Lord Dalek said:
Dog Days (licensed, and promptly shelved)
I never recalled Dog Days being licensed in the United States for home release. I did recall it was streamed at Crunchyroll, that's about it. I think the reason Aniplex USA (this is an Aniplex title by the way) gave this one a pass is because despite being an action show, this anime uses too many weird anime cliches (dog and cat people, idol singers, moe, tsundere, and lolis) that would drive a typical average viewer away. Heck, even the supposed third season was supposed to be produced when they announced it two years ago, but it probably went into development hell. Although I wish this series did got a Bang Zoom dub though.
Lord Dalek said:
School Days (briefly appeared on Daisuki before getting pulled)
It has to deal more with the infamous ending of the anime (the "Nice Boat" thing). I did recall that JAST USA did released the visual novel and its sequels for the U.S. release. It could be a possibility that Maiden Japan (Section23) could get grabs for a sub-only release.
Lord Dalek said:
Actually, Jojo is fairly popular in the United States (at least the games part). The manga sould about average though. That is according to someone I follow at Twitter.
Mr. Anime said:
Funimation or Sentai may get them eventually though it will be a long up-hill battle.
Meh, I'm leaning more towards Viz Media getting the grabs on Gundam.
Lord Dalek said:
The original Japanese producers yanked the international home release rights outside of Asia, including Sentai Filmworks. They still have the streams though.
I'm not sure of their reasoning, but it's more of the fact of different cultural tastes from both Japanese and American anime fandom side of things (and it doesn't help to note that it was licensed around the time the Penn State child sex scandal was going on), and the fact that American anime fandom has a VERY negative view on lolicon anime and loli characters in general (in fact, I never recall a lolicon series ever released dubbed in the U.S.).
BTW, can you add these in the following categories as well:
SNOWBALL IN HELL-LEVEL
- Heroman (screwed over by Disney)
Not exactly but close (IE: Money Reasons, Xenophobic Distributors, Bad Reputations; unlike the previous catagory, these shows could be licensed though)
- C[SUP]3[/SUP] (Licensed by Funimation for streaming in 2011, no word on home video release)
- Code:Breaker (LIcensed by Funimation for streaming in 2012, no word for home video release)
- Black Rock Shooter (Licensed by Funimation for streaming via NicoNico in 2011, no word on home release)
- Symphogear (Licensed by Funimation for streaming via NicoNico in 2011, no word on home release)