What on Earth were they thinking? Do people really think that they can just pull any image they want from Google and then pretend it's theirs? It actually makes me a bit angry. Here's an appropriate smiley.
Phill
Not the first time, not likely to be the last. There's a few projects floating around now that push the boundaries. Those two monster decks based on Universal's movie monsters are probably next in line for this type of challenge, since neither obtained rights from the studio.
So far, the biggest disaster was Bicycle Army Men. Adam Clarkson got sued or something, presumably by the IP owners of the plastic Army Men toys. Combine that with a tactical mistake - spending some of what he assumed would be profit from the project before its completion - and the entire thing collapsed under its own weight. Clarkson at least took the trouble to refund his backers, which by now I think he's completed.
This project, at least, stands a chance of returning if the creator opts for either work he has rights to or a public domain piece. Whether it stands a chance of succeeding is another story altogether. But I get the feeling that this project will die at this stage - the creator didn't put much effort into this in the first place, probably expecting a quick payday when the project closed and only interested in doing the least amount possible to get it done.