Viewer Rating
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources

The Future Diary (2011)
Reality quickly unravels when antisocial Yukiteru is called into a death match against 11 other mentally scarred individuals. Each player has a prophetic device tuned to their personality, giving them control over their future—and the fate of their foes.
Reality quickly unravels when antisocial Yukiteru is called into a death match against 11 other mentally scarred individuals. Each player has a prophetic device tuned to their personality, giving them control over their future—and the fate of their foes.
The film's central narrative focuses on a death game, individual survival, and psychological drama, which are largely apolitical themes. The solutions presented are highly individualistic and personal, rather than advocating for specific societal or political changes, leading to a neutral rating.
The Future Diary, an anime series, features a typical voice cast for its English dub and stylized character designs inherent to the anime genre. The narrative primarily focuses on its psychological thriller themes without explicitly engaging with or critiquing traditional identities or making DEI themes central to its plot.
The Future Diary includes significant LGBTQ+ representation through Akise Aru, a complex and dignified character whose unrequited love for the male protagonist drives his actions. His sexuality is treated respectfully, not as a flaw or source of mockery. Additionally, a minor character is shown with two mothers, presented without judgment. The overall portrayal is respectful and acknowledges queer identity with dignity.
The anime features Yuno Gasai, a highly skilled combatant who frequently engages in and wins close-quarters physical fights against male opponents, utilizing melee weapons and hand-to-hand techniques.
There is not enough publicly available information for AI to assess this category for this movie.
The Future Diary (Mirai Nikki) anime series is a direct adaptation of the manga. All major characters retain their established genders from the source material, with no instances of a character canonically established as one gender being portrayed as another.
The 2011 anime series "The Future Diary" is a direct adaptation of a Japanese manga. The animated characters retain their original Japanese racial depiction from the source material, with no changes in race for any established characters.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources























