Predictions

As of the last update, Kyoto Animation or any company related to the production of the anime has not officially confirmed the Violet Evergarden Season 2 release date. Nor has the production of a TV sequel been announced.

Once the news is officially confirmed this article will be updated with the relevant information. In the meantime, it’s possible to speculate about when, or if, the Violet Evergarden Season 2 premiere date will occur in the future.

From a financial perspective, there is no reason not to move forward with a sequel. The first Blu-Ray box set topped the Oricon charts upon release, selling 7,322 copies in the first week. An anime is considered to be doing decently with half of those sales numbers. Being a Netflix Original is also a feather in Violet’s cap since the revenue from streaming platforms has been a game-changer in the anime industry.

Considering that the movie is coming out in late 2020, it’s possible that the Violet Evergarden Season 2 release date could be scheduled for 2021 or 2022.

Let’s just hope that Violet Evergarden Season 2 is confirmed after the movie releases in 2020.

Violet Evergarden Anime 2018
The second season has amazing potential for telling new stories through letters

Violet Evergarden’s Ending Explained – Is Major Gilbert Alive? [Major Spoilers]

Major Spoilers Warning: The following should not be read unless you have watched Violet Evergarden Episode 13 and desire potential spoilers for Violet Evergarden Season 2.

Major Gilbert’s last words to Violet may have been the central theme to the first season, but for much of the audience having Gilbert live on in Violet’s heart is not enough. They want Major Gilbert to be alive and Violet to be able to say “I love you” in person now that she’s capable of understanding the meaning of the words.

Unfortunately, Major Gilbert does not directly appear in the finale episode because he presumably has been killed in action. However, a mysterious client appears at the end and many anime fans think it might be Gilbert based on the way Violet reacted. So, is Gilbert alive or not?

The answer to the question can’t be given without first considering the central theme of the first season. The story was about Violet’s emotional growth while being independent and overcoming her grief at Gilbert’s loss. Throughout the entire series, Violet has not given up on the hope that Gilbert is alive, but it’s not until the ending that she even recognizes her own feelings as being love.

Therefore, now that Violet has achieved this goal, the central theme of Violet Evergarden Season 2 will probably be reunification with Major Gilbert. Yes, although the anime muddies the waters, it becomes very clear in Volume 2 of the light novels that Gilbert is alive and that he eventually reunites with Violet. Gilbert only lied about his own death out of love for Violet since he desired her to forge her own path in life rather than be dependent on following orders. Gilbert’s love for her is so great that he only wants to reunite when she is capable of accepting of his love.

Knowing that revelation does not mean that Violet Evergarden Season 2 can’t have some mysteries to be unveiled beside Major Gilbert’s fate. Violet can continue to grow through writing letters and her own origins are a mystery even in the light novels (although the movie may adapt that part of the story).

Volume 4, Violet Evergarden Ever After, also provides an after story featuring Violet and Gilbert together. They have been nurturing their relationship since their reunion, but their work lives as an Army colonel and a popular Autom Memories Doll often means they live apart. What’s more, the world around them is transforming and during this time Violet visits a town called Alfine.

Let’s just hope Kyoto Animation delivers a new twist on the story that transcends even the books. Stay tuned!

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