

- #Charles rocket cause of death license#
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- #Charles rocket cause of death tv#
Although the 2011 Sendai Earthquake didn't help matters, the show's ratings prior to the earthquake were noticeably behind the average ratings for all other series in the block. It also garnered some of the worst ratings for the noitaminA animation block. Yamakan probably would have had to step down even if he hadn't explicitly staked his career on it doing well. The end result was said to be good, if not great, by most people who watched it to the end, but not many people did. He was so sure of its success that he said he'd step down if it did poorly. Fractale was conceived as a way for its director, Yutaka "Yamakan" Yamamoto, to make Kyoto Animation regret firing him, with all the resources put into it that you'd expect with a goal like that.Crimson Wolf caused Streamline to stop producing new anime releases in 1997 and eventually shut down five years later.
#Charles rocket cause of death license#
Streamline Pictures' 1995 release of Crimson Wolf was so bad not even Fred Patten, an animation historian and Streamline's longest-serving employee, had anything nice to say about it in his chronicle of the company on his blog, and yet they had to license it in order to get a more attractive title that founder Carl Macek wanted.Tragically, the series would do far better in the United States and would even gain an underground fanbase in Japan, but he would never see any of it. Peepo Choo was his attempt to break away from his usual output and an attempt to tackle more complex and absurd themes, but the off-brand Toilet Humor and craziness made the manga very unpopular, and it was canceled three years into its run. Before he started serializing it, he was beloved as a children's author and very popular for his picture books. In-universe example: Peepo Choo creator Ringo Plum became impoverished after the original manga bombed hard in Japan.
#Charles rocket cause of death tv#
( As TV Tropes does not know time, please wait either 10 years after the work's release or, in the case of studios and production companies, for official confirmation before adding an example.) Also has nothing to do with the God Killer awakening from Puzzle & Dragons. Has nothing to do with killing God/the gods, nor does it have anything to do with the creator dying for a different reason for the latter you may want Died During Production, if they died without finishing the work. Is a Crapshoot or for when an author wants to kill their own work. A creator/business that went defunct after one or two serious flops/mistakes could still leave a lasting legacy and be fondly remembered in hindsight.ĭo not confuse with A.I. Not to be confused with Fallen Creator, where a once-respected creator is permanently disgraced due to a string of flops or personal misbehaviors.

Note: While a good number of these entries have either been Vindicated by History or are a Cult Classic, they still count as Creator Killers because of the damage they did at the time of their release. When this happens to filmmakers, it's sometimes referred to as being thrown in "director jail". If it literally, and directly, kills them, then it's probably an example of Fatal Method Acting. For understandable reasons, many of these overlap with Troubled Production. Contrast Breakthrough Hit (when the work makes the creator a big name), Career Resurrection (when the work makes the creator a big name again after a Creator Killer) and Win Back the Crowd (same). A Role-Ending Misdemeanor is when this trope is caused by personal scandal rather than a failed work. See Tough Act to Follow when one's career was not killed by a flop but the inability to follow-up a massive success. See Creator Backlash for when a creator turns against their work and Bury Your Art if they refuse to let it see the light of day, regardless if the work itself destroys their credibility. See Star-Derailing Role when it happens to the performers. Not to be confused with Died During Production (where the creator dies before their work is completed), Rage Against the Author (where the creator can literally be killed by his/her work) or The Fourth Wall Will Not Protect You (same). Though there are usually many factors needed to cause the death of a publisher or a creator, some high-profile flops are linked (rightfully or not) to the death of the organization working on it.Ĭompare Trend Killer, Genre-Killer and Franchise Killer. Glove and Boots, "Nine Movies That Make Men Cry"Ī Creator Killer is a rather unpredictable phenomenon when one or more works flop badly enough to take down or badly damage the publishers, the reputation of creative talents behind it, or both.
