There is a rumor that’s spread about anime director Takeyuki Kanda’s sudden death in 1996 that has nothing to back it up. As best as I can tell, it remains unfounded and almost certainly false. The rumor is that he died in a car crash, but the only available information on Japanese sites doesn’t mention that at all. The oldest source I could find for that rumor was an uncited English Wikipedia article written by an account later banned for bad edits.
The only confirmed detail on Kanda’s death is that he suddenly
passed away at the age of 52. That much, at a minimum, is confirmed by an official
interview on the VOTOMS website with Ryosuke Takahashi that mentions Kanda’s
passing, specifically in its third footnote.
I was (and still am) working on a separate, more fun article
about a series of anime image albums, but I got sucked into this rabbit hole over
the last few days. I figured I’d tell the story of how this unraveled, as well
as share some thoughts on anime rumors in general.
Hey, Maybe Someone
Should Check Wikipedia
I was chatting with people from Inka Subs about Vifam, and Ralem, one of
the staffers, posted the credits of its 1920’s Chicago gag spinoff OVA short. The
credits are in English and contain a bunch of names and inside jokes on the
staff involved, and one of them was for the director “Drunkard Kanda”.
Takeyuki Kanda was a seasoned anime director who worked on
many shows over his career, and he was Vifam’s series director, hence the
shoutout. A tidbit I’d heard through the years and repeated myself was that Kanda
died while directing the Gundam: The 08th MS Team OVA because
he got into a fatal car accident. Because other staff noted his tendency to
drink, that carried the implicit connotation of an alcoholic car crash, which
would explain why the OVA had a director change part way through. It’s a short,
somewhat dramatic story that gives a grim flourish of sudden crisis to the
production of The 08th MS Team.
Except I thought for a second and realized that I wasn’t
sure where that detail actually came from. I’d heard it so often, but where did
it come from originally? Just to double check, I went to his English Wikipedia
page to see if it was sourced there.
It was soon apparent that something was wrong. The Wikipedia
page for Kanda was barebones, and it hadn’t been updated since June 13th,
2021. The article
at the time had this as its bio paragraph at the start:
None of this information was cited whatsoever. There were no
formatted citations, no in-text descriptions, and no links of any kind except external
ones to IMDB and ANN. The page had a huge “this article needs additional
citations for verification” warning slapped right at the top since 2019, but
nothing had been done to fix anything.
I switched over to JP Wikipedia to see if it was listed there. I don’t know Japanese myself, but
even from cautiously using both Google Translate and DeepL with the page, there’s
no mention there of any sort of car crash, which was also checked by the Inka
people who knew Japanese.
I looked back through the history of the page to see where
that detail could have possibly come from, and it turned out that unverified
detail was there from the page’s inception
in 2015. That’s also where I noticed that there was an additional unverified
detail about Kanda being “heavily inspired by Stanley Kubrick and Steven
Spilberg [sic]” (and 20 days later even added Nicolas Roeg). The user who made
that page had not only received warnings from
other Wikipedia editors for adding unverified information even before the
article was written, but was repeatedly blocked and later
permabanned for sockpuppeting, unverified malicious edits, and personally
attacking other editors.
Needless to say, the car crash detail is very suspect and unreliable.
There’s no reason to believe it’s real based on the existing current evidence. Other
Inka members checked through JPN sites with pages about Kanda, and none of them
mentioned a car crash. Checking on my own, it’s not mentioned in the Pixiv encyclopedia,
the NicoNicoDouga
encyclopedia, nor even a fan-site Sunrise encyclopedia. All
of those are user generated and don’t have sources themselves, so even the details
that are there are unverified.
There is official
interview on the VOTOMS website with Ryosuke Takahashi in 2010 where mentions
Kanda. The third footnote only confirms that he suddenly passed away at the age
of 52 in 1996, with no mention of the cause of death. The note does mention he
shared drinks, but there are no further details beyond that.
It’s possible somewhere out there, there’s some obscure contemporaneous
Japanese article or coverage where something like that maybe happened. But
until any actual proof emerges, there’s no reason to believe the car crash rumor
is true, or any of the other details on those JP sites for that matter. The only
verifiable detail is that Takeyuki Kanda suddenly passed away at the age of 52
in 1996. If anyone has more reliable information to add to this, please share
it.
Other Wrong Listings
The next “official” source I could find for that car
crash rumor was ANN’s encyclopedia page on Kanda. The detail has no information on its
source unless logged in, but I initially thought it could have maybe had some
reputable source.
After logging in, its only listed source was that same Wikipedia
article. AniDB's page also has that detail but again only lists Wikipedia as its source.
With all this looking like a mess, I decided to remove that
detail from Kanda’s Wikipedia page myself. I also submitted an error report to ANN and to AniDB, both of which are pending at the time of this post.
I decided to later check The 08th MS Team
Wikipedia article
to correct the information there as well, and that’s where another oddity
popped up. It had “citation” on Kanda dying in a car crash, but it was an anime
blog that gave me a fake virus warning pop-up ad upon opening. That blog post had
no source listed. There was also a link to a different anime blog
saying that the episodes were delayed after of Kanda’s death (though they don’t
mention the rumor, good on them!), which is at least a more plausible inference
based on the release schedule, but still not confirmed. I deleted those
sections as well.
I think that rumor is now at least
dead on Wikipedia and hopefully soon ANN and AniDB, but by that point it had likely spread
for years. I’m thankful people shared my description
of this on Twitter, but that’s still a small subset of a niche of a niche on an
unrepresentative website. Who knows how far that unconfirmed detail has spread?
Something Was Wrong
on the Internet
Despite my attempt to tell this somewhat as a story, all of
this was rather basic. Checking a Wikipedia article to see if it has a citation
takes seconds. Even with blunt use of auto-translator software, which itself is
very imperfect even in the most narrow and careful possible circumstances,
checking JP Wikipedia and other bio sites had no mention of anything close to
an auto accident. Finding reliable anime information is a thankless task, but doing
the most basic fact-checking to see if a detail has a confirmed source is relatively
simple. Anything unsourced on Wikipedia is always suspect, and even things with
sources there need checking to see what they’re linking too.
It’s commendable that English staff databases and editable
encyclopedias even exist, but those also have structural issues. On ANN, you
can’t see the source listed for something unless you’re logged in, which seems
like a rather serious flaw for a public encyclopedia that’s the most public-facing
source of Anime staff information aside from smaller sites like AniDB and AniList.
Having an editor manually approve changes is a good deterrent from false info
getting posted, but it does make it harder to speedily correct things aside
from using error reports to put tiny red warning circles.
As much of a weird obsession this has been for me over the
last few days, and as much as it feels good to see this attempt at a correction
getting shared, it is still emblematic of a larger problem.
Wrong and misleading information is a longstanding issue in
English anime fandom and companies, especially when communication was more
limited, but even the long-debunked ones remain nigh-unkillable even now. How
many times has the “Ghost Stories flopped” rumor been spread even though it was totally wrong?
Or the rumor about where Toriyama “intended” for Dragon Ball to end that’s not only inaccurate across the
board but also includes outright hoaxes? Or
the lacking knowledge about the anime production
process
as a whole?
Even from my own experiences, small details can cause these
kinds of issues if they remain unchecked. A few 0079 mecha on the Gundam Wiki
had to have their articles reformatted because their model numbers were lifted
from made-up details posted to Japanese
Wikipedia years ago from a doujin site, including
the Gaw and the Dopp (thanks to editors MatokoLee
and SuperFeatherYoshi for pointing these out!). The Dopp one was copied into the
Wiki in 2011, but no one had bothered to verify them for so long because there
was no immediate reason to suspect they were wrong. This isn’t as egregious as
the prior examples since all the tech specs for mecha are fictional (and sometimes
contradictory), but even the tiniest pieces of incorrect anime info can linger
on for years.
I won’t give other specific rumors any more oxygen, but this
still happens with tons of recent shows. One detail from an interview or one comment
from an animator on twitter can get spun into something totally unfounded from
the original basis of what they were trying to say, and then those
misconceptions only get more repeated and exaggerated the more users and sites
they pass through.
To some extent, a certain amount of this is inevitable given
the language and cultural barrier for English anime fandom. But since anime has
grown far wider from its initial niche, it’s almost even easier for bad
information to spread quickly while corrections and actual well-researched
information can’t catch up. Running actual news and press sites is challenging as
online news faces many economic struggles, and there’s little incentive for individuals
or influencer-type people to concern themselves with accuracy. It’s easy, and
frankly more entertaining, to mythologize about so many aspects of anime
production and history, to spread speculation, or to share funny or gripping
details that sound true enough while never bothering to do the most basic checking
on any of them.
I sometimes wonder if it is possible to make some kind of website
cataloging and debunking common anime misconceptions and rumors. Kazenshuu’s rumor guide is the most comprehensive
in debunking anime-related rumors, even if it’s only for Dragon Ball. Wikizilla’s
misconceptions
page (thanks Chungris!) is also another good example, as is TFWiki’s “urban legends” page.
But there needs to be a way more centralized way to broadcast these kinds of rumor-debunkings
rather than individual people happening to find them years later.
The obvious takeaway from all this is for people to be more
cautious, which seems straightforward enough, but that only gets so far. My blither
takeaway is that more people, myself included, should just learn Japanese. There’s
a whole world of anime magazines, interviews, websites, and more that could clear
up tons of longstanding rumors and even provide new details never accessible
beyond Japan before, but so much remains untranslated. I have paid people to
translate things I really wanted to access before (thanks Windii!), but
realistically that’s an expense I can’t incur that frequently.
Life is already getting busy for me, but I think there’s
merit to devoting enough time to learn some Japanese. Anime is a hobby, but it’s
a hobby I love and want to learn as much as I can. Relying so much on
secondhand info spread through random people, having to use flawed and unreliable
auto-translate programs to skim websites, or being lucky enough to know
fansubbers with actual Japanese knowledge isn’t a sustainable substitute for
actually knowing things.
Learning Japanese wouldn’t fix everything. Bad information
and rumors still spread among JP fans too. Even official sources from companies
can intentionally mislead, while faulty memoirs and recollections from
animators can get things wrong. But the English anime community needs more
serious, verifiable (and far less scattered) work on sourcing anime history and
news. If any of us can move that needle and stop wrong info from spreading, then
that’s already more valuable than any amount of casual waffling, opinionating,
and speculation that only begets more wrong information.
So be the annoying pedant who asks where someone got the detail
they’re sharing. Don’t spread something that sounds too neat and simple without
bothering to check. Don’t take anything for granted. Learn Japanese and look
things up yourself. Demand better of others and yourself.
By the way, this shouldn’t overshadow Kanda’s extensive
career in anime. I haven’t finished Vifam yet, but I highly recommend it. Watch
the shows Kanda worked on and played a huge role in shaping. Let that be his
legacy.
Postscript: Some Better
Sources
This is by no means an exhaustive list and I don’t mean to
snub anyone, but I figured I’d at least post a few people I know are more thorough
with things to steer this post towards a better direction.
Regarding Gundam, I can recommend Mark Simmons’ UC-focused website, Feez’s Turn A blog, and the translations on the
Zeonic Website. They have lots of old interviews and production details
translated that are invaluable for understanding the behind-the-scenes of
Gundam.
For anime production information more generally, I can recommend
the Full Frontal team and the SakugaBlog/Booru team. They’re doing
some of the best active work in covering current anime creators and detailing
the current state of the industry with high quality translations and original
reporting of their own.
Windii
has been an immense help for me in the past, and she’s actively soliciting to
translate and preserve tons of anime (and lots of Sonic) related stuff.
This is with the clarification that I don’t watch anime
youtubers, but I can at least say MercuryFalcon
has some very well-sourced videos, especially his Toei Fushigi Comedy one.
None of these are perfect, but they do a solid job of
translating information that I’d like to see more of. Again, apologies if I
forgot or don’t know about other people, but I figured I’d shout out a few of
the ones I do know.
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