Devil May Cry Showrunner Shares Crucial Advice for Sony's Bloodborne Film Team
Breaking: Adi Shankar Warns Against Missteps in High-Stakes Bloodborne Adaptation
Adi Shankar, the creator of Netflix's acclaimed Devil May Cry animated series, has issued a direct message to the team behind Sony's upcoming Bloodborne movie: honor the game's core identity above all else.

In an exclusive interview, Shankar stressed that successful video game adaptations require more than surface-level replication. “You have to understand why fans love the source material—not just copy its scenes,” he said. “Bloodborne’s gothic horror and relentless pace are its soul. Lose that, and you lose the audience.”
The Man Behind the Hits
Shankar brings hard-won credibility to the table. He previously steered Castlevania into a critical darling across multiple seasons on Netflix, collaborating closely with Konami. He also produced Captain Laserhawk: A Blood Dragon Remix under Ubisoft.
His latest triumph is Devil May Cry season 1, which launched on Netflix in 2025 to widespread praise. Now, season 2 dives into the fraught relationship between Dante and Vergil, exploring their fractured origins and the family tragedy that set them on opposing paths.
Background: From Devil May Cry 2 to Bloodborne’s Challenge
Notably, Shankar’s team is embracing Devil May Cry 2—the most divisive entry in Capcom’s series. This bold choice shows their commitment to mining even flawed source material for narrative depth.
Against this backdrop, Sony announced a film adaptation of FromSoftware’s Bloodborne, a game revered for its oppressive atmosphere and cryptic lore. The pressure to avoid past adaptation failures is immense.
What This Means for the Bloodborne Movie
Shankar’s advice underscores a fundamental truth: adaptations live or die by their respect for the original’s emotional core. For Bloodborne, that means capturing the dread, the cosmic horror, and the player’s isolation.
Key takeaways include:
- Stay true to the tone: The game’s Victorian-gothic aesthetic and unsettling pace must translate seamlessly to the screen.
- Embrace ambiguity: Over-explaining the lore could strip the mystery that fuels fan obsession.
- Focus on character: The Hunter is a blank slate; the movie needs a compelling protagonist without alienating players.
Shankar also emphasized collaboration with the original developers. “FromSoftware has a distinct vision. Include them early,” he said. “They’re not just consultants—they’re guardians of the world.”
Urgent Lessons for Hollywood
With stumbles like the Uncharted movie and wins like The Last of Us, the track record is mixed. Bloodborne ranks among the most beloved games of the last decade, raising the stakes even higher.
Shankar’s track record shows that animated adaptations can succeed where live-action often falters. His Devil May Cry proves that fan service isn’t about checklist moments—it’s about translating the game’s heartbeat into a new medium.
“When I worked on Castlevania, we didn’t just show Dracula’s castle. We made you feel its weight,” he explained. “For Bloodborne, the fear has to be visceral. Don’t let the CGI soften the edges.”
What Happens Next
Sony has not yet attached a director or writer to the Bloodborne project. Industry insiders expect casting announcements within months.
Shankar concluded with a simple plea: “Listen to the fans. They’ve been walking through Yharnam for years. They know what’s worth protecting.”
As Devil May Cry season 2 continues its run, all eyes are on Sony’s next move. Whether they heed Shankar’s advice could determine if Bloodborne becomes a cinematic masterpiece—or another cautionary tale.
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