Dead Star Walking: Difference between revisions

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** There's also a rumor that Takanori would've prefer to play a bigger role (especially in Destiny), but couldn't spare much time from his ''very'' tight touring and recording schedule, so he had to stick to this trope.
* Amuria in ''[[Simoun]]''.
* ''[[Soukou no Strain]]'' kills the lead character's two love interests, best friends, enemy, most of the cast of the first episode... in the best example of [[Dead Star Walking]], the series actually kills off Tanaka Rie's character''twice''.
* Yet another anime example is Seki Ray Shiroe from ''[[Toward the Terra]]'', played by [[Marina Inoue]]; it seems as though he might even become the protagonist's protege, and failing that, he begins to cultivate a relationship with the antihero as well - however, he is heartlessly (and, in the manga and original movie, a bit abruptly) snuffed out. (Savvy fans may predict this trope when they observe that [[Cross-Dressing Voices|Inoue]] is the only voice actor credited for Shiroe, indicating that he's not going to live long enough for his voice to change.)
* In ''[[Baccano!]]!'', [[Masakazu Morita]]'s character gets his face blown off [[Gory Discretion Shot|during the closing]] of [[Sacrificial Lamb|the very episode he first shows up in]]. Or did he?
** For those of you who do not pay close attention to Japanese seiyuu, the character is Claire Stanfield.
* Oh, look, an obvious love interest! Aw, look how that [[Nice Guy|cute Chinese exchange student]] keeps [[Meet Cute|rescuing her]] from all the evil people with superpowers chasing her! Wait a minute... did he just knock her out after getting information out of her? And... hold on, we saw that [[Badass Longcoat]] at the beginning of the last episode... Wait, she wasn't even the real person? And did she just jump in front of him so she dies from a [[Beat Still My Heart|rather nasty attack]] instead? Congratulations, you have just finished [[First Episode Spoiler|the second episode]] of ''[[Darker Thanthan Black]]''.
* Kamina in ''[[Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann]]''.
* Tomoe Mami in ''[[Puella Magi Madoka Magica]]''.
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== ComicbooksComic Books ==
* In the [[Marvel Comics]] series ''Exiles'', Magnus was one of the six characters gathered in the first issue as a team of dimension-hoppers who must [[Set Right What Once Went Wrong]]. He was also clearly the most powerful of the six. In the second issue he dies, and it eventually became clear this was an inherent gimmick of the series to allow logical cast changes.
* In the first issue of Peter Milligan and Mike Allred's run on the Marvel comic book ''X-Force'', a new X-Force team is introduced with most of the focus put on the sympathetic team leader. Almost all of the team gets brutally killed off in the same issue, including aforementioned leader. This effects [[Anyone Can Die]] for the remainder of the book's run and its follow-up ''X-Statix''.
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** He dies about a quarter of the way into ''[[Kingdom of Heaven]]''.
* [[Christopher Lee]] in ''[[Honeymoon Academy]]''.
* Jennifer Lopez in ''Jersey Girl''; not only does Lopez get second billing in promotional material, but upon first glance she appears to be the title character of the movie. Ten minutes in, she dies during childbirth -- andchildbirth—and we find out that her ''daughter'' is arguably the title character. After the "Bennifer" craze sprung up, the studio made [[Kevin Smith]] film more scenes so that they could push J-Lo's death to halfway through the film, which would have totally undone the whole point of the story. Fortunately the failure of ''[[Gigli]]'' combined with [[Ben Affleck]] and Lopez ending their relationship let Smith go back to his original idea. It also meant they had to spoil the death in the advertising to make it seem less like ''[[Gigli]]''.
* In the 1996 ''[[Mission: Impossible]]'' movie, [[Tom Cruise]]'s backup team includes Kristin Scott-Thomas, Emilio Estevez, Emmanuelle Béart and Jon Voight, all of whom are massacred early in the movie. Of course, the latter two turn out not to be dead after all, but are instead pulling a [[Xanatos Gambit]].
** The third movie does the same with Keri Russell, and ''Ghost Protocol'' does it with Tom Wilkinson and Josh Holloway.
** Estevez isn't even ''credited''.
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* In ''[[Scream (film)|Scream]]'', [[Drew Barrymore]] is killed off ten minutes into the movie. [[Throw It In|She came up with the idea]], having been initially cast as [[Final Girl|Sidney]].
** Pffft, that's nothing. The '''''[[Sarah Michelle Gellar|Slayer]]''''' bites it in the second film.
** The fourth film kills off five characters -- includingcharacters—including [[Lucy Hale]] and [[Anna Paquin]] -- before—before the title card.
* In the 2005 action film ''Stealth'', Jamie Foxx's character, Henry, is killed off suddenly while trying to pilot his aircraft through a canyon, less than halfway through the film. Although Stealth was made before ''Ray'' (which was one of Foxx's breakout roles), the film was released afterwards, and shocked audiences who expected Foxx's character to survive.
* Perhaps the most impressive occurrence is in the first ''[[Superman]]'' movie; [[Marlon Brando]] received top billing, and what was at the time the highest salary ever paid to a motion picture actor, to play a character with 8 minutes of screen time who dies before the end of the first act. Furthermore, Christopher Reeve was relegated to ''third'' billing even though he plays the lead character of the film. Fortunately, people caught on quickly to how much he was responsible for making the film so good.
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* Ken Watanabe was cast (with much publicity) as Ra's Al Ghul in ''[[Batman Begins]]''. Turns out he's an imposter who dies very early in the movie - an intentional deception to set up the twist to the mystery of exactly who the [[Big Bad]] was toward the end.
* [[Morgan Freeman]] gets killed halfway through ''The Sum of All Fears''.
** And ''twice'' in ''[[RedRED (film)]]''. At the beginning, we think he has been killed, then he pops up again and shortly after performs a [[Heroic Sacrifice]] at around the halfway mark of the film.
* Arguably [[Val Kilmer]] and Christian Slater in ''[[Mind HuntersMindhunters]]''.
* ''[[Alien]]''. Tom Skerritt is top-billed during a period in his career where audiences would naturally assume he was the main character. The Xenomorph (and the scriptwriters) disagreed.
** The cast dies in reverse order of their credit billing. At the time, John Hurt, Harry Dean Stanton and Tom Skerritt were all relatively well-known actors, while Sigourney Weaver was a complete unknown.
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* [[Bruce Campbell]] in ''[[From Dusk till Dawn]]: Texas Blood Money''. He received top billing, but not only does he die very quickly, his "death" is part of an in-film movie that a character is watching.
** Likewise, in ''[[Congo]]'', Campbell plays a researcher who is brutally killed by an ape in the first few minutes of the film. The main group of characters later stumble upon his body.
* In ''[[Children of Men]]'', Julianne Moore is the second-billed actress after the star Clive Owen (possibly misleading some viewers into thinking she is the last pregant woman who Theo has to escort to safety). She gets introduced early on, and being Theo's ex-wife, starts setting up a sub-plot about the two of them reconnecting their lost love. Then they try to drive a young girl out of the country and Julian gets shot through the throat. All this happens in the first 20 minutes, and the rest of the film is centered around Theo helping said young girl after discovering she is pregnant.
* [[Tom Hanks]] in ''[[Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close]]''. He is top-billed and yet the trailer reveals early on that he dies.
* Gwyneth Paltrow in ''[[Contagion]]'', who is first introduced sneezing and coughing at an airport in Chicago, and, when she arrives home minutes into the film, she is rushed to a hospital, where she convulses and dies. The only footage seen of her afterwards is an autopsy scene (where doctors [[Gory Discretion Shot|cut her skull open]]) and a flashback at the end of the film to how the virus was transmitted to her. Likewise, Kate Winslet appears for a few minutes as a CDC researcher working to investigate the cure, but she gets infected and is rushed to a quarantine zone, and is only seen some time later when she tries to give a patient a blanket before dying.
* Angie Dickinson in [[Brian De Palma]]'s ''Dressed To Kill''. She's top-billed in the credits alongside [[Michael Caine]], but gets brutally murdered less than halfway into the movie. It's appropriate, since ''Dressed To Kill'' is an overt homage to Hitchcock.
* Aaron Eckhart plays the redneck boyfriend of the title character in the 2001 comedy ''Nurse Betty''...for all of 20 minutes, until he gets half his scalp ripped off and is shot as he pitifully tries to run away from the contract killers played by [[Chris Rock]] and [[Morgan Freeman]].
* Zig-zagged in ''[[RedRED (film)]]''. [[Morgan Freeman]]'s character is killed off very early on...: Then it turns out he's still alive. But he dies again about halfway through the film, this time for real.
* Robert Patrick in ''Safe House''.
* [[Olivia Wilde]] in ''[[In Time]]''.
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== Live-Action TV ==
* [[The BBC]] has done this so often in its genre series in the 2000s that it's become predictable.
** The first example, genuinely surprising and gruesome: Lisa Faulkner on ''[[Spooks]]'' was being set up as a major performer on the show, playing a Spooks employee moving from a desk job to field work. She got deep fried in the 2nd episode. Literally. Her head was shoved into a deep fryer. It worked for surprise on this show because of the lack of any kind of credits. It also established early on that any character could be killed at any time which made the program much more suspenseful. The spin-off ''[[Spooks: Code 9]]'' also killed off the apparent team leader at the end of the first episode.
** [[Freema Agyeman]] was heavily involved in the promotion of the remake of ''[[Survivors (TV series)|Survivors]]''. She dies halfway through the first episode. To add to the impact, the character she played was, in the original, the only one to survive for the entire show.
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** In ''[[Torchwood]]'' Suzie Costello, played by Indira Varma, is the second-in-command of Torchwood Three...for most of episode one. Then she explains how she can't live without the job but is going to get fired when they find out she's been killing people for Resurrection Gauntlet test subjects and [[Driven to Suicide|puts a bullet in her skull]]. She comes back, though, and is revealed to have had a goddamn amazing [[Xanatos Gambit]] going ''which planned for her death and resurrection as a crucial stage'', in the episode "They Keep Killing Suzie". She was also featured heavily in the promotional material. ''Torchwood'' is an odd example in that its leading man and star gets killed several times a season. He [[Resurrective Immortality|doesn't stay dead]] for long, though.
*** In ''[[Torchwood: Miracle Day]]'', we get Dr. Juarez, who is killed off (as much as someone can die in ''Miracle Day'', anyway) the very episode where she joins the Torchwood team.
** [[Jamie Bamber]]'s character Mitchell Hoban in ''[[Outcasts]]''. All of the promotional material assures the viewer that Mitchell, why he's acting so irrationally, his Expeditionary Forces, and his conflict with President Tate are going to be vital parts of the show. Then, in the pilot, he commits [[Suicide by Cop]] via Fleur after beating his wife into a coma.
** [[Jamie Bamber]], period. Hoban is just one of ''many'' of his characters to be killed off, to the point where two of them ([[Horatio Hornblower|Archie Kennedy]] and [[Law and Order UK|Matt Devlin]]), died in an eerily similar fashion ([[Blood From the Mouth]], [[Heroic Sacrifice]]), and two others (on ''[[Cold Case]]'' and [[Ghost Whisperer]]) bit the dust even faster than Hoban did, being killed off [[Posthumous Character|within the first few minutes of the show]].
* Tom Skeritt was the father in ''Brothers and Sisters''. Although the father died in the pilot, he has appeared in flashbacks since.
* ''[[Buffy the Vampire Slayer]]'': [[Joss Whedon]] wanted to do this for Eric Balfour as Jesse in the first episode, but was denied permission by the network. He ultimately got his wish in Season 6, when after thirty-nine appearances as a guest star Amber Benson was finally promoted to the show's full credits - just in time for her character Tara to be shot dead.
* Elias Koteas's character in ''Conviction'' appeared to be major, but when he was billed as a guest star in the first episode, it made it pretty obvious he was getting killed.
* [[Naive Newcomer]] Holly hardly got to have any time to get to know her ''[[CSI: Crime Scene Investigation]]'' buddies before getting offed.
* ''Almost'' happened on ''[[Lost]]''. The original plan was to have a reasonably well known movie actor, such as Michael Keaton, be cast as Jack. All the promotions, released information, cast photos, and interviews would indicate that Keaton (or whoever was cast as Jack) was a permanent part of the show and would be the main character throughout. Then, halfway through the pilot episode, he'd be killed by the monster, thus putting everyone on notice that ''[[Lost]]'' was a show where [[Anyone Can Die]] and where crazy stuff happens all the time. Kate (possibly played by Yunjin Kim) would then become the leader and the show's hero. The network [[Executive Veto|vetoed]] the plan, believing the audience would feel manipulated and resentful. As a result, Matthew Fox was cast as Jack and the character of the pilot (played by Greg Grunberg) was created to die in Jack's place.
* The ''[[General Hospital]]'' spinoff ''Night Shift'' had Pat Crawford Brown as a tapestry-sewing patient for the first 3 episodes, before having a [[Serial Killer]] [http://serialdrama.typepad.com/serial_drama/2007/07/nigh-shift-epis.html#more off her via IV]. Granted, Brown has rarely ever had a regular role on any TV show, but still...
* John Goodman portrays the main character of ''Now and Again'' for about thirty seconds of the first episode before he's hit by a train and has his brain placed in an artificially engineered body, thus setting up the rest of the series.
* Jon Seda's character on ''[[Oz]]'', Dino Ortolani, was set up as the (or at least a) main character, only to be burned to death at the end of the 1st episode.
* Parodied on ''[[Police Squad!]]'': in each episode's [[Title Montage]], a different celebrity [[Special Guest]] is killed off ''as they are being introduced''.
* Detective Terry Crowley in ''[[The Shield]]'' seems to be set up as one of the main characters of the series in the pilot episode when he's assigned to the Strike Team as a mole with the intention of exposing their corrupt activities, and gets more than his fair share of screen time in the process... until the final minute of the episode, where Vic Mackey and Shane Vendrell kill him and frame an also-deceased drug dealer as the killer. Crowley's death isn't brushed aside, though, as it haunts the Strike Team for the rest of the series and the character himself appears in flashback episodes.
* An unusual variation: in the fourth season of ''[[Star Trek: Voyager|Star Trek Voyager]]'' (Trek itself having numerous examples played straight), Jennifer Lien, cast regular for the first three seasons, is billed as a "special guest star." Her character [[Ascend to a Higher Plane of Existence|violently evolved into an energy being and abruptly left the show]] in the second episode of that season, once her [[Suspiciously Similar Substitute]] was settled.
* Like ''[[Spooks]]'', FX Network's ''[[Series/Thief|Thief]]'' had a 6-episode first season. Like ''[[Spooks]]'', it bumped off a name performer by the 2nd episode: Linda "Terminator 1 and 2" Hamilton as the handler. Unlike ''[[Spooks]]'', Hamilton was just the latest in a rather misogynistic streak. Including the handler, there were three surprising deaths in the first two eps -- alleps—all women. Unlike ''[[Spooks]]'', ''Thief'' was not renewed beyond its initial 6 ep run.
* In ''[[Stargate Atlantis]]'', [[Terminator|Robert Patrick]] plays Colonel Sumner in the pilot. He's supposed to be the head of the military unit attached to the Atlantis team, and naturally is killed off before the end of the second episode.
** Fans expected the same trick to be pulled in the premiere of ''[[Stargate Universe]]'' with Lou Diamond Phillips, who didn't seem to have an appropriately large role for a name-actor. However, his character lived, and the one who actually died in the pilot was [[Hey, It's That Guy!|that guy who played]] [[Jerk Jock|Shooter McGavin]] in ''[[Happy Gilmore]]''.
* The ''Doctor Who'' TV Movie actually brought back Sylvester McCoy as the Seventh Doctor, just so he could be killed off to regenerate into Paul McGann's Eighth Doctor.
* William Hurt gets top billing as Duke Leto Atreides in [[Sci Fi]] Channel's ''[[Dune]]'' miniseries, despite his character getting killed at the end of part one (of three). Similar thing for Susan Sarandon in the sequel, but they did elevate her character more from the books.
* About 20 or so characters introduced in volume three of ''[[Heroes (TV series)|Heroes]]''.
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* Ingo Fischer, one of the two top-billed stars in ''[[Alarm Fuer Cobra 11]],'' died in the second episode.
* For the first few seasons of ''[[Lost in Space]]'', Doctor Smith (Jonathan Harris) got billed as a special guest star in the title credits. [[Word of God]] has it that he was supposed to escape the ship (or die) early on, but that never came about.
* HBO gleefully marketed Sean Bean as the [[Decoy Protagonist|"main character"]] for the [[Game of Thrones]] adaptation. Then his head gets chopped off. Another example is Jason Momoa of [[Stargate Atlantis]] fame, who doesn't merit the opening credits despite being a major character. He gets killed off partway through.
** Although, to be fair, Sean Bean does make it almost to the end of the first season before dying (episode 9 out of 10). Jason Mamoa's character, doesn't die until the last episode. Other cast members who are stars make it through the season.
* [[Callum Keith Rennie]] as Don Morgan in ''[[Alphas]]'': the team's original government liaison, who is present in the pilot episode, [[Put on a Bus]] for the second, and then violently killed off in the third.
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[[Category:Death Tropes]]
[[Category:Characters As Device]]
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