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− | {{ |
+ | {{DISPLAYTITLE:''Dragon Ball Z''}} |
+ | {{seealso|the anime adaptation of the original manga's second part|other uses|Dragon Ball (disambiguation)}} |
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− | [[File:DBZLogo.jpg|thumb|220px|''Dragon Ball Z'' logo]] |
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+ | {{Infobox/Animanga/Start |
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− | '''''Dragon Ball Z''''' (ドラゴンボールZ; ''Doragon Boru Zetto, ''commonly abbreviated as '''''DBZ''''') is the long-running sequel to the anime ''[[Dragon Ball (anime)|Dragon Ball]]''. The series is a close adaptation of the second (and far longer) portion of the [[Dragon Ball (manga)|''Dragon Ball'' manga]] written and drawn by [[Akira Toriyama]]. In the United States, the manga's second portion is also titled ''Dragon Ball Z'' to prevent confusion for younger readers. |
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+ | |title = Dragon Ball Z |
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+ | |english = Dragon Ball Z |
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+ | |kanji = ドラゴンボール{{Ruby|Z|ゼット}} |
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+ | |romanji = Doragon Bōru Zetto |
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+ | |genre = Action, Adventure, Comedy, Fantasy, Science Fiction, Martial Arts |
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+ | |image name = Dragon Ball Z Logo.png |
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+ | |image size = 300px |
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+ | |image caption = ''Dragon Ball Z'' logo used in the Funimation dub |
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+ | |image = <span class>="Image"</span> |
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+ | |float = Left |
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+ | |ref = |
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+ | }} |
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+ | {{Infobox/Animanga/Anime |
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+ | |title = Dragon Ball Z |
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+ | |director = Daisuke Nishio {{small|(#1-199)}}<br/>Shigeyasu Yamauchi {{small|(#200-291)}} |
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+ | |writer = Takao Koyama |
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+ | |studio = [[Toei Animation]] |
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+ | |licensor = {{Flag|Australia}} [[Madman Entertainment]]<br>{{Flag|United States of America}} [[Funimation]]<br>{{Flag|United Kingdom}} Funimation UK |
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+ | |network = {{Flag|Japan}} [[Fuji Television]]<br>{{Flag|Australia}} Network Ten, Cartoon Network<br>{{Flag|Canada}} [[YTV]]<br>{{Flag|India}} Cartoon Network<br>{{Flag|United Kingdom}} Cartoon Network, CNX, Toonami<br>{{Flag|United States of America}} {{w|Broadcast syndication#First-run syndication in the U.S.|First-run syndication}}, International Channel, Cartoon Network ([[Toonami]]) |
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+ | |first aired = April 26, 1989 |
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+ | |last aired = January 31, 1996 |
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+ | |num of episodes = 291 |
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+ | |num of chapters = 195-519 |
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+ | |Streaming Sites = |
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+ | *Prime Video |
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+ | *Crunchyroll |
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+ | |ref = |
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+ | }} |
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+ | {{Infobox/Animanga/End}} |
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+ | {{MAL-Banner|size=302|margin=10|link=https://myanimelist.net/anime/813/Dragon_Ball_Z?from=fandomxmal01}} |
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+ | {{nihongo|'''''Dragon Ball Z'''''|ドラゴンボール{{Ruby|Z|ゼット}}|''Doragon Bōru Zetto''|commonly abbreviated as '''''DBZ'''''}} is the long-running sequel to the anime ''[[Dragon Ball (anime)|Dragon Ball]]''. The series is a close adaptation of the second (and far longer) portion of the [[Dragon Ball (manga)|''Dragon Ball'' manga]] written and drawn by [[Akira Toriyama]]. In the United States, the manga's second portion is also titled ''Dragon Ball Z'' to prevent confusion for younger readers. |
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==Overview== |
==Overview== |
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===Story=== |
===Story=== |
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− | [[File: |
+ | [[File:DragonBallZLogo.png|thumb|left|''Dragon Ball Z'' opening title card in the original Japanese version]] |
− | ''Dragon Ball Z'' follows the adventures of the adult [[Goku]] who, along with his companions, defends the earth against an assortment of villains ranging from intergalactic space fighters and conquerors, unnaturally powerful androids and near indestructible magical creatures. While the original ''Dragon Ball'' anime followed Goku through childhood into adulthood, ''Dragon Ball Z'' is a continuation of his adulthood life, but at the same time parallels the maturation of his son, [[Gohan]], as well as characters from ''Dragon Ball ''and more. The separation between the series is also significant as the latter series takes on a more dramatic and serious tone. The anime also features characters, situations and back-stories not present in the original manga. |
+ | ''Dragon Ball Z'' follows the adventures of the adult [[Goku]] who, along with his companions, defends the earth against an assortment of villains ranging from intergalactic space fighters and conquerors, unnaturally powerful androids and near indestructible magical creatures. While the original ''Dragon Ball'' anime followed Goku through childhood into adulthood, ''Dragon Ball Z'' is a continuation of his adulthood life, but at the same time parallels the maturation of his son, [[Gohan]], as well as other characters from ''Dragon Ball ''and more. The separation between the series is also significant as the latter series takes on a more dramatic and serious tone. The anime also features characters, situations and back-stories not present in the original manga. |
===Production history=== |
===Production history=== |
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[[File:EveryoneInDragonBallZ.jpg|thumb|The main characters of ''Dragon Ball Z'']] |
[[File:EveryoneInDragonBallZ.jpg|thumb|The main characters of ''Dragon Ball Z'']] |
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− | + | The other names the production was considering for this second series before they settled on ''Dragon Ball Z'' were '''''Dragon Ball: Gohan's Big Adventure''''', '''''New Dragon Ball''''', '''''Dragon Ball 2''''', '''''Dragon Ball Wonder Boy''''', and '''''Dragon Ball 90'''''.<ref>''[[Supplemental Daizenshuu]]'', 1996</ref> The anime first premiered in Japan on April 26, 1989 (on Fuji TV) at 7:30 p.m. and ended on January 31, 1996. The series average rating was 20.5%, with its maximum being 27.5% ([[Identities Revealed|Episode 218]]) and its minimum being 12.1% ([[The Innards of Buu|Episode 273]]). Like ''Dragon Ball'', the music for ''Dragon Ball Z'' was composed by [[Shunsuke Kikuchi]]. The character designs for ''Dragon Ball Z'' were created by Minoru Maeda from the [[Raditz Saga]] to the [[Cell Games Saga]] and [[Katsuyoshi Nakatsuru]] from the [[Great Saiyaman Saga]] to the [[Peaceful World Saga]]. |
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− | Toriyama's humor/parody manga ''[[Nekomajin]]'', released after ''Dragon Ball'' and ''Dragon Ball Z'', features several concepts introduced in the series, and several ''Dragon Ball Z'' characters make various appearances in this manga. After ''Dragon Ball Z'', the story of Goku and friends continues in the anime-only series ''[[Dragon Ball GT]]'', which is not based on a manga by Akira Toriyama. |
+ | Toriyama's humor/parody manga ''[[Nekomajin]]'', released after ''Dragon Ball'' and ''Dragon Ball Z'', features several concepts introduced in the series, and several ''Dragon Ball Z'' characters make various appearances in this manga. After ''Dragon Ball Z'', the story of Goku and friends continues in the anime-only series ''[[Dragon Ball GT]]'', which is not based on a manga by Akira Toriyama but is a project by Toei Animation using the same characters and storyline that serves as a sequel to ''Dragon Ball Z''. 19 years after the end of ''Dragon Ball Z'' in Japan, a new sequel series titled ''[[Dragon Ball Super (anime)|Dragon Ball Super]]'' premiered with original concepts by Akira Toriyama, taking place after the death of [[Kid Buu]] but before ''Dragon Ball Z's'' ending. |
− | In the U.S., the series |
+ | In the U.S., the series initially aired in first-run syndication from September 13, 1996, to May 23, 1998, and then aired on Cartoon Network's [[Toonami]] block from August 31, 1998, to April 7, 2003, though not always with the same continuity of dubbing (for details on the dubbing problems, see [[Ocean Group dubs]] and [[Funimation dub]]). It was also shown in Canada on YTV around the same time. It aired in the UK, with the same dubbing problem, on Cartoon Network, premiering on March 6, 2000, and running on that channel until 2002. The [[Majin Buu Saga]], [[Fusion Saga]] and Kid Buu Saga were later broadcast on CNX, which later changed its name to Toonami, with the show ending on February 28, 2003. After the finished run, it was repeated daily, until Toonami merged with Cartoon Network. In Australia it was shown on both Cartoon Network and Network 10 with Cartoon Network airing it in around 1997-1999 and Channel 10 from 1999-2004. In New Zealand, it was shown on TV3. |
− | In April 2009, a new |
+ | In April 2009, a new "refresh" of ''Dragon Ball Z'' began airing on Japanese television. This re-cut is titled ''[[Dragon Ball Z Kai]]''. |
===Censorship issues=== |
===Censorship issues=== |
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− | ''Dragon Ball Z'' was marketed to appeal to a wide range of viewers from all ages |
+ | ''Dragon Ball Z'' was marketed to appeal to a wide range of viewers from all ages and contains crude humor and occasional excesses of violence which are commonly seen as inappropriate for younger audiences by American standards. When it was first marketed in the US, the distribution company [[Funimation]] alongside [[Saban Entertainment|Saban]] decided to initially focus exclusively on the young children's market, because the anime market was still small compared to the much larger children's cartoon market. This censorship often had unintentionally humorous results, such as changing all references to death, so the dead characters were merely going to "another dimension", and digitally altering two [[ogre]]s' shirts to read "HFIL" instead of "[[Hell|HELL]]". |
− | Starting with the [[Captain Ginyu Saga]] on Cartoon Network, censorship was reduced due to fewer restrictions on cable programming. |
+ | Starting with the [[Captain Ginyu Saga]] on Cartoon Network, censorship was reduced due to fewer restrictions on cable programming. Funimation did the dubbing on their own this time around with their voice actors. In 2004, Funimation began to [[Funimation dub|redub]] the first two sagas of ''Dragon Ball Z'', to remove the problems that were caused by their previous partnership with Saban. They also redubbed the first three movies. |
− | However, the show still retained some level of censorship, not out of FCC laws, but out of choice by Funimation, |
+ | However, the show still retained some level of censorship, not out of FCC laws, but out of choice by Funimation, to cater to the possible sensitivity of western audiences. For example, [[Mr. Satan]] was renamed "Hercule" to avoid any religious slurs; his daughter, [[Videl]], was a play on the word "Devil", but Funimation felt that the connection was obscure enough to not worry about. |
===Filler and differences from the manga=== |
===Filler and differences from the manga=== |
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{{Main|Filler}} |
{{Main|Filler}} |
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− | [[File:Dragon ball z 3.jpg|thumb|Some of the series' main heroes and villains]] |
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Filler is used to pad out the series for many reasons; in the case of ''Dragon Ball Z'', more often than not, it was because the anime was running alongside the manga, and there was no way for the anime to run ahead of the manga (since Toriyama was still writing it, at the same time). |
Filler is used to pad out the series for many reasons; in the case of ''Dragon Ball Z'', more often than not, it was because the anime was running alongside the manga, and there was no way for the anime to run ahead of the manga (since Toriyama was still writing it, at the same time). |
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+ | [[File:Dragon ball z 3.jpg|thumb|left|Some of the series' main heroes and villains]] |
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− | The company behind the anime, [[Toei Animation]], would occasionally make up their own side stories to either further explain things, or simply to extend the series. Filler doesn't come only in the form of side stories, though; sometimes it is as simple as adding some extra attacks into a fight. One of the more infamous examples of filler is the [[Frieza Saga]]. After Frieza had set the [[Planet Namek]] to blow up in five minutes, the final fight with Frieza still lasted well over five episodes, much less five minutes, although this can be attributed to the fact that Namek simply took longer to explode than Frieza expected. Also, there were many numerous filler scenes that took place while the battle with Frieza was in motion, which accounts for much of the footage during the planet's explosion. |
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+ | The company behind the anime, [[Toei Animation]], would occasionally make up their own side stories to either further explain things, or simply to extend the series. Filler does not come only in the form of side stories, though; sometimes it is as simple as adding some extra attacks into a fight. One of the more infamous examples of filler is the [[Frieza Saga]]. After [[Frieza]] had set the planet [[Namek]] to blow up in five minutes, the final fight between Goku and Frieza still lasted well over five episodes, much less five minutes, although this can be attributed to the fact that Namek simply took longer to explode than Frieza expected. Also, many numerous filler scenes took place while the battle with Frieza was in motion, which accounts for much of the footage during the planet's explosion. |
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− | As the anime series was forced to expand 12 pages of manga text into 25 minutes of animation footage, these changes were introduced to kill time or to allow the (anime) writers to explore some other aspect of the series' universe. The |
+ | As the anime series was forced to expand 12 pages of manga text into 25 minutes of animation footage, these changes were introduced to kill time or to allow the (anime) writers to explore some other aspect of the series' universe. The [[Garlic Jr. Saga]] (Garlic Jr.'s return from the ''[[Dragon Ball Z: Dead Zone]]'' movie) between the [[Frieza Saga]] and [[Trunks Saga]] and the [[Other World Tournament]] between the [[Cell Games Saga]] and the [[Majin Buu Saga]] are both good examples of this. |
− | Besides having filler scenes and episodes, there are many changes from the original manga. Among them are the following: |
+ | Besides having filler scenes and episodes, there are many other changes from the original manga. Among them are the following: |
− | *When [[Tien Shinhan]] loses his arm while fighting [[Nappa]], his arm becomes a stump with only a small amount of blood seen. In the manga, the scene is much |
+ | *When [[Tien Shinhan]] loses his arm while fighting [[Nappa]], his arm becomes a stump with only a small amount of blood seen. In the manga, the scene is much gorier. |
− | *In the manga, |
+ | *In the manga, Frieza kills [[Cargo]], but in the anime [[Dodoria]] kills him. |
+ | *In the manga, [[Zarbon]] informs Vegeta about Frieza's ability to transform during their first fight. This was removed from the anime, but Vegeta still later tells Frieza that it was Zarbon who told him about Frieza's transformation ability. |
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− | *In the original manga, [[Appule]] finds all the [[Namekian]]s in the village attacked by Vegeta dead and tells Frieza, who just tells him to call the [[Ginyu Force]]. In the anime, the soldier is changed to another soldier referred to as "[[Orlen]]" (in the closed captioning for the Ocean Dub VHS tapes; it is unclear if this is canonical however) who is killed by Frieza when he tells that he killed the last survivor of the village without asking him where Vegeta was. |
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+ | *In the manga, [[Appule]] finds all the [[Namekian]]s in the village attacked by Vegeta dead and tells Frieza, who just tells him to call the [[Ginyu Force]]. In the anime, the soldier is changed to another soldier referred to as "[[Orlen]]" in the closed captioning for the Ocean Dub VHS tapes. This soldier is killed by Frieza when he tells that he killed the last survivor of the village without asking him where Vegeta had hidden the Four Star Namekian Dragon Ball. |
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− | *In the manga, after Frieza survives [[Goku]]'s [[Spirit Bomb]], he immediately strikes down [[Piccolo]] with his [[Death Beam]] technique, but in the anime, he fires his beam at Goku, only for Piccolo to jump in the way and get struck down by the beam anyway. |
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+ | *In the manga, after Frieza survives Goku's [[Spirit Bomb]], he immediately strikes down [[Piccolo]] with his [[Death Beam]] technique. In the anime, however, Frieza fires his beam at Goku, only for Piccolo to jump in the way and get struck down by the beam anyway. |
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*In the manga, Frieza's full power was still never a match for Goku's [[Super Saiyan]] form, but in the anime, Frieza appears to have the upper hand for a short time before he begins to tire. |
*In the manga, Frieza's full power was still never a match for Goku's [[Super Saiyan]] form, but in the anime, Frieza appears to have the upper hand for a short time before he begins to tire. |
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*In the anime, when Vegeta is brought back to life on Planet Namek, he manages to witness some of the battle between Goku and Frieza, as well as Goku's Super Saiyan form, before being teleported to Earth by the Namekian Dragon Balls. In the manga, he is teleported to Earth almost immediately after being revived and does not get a chance to see Goku as a Super Saiyan for the first time until Goku returns to Earth himself later on. |
*In the anime, when Vegeta is brought back to life on Planet Namek, he manages to witness some of the battle between Goku and Frieza, as well as Goku's Super Saiyan form, before being teleported to Earth by the Namekian Dragon Balls. In the manga, he is teleported to Earth almost immediately after being revived and does not get a chance to see Goku as a Super Saiyan for the first time until Goku returns to Earth himself later on. |
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+ | *When [[Dr. Gero]] first appears in the series (as Android 20), he grabs a man by the neck and tears him through the roof of a car. In the original manga, he crushes the man's neck afterward, tearing his head off. |
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− | *The anime has two significant filler portions: the [[Garlic Jr. Saga]] and the [[Other World Tournament]] segment of the [[Great Saiyaman Saga]]. |
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− | *When [[Dr. Gero]] first appears in the series (as Android 20), he grabs a man by the neck and tears him through the roof of a car. In the original manga, he crushes the man's neck afterwards, tearing his head off. |
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*In the manga, when Goku fully recovers from the [[Heart Virus]], [[Chi-Chi]] finds him simply looking out the window of the bedroom he was resting in at [[Kame House]]. In the anime, however, Chi-Chi finds him outside the house, firing several [[Kamehameha]] blasts across the ocean. |
*In the manga, when Goku fully recovers from the [[Heart Virus]], [[Chi-Chi]] finds him simply looking out the window of the bedroom he was resting in at [[Kame House]]. In the anime, however, Chi-Chi finds him outside the house, firing several [[Kamehameha]] blasts across the ocean. |
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− | *During Gohan and [[Cell]]'s [[ |
+ | *During Gohan and [[Cell]]'s [[Energy Clash]] in the anime, Piccolo, Krillin, Tien, and [[Yamcha]] unsuccessfully try to distract Cell before Vegeta succeeds in doing so, whereas in the manga, they all simply observe the struggle and Vegeta is the only one to attack Cell from behind. |
+ | **When Vegeta shoots a [[Galick Blazer]] at Cell, he is seen in his Super Saiyan form in the anime. In the manga, he is seen in his base form. Similarly, Goku's spirit is seen in his Super Saiyan form in the anime as he and Gohan perform the [[Father-Son Kamehameha]] against Cell, while he is seen in his base form in the manga. |
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− | *Though the flashback of [[Future Trunks]] and [[Future Gohan]] fighting [[Future Android 17|Androids 17]] and [[Future Android 18|18]] is present in both the anime and the manga, there are notable discrepancies between the flashback and the scene depicted in the TV special ''[[Dragon Ball Z: The History of Trunks]]''. In the special, Gohan had not lost his arm yet at beginning of the story, Trunks had not yet achieved his Super Saiyan form too, and there was rain in the scene in question. |
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+ | *Though the flashback of [[Future Trunks]] and [[Future Gohan]] fighting [[Future Android 17|Androids 17]] and [[Future Android 18|18]] are present in both the anime and the manga, there are notable discrepancies between the flashback and the scene depicted in the TV special ''[[Dragon Ball Z: The History of Trunks]]''. In the special, Gohan had not lost his arm yet at the beginning of the story, Trunks had not yet achieved his Super Saiyan form too, and there was rain in the scene in question. |
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− | *When [[Vegito]] fights [[Super Buu]] (with Gohan absorbed) in the manga, Vegito immediately transforms into his Super Saiyan form. In the anime, Vegito fought in his base form for a while before becoming a Super Saiyan. |
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− | *When |
+ | *When [[Vegito]] fights [[Super Buu]] (with Gohan absorbed) in the manga, Vegito immediately transforms into his Super Saiyan form. In the anime, Vegito fought in his base form for a while before becoming a Super Saiyan. Similarly, in the anime Goku and Vegeta battle Super Buu together (unsuccessfully) before [[Fusion|fusing]] into Vegito, while in the manga Goku is able to convince Vegeta to fuse with him before Buu gets a chance to attack them. |
+ | *When Goku begins his battle against [[Kid Buu]] in the manga, he transforms immediately into his [[Super Saiyan 3]] form. In the anime, however, Goku starts the battle as a [[Super Saiyan 2]] and manages to hold his own against Kid Buu for a while before ascending to Super Saiyan 3. |
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− | *In the manga, many characters have a different number of fingers on their hands; such as Piccolo (3 fingers and a thumb), Dodoria (3 thumb-like fingers), and Imperfect form [[Cell]] (two long fingers and a long thumb). In the anime, everybody has human-like hands with 4 fingers and a thumb. |
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+ | *In the manga, many characters have a different number of fingers on their hands, such as Piccolo (3 fingers and a thumb), Dodoria (3 thumb-like fingers), and Imperfect form [[Cell]] (two long fingers and a long thumb). In the anime, everybody has human-like hands with 4 fingers and a thumb. |
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− | ===Reception and |
+ | ===Reception and Impact=== |
The impact of ''Dragon Ball Z'' is enormous. For more than 20 years, the series has stood the test of time and has reached out to many children and adults alike across the globe. This is mainly due to the series' very clear representations of good overpowering evil, love overpowering hate, the importance of family and friends, and an unyielding passion toward achieving goals. The series also featured heavy sci-fi overtones, and a greater emphasis on fighting - making it extremely popular among adolescent boys who had grown up alongside the original series. |
The impact of ''Dragon Ball Z'' is enormous. For more than 20 years, the series has stood the test of time and has reached out to many children and adults alike across the globe. This is mainly due to the series' very clear representations of good overpowering evil, love overpowering hate, the importance of family and friends, and an unyielding passion toward achieving goals. The series also featured heavy sci-fi overtones, and a greater emphasis on fighting - making it extremely popular among adolescent boys who had grown up alongside the original series. |
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− | ''Dragon Ball Z'' has also played a large part in contributing to the popularity of anime in western culture. Though the first two seasons of the series were played on various networks in the U.S. in 1996, it would not take off for two more years until August 31, 1998, when Cartoon Network featured the show in its action |
+ | ''Dragon Ball Z'' - along with ''Sailor Moon'' and ''Pokémon'' - has also played a large part in contributing to the popularity of anime in western culture. Though the first two seasons of the series were played on various networks in the U.S. in 1996, it would not take off for two more years until August 31, 1998, when Cartoon Network featured the show in its action oriented Toonami lineup. Toonami heralded the show as "The Greatest Action Cartoon Ever Made," and it greatly boosted the popularity of Toonami, but unknowingly did so much more. ''Dragon Ball Z's'' newfound popularity helped to bring about a greater interest in Japanese cartoons in the eyes of western youth, which in turn fueled the western anime industry to new heights. Because of its success on Toonami, ''Dragon Ball Z'' was the first anime that made its way to the Wall Street Journal, who declared it "A Huge Cartoon Hit." |
− | Many items such as apparel, backpacks, lunch boxes, writing utensils, candies, drinks, foods and more feature ''Dragon Ball Z'', in both Japan and North America. Action figures, collectible figurines, plush toys, |
+ | Many items such as apparel, backpacks, lunch boxes, writing utensils, candies, drinks, foods and more feature ''Dragon Ball Z'', in both Japan and North America. Action figures, collectible figurines, plush toys, bobbleheads, and character model kits were also made. The fast-food chain ''Burger King'' featured ''Dragon Ball Z'' toys twice in the early 2000s. Despite the TV series officially ending in Japan in 1996, and in 2003 in North America, ''Dragon Ball Z'' video games are created nearly every year for almost every console on the market, helping to introduce the ''Dragon Ball Z'' series to younger generations that never got a chance to see it air on television. These games usually do very well in the market. Popular sites such as ''YouTube'' have attracted large ''Dragon Ball Z'' fan communities throughout the last few years, and ''Dragon Ball'' related videos receive many views. All of these examples showcase the incredible popularity of ''Dragon Ball Z'' in many countries of the world. |
+ | |||
+ | The original author of the manga, [[Akira Toriyama]], held a great deal of respect for both the ''Dragon Ball'' and ''Dragon Ball Z'' anime and those that developed them. Toriyama also admired the fact that the anime managed to possess [[Filler|original stories]] created by the animation team and stated that he considered the ''Dragon Ball'' anime to be equal in importance to the ''Dragon Ball'' manga.<ref>"The Anime and Me", ''Dragonball Z Anime Special'', 1989</ref> |
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==Sagas== |
==Sagas== |
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+ | <!--The Toei sagas are arranged according to the Daizenshuu--> |
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− | ===Toei sagas=== |
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+ | ;'''Toei sagas''' |
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− | #Saiyan (Episodes 1~35); 1989–1990 |
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+ | #Attack of the Saiyans (Episodes 1–35) ({{MDY|4|26|1989}}—{{MDY|2|7|1990}}) |
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− | #Frieza (Episodes 36~107); 1990–1991 |
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+ | #Battle on Planet Namek (Episodes 36–74) ({{MDY|2|14|1990}}—{{MDY|1|16|1991}}) |
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− | #Cell (Episodes 108~194); 1991–1993 |
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+ | #Terrible Emperor Freeza (Episodes 75–107) ({{MDY|1|23|1991}}—{{MDY|9|11|1991}}) |
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− | #Buu (Episodes 195~291); 1993–1996 |
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+ | #Fight with Garlic Jr. (Episodes 108–125) ({{MDY|9|18|1991}}—{{MDY|1|29|1992}}) |
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+ | #Android No. 16~20 (Episodes 126–147) ({{MDY|2|5|1992}}—{{MDY|7|8|1992}}) |
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+ | #Over the Super Saiyan (Episodes 148–165) ({{MDY|7|15|1992}}—{{MDY|11|18|1992}}) |
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+ | #Beginning of the Cell Games (Episodes 166–194) ({{MDY|11|25|1992}}—{{MDY|7|21|1993}}) |
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+ | #Ano-yo'ichi Budōkai (Episodes 195–219) ({{MDY|7|28|1993}}—{{MDY|3|2|1994}}) |
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+ | #Majin Boo Returns (Episodes 220–237) ({{MDY|3|9|1994}}—{{MDY|8|24|1994}}) |
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+ | #Appearance of the Super Saiyan III (Episodes 237–254) ({{MDY|8|31|1994}}—{{MDY|2|1|1995}}) |
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+ | #The Final Fighter, Vegetto (Episodes 255–268) ({{MDY|2|8|1995}}—{{MDY|6|28|1995}}) |
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+ | #The Final Battle (Episodes 269–291) ({{MDY|7|5|1995}}—{{MDY|1|31|1996}}) |
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− | + | ;'''Funimation sagas''' |
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+ | #[[Raditz Saga]] (Episodes 1–6 [1–4 edited]; formerly part of the "Saiyan Saga") |
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− | Saiyan: |
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− | + | #[[Vegeta Saga]] (Episodes 7–35 [5–26 edited]; formerly part of the "Saiyan Saga") |
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+ | #[[Namek Saga]] (Episodes 36–67 [27–53 edited]) |
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− | |||
+ | #[[Captain Ginyu Saga]] (Episodes 68–74 [54–60 edited]) |
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− | Frieza: |
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− | + | #[[Frieza Saga]] (Episodes 75–107 [61–92 edited]) |
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− | + | #[[Garlic Jr. Saga]] (Episodes 108–117 [93–102 edited]) |
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− | + | #[[Trunks Saga]] (Episodes 118–125 [103–110 edited]) |
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+ | #[[Androids Saga]] (Episodes 126–139 [111–124 edited]) |
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− | |||
+ | #[[Imperfect Cell Saga]] (Episodes 140–152 [125–137 edited]) |
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− | Cell: |
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− | + | #[[Perfect Cell Saga]] (Episodes 153–165 [138–150 edited]) |
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− | + | #[[Cell Games Saga]] (Episodes 166–194 [151–179 edited]) |
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− | + | #[[Other World Saga]] (Episodes 195-199 [180-184 edited]) |
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− | + | #[[Great Saiyaman Saga]] (Episodes 200–209 [185–194 edited]) |
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− | + | #[[World Tournament Saga]] (Episodes 210–219 [195–204 edited]) |
|
− | + | #[[Babidi Saga]] (Episodes 220–231 [205–216 edited]) |
|
+ | #[[Majin Buu Saga]] (Episodes 232–253 [217–238 edited]) |
||
− | |||
+ | #[[Fusion Saga]] (Episodes 254–275 [239–260 edited]) |
||
− | Buu: |
||
− | + | #[[Kid Buu Saga]] (Episodes 276–287 [261–272 edited]) |
|
− | + | #[[Peaceful World Saga]] (Episodes 288–291 [273–276 edited]) |
|
− | *The [[Babidi Saga]] (Episodes 220~231) |
||
− | *The [[Majin Buu Saga]] (Episodes 232~253) |
||
− | *The [[Fusion Saga]] (Episodes 254~275) |
||
− | *The [[Kid Buu Saga]] (Episodes 276~291) |
||
==Movies, TV specials, OVA== |
==Movies, TV specials, OVA== |
||
− | ===Movies |
+ | ===Movies=== |
− | + | ;Toei titles |
|
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Dead Zone|Return |
+ | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Dead Zone|''Return My Gohan!!'']] (1989) {{small|(Originally released without a subtitle)}} |
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: The World's Strongest]] (1990) |
+ | #[[Dragon Ball Z: The World's Strongest|''The World's Strongest Guy'']] (1990) |
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: The Tree of Might|Super Deciding Battle for the Entire Planet Earth]] (1990) |
+ | #[[Dragon Ball Z: The Tree of Might|''Super Deciding Battle for the Entire Planet Earth'']] (1990) |
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Lord Slug|Super Saiyan Son Goku]] (1991) |
+ | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Lord Slug|''Super Saiyan Son Goku'']] (1991) |
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Cooler's Revenge|The Incredible Mightiest vs. Mightiest]] (1991) |
+ | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Cooler's Revenge|''The Incredible Mightiest vs. Mightiest'']] (1991) |
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: The Return of Cooler|Clash!! 10,000,000,000 Powerful Warriors]] (1992) |
+ | #[[Dragon Ball Z: The Return of Cooler|''Clash!! 10,000,000,000 Powerful Warriors'']] (1992) |
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Super Android 13!|Extreme Battle!! The Three Great Super Saiyans]] ( |
+ | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Super Android 13!|''Extreme Battle!! The Three Great Super Saiyans'']] (1992) |
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Broly - The Legendary Super Saiyan|Burn Up!! A Close, Intense, Super-Fierce Battle]] (1993) |
+ | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Broly - The Legendary Super Saiyan|''Burn Up!! A Close, Intense, Super-Fierce Battle'']] (1993) |
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Bojack Unbound|The Galaxy at the Brink!! The Super Incredible Guy]] (1993) |
+ | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Bojack Unbound|''The Galaxy at the Brink!! The Super Incredible Guy'']] (1993) |
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Broly - Second Coming|The Dangerous Duo! Super-Warriors Can't Rest]] (1994) |
+ | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Broly - Second Coming|''The Dangerous Duo! Super-Warriors Can't Rest'']] (1994) |
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Bio-Broly|Super-Warrior Defeat!! I'm the One who'll Win]] (1994) |
+ | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Bio-Broly|''Super-Warrior Defeat!! I'm the One who'll Win'']] (1994) |
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Fusion Reborn|Fusion Reborn!! Goku and Vegeta]] (1995) |
+ | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Fusion Reborn|''Fusion Reborn!! Goku and Vegeta'']] (1995) |
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Wrath of the Dragon|Dragon Fist Explosion! If Goku Can't Do It, Who Will?]](1995) |
+ | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Wrath of the Dragon|''Dragon Fist Explosion! If Goku Can't Do It, Who Will?'']] (1995) |
+ | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Battle of Gods|''God and God'']] (2013) |
||
+ | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Resurrection ‘F’|''Revival of "F"'']] (2015) |
||
− | + | ;'''Funimation titles''' |
|
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Dead Zone]] (1997) |
+ | #''[[Dragon Ball Z: Dead Zone]]'' (1997) {{small|(Re-released with a new dub on May 31, 2005; Remastered/Re-released on May 27, 2008)}} |
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: The World's Strongest]] (1998) |
+ | #''[[Dragon Ball Z: The World's Strongest]]'' (1998) {{small|(Re-released with a new dub on November 14, 2006; Remastered/Re-released on May 27, 2008)}} |
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: The Tree of Might]] (1998) |
+ | #''[[Dragon Ball Z: The Tree of Might]]'' (1998) {{small|(Re-released with a new dub on November 14, 2006; Remastered/Re-released on September 16, 2008)}} |
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Lord Slug]] (2001) |
+ | #''[[Dragon Ball Z: Lord Slug]]'' (2001) {{small|(Remastered/Re-released on September 16, 2008)}} |
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Cooler's Revenge]] ( |
+ | #''[[Dragon Ball Z: Cooler's Revenge]]'' (2002) {{small|(Remastered/Re-released on November 11, 2008)}} |
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: The Return of Cooler]] (2002) |
+ | #''[[Dragon Ball Z: The Return of Cooler]]'' (2002) {{small|(Remastered/Re-released on November 11, 2008)}} |
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Super Android 13!]] (2003) |
+ | #''[[Dragon Ball Z: Super Android 13!]]'' (2003) {{small|(Remastered/Re-released on February 18, 2009)}} |
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Broly - The Legendary Super Saiyan]] (2003) |
+ | #''[[Dragon Ball Z: Broly - The Legendary Super Saiyan]]'' (2003) {{small|(Remastered/Re-released on March 31, 2009)}} |
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Bojack Unbound]] (2004) |
+ | #''[[Dragon Ball Z: Bojack Unbound]]'' (2004) {{small|(Remastered/Re-released on February 18, 2009)}} |
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Broly - Second Coming]] (2005) |
+ | #''[[Dragon Ball Z: Broly - Second Coming]]'' (2005) {{small|(Remastered/Re-released on March 31, 2009)}} |
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Bio-Broly]] (2005) |
+ | #''[[Dragon Ball Z: Bio-Broly]]'' (2005) {{small|(Remastered/Re-released on March 31, 2009)}} |
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Fusion Reborn]] (2006) |
+ | #''[[Dragon Ball Z: Fusion Reborn]]'' (2006) {{small|(Remastered/Re-released on May 19, 2009)}} |
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Wrath of the Dragon]] (2006) |
+ | #''[[Dragon Ball Z: Wrath of the Dragon]]'' (2006) {{small|(Remastered/Re-released on May 19, 2009)}} |
+ | #''[[Dragon Ball Z: Battle of Gods]]'' (2014) |
||
+ | #''[[Dragon Ball Z: Resurrection ‘F’]]'' (2015) |
||
===TV specials=== |
===TV specials=== |
||
− | + | ;'''Toei titles''' |
|
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Bardock - The Father of Goku|A Lonesome, Final Battle: The Father of Z-Warrior Kakarrot, who Challenged |
+ | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Bardock - The Father of Goku|''A Lonesome, Final Battle: The Father of Z-Warrior Kakarrot, who Challenged Freeza'']] (1990) |
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: |
+ | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Summer Vacation Special|''Summer Vacation Special'']] (1992) |
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: The History of Trunks|Resistance to Despair!! The Remaining Super-Warriors, Gohan and Trunks]] (1993) |
+ | #[[Dragon Ball Z: The History of Trunks|''Resistance to Despair!! The Remaining Super-Warriors, Gohan and Trunks'']] (1993) |
− | #[[Looking Back at it All: The Dragon Ball Z Year-End Show!]] (1993) |
+ | #''[[Looking Back at it All: The Dragon Ball Z Year-End Show!]]'' (1993) |
− | + | ;'''Funimation titles''' |
|
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: Bardock - The Father of Goku]] (2000) |
+ | #''[[Dragon Ball Z: Bardock - The Father of Goku]]'' (2000) {{small|(Remastered/Re-released in February 19, 2008)}} |
− | #[[Dragon Ball Z: The History of Trunks]] (2000) |
+ | #''[[Dragon Ball Z: The History of Trunks]]'' (2000) {{small|(Remastered/Re-released in February 19, 2008)}} |
===OVA=== |
===OVA=== |
||
− | *[[Dragon Ball: |
+ | *''[[Dragon Ball: Plan to Eradicate the Saiyans]]'' (1993) |
+ | *''[[The World of Dragon Ball Z]]'' (2000) |
||
− | *[[Dragon Ball: Yo! Son Goku and His Friends Return!!]] (2008) |
||
+ | *''[[Dragon Ball: The Return of Son Goku and Friends!]]'' (2008) |
||
+ | *''[[Dragon Ball: Plan to Eradicate the Saiyans]]'' (2010) |
||
+ | *''[[Dragon Ball: Episode of Bardock]]'' (2011) |
||
==Releases== |
==Releases== |
||
===Japanese releases=== |
===Japanese releases=== |
||
− | Originally, only the ''Dragon Ball Z'' movies |
+ | Originally, only the ''Dragon Ball Z'' movies and the ''[[Dragon Ball: Plan to Eradicate the Saiyans|Plan to Eradicate the Saiyans]]'' OVA were available for home viewing in Japan. The movies were released on both VHS and Laserdisc format. The ''Plan to Eradicate the Saiyans'' OVA was released both on VHS and the PlayDia, as an interactive FMV. |
+ | |||
+ | {{Scroll box |
||
+ | |content=<gallery widths="120" captionalign="center"> |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 1 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 1 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 2 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 2 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 3 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 3 |
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+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 4 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 4 |
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+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 5 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 5 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 6 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 6 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 7 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 7 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 8 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 8 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 9 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 9 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 10 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 10 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 11 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 11 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 12 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 12 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 13 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 13 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 14 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 14 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 15 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 15 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 16 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 16 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 17 DVD Cover.jpg||Dragon Ball Z Volume 17 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 18 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 18 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 19 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 19 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 20 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 20 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 21 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 21 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 22 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 22 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 23 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 23 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 24 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 24 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 25 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 25 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 26 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 26 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 27 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 27 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 28 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 28 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 29 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 29 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 30 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 30 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 31 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 31 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 32 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 32 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 33 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 33 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 34 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 34 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 35 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 35 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 36 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 36 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 37 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 37 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 38 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 38 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 39 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 39 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 40 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 40 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 41 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 41 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 42 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 42 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 43 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 43 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 44 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 44 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 45 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 45 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 46 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 46 |
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+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 47 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 47 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 48 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 48 |
||
+ | Dragon Ball Z Volume 49 DVD Cover.jpg|Dragon Ball Z Volume 49 |
||
+ | </gallery> |
||
+ | }} |
||
===Dragon Box releases=== |
===Dragon Box releases=== |
||
{{Main|Dragon Box}} |
{{Main|Dragon Box}} |
||
− | In 2003, all of the ''Dragon Ball Z'' TV series was finally released under the "[[Dragon Box]]" label for home viewing in Japan, on two large DVD boxed sets, following the release of a similar set for ''[[Dragon Ball]]''. Each ''Dragon Ball Z'' Dragon Box had a large |
+ | In 2003, all of the ''Dragon Ball Z'' TV series was finally released under the "[[Dragon Box]]" label for home viewing in Japan, on two large DVD boxed sets, following the release of a similar set for ''[[Dragon Ball (anime)|Dragon Ball]]''. Each ''Dragon Ball Z'' Dragon Box had a large number of DVD extras, as well as an action figure and a book. |
The video and audio transfers of the show used on these DVDs came off of the Fuji TV master tapes of the show, as this allowed [[Toei Animation|Toei]] to put out a far superior and completely accurate version of the show on DVD, which was helpful since the entire plot of a season could be summed up in about ten minutes. This allowed all episodes to have their original openings, endings, eyecatches, next episode previews, etc., compared to what was available in the US. |
The video and audio transfers of the show used on these DVDs came off of the Fuji TV master tapes of the show, as this allowed [[Toei Animation|Toei]] to put out a far superior and completely accurate version of the show on DVD, which was helpful since the entire plot of a season could be summed up in about ten minutes. This allowed all episodes to have their original openings, endings, eyecatches, next episode previews, etc., compared to what was available in the US. |
||
− | In late 2005 the Dragon Box Z DVDs were re-released in single volumes with six episodes per disc. While the packaging and DVD menus are different from the 2003 release, and so far no plans have been announced for the two TV specials and the Playdia footage released with the 2003 versions, the Audio and Visual quality is |
+ | In late 2005 the Dragon Box Z DVDs were re-released in single volumes with six episodes per disc. While the packaging and DVD menus are different from the 2003 release, and so far, no plans have been announced for the two TV specials and the Playdia footage released with the 2003 versions, the Audio and Visual quality is the same as those discs found in the 2003 Dragon Box release. |
− | + | On April 14, 2006, a "Dragon Box: The Movies" DVD box was released. This release contained all 17 ''Dragon Ball'' and ''Dragon Ball Z'' theatrical features, containing 8 DVDs in total, along with a book, and two scouters in the form of walkie-talkies. The video and audio are remastered; however, the video is cropped to 16:9 (widescreen) and contains less picture than the full-screen versions. This is a common occurrence for films from Toei based on long running and popular TV series (See Saint Seiya, Fist of the North Star, and One Piece). |
|
All Dragon Box releases contain Japanese language audio only (with exceptions to foreign-language bonus clips), and no subtitles. |
All Dragon Box releases contain Japanese language audio only (with exceptions to foreign-language bonus clips), and no subtitles. |
||
===Pioneer DVDs=== |
===Pioneer DVDs=== |
||
− | During the late 90's/early |
+ | [[File:Pioneer Boxed Set I DVD.PNG|thumb|DVD Boxed Set I; The Saiyan Conflict]] During the late 90's/the early '00s, the first 53 (Saban/Funimation version numbers, originally uncut as 67) TV episodes were released on to DVD by [[NBCUniversal Entertainment Japan|Pioneer Entertainment]] (now NBCUniversal Entertainment Japan). These contained only the edited, US-TV broadcast versions (dubbed by the [[Ocean Group dubs|Ocean Group]]), and totaled 17 volumes, comprising the '[[Saiyan Saga]]' and the '[[Namek Saga]]'. |
− | Along with these episodes, Pioneer also produced bilingual, uncut DVDs of the first three ''Dragon Ball Z'' theatrical features. These DVDs retained the original |
+ | Along with these episodes, Pioneer also produced bilingual, uncut DVDs of the first three ''Dragon Ball Z'' theatrical features. These DVDs retained the original Ocean cast for the English track, as well as being one of the first uncut and bilingual releases in the U.S. The English versions of these films were also subject to a different treatment than the series; rather than replacing the original music, the original OP and ED themes, as well as background music, were retained. The only noticeable differences besides languages are the inclusion of a few different sound effects which are not present on the original Japanese version. These films were released as a three-disc boxset by Pioneer. |
− | As of August |
+ | As of August 31, 2004, Pioneer's license for video distribution of the first 53 episodes ended, allowing Funimation to re-release them. At the moment, the rights for these episodes and the first three ''Dragon Ball Z'' movies belong to Funimation. |
− | === |
+ | ===Funimation DVDs=== |
− | As of 2000, |
+ | [[File:Dbz funi.jpeg|thumb|left|Funimation's Captain Ginyu Saga DVDs]] As of 2000, Funimation had released uncut versions of their [[Funimation dub|Texas-based English dub]] on to DVD, with Japanese language track, and English-translation subtitles. This release does not include the first two sagas, as the rights for the distribution of that episodes were still held by Pioneer Entertainment. These DVDs begin with the [[Captain Ginyu]] Saga and contain every episode covering (Japanese numbers) 68 till 291. Boxsets were release for the [[Garlic Jr. Saga|Garlic Jr.]], [[Androids Saga|Androids]], [[Imperfect Cell Saga|Imperfect Cell]], [[Perfect Cell Saga|Perfect Cell]], [[World Tournament Saga|World Tournament]], [[Majin Buu Saga|Majin Buu]], [[Fusion Saga|Fusion]], and [[Kid Buu Saga|Kid Buu]] U.S. sagas. However, to maximize profits, the DVDs were released out of continuity (certain amounts of one section of the series were released, and then Funimation would go back and release others). With no noticeable numbering visible, this caused frustration to those trying to follow the series from start to finish. |
− | + | Funimation also released ''Dragon Ball Z'' movies 4-13, finishing the release of the movies with ''[[Dragon Ball Z: Wrath of the Dragon|Wrath of the Dragon]]'', the 13th movie. These are all bilingual and subtitled, but do not follow the trend set by [[Ocean Group dubs|Ocean]]'s first three movies. Music has been changed and altered, including the insertion of songs from rock bands such as Deftones, Disturbed, Breaking Point, and American Pearl. The movies utilize [[Funimation dub|Funimation's TV series Texas cast]], though they also include the original Japanese version with subtitling by Steve Simmons. |
|
− | === |
+ | ===Funimation Ultimate Uncut DVDs=== |
− | {{ |
+ | {{main|Funimation Ultimate Uncut Special Edition}} |
+ | [[File:UUCE1.jpg|thumb|Vegeta Saga I: Saiyan Showdown]] |
||
− | After acquiring the video rights to the first 53 (67 uncut) episodes from Pioneer in 2004, [[Funimation|FUNimation]] announced that they would release these episodes uncut, with a new 5.1 English language track and uncut footage. The [[Ultimate Uncut Special Edition]] line was born. The release would be 22 volumes, bilingual, and with extras. The [[Saiyan Saga]] was renamed the 'Vegeta' Saga (Parts I and II, covering 12 DVDs), probably to avoid confusion with the Pioneer volumes. However, after DVD volume 9, FUNimation canceled these box sets and planned to re-re-release them in the DVD season boxsets. This upset fans who had purchased the expensive Ultimate Uncut DVDs, as the Vegeta Saga Part II will never be completed, and the Ultimate Uncut [[Namek Saga]] DVDs will not be created. |
||
+ | After acquiring the video rights to the first 53 (67 uncut) episodes from Pioneer in 2004, Funimation announced that they would release these episodes uncut, with a new 5.1 English language track and uncut footage. The "[[Funimation Ultimate Uncut Special Edition|Ultimate Uncut Special Edition]]" line was born. The release would be 22 volumes, bilingual, and extras. The [[Saiyan Saga]] was renamed the 'Vegeta' Saga (Parts I and II, covering 12 DVDs), probably to avoid confusion with the Pioneer volumes. However, after DVD volume 9, Funimation canceled these box sets and planned to re-re-release them in the DVD season boxsets. This upset fans who had purchased the expensive Ultimate Uncut DVDs, as the Vegeta Saga Part II was never completed and the Ultimate Uncut [[Namek Saga]] DVDs were not created. |
||
− | + | Funimation had also acquired the rights for the first three movies from Pioneer in 2004 and re-released them. Even though the three had the same cover style, only the first movie was released under the Ultimate Uncut line. All of these movies had a 5.1 English track, new subtitles, different DVD extras and come in a boxset titled 'First Strike'. However, they do not retain the original [[Ocean Group dubs|dub]] and contain a new English dub produced by [[Funimation dub|Funimation's Texas cast]]. This version contains different music than the original dub and the Japanese version. |
|
− | === |
+ | ===Funimation Remastered Box Sets=== |
{{Main|Funimation Remastered Box Sets}} |
{{Main|Funimation Remastered Box Sets}} |
||
+ | [[File:Dragon Ball Z Season 1 Remastered DVD Cover.jpg|thumb|left|Season 1]] |
||
− | In November 2005, FUNimation announced they would release a remastered form of ''Dragon Ball'' Z on DVD beginning in 2007. All DBZ episodes were to be digitally remastered and released in boxset form. |
||
+ | In November 2005, Funimation announced they would release a remastered form of ''Dragon Ball'' Z on DVD beginning in 2007. All ''DBZ'' episodes were to be digitally remastered and released in boxset form. |
||
− | The first season set (the entire [[Vegeta Saga]]) was re-released on February 6, 2007. The first 39 episodes of this season are spread across 6 discs |
+ | The first season set (the entire [[Saiyan Saga|Vegeta Saga]]) was re-released on February 6, 2007. The first 39 episodes of this season are spread across 6 discs and cost $30–$50 (the original intention was for 5 discs, but there was a risk of quality reduction). Funimation released a trailer for the new set on the ''Dragon Ball Z'' official website. |
− | + | Funimation released the second season set, containing both the [[Namek Saga|Namek]] and [[Captain Ginyu]] sagas, on May 22, 2007. Beginning with this release, several of the in-house voice actors re-dubbed their characters' lines to keep consistency with the remainder of the dub. The third season set, containing the [[Frieza Saga]], was released on September 18, 2007. The fourth season, containing both the [[Garlic Jr. Saga|Garlic Jr.]], [[Trunks Saga|Trunks]] and [[Androids Saga|Android]] sagas, was released on February 11, 2008. Season five, containing both the [[Imperfect Cell Saga|Imperfect]] and [[Perfect Cell Saga|Perfect Cell]] sagas, was released on May 27, 2008. Season six, containing the [[Cell Games Saga]], was released on September 16, 2008. Season seven, containing both the [[Great Saiyaman Saga|Great Saiyaman]] and [[World Tournament Saga|World Tournament]] sagas, was released on November 11, 2008. Season eight, containing both the [[Babidi Saga|Babidi]] and [[Majin Buu Saga|Majin Buu]] sagas, was released on February 10, 2009. Season nine, containing both the [[Fusion Saga|Fusion]] and [[Kid Buu Saga|Kid]] [[Peaceful World Saga|Buu]] sagas, was released on May 19, 2009. |
|
− | The series has been re-transferred at 1080p resolution with digital restoration technology removing all grain and scratches from |
+ | The series has been re-transferred at 1080p resolution with digital restoration technology removing all grain and scratches from Funimation's original prints of the series. It is important to note, however, that like many late 80's-early 90's Toei productions (for example, ''Saint Seiya'', ''Sailor Moon'', ''Marmalade Boy'', ''Ghost Sweeper Mikami,'' and ''Slam Dunk''), the series was produced on 16-millimeter film which tends to be fairly grainy and soft. The new restoration was supervised by colorist Steve Franko. |
− | The series is presented in widescreen format (1.78:1, cropped from the original full frame) for the first time. Comparison images from the new set show that while there is missing footage on the top and bottom, there is at least additional footage on the right and left that has not appeared in any prior release, having been taken straight from the original Japanese film master recording. |
+ | The series is presented in a widescreen format (1.78:1, cropped from the original full frame) for the first time. Comparison images from the new set show that while there is missing footage on the top and bottom, there is at least additional footage on the right and left that has not appeared in any prior release, having been taken straight from the original Japanese film master recording. |
− | This format change was highly controversial among fans, as this is not how the T.V. episodes were intended to be seen and this substantially alters them. Many fans launched a letter-writing campaign against the release. In response to the negative fan outcry regarding the release's apparent cropping of the source video, a |
+ | This format change was highly controversial among fans, as this is not how the T.V. episodes were intended to be seen and this substantially alters them. Many fans launched a letter-writing campaign against the release. In response to the negative fan outcry regarding the release's apparent cropping of the source video, a Funimation representative has released a document from the team remastering the video, which explains the logistics of the new release. This document details how certain areas of the original film are damaged, and admits that though the video is cropped, this release eliminates the grain that was present on prior 4:3 releases. It has also been theorized that it is ultimately more inexpensive to transfer the series in 16:9 and thereby remove the damaged portions of the frame than to repair 291 episodes' worth of damaged film. |
− | The boxset contains a revised English track in Dolby Digital 5.1 surround sound (it contains the original Japanese score by Shunsuke Kikuchi, although it is unknown just how the English dialogue is revised). For the first time |
+ | The boxset contains a revised English track in Dolby Digital 5.1 surround sound (it contains the original Japanese score by Shunsuke Kikuchi, although it is unknown just how the English dialogue is revised). For the first time, there is a choice between having the Japanese dialogue with [[Toei Animation|Toei]]'s original Japanese music or English dialogue with either Funimation's dub music or Toei's original Japanese music. |
− | Special features include a featurette on the remastering of the original Japanese print and a 24-page booklet with episode summaries, character descriptions and a DBZ timeline. |
+ | Special features include a featurette on the remastering of the original Japanese print and a 24-page booklet with episode summaries, character descriptions and a ''DBZ'' timeline. |
− | === |
+ | ===Funimation Dragon Box Sets=== |
{{Main|Funimation Dragon Box Sets}} |
{{Main|Funimation Dragon Box Sets}} |
||
+ | [[File:DBZ Dragon Box Vol. 1 Cover (Funimation).png|thumb|Dragon Box 1]] |
||
− | FUNimation Dragon Box sets were confirmed for release by FUNimation Entertainment on July 19, 2009. The Dragon Box will be produced from the original Dragon Box masters after a frame by frame restoration and will span the entire 291 episode television series and all 13 of its movies. |
||
+ | Funimation Dragon Box sets were confirmed for release by Funimation Entertainment on July 19, 2009. The Dragon Box was produced from the original Dragon Box masters after a frame-by-frame restoration and spans the entire 291 episodes of ''Dragon Ball Z''. |
||
This definitive DVD box release begins with Dragon Box One which includes the first 42 episodes, uncut, on 6 discs. |
This definitive DVD box release begins with Dragon Box One which includes the first 42 episodes, uncut, on 6 discs. |
||
− | The Dragon Box releases |
+ | The Dragon Box releases feature an aspect ratio of 4:3, the original Japanese audio (with options for an English track or English subtitles), the original episode previews, complete opening and closing credits and a collector's booklet. |
− | Dragon Box One was released on November 10, 2009 with an SRP of $79.98, while Dragon Box Two was released on February 16, 2010, Dragon Box Three was released on May 4, 2010, Dragon Box Four was released on September 21, 2010, |
+ | While Toei's ''DBZ'' Dragon Boxes consists of only two volumes, Funimation's divides the series into seven; Dragon Box One was released on November 10, 2009, with an SRP of $79.98, while Dragon Box Two was released on February 16, 2010, Dragon Box Three was released on May 4, 2010, Dragon Box Four was released on September 21, 2010, Dragon Box Five was released on April 26, 2011, Dragon Box Six was released on July 5, 2011, and Dragon Box Seven was released on October 11, 2011. |
+ | |||
+ | ===Funimation Rock the Dragon Edition Box Set=== |
||
+ | {{Main|Dragon Ball Z: Rock the Dragon Edition}} |
||
+ | [[File:DBZ Rock the Dragon Edition Box Set Cover.png|thumb|left]] |
||
+ | It is the release of the original Funimation/Saban dub of ''Dragon Ball Z'' in a box set. The set consists of the 53 episodes (which were edited from the first 67 Japanese episodes of ''DBZ'') and includes the first three ''Dragon Ball Z'' movies (''[[Dragon Ball Z: Dead Zone|Dead Zone]]'', ''[[Dragon Ball Z: The World's Strongest|The World's Strongest]]'', ''[[Dragon Ball Z: The Tree of Might|The Tree of Might]]''). It was released on August 20, 2013. The collector's edition features the [[Ocean Group dubs|Ocean voice cast]] and opening theme song "[[Main Title (Rock the Dragon)|Rock the Dragon]]". It also features a hardbound full-color 48-page book that showcases the character's history, and tropes that helped elevate ''DBZ'' to the pop culture it is today. |
||
+ | |||
+ | ===Funimation Blu-ray Level Sets=== |
||
+ | [[File:Dragon Ball Z Level 1.1 Blu-ray Cover.png|thumb]] |
||
+ | In July 2011, Funimation announced plans to release ''Dragon Ball Z'' in Blu-ray format. The first volume was released on November 18, 2011. However, after the release of the second volume, Funimation discontinued production of the rest of the Blu-ray releases, citing concerns over restoring the original film material frame by frame. The episodes were presented in their original 4:3 aspect ratio. |
||
+ | |||
+ | ===Funimation Season Blu-ray Sets=== |
||
+ | [[File:Dbz blu ray.jpeg|thumb|left]] |
||
+ | Funimation confirmed in June 2013 that the Blu-ray season box sets of ''DBZ'' would take place once again. The first set, "Dragon Ball Z Season 1", was released on December 31, 2013, and the final set, "Dragon Ball Z Season 9", was released on December 9, 2014. The episodes are presented in the cropped 16:9 widescreen format. However, unlike the "Orange Brick" DVD sets which were a "straight crop", these use pan and scan so that important information in the frame is not lost. |
||
+ | {{-}} |
||
+ | |||
+ | ===Funimation 30th Anniversary Collector's Edition=== |
||
+ | [[File:Funimation_30th_Anniversary_boxset.jpg|thumb|]] |
||
+ | On March 2, 2019, Funimation announced that ''Dragon Ball Z'' will be celebrating its 30th Anniversary with a Collector's Edition Blu-ray box set, which compiles the full series in a 4:3 aspect ratio along with some extra goods. However according to Funimation, they need at least 2,500 fans to reserve the set for it to be produced and need to measure the interest since it's a high-cost endeavor, and 2,500 is the minimum of interested fans needed. But if Funimation fails to get the 2,500 pledges to produce the Collector's Edition, they will not release the anniversary set. However, Funimation announced that they needed 3,000 pre-orders from fans and the previous 2,500 pledges was a mistake. Funimation began taking pre-orders for the set on April 6 and had since then reached the necessary 3,000 pre-orders needed, making them eligible to produce 6,000 units of the set overall. The release of the teaser for this box set sparked many controversies among fans who viewed the teaser featuring the remastered clips. The main concern was the remastered footage's framework, color saturation and other footage components that looked worse than previous footage from older collector's edition. Funimation responded by stating that they cropped the release by going in "scene-by-scene to make judgments based onto the image available in each frame of how much to trim to get to a consistent 4:3 aspect ratio, while still attempting to cut as little out of the picture as possible," and that they felt the digital video noise reduction was "mandatory for this release based on the different levels of fan support from various past DBZ releases with different levels of noise reduction over the years." Funimation took pre-orders for the 30th Anniversary Collector's Edition until May 5. It was released on November 5th, 2019. |
||
+ | |||
+ | ==Manga== |
||
+ | An "anime comic" manga adaption of the ''Dragon Ball Z'' anime was released in Japan from 2005 to 2010. The sagas covered included the "[[Saiyan Saga]]", "[[Namek Saga|Super Saiyan / Ginyu]] [[Captain Ginyu Saga|Special-Squad Saga]]", [[Frieza Saga|"Super Saiyan / Freeza Saga]]", "[[Trunks Saga|Artificial]] [[Androids Saga|Humans Saga]]", "[[Imperfect Cell Saga|Cell]] [[Perfect Cell Saga|Game]] [[Cell Games Saga|Saga]]", "[[Great Saiyaman Saga|Afterlife]] [[World Tournament Saga|Tournament Saga]]", "[[Babidi Saga|Majin Boo]] [[Majin Buu Saga|Revival Saga]]", and "[[Fusion Saga|Majin Boo]] [[Kid Buu Saga|Battle]] [[Peaceful World Saga|Saga]]". |
||
==Main cast list== |
==Main cast list== |
||
− | {|class="wikitable" |
+ | {| class="wikitable" |
− | !Character |
+ | !Character name |
− | !Voice |
+ | !Voice actor (Japanese) |
− | ! |
+ | !V.A. (English - Ocean Group) |
− | ! |
+ | !V.A. (English - Funimation) |
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Goku]] |
|[[Goku]] |
||
|[[Masako Nozawa]] |
|[[Masako Nozawa]] |
||
− | |[[Ian James Corlett]] (ep.1-41 uncut)<br />[[Peter Kelamis]] (ep.42-67 uncut; 108-143)<br />[[Kirby Morrow]] (ep.144-291) |
||
| |
| |
||
+ | *[[Ian James Corlett]] (ep.1-49 [1-37 edited]) |
||
− | [[Sean Schemmel]] (adult)<br />[[Stephanie Nadolny]] (child) |
||
+ | *[[Peter Kelamis]] (ep.50-67 [38-53 edited]; 123-174 [108-159 edited]) |
||
+ | *[[Kirby Morrow]] (ep.175-291 [160-276 edited]) |
||
+ | | |
||
+ | *[[Sean Schemmel]] (adult) |
||
+ | *[[Ceyli Delgadillo]] (child) |
||
+ | *[[Stephanie Nadolny]] (child) |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Gohan]] |
|[[Gohan]] |
||
|[[Masako Nozawa]] |
|[[Masako Nozawa]] |
||
| |
| |
||
− | [[Saffron Henderson]] (ep.1-67 |
+ | *[[Saffron Henderson]] (ep.1-67 [1-53 edited]; 123-165 [108-150 edited]) |
+ | *[[Jillian Michaels]] (ep.166-194 [151-179 edited]) |
||
− | |[[Stephanie Nadolny]] (child)[[Kara Edwards|<br />]][[Kyle Hebert]] (teen and adult) |
||
+ | *[[Brad Swaile]] (ep.200-291 [185-276 edited]) |
||
+ | | |
||
+ | *[[Stephanie Nadolny]] (child) |
||
+ | *[[Kyle Hebert]] (teen and adult) |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Goten]] |
|[[Goten]] |
||
|[[Masako Nozawa]] |
|[[Masako Nozawa]] |
||
| |
| |
||
− | Jillian Michaels (child |
+ | *[[Jillian Michaels]] (child) |
+ | *[[Brad Swaile]] (teen) |
||
| |
| |
||
− | [[Kara Edwards]] (child |
+ | *[[Kara Edwards]] (child) |
+ | *[[Robert McCollum]] (teen) |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Chi-Chi]] |
|[[Chi-Chi]] |
||
− | |Mayumi Sho (ep.1-66)<br />[[Naoko Watanabe]] (ep.88-291) |
||
| |
| |
||
+ | *[[Mayumi Sho]] (ep.1-66) |
||
− | Laara Sadiq (ep.1-66 uncut)<br />Lisa Ann Beley (ep.108-291) |
||
+ | *[[Naoko Watanabe]] (ep.88-291) |
||
+ | | |
||
+ | *[[Laara Sadiq]] (ep.1-67, 123–257 [1-53, 108–242 edited]) |
||
+ | *Nicole Oliver (ep.257-291 [242-276 edited]) |
||
|[[Cynthia Cranz]] |
|[[Cynthia Cranz]] |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |[[Bulma]] |
||
+ | |[[Hiromi Tsuru]] |
||
+ | | |
||
+ | *[[Lalainia Lindbjerg]] (ep.2-66 [1-53 edited]) |
||
+ | *[[Maggie Blue O'Hara]] (ep.123-258 [108-243 edited]) |
||
+ | *[[France Perras]] (ep.259-291 [244-276 edited]) |
||
+ | |[[Tiffany Vollmer]] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Vegeta]] |
|[[Vegeta]] |
||
Line 238: | Line 384: | ||
|[[Takeshi Kusao]] |
|[[Takeshi Kusao]] |
||
| |
| |
||
− | Cathy Weseluck (child |
+ | *[[Cathy Weseluck]] (child) |
+ | *[[Alistair Abell]] (teen) |
||
| |
| |
||
− | [[Laura Bailey (voice actress)|Laura Bailey]] (child |
+ | *[[Laura Bailey (voice actress)|Laura Bailey]] (child) |
+ | *[[Eric Vale]] (teen) |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Future Trunks]] |
|[[Future Trunks]] |
||
|[[Takeshi Kusao]] |
|[[Takeshi Kusao]] |
||
− | | |
+ | |[[Alistair Abell]] |
|[[Eric Vale]] |
|[[Eric Vale]] |
||
− | |- |
||
− | |[[Bulma]] |
||
− | |[[Hiromi Tsuru]] |
||
− | | |
||
− | [[Lalainia Lindbjerg]] (ep.2-67 uncut)<br />Maggie Blue O'Hara (ep.108-291) |
||
− | |[[Tiffany Vollmer]] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Piccolo]] |
|[[Piccolo]] |
||
− | |Toshio Furukawa |
+ | |[[Toshio Furukawa]] |
| |
| |
||
[[Scott McNeil]] |
[[Scott McNeil]] |
||
Line 260: | Line 402: | ||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Krillin]] |
|[[Krillin]] |
||
− | |Mayumi Tanaka |
+ | |[[Mayumi Tanaka]] |
|[[Terry Klassen]] |
|[[Terry Klassen]] |
||
|[[Sonny Strait]] |
|[[Sonny Strait]] |
||
− | |- |
||
− | |[[Yajirobe]] |
||
− | |Mayumi Tanaka |
||
− | |[[Brian Drummond]] |
||
− | |[[Mike McFarland]] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Yamcha]] |
|[[Yamcha]] |
||
Line 277: | Line 414: | ||
|[[Hirotaka Suzuoki]] |
|[[Hirotaka Suzuoki]] |
||
|[[Matt Smith]] |
|[[Matt Smith]] |
||
+ | | |
||
− | |Chris Cason (ep.75-107)<br />[[John Burgmeier]] (ep.118-288; 12-107 remastered) |
||
+ | *[[Chris Cason]] (ep.75-107 [61-92 edited]) |
||
+ | *[[John Burgmeier]] (ep.118-288; 12-107 remastered) |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Chiaotzu]] |
|[[Chiaotzu]] |
||
− | |Hiroko Emori |
+ | |[[Hiroko Emori]] |
− | |Cathy Weseluck |
+ | |[[Cathy Weseluck]] |
|[[Monika Antonelli]] |
|[[Monika Antonelli]] |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |[[Yajirobe]] |
||
+ | |[[Mayumi Tanaka]] |
||
+ | |[[Brian Drummond]] |
||
+ | |[[Mike McFarland]] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Master Roshi]] |
|[[Master Roshi]] |
||
− | |Kohei Miyauchi (ep.2-260)<br />Hiroshi Masuoka (ep.288-291) |
||
| |
| |
||
+ | *[[Kōhei Miyauchi]] (ep.2-260) |
||
− | [[Ian James Corlett]] (ep.2-39 uncut)<br />[[Peter Kelamis]] (ep.43-63 uncut)<br />[[Terry Klassen]] (ep.108-291) |
||
+ | *[[Hiroshi Masuoka]] (ep.288-291) |
||
+ | | |
||
+ | *[[Ian James Corlett]] (ep.1-46 [1-34 edited]) |
||
+ | *[[Peter Kelamis]] (ep.63 [50 edited]) |
||
+ | *[[Terry Klassen]] (ep.123-291 [108-276 edited]) |
||
|[[Mike McFarland]] |
|[[Mike McFarland]] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
Line 293: | Line 441: | ||
|[[Naoki Tatsuta]] |
|[[Naoki Tatsuta]] |
||
| |
| |
||
− | Alec Willows (ep. |
+ | *[[Alec Willows]] (ep.18-57 [12-44 edited]) |
− | + | *[[Richard Newman]] (ep.127-291 [112-276 edited]) |
|
+ | | |
||
+ | *[[Mark Britten]] (ep.88-169) |
||
+ | *[[Brad Jackson]] (ep.208-291; 18-107, 127-169 remastered) |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Puar]] |
|[[Puar]] |
||
|[[Naoko Watanabe]] |
|[[Naoko Watanabe]] |
||
− | |Cathy Weseluck |
+ | |[[Cathy Weseluck]] |
|[[Monika Antonelli]] |
|[[Monika Antonelli]] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
− | |[[ |
+ | |[[Turtle]] |
− | |[[ |
+ | |[[Daisuke Gōri]] |
+ | |[[Scott McNeil]] |
||
− | |Cathy Weseluck (polite-self)<br />Teryl Rothery (mean-self) |
||
− | |[[ |
+ | |[[Christopher R. Sabat]] |
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Mr. Satan]] |
|[[Mr. Satan]] |
||
|[[Daisuke Gōri]] |
|[[Daisuke Gōri]] |
||
+ | |[[Don Brown]] |
||
− | | |
||
− | Don Brown |
||
|[[Chris Rager]] |
|[[Chris Rager]] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Videl]] |
|[[Videl]] |
||
− | | |
+ | |[[Yūko Minaguchi]] |
+ | |[[Moneca Stori]] |
||
− | | |
||
− | Moneca Stori |
||
|[[Kara Edwards]] |
|[[Kara Edwards]] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Android 18]] |
|[[Android 18]] |
||
− | |Miki |
+ | |[[Miki Itō]] |
+ | |[[Farrell Spence]] |
||
− | | |
||
− | Enuka Okuma |
||
|[[Meredith McCoy]] |
|[[Meredith McCoy]] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Fortuneteller Baba|Baba]] |
|[[Fortuneteller Baba|Baba]] |
||
− | |Junpei Takiguchi (ep.9-34)<br />Mayumi Tanaka (ep.207-271) |
||
| |
| |
||
+ | *[[Junpei Takiguchi]] (ep.9-34) |
||
− | Ellen Kennedy (ep.9-34 uncut)<br />[[Brian Drummond]] (ep.207-271) |
||
+ | *[[Mayumi Tanaka]] (ep.190-287) |
||
| |
| |
||
+ | *[[Elan Ross Gibson]](ep.20-34 [14-25 edited]) |
||
− | [[Linda Young]] |
||
+ | *[[Brian Drummond]] (ep.190-287 [175-272 edited]) |
||
+ | | |
||
+ | *[[Laurie Steele]] (ep.190-287) |
||
+ | *[[Linda Young]] (ep.7-34 remastered) |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Dende]] |
|[[Dende]] |
||
+ | | |
||
− | |Tomiko Suzuki (ep.46-288)<br />Hiro Yuuki (ep.290-291) |
||
+ | *[[Tomiko Suzuki]] (ep.46-288) |
||
− | |[[Tabitha St. Germain]] (ep.46-67 uncut)<br />Andrew Francis (ep.173-291) |
||
+ | *[[Hiro Yuuki]] (ep.290-291) |
||
− | |[[Ceyli Delgadillo]] (child - original dub)<br />[[Laura Bailey (voice actress)|Laura Bailey]] (child - remastered dub)<br />[[Justin Cook]] (adult) |
||
+ | | |
||
+ | *[[Andrew Francis]] (ep.46-67 [34-53 edited], ep.153-165 [138-150 edited]) |
||
+ | *[[Dillon Moen]] (ep.166-291 [151-276 edited]) |
||
+ | | |
||
+ | *[[Ceyli Delgadillo]] (child - original) |
||
+ | *[[Laura Bailey (voice actress)|Laura Bailey]] (child - remastered) |
||
+ | *[[Justin Cook]] (adult) |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Ox-King]] |
|[[Ox-King]] |
||
|[[Daisuke Gōri]] |
|[[Daisuke Gōri]] |
||
| |
| |
||
− | Dave Ward (ep. |
+ | *[[Dave Ward]] (ep.7-64 [5-51 edited]) |
− | + | *[[Dale Wilson]] (ep.171-291 [157-276 edited]) |
|
+ | | |
||
+ | *[[Mark Britten]] (ep.88-193) |
||
+ | *[[Kyle Hebert]] (ep.208-291; 5-193 remastered) |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |[[Dr. Brief]] |
||
+ | |[[Jōji Yanami]] |
||
+ | | |
||
+ | *[[Paul Dobson]] (up to ep. 107) |
||
+ | *[[Scott McNeil]] (ep. 108-291) |
||
+ | |[[Chris Forbis]] |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |[[Bikini]] |
||
+ | | |
||
+ | *[[Mariko Mukai]] (up to ep. 136) |
||
+ | *[[Hiroko Emori]] (ep. 136-165) |
||
+ | *[[Yoko Kawanami]] (ep. 166-291) |
||
+ | | |
||
+ | *[[Tabitha St. Germain]] (Namek Saga, ep.240 [225 Edited]) |
||
+ | *[[Saffron Henderson]] (Trunks to Imperfect Cell Saga) |
||
+ | *[[Jillian Michaels]] (Cell Games Saga) |
||
+ | *[[Kelly Sheridan]] (ep. 245 [230 Edited]) |
||
+ | *[[Willow Johnson]] (ep.246 [231 Edited]) |
||
+ | |[[Cynthia Cranz]] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Mr. Popo]] |
|[[Mr. Popo]] |
||
− | |Toku Nishio |
+ | |[[Toku Nishio]] |
| |
| |
||
− | Alvin Sanders (ep. |
+ | *[[Alvin Sanders]] (ep.14-38 [9-28 edited]) |
+ | *[[French Tickner]] (ep.137-288 [123-273 edited]) |
||
| |
| |
||
− | Chris Cason |
+ | *[[Chris Cason]] (ep.76-100) |
+ | *[[Christopher Sabat]] (ep.108-288; 17-100 remastered) |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Korin]] |
|[[Korin]] |
||
− | |Ichiro Nagai (ep.26-192)<br />[[Naoki Tatsuta]] (ep.217-285) |
||
| |
| |
||
+ | *[[Ichiro Nagai]] (ep.26-192) |
||
− | Paul Dobson (ep.26-37 uncut)<br />[[Ted Cole]] (ep.109-285) |
||
+ | *[[Naoki Tatsuta]] (ep.217-285) |
||
| |
| |
||
+ | *[[Paul Dobson]] (ep.26-38 [19-28 edited]) |
||
− | Mark Britten (ep.109-192)<br />[[Christopher Sabat]] (ep.217-285; 26-38 remastered) |
||
+ | *[[Ted Cole]] (ep. 137-285 [123-270 edited]) |
||
+ | | |
||
+ | *[[Mark Britten]] (ep.109-192) |
||
+ | *[[Christopher Sabat]] (ep.217-285; 26-37 remastered) |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Kami]] |
|[[Kami]] |
||
|[[Takeshi Aono]] |
|[[Takeshi Aono]] |
||
| |
| |
||
− | Michael Dobson (ep.6-28 |
+ | *[[Michael Dobson]] (ep.6-28 [4-21 edited]) |
+ | *[[Dale Wilson]] (ep.137-141 [123-126 edited]) |
||
|[[Christopher Sabat]] |
|[[Christopher Sabat]] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[King Kai]] |
|[[King Kai]] |
||
− | | |
+ | |[[Jōji Yanami]] |
− | |Don Brown |
+ | |[[Don Brown]] |
|[[Sean Schemmel]] |
|[[Sean Schemmel]] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
− | |[[Supreme Kai]] |
+ | |[[Shin|Supreme Kai]] |
− | | |
+ | |[[Yuji Mitsuya]] |
+ | |[[Michael Dobson]] |
||
− | | |
||
− | Michael Dobson |
||
|[[Kent Williams]] |
|[[Kent Williams]] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
− | |[[ |
+ | |[[Kibito]] |
+ | |[[Shin Aomori]] |
||
− | |Reizo Nomoto |
||
+ | |[[Don Brown]] |
||
− | | |
||
− | [[ |
+ | |[[Chuck Huber]] |
+ | |- |
||
+ | |[[Old Kai]] |
||
+ | |[[Reizo Nomoto]] |
||
+ | |[[Scott McNeil]] |
||
|[[Kent Williams]] |
|[[Kent Williams]] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
− | |[[ |
+ | |[[Raditz]] |
+ | |[[Shigeru Chiba]] |
||
− | |Ryusei Nakao |
||
| |
| |
||
+ | *[[Jason Gray-Stanford]] (ep.1-5 [1-4 edited]) |
||
− | Pauline Newstone |
||
+ | *[[Alistair Abell]] (ep.182 [167 edited]) |
||
| |
| |
||
+ | *[[Christopher Sabat]] (ep. 104 [89 edited]) |
||
− | [[Linda Young]] |
||
+ | *[[Justin Cook]] (remastered) |
||
|- |
|- |
||
− | |[[ |
+ | |[[Nappa]] |
− | |[[ |
+ | |[[Shōzō Iizuka]] |
+ | |[[Michael Dobson]] |
||
| |
| |
||
+ | *[[Christopher Sabat]] (original) |
||
− | Dale Wilson |
||
+ | *[[Phil Parsons]] (remastered) |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |[[Frieza]] |
||
+ | |[[Ryusei Nakao]] |
||
+ | |[[Pauline Newstone]] |
||
+ | |[[Linda Young]] |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |[[Zarbon]] |
||
+ | |[[Shō Hayami]] |
||
+ | |[[Paul Dobson]] |
||
+ | |[[Christopher Sabat]] |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |[[Dodoria]] |
||
+ | |[[Yukitoshi Hori]] |
||
+ | |[[Paul Dobson]] |
||
+ | |[[Chris Forbis]] |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |[[Captain Ginyu]] |
||
+ | |[[Hideyuki Hori]] |
||
+ | |[[Richard Newman]] |
||
| |
| |
||
+ | *[[Dale Kelly]] (original) |
||
− | [[Dameon Clarke]] |
||
+ | *[[Brice Armstrong]] (remastered) |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |[[Garlic Jr.]] |
||
+ | |[[Shigeru Chiba]] |
||
+ | |[[Don Brown]] |
||
+ | |[[Chuck Huber]] |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |[[Dr. Gero]] |
||
+ | |[[Kōji Yada]] |
||
+ | |[[Brian Dobson]] |
||
+ | |[[Kent Williams]] |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |[[Android 17]] |
||
+ | |[[Shigeru Nakahara]] |
||
+ | |[[Ted Cole]] |
||
+ | |[[Chuck Huber]] |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |[[Android 16]] |
||
+ | |[[Hikaru Midorikawa]] |
||
+ | |[[Scott McNeil]] |
||
+ | |[[Jeremy Inman]] |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |[[Cell]] |
||
+ | |[[Norio Wakamoto]] |
||
+ | |[[Dale Wilson]] |
||
+ | |[[Dameon Clarke]] |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |[[Pikkon]] |
||
+ | |[[Hikaru Midorikawa]] |
||
+ | |[[Brian Drummond]] |
||
+ | |[[Kyle Hebert]] |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |[[Babidi]] |
||
+ | |[[Jōji Yanami]] |
||
+ | |[[Terry Klassen]] |
||
+ | |[[Duncan Brannan]] |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |[[Dabura]] |
||
+ | |[[Ryūzaburō Ōtomo]] |
||
+ | |[[Scott McNeil]] |
||
+ | |[[Rick Robertson]] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Majin Buu]] |
|[[Majin Buu]] |
||
− | |Kozo Shioya |
+ | |[[Kozo Shioya]] |
| |
| |
||
− | [[Scott McNeil]] |
+ | *[[Scott McNeil]] ([[Innocent Buu]], [[Good Buu]]) |
+ | *[[Brian Dobson]] ([[Evil Buu]], [[Super Buu]], [[Kid Buu]]) |
||
| |
| |
||
− | [[Josh Martin]] ( |
+ | *[[Josh Martin]] ([[Innocent Buu]], [[Good Buu]], [[Kid Buu]]) |
+ | *[[Justin Cook]] ([[Evil Buu]], [[Super Buu]]) |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Shenron]] |
|[[Shenron]] |
||
+ | | |
||
− | |[[Kenji Utsumi]] |
||
+ | *[[Kenji Utsumi]] |
||
− | Masaharu Satou (ep.192-193) |
||
+ | *[[Masaharu Satou]] (ep.192-193) |
||
− | |Don Brown |
||
+ | |[[Don Brown]] |
||
|[[Christopher Sabat]] |
|[[Christopher Sabat]] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Narrator]] |
|[[Narrator]] |
||
− | | |
+ | |[[Jōji Yanami]] |
− | |Doc Harris |
+ | |[[Doc Harris]] |
+ | | |
||
− | |[[Dale Kelly]] (ep.68-194)<br />[[Kyle Hebert]] (ep.195-291; 1-194 remastered) |
||
+ | *[[Dale Kelly]] (ep.68-194 [54-179 edited]) |
||
+ | *[[Kyle Hebert]] (ep.195-291 [180-276 edited]; 1-194 remastered) |
||
|} |
|} |
||
==Staff== |
==Staff== |
||
− | *'''Series Director''': [[Daisuke Nishio]] |
+ | *'''Series Director''': [[Daisuke Nishio]], [[Shigeyasu Yamauchi]] |
− | *'''Episode Director''': [[Atsutoshi Umezawa]], [[Daisuke Nishio]] (23 episodes), [[Hidehiko |
+ | *'''Episode Director''': [[Atsutoshi Umezawa]], [[Daisuke Nishio]] (23 episodes), [[Hidehiko Kadota]], [[Hidehiko Kadota]], [[Hiroki Shibata]], [[Johei Matsuura]], [[Jun'ichi Fujise]], [[Kazuhisa Takenouchi]], [[Kazuhito Kikuchi]], [[Masahiro Hosoda]], [[Minoru Okazaki]], [[Mitsuo Hashimoto]], [[Osamu Kasai]], [[Shigeyasu Yamauchi]] (31 episodes), [[Takahiro Imamura]], [[Tatsuya Orime]], [[Yoshihiro Ueda]] |
− | *'''Assistant Episode Director''': [[Akihiko Yamaguchi]], [[Hidehiko Kadota]], [[ |
+ | *'''Assistant Episode Director''': [[Akihiko Yamaguchi]], [[Hidehiko Kadota]], [[Jun'ichi Fujise]], [[Keiko Hashimoto]], [[Tatsuya Orime]], [[Toshihiro Ishikawa]], [[Yasuhiro Kamimura]] |
*'''Producer''': [[Kenji Shimizu]] (Fuji TV), [[Kōzō Morishita]] |
*'''Producer''': [[Kenji Shimizu]] (Fuji TV), [[Kōzō Morishita]] |
||
*'''Assistant producer''': [[Hiromi Seki]] (Toei Animation), [[Seiichi Hiruta]] (Toei Animation) |
*'''Assistant producer''': [[Hiromi Seki]] (Toei Animation), [[Seiichi Hiruta]] (Toei Animation) |
||
− | *'''Production manager''': [[Matsuji Kishimoto]] ([[The New Threat|1]]-[[Unknown Enemies|58]]), [[ |
+ | *'''Production manager''': [[Matsuji Kishimoto]] ([[The New Threat|1]]-[[Unknown Enemies|58]]), [[Takeshi Torimoto]] ([[Destination: Guru|59]]-[[Black Fog of Terror|109]]), [[Akihiko Yamaguchi]] ([[Battle in Kami's Lookout|110]]-[[No Worries Here|169]]), [[Yuichi Suenaga]] ([[A Girl Named Lime|170]]-[[Goku's Next Journey|291]]) |
*'''Public Relations''': [[Yumiko Shigeoka]] (Fuji TV) |
*'''Public Relations''': [[Yumiko Shigeoka]] (Fuji TV) |
||
*'''Series Composition''': [[Takao Koyama]] |
*'''Series Composition''': [[Takao Koyama]] |
||
Line 428: | Line 689: | ||
*'''Art''': [[Chigusa Yokoyama]], [[Hitoshi Nagasaki]], [[Kayoko Koitabashi]], [[Kenji Matsumoto]], [[Masazumi Matsumiya]], [[Shigenori Takada]], [[Shinobu Takahashi]], [[Takeo Yamamoto]], [[Tsutomu Fujita]], [[Yoshito Watanabe]], [[Yuji Ikeda]] |
*'''Art''': [[Chigusa Yokoyama]], [[Hitoshi Nagasaki]], [[Kayoko Koitabashi]], [[Kenji Matsumoto]], [[Masazumi Matsumiya]], [[Shigenori Takada]], [[Shinobu Takahashi]], [[Takeo Yamamoto]], [[Tsutomu Fujita]], [[Yoshito Watanabe]], [[Yuji Ikeda]] |
||
*'''Background Art''': [[Chigusa Yokoyama]], [[Eiko Ito]], [[Goichi Katanosaka]], [[Hideaki Kudo]], [[Hiroaki Kaneko]], [[Hiromitsu Shiozaki]], [[Hisaharu Iijima]] ([[The Search Continues|ep 42]]), [[Hitoshi Nagasaki]], [[Izumi Wada]], [[Junichi Taniguchi]], [[Kayoko Koitabashi]], [[Kazuhiko Suzuki]], Kazumi Chiba, [[Keito Watanabe]], [[Kenji Matsumoto]], Kyōko Matsunaga, [[Masanori Tachibanada]], [[Masao Kajitani]], [[Masuo Nakayama]], [[Mio Isshiki]], [[Momonori Taniguchi]], [[Mutsumi Matsui]], [[Nanae Fukui]], [[Natsuyo Kato]], [[Noriyoshi Doi]], Reiichirō Yanagisawa, [[Rumiko Minemura]], Sanae Makino, [[Sawako Takagi]], Shinichi Kamiyama, [[Shinobu Takahashi]], [[Shoji Tokiwa]], [[Tadahiko Ono]], [[Tadashi Iwasa]], [[Takeo Yamamoto]], [[Tatsuro Iseri]], [[Tetsuhiro Shimizu]], Toki Sakamaki, [[Tomoko Shitamoto]], [[Tomoko Takahashi]], [[Tomoko Yoshida]], Toshiko Odagiri, [[Yoko Ichihara]], [[Yuji Kihara]], [[Yukio Suzuki]], [[Yuko Iida]], [[Yuko Saitou]], [[Yumiko Ogata]], [[Yutaka Ito]] |
*'''Background Art''': [[Chigusa Yokoyama]], [[Eiko Ito]], [[Goichi Katanosaka]], [[Hideaki Kudo]], [[Hiroaki Kaneko]], [[Hiromitsu Shiozaki]], [[Hisaharu Iijima]] ([[The Search Continues|ep 42]]), [[Hitoshi Nagasaki]], [[Izumi Wada]], [[Junichi Taniguchi]], [[Kayoko Koitabashi]], [[Kazuhiko Suzuki]], Kazumi Chiba, [[Keito Watanabe]], [[Kenji Matsumoto]], Kyōko Matsunaga, [[Masanori Tachibanada]], [[Masao Kajitani]], [[Masuo Nakayama]], [[Mio Isshiki]], [[Momonori Taniguchi]], [[Mutsumi Matsui]], [[Nanae Fukui]], [[Natsuyo Kato]], [[Noriyoshi Doi]], Reiichirō Yanagisawa, [[Rumiko Minemura]], Sanae Makino, [[Sawako Takagi]], Shinichi Kamiyama, [[Shinobu Takahashi]], [[Shoji Tokiwa]], [[Tadahiko Ono]], [[Tadashi Iwasa]], [[Takeo Yamamoto]], [[Tatsuro Iseri]], [[Tetsuhiro Shimizu]], Toki Sakamaki, [[Tomoko Shitamoto]], [[Tomoko Takahashi]], [[Tomoko Yoshida]], Toshiko Odagiri, [[Yoko Ichihara]], [[Yuji Kihara]], [[Yukio Suzuki]], [[Yuko Iida]], [[Yuko Saitou]], [[Yumiko Ogata]], [[Yutaka Ito]] |
||
− | *'''Animation Director''': [[Ichio Hayashi]] ([[Super Saiyan 3?!|ep 245]]), [[Ichiroo Hattori]], [[Isao Hayashi]], [[Katsumi Aoshima]], [[Katsuyoshi Nakatsuru]] ([[Detekoi Tobikiri |
+ | *'''Animation Director''': [[Ichio Hayashi]] ([[Super Saiyan 3?!|ep 245]]), [[Ichiroo Hattori]], [[Isao Hayashi]], [[Katsumi Aoshima]], [[Katsuyoshi Nakatsuru]] ([[Detekoi Tobikiri ZENKAI Power!|OP 2]]; [[Brood of Evil|eps 44]], [[Another Super Saiyan?|120]]), [[Kazuya Kuda]], [[Keisuke Masunaga]] (18 episodes), [[Masahiro Shimanuki]], [[Masaki Sato]] (ep 64), [[Masayuki Uchiyama]], [[Minoru Maeda]], [[Mitsuo Shindō]], [[Naoaki Houjou]], [[Naoki Miyahara]], [[Tadayoshi Yamamuro]], [[Sachio Ebisawa]], [[Shingo Ishikawa]], [[Takeo Ide]], [[Tomekichi Takeuchi]], [[Yukio Ebisawa]], [[Yuuji Hakamada]] |
*'''Chief animator''': [[Katsuyoshi Nakatsuru]], [[Minoru Maeda]] |
*'''Chief animator''': [[Katsuyoshi Nakatsuru]], [[Minoru Maeda]] |
||
− | *'''Key Animation''': [[Akio Katada]], [[Akira Inagami]], [[Chikako Uesugi]], [[Eisaku Inoue]], [[Hideko Okimoto]], [[Hiroshi Takeuchi]], [[Hisashi Eguchi]], [[Katsuhiro Nakatsuru]], [[Katsuki Aoshima]], [[Katsuyoshi Nakatsuru]] (21 episodes), [[Kazuo Takigawa]], [[Kazuya Hisada]], [[Kenji Yokoyama]], [[Kiyoshi Matsumoto]], [[Kuniko Iwagami]], [[Mamoru Hosoda]] ([[Dende's Dragon|ep 173]]), [[Masahiro Shimanuki]], [[Masaki Sato]] (17 episodes), [[Masako Sankaku]], [[Masayuki Uchiyama]], [[Miki Ugai]], [[Minako Ito]], [[Naoki Mishiba]], [[Naoki Miyahara]], [[Naoki Tate]], [[Naotoshi Shida]], [[ |
+ | *'''Key Animation''': [[Akio Katada]], [[Akira Inagami]], [[Chikako Uesugi]], [[Eisaku Inoue]], [[Hideko Okimoto]], [[Hiroshi Takeuchi]], [[Hisashi Eguchi]], [[Katsuhiro Nakatsuru]], [[Katsuki Aoshima]], [[Katsuyoshi Nakatsuru]] (21 episodes), [[Kazuo Takigawa]], [[Kazuya Hisada]], [[Kenji Yokoyama]], [[Kiyoshi Matsumoto]], [[Kuniko Iwagami]], [[Mamoru Hosoda]] ([[Dende's Dragon|ep 173]]), [[Masahiro Shimanuki]], [[Masaki Sato]] (17 episodes), [[Masako Sankaku]], [[Masayuki Uchiyama]], [[Miki Ugai]], [[Minako Ito]], [[Naoki Mishiba]], [[Naoki Miyahara]], [[Naoki Tate]], [[Naotoshi Shida]], [[Tadayoshi Yamamuro]], [[Noriko Ichihashi]], [[Noriko Shibata]], [[Taiichiro Kohara]], [[Takahiro Yoshimatsu]], [[Takeo Ide]], [[Teruhisa Ryu]], [[Tetsuya Numako]], [[Tetsuya Saeki]], [[Tomekichi Takeuchi]], [[Tomoya Iida]], [[Toshiyuki Kan'no]], [[Yoko Arai]], [[Yoko Iizuka]], [[Yosuji Kudo]], [[Yukio Ebisawa]] |
*'''In-Between Animation''': [[Akemi Seki]], [[Akihiko Nomura]], [[Akiko Matsumoto]], [[Akira Kato]], [[Ayumi Kondou]], [[Chikako Uesugi]], [[Chiori Matsuda]], [[Chizuko Kawamura]], [[Daisuke Hiruma]], [[Eriko Kimura]], [[Hideaki Maniwa]], [[Hidehiko Kadota]], [[Hideki Inoue]], [[Hiroaki Shimizu]], [[Hiroaki Yoshikawa]], [[Hiromi Ono]], [[Hiromi Shirakami]], [[Hiroyuki Kanbe]], [[Hisashi Nakayama]], [[Iwao Ōtsuka]], [[Izumi Ichiki]], Izumi Komatsu, [[Jin Ehara]], [[Junji Kiyohara]], [[Junko Miyamoto]], [[Junko Shirasu]], [[Kanae Suwa]], Kayo Nangumo, [[Kayo Tanahashi]], [[Kazue Ōneda]], [[Kazufumi Takano]], [[Kazuhiro Takahashi]], [[Kazuyoshi Minato]], [[Keiko Sasa]], Kenichi Koyabe, [[Kimiko Hoshi]], [[Kiyomi Ishiwata]], [[Kiyomi Masuda]], Kiyomi Masuko, Kōichirō Tanigishi, [[Koji Usui]], [[Kouji Aoki]], [[Kumiko Horikoshi]], [[Kuniko Iwagami]], [[Kunitoshi Ishii]], [[Kyoko Higurashi]], [[Maki Ito]], [[Masahiro Hamamori]], [[Masahiro Takano]], [[Masatoshi Hakada]], [[Masayuki Yoshihara]], [[Mayumi Fukushi]], [[Mayumi Nakamura]], [[Megumi Yamashita]], [[Midori Iwai]], [[Miho Fujimoto]], [[Minako Ito]], [[Mineto Shibawaki]], [[Miwa Oshima]], [[Miyako Nishiwaki]], [[Miyuki Abe]], [[Miyuki Nakamura]], [[Miyuki Shibazaki]], [[Miyuki Yano]], [[Naoaki Houjou]], [[Naoki Mishiba]], [[Naoki Tate]], [[Noriko Ichihashi]], [[Rumiko Ōmiya]], [[Sai Yamane]], [[Sanae Kojima]], [[Shigeru Komatsuzaki]], [[Shigeru Nishioka]], [[Shigetaka Nagata]], [[Shiho Takeuchi]], [[Shiho Tamai]], [[Shinichi Kaneko]], Shinji Higashida, Shiori Nozawa, [[Takahiro Umehara]], [[Takashi Aoyama]], [[Takayuki Komori]], [[Takayuki Ushiki]], [[Takeshi Mochida]], [[Tomoko Hirokawa]], [[Tomoko Tanifuji]], [[Tomomi Shimazaki]], [[Toshiko Nakamura]], [[Toshiyuki Komaru]], [[Toshiyuki Sugano]], [[Wataru Abe]], Yasushi Morimoto, [[Yoko Arai]], [[Yoko Tanida]], [[Yoshie Komatsu]], [[Yoshifumi Miyaji]], [[Yosuji Kudo]], Yū Ōkusa, [[Yuko Inoue]], [[Yūko Kogawara]] |
*'''In-Between Animation''': [[Akemi Seki]], [[Akihiko Nomura]], [[Akiko Matsumoto]], [[Akira Kato]], [[Ayumi Kondou]], [[Chikako Uesugi]], [[Chiori Matsuda]], [[Chizuko Kawamura]], [[Daisuke Hiruma]], [[Eriko Kimura]], [[Hideaki Maniwa]], [[Hidehiko Kadota]], [[Hideki Inoue]], [[Hiroaki Shimizu]], [[Hiroaki Yoshikawa]], [[Hiromi Ono]], [[Hiromi Shirakami]], [[Hiroyuki Kanbe]], [[Hisashi Nakayama]], [[Iwao Ōtsuka]], [[Izumi Ichiki]], Izumi Komatsu, [[Jin Ehara]], [[Junji Kiyohara]], [[Junko Miyamoto]], [[Junko Shirasu]], [[Kanae Suwa]], Kayo Nangumo, [[Kayo Tanahashi]], [[Kazue Ōneda]], [[Kazufumi Takano]], [[Kazuhiro Takahashi]], [[Kazuyoshi Minato]], [[Keiko Sasa]], Kenichi Koyabe, [[Kimiko Hoshi]], [[Kiyomi Ishiwata]], [[Kiyomi Masuda]], Kiyomi Masuko, Kōichirō Tanigishi, [[Koji Usui]], [[Kouji Aoki]], [[Kumiko Horikoshi]], [[Kuniko Iwagami]], [[Kunitoshi Ishii]], [[Kyoko Higurashi]], [[Maki Ito]], [[Masahiro Hamamori]], [[Masahiro Takano]], [[Masatoshi Hakada]], [[Masayuki Yoshihara]], [[Mayumi Fukushi]], [[Mayumi Nakamura]], [[Megumi Yamashita]], [[Midori Iwai]], [[Miho Fujimoto]], [[Minako Ito]], [[Mineto Shibawaki]], [[Miwa Oshima]], [[Miyako Nishiwaki]], [[Miyuki Abe]], [[Miyuki Nakamura]], [[Miyuki Shibazaki]], [[Miyuki Yano]], [[Naoaki Houjou]], [[Naoki Mishiba]], [[Naoki Tate]], [[Noriko Ichihashi]], [[Rumiko Ōmiya]], [[Sai Yamane]], [[Sanae Kojima]], [[Shigeru Komatsuzaki]], [[Shigeru Nishioka]], [[Shigetaka Nagata]], [[Shiho Takeuchi]], [[Shiho Tamai]], [[Shinichi Kaneko]], Shinji Higashida, Shiori Nozawa, [[Takahiro Umehara]], [[Takashi Aoyama]], [[Takayuki Komori]], [[Takayuki Ushiki]], [[Takeshi Mochida]], [[Tomoko Hirokawa]], [[Tomoko Tanifuji]], [[Tomomi Shimazaki]], [[Toshiko Nakamura]], [[Toshiyuki Komaru]], [[Toshiyuki Sugano]], [[Wataru Abe]], Yasushi Morimoto, [[Yoko Arai]], [[Yoko Tanida]], [[Yoshie Komatsu]], [[Yoshifumi Miyaji]], [[Yosuji Kudo]], Yū Ōkusa, [[Yuko Inoue]], [[Yūko Kogawara]] |
||
*'''Special Effects''': [[Chiaki Hirao]], [[Kazuya Sakurada]], [[Kunji Tanifuji]], [[Masayuki Kawachi]], [[Masayuki Nakajima]], [[Nobuhiro Shimokawa]], [[Shoji Sato]], [[Yoshiaki Okada]], [[Yūji Okajima]], [[Yukari Hashimoto]] |
*'''Special Effects''': [[Chiaki Hirao]], [[Kazuya Sakurada]], [[Kunji Tanifuji]], [[Masayuki Kawachi]], [[Masayuki Nakajima]], [[Nobuhiro Shimokawa]], [[Shoji Sato]], [[Yoshiaki Okada]], [[Yūji Okajima]], [[Yukari Hashimoto]] |
||
Line 442: | Line 703: | ||
*'''Editing''': [[Shinichi Fukumitsu]] |
*'''Editing''': [[Shinichi Fukumitsu]] |
||
− | ==Theme |
+ | ==Theme Songs== |
− | ===Japanese |
+ | ===Japanese Themes=== |
*Openings: |
*Openings: |
||
:*"[[Cha-La Head-Cha-La]]": |
:*"[[Cha-La Head-Cha-La]]": |
||
− | ::*Version 1: [[The New Threat|episodes 1]]~[[Counting Down|21]] |
+ | ::*Version 1: [[The New Threat|episodes 1]]~[[Counting Down|21]] {{small|(not on FUNimation's DVDs, except for the remastered version of ''[[Dragon Ball Z: Dead Zone|Dead Zone]]'' and the [[Dragon Ball Z: Season One (Blu-ray)|Season 1 Blu-ray]])}} |
::*Version 2: [[The Darkest Day|episodes 22]]~[[Krillin's Proposal|117]] |
::*Version 2: [[The Darkest Day|episodes 22]]~[[Krillin's Proposal|117]] |
||
− | ::*Version 3: [[Frieza's Counterattack|episodes 118]]~[[ |
+ | ::*Version 3: [[Frieza's Counterattack|episodes 118]]~[[Goku vs. Pikkon|199]] |
− | :*"[[We Gotta Power]]": [[ |
+ | :*"[[We Gotta Power]]": [[Gohan Goes to High School|episodes 200]]~[[Goku's Next Journey|291]] |
*Endings: |
*Endings: |
||
− | :*"[[Detekoi Tobikiri |
+ | :*"[[Detekoi Tobikiri ZENKAI Power!]]": [[The New Threat|episodes 1]]~[[Goku vs. Pikkon|199]] |
− | :*"[[We Were Angels]]": [[ |
+ | :*"[[We Were Angels]]": [[Gohan Goes to High School|episodes 200]]~[[Goku's Next Journey|291]] |
− | ===English |
+ | ===English Themes=== |
*Openings: |
*Openings: |
||
− | **"[[ |
+ | **"[[Main Title]]" (AKA "Rock the Dragon") |
− | **"[[Dragon Ball Z ( |
+ | **"[[Dragon Ball Z (Faulconer Productions song)|Dragon Ball Z]]" (AKA "DBZ Theme") |
− | **" |
+ | **"[[Dragon Ball Z (Tom Keenlyside)|Dragon Ball Z]]" (Ocean dub episodes 108-276) |
**"[[Dragon Ball Z Uncut Theme]]" |
**"[[Dragon Ball Z Uncut Theme]]" |
||
**"[[Dragon Ball Z Movie Theme]]" |
**"[[Dragon Ball Z Movie Theme]]" |
||
**"[[DBZ Movie Theme]]" |
**"[[DBZ Movie Theme]]" |
||
**"[[Eternal Sacrifice]]" (''[[Dragon Ball Z: Broly - The Legendary Super Saiyan|Broly - The Legendary Super Saiyan]]'' theme song) |
**"[[Eternal Sacrifice]]" (''[[Dragon Ball Z: Broly - The Legendary Super Saiyan|Broly - The Legendary Super Saiyan]]'' theme song) |
||
− | *Endings: most English endings are simply shortened or otherwise altered versions of the openings, however |
+ | *Endings: most English endings are simply shortened or otherwise altered versions of the openings, however the "[[Funimation Ultimate Uncut Special Edition|Ultimate Uncut Special Edition]]" release used "[[Summon Up the Dragon]]". |
+ | |||
+ | ==Reception== |
||
+ | ''Dragon Ball Z'' peaked at 25% ratings, and its lowest point was 13.5%, much better ratings than its successor, ''Dragon Ball GT'' (which got up to 14%). However, in America, ''Dragon Ball GT'' DVDs outsold ''Dragon Ball Z'' ones in 2003.<ref>[https://www.kanzenshuu.com/press-archive/anime-insider-december-2003-feature-the-qt-on-gt/ Anime Insider December 2003 (#10), "The QT on GT"]</ref> |
||
==See also== |
==See also== |
||
− | *[[List of Dragon Ball Z episodes]] |
+ | *[[List of Dragon Ball Z episodes|List of ''Dragon Ball Z'' episodes]] |
− | *[[Dragon Ball Z Kai]] |
+ | *''[[Dragon Ball Z Kai]]'' |
+ | |||
+ | ==External links== |
||
+ | *[http://www.toei-anim.co.jp/tv/dragonz/ Official Toei Animation's website] |
||
+ | *[http://www.dragonballz.com/ Official FUNimation's website] |
||
+ | *[http://www.dragonballzuk.com/ Official Manga UK's website] |
||
+ | *[http://www.dragonballz.com.au/ Official Madman's website] |
||
==References== |
==References== |
||
{{Reflist}} |
{{Reflist}} |
||
− | == |
+ | ==Site Navigation== |
+ | {{DBProductionStaff}} |
||
− | *[http://www.toei-anim.co.jp/tv/dragonz/ Official Toei website for ''Dragon Ball Z''] (Japanese) |
||
− | *[http://www.dragonballz.com Official FUNimation website for ''Dragon Ball Z''] (English) |
||
[[Category:Dragon Ball Z]] |
[[Category:Dragon Ball Z]] |
||
+ | [[Category:Anime series]] |
||
+ | |||
+ | [[pt-br:Dragon Ball Z]] |
||
+ | [[es:Dragon Ball Z]] |
||
+ | [[fr:Dragon Ball Z]] |
||
+ | [[it:Dragon Ball Z]] |
||
+ | [[ca:Bola de Drac Z]] |
||
+ | [[de:Dragon Ball Z]] |
||
+ | [[tr:Dragon Ball Z]] |
Latest revision as of 09:01, 17 March 2024
- This article is about the anime adaptation of the original manga's second part. For other uses, see Dragon Ball (disambiguation).
Dragon Ball Z | |
Dragon Ball ZドラゴンボールZDoragon Bōru Zetto | |
Genre | Action, Adventure, Comedy, Fantasy, Science Fiction, Martial Arts |
---|---|
Anime series: Dragon Ball Z | |
Directed by |
Daisuke Nishio (#1-199) |
Studio | |
Written by |
Takao Koyama |
Licensor |
Madman Entertainment |
Network |
Fuji Television |
Original run |
April 26, 1989 — January 31, 1996 |
No. of episodes |
291 |
Manga chapters adapted |
195-519 |
Streaming Sites |
|
Dragon Ball Z (ドラゴンボールZ Doragon Bōru Zetto, commonly abbreviated as DBZ) is the long-running sequel to the anime Dragon Ball. The series is a close adaptation of the second (and far longer) portion of the Dragon Ball manga written and drawn by Akira Toriyama. In the United States, the manga's second portion is also titled Dragon Ball Z to prevent confusion for younger readers.
Overview
Story
Dragon Ball Z follows the adventures of the adult Goku who, along with his companions, defends the earth against an assortment of villains ranging from intergalactic space fighters and conquerors, unnaturally powerful androids and near indestructible magical creatures. While the original Dragon Ball anime followed Goku through childhood into adulthood, Dragon Ball Z is a continuation of his adulthood life, but at the same time parallels the maturation of his son, Gohan, as well as other characters from Dragon Ball and more. The separation between the series is also significant as the latter series takes on a more dramatic and serious tone. The anime also features characters, situations and back-stories not present in the original manga.
Production history
The other names the production was considering for this second series before they settled on Dragon Ball Z were Dragon Ball: Gohan's Big Adventure, New Dragon Ball, Dragon Ball 2, Dragon Ball Wonder Boy, and Dragon Ball 90.[1] The anime first premiered in Japan on April 26, 1989 (on Fuji TV) at 7:30 p.m. and ended on January 31, 1996. The series average rating was 20.5%, with its maximum being 27.5% (Episode 218) and its minimum being 12.1% (Episode 273). Like Dragon Ball, the music for Dragon Ball Z was composed by Shunsuke Kikuchi. The character designs for Dragon Ball Z were created by Minoru Maeda from the Raditz Saga to the Cell Games Saga and Katsuyoshi Nakatsuru from the Great Saiyaman Saga to the Peaceful World Saga.
Toriyama's humor/parody manga Nekomajin, released after Dragon Ball and Dragon Ball Z, features several concepts introduced in the series, and several Dragon Ball Z characters make various appearances in this manga. After Dragon Ball Z, the story of Goku and friends continues in the anime-only series Dragon Ball GT, which is not based on a manga by Akira Toriyama but is a project by Toei Animation using the same characters and storyline that serves as a sequel to Dragon Ball Z. 19 years after the end of Dragon Ball Z in Japan, a new sequel series titled Dragon Ball Super premiered with original concepts by Akira Toriyama, taking place after the death of Kid Buu but before Dragon Ball Z's ending.
In the U.S., the series initially aired in first-run syndication from September 13, 1996, to May 23, 1998, and then aired on Cartoon Network's Toonami block from August 31, 1998, to April 7, 2003, though not always with the same continuity of dubbing (for details on the dubbing problems, see Ocean Group dubs and Funimation dub). It was also shown in Canada on YTV around the same time. It aired in the UK, with the same dubbing problem, on Cartoon Network, premiering on March 6, 2000, and running on that channel until 2002. The Majin Buu Saga, Fusion Saga and Kid Buu Saga were later broadcast on CNX, which later changed its name to Toonami, with the show ending on February 28, 2003. After the finished run, it was repeated daily, until Toonami merged with Cartoon Network. In Australia it was shown on both Cartoon Network and Network 10 with Cartoon Network airing it in around 1997-1999 and Channel 10 from 1999-2004. In New Zealand, it was shown on TV3.
In April 2009, a new "refresh" of Dragon Ball Z began airing on Japanese television. This re-cut is titled Dragon Ball Z Kai.
Censorship issues
Dragon Ball Z was marketed to appeal to a wide range of viewers from all ages and contains crude humor and occasional excesses of violence which are commonly seen as inappropriate for younger audiences by American standards. When it was first marketed in the US, the distribution company Funimation alongside Saban decided to initially focus exclusively on the young children's market, because the anime market was still small compared to the much larger children's cartoon market. This censorship often had unintentionally humorous results, such as changing all references to death, so the dead characters were merely going to "another dimension", and digitally altering two ogres' shirts to read "HFIL" instead of "HELL".
Starting with the Captain Ginyu Saga on Cartoon Network, censorship was reduced due to fewer restrictions on cable programming. Funimation did the dubbing on their own this time around with their voice actors. In 2004, Funimation began to redub the first two sagas of Dragon Ball Z, to remove the problems that were caused by their previous partnership with Saban. They also redubbed the first three movies.
However, the show still retained some level of censorship, not out of FCC laws, but out of choice by Funimation, to cater to the possible sensitivity of western audiences. For example, Mr. Satan was renamed "Hercule" to avoid any religious slurs; his daughter, Videl, was a play on the word "Devil", but Funimation felt that the connection was obscure enough to not worry about.
Filler and differences from the manga
Main article: Filler Filler is used to pad out the series for many reasons; in the case of Dragon Ball Z, more often than not, it was because the anime was running alongside the manga, and there was no way for the anime to run ahead of the manga (since Toriyama was still writing it, at the same time).
The company behind the anime, Toei Animation, would occasionally make up their own side stories to either further explain things, or simply to extend the series. Filler does not come only in the form of side stories, though; sometimes it is as simple as adding some extra attacks into a fight. One of the more infamous examples of filler is the Frieza Saga. After Frieza had set the planet Namek to blow up in five minutes, the final fight between Goku and Frieza still lasted well over five episodes, much less five minutes, although this can be attributed to the fact that Namek simply took longer to explode than Frieza expected. Also, many numerous filler scenes took place while the battle with Frieza was in motion, which accounts for much of the footage during the planet's explosion.
As the anime series was forced to expand 12 pages of manga text into 25 minutes of animation footage, these changes were introduced to kill time or to allow the (anime) writers to explore some other aspect of the series' universe. The Garlic Jr. Saga (Garlic Jr.'s return from the Dragon Ball Z: Dead Zone movie) between the Frieza Saga and Trunks Saga and the Other World Tournament between the Cell Games Saga and the Majin Buu Saga are both good examples of this.
Besides having filler scenes and episodes, there are many other changes from the original manga. Among them are the following:
- When Tien Shinhan loses his arm while fighting Nappa, his arm becomes a stump with only a small amount of blood seen. In the manga, the scene is much gorier.
- In the manga, Frieza kills Cargo, but in the anime Dodoria kills him.
- In the manga, Zarbon informs Vegeta about Frieza's ability to transform during their first fight. This was removed from the anime, but Vegeta still later tells Frieza that it was Zarbon who told him about Frieza's transformation ability.
- In the manga, Appule finds all the Namekians in the village attacked by Vegeta dead and tells Frieza, who just tells him to call the Ginyu Force. In the anime, the soldier is changed to another soldier referred to as "Orlen" in the closed captioning for the Ocean Dub VHS tapes. This soldier is killed by Frieza when he tells that he killed the last survivor of the village without asking him where Vegeta had hidden the Four Star Namekian Dragon Ball.
- In the manga, after Frieza survives Goku's Spirit Bomb, he immediately strikes down Piccolo with his Death Beam technique. In the anime, however, Frieza fires his beam at Goku, only for Piccolo to jump in the way and get struck down by the beam anyway.
- In the manga, Frieza's full power was still never a match for Goku's Super Saiyan form, but in the anime, Frieza appears to have the upper hand for a short time before he begins to tire.
- In the anime, when Vegeta is brought back to life on Planet Namek, he manages to witness some of the battle between Goku and Frieza, as well as Goku's Super Saiyan form, before being teleported to Earth by the Namekian Dragon Balls. In the manga, he is teleported to Earth almost immediately after being revived and does not get a chance to see Goku as a Super Saiyan for the first time until Goku returns to Earth himself later on.
- When Dr. Gero first appears in the series (as Android 20), he grabs a man by the neck and tears him through the roof of a car. In the original manga, he crushes the man's neck afterward, tearing his head off.
- In the manga, when Goku fully recovers from the Heart Virus, Chi-Chi finds him simply looking out the window of the bedroom he was resting in at Kame House. In the anime, however, Chi-Chi finds him outside the house, firing several Kamehameha blasts across the ocean.
- During Gohan and Cell's Energy Clash in the anime, Piccolo, Krillin, Tien, and Yamcha unsuccessfully try to distract Cell before Vegeta succeeds in doing so, whereas in the manga, they all simply observe the struggle and Vegeta is the only one to attack Cell from behind.
- When Vegeta shoots a Galick Blazer at Cell, he is seen in his Super Saiyan form in the anime. In the manga, he is seen in his base form. Similarly, Goku's spirit is seen in his Super Saiyan form in the anime as he and Gohan perform the Father-Son Kamehameha against Cell, while he is seen in his base form in the manga.
- Though the flashback of Future Trunks and Future Gohan fighting Androids 17 and 18 are present in both the anime and the manga, there are notable discrepancies between the flashback and the scene depicted in the TV special Dragon Ball Z: The History of Trunks. In the special, Gohan had not lost his arm yet at the beginning of the story, Trunks had not yet achieved his Super Saiyan form too, and there was rain in the scene in question.
- When Vegito fights Super Buu (with Gohan absorbed) in the manga, Vegito immediately transforms into his Super Saiyan form. In the anime, Vegito fought in his base form for a while before becoming a Super Saiyan. Similarly, in the anime Goku and Vegeta battle Super Buu together (unsuccessfully) before fusing into Vegito, while in the manga Goku is able to convince Vegeta to fuse with him before Buu gets a chance to attack them.
- When Goku begins his battle against Kid Buu in the manga, he transforms immediately into his Super Saiyan 3 form. In the anime, however, Goku starts the battle as a Super Saiyan 2 and manages to hold his own against Kid Buu for a while before ascending to Super Saiyan 3.
- In the manga, many characters have a different number of fingers on their hands, such as Piccolo (3 fingers and a thumb), Dodoria (3 thumb-like fingers), and Imperfect form Cell (two long fingers and a long thumb). In the anime, everybody has human-like hands with 4 fingers and a thumb.
Reception and Impact
The impact of Dragon Ball Z is enormous. For more than 20 years, the series has stood the test of time and has reached out to many children and adults alike across the globe. This is mainly due to the series' very clear representations of good overpowering evil, love overpowering hate, the importance of family and friends, and an unyielding passion toward achieving goals. The series also featured heavy sci-fi overtones, and a greater emphasis on fighting - making it extremely popular among adolescent boys who had grown up alongside the original series.
Dragon Ball Z - along with Sailor Moon and Pokémon - has also played a large part in contributing to the popularity of anime in western culture. Though the first two seasons of the series were played on various networks in the U.S. in 1996, it would not take off for two more years until August 31, 1998, when Cartoon Network featured the show in its action oriented Toonami lineup. Toonami heralded the show as "The Greatest Action Cartoon Ever Made," and it greatly boosted the popularity of Toonami, but unknowingly did so much more. Dragon Ball Z's newfound popularity helped to bring about a greater interest in Japanese cartoons in the eyes of western youth, which in turn fueled the western anime industry to new heights. Because of its success on Toonami, Dragon Ball Z was the first anime that made its way to the Wall Street Journal, who declared it "A Huge Cartoon Hit."
Many items such as apparel, backpacks, lunch boxes, writing utensils, candies, drinks, foods and more feature Dragon Ball Z, in both Japan and North America. Action figures, collectible figurines, plush toys, bobbleheads, and character model kits were also made. The fast-food chain Burger King featured Dragon Ball Z toys twice in the early 2000s. Despite the TV series officially ending in Japan in 1996, and in 2003 in North America, Dragon Ball Z video games are created nearly every year for almost every console on the market, helping to introduce the Dragon Ball Z series to younger generations that never got a chance to see it air on television. These games usually do very well in the market. Popular sites such as YouTube have attracted large Dragon Ball Z fan communities throughout the last few years, and Dragon Ball related videos receive many views. All of these examples showcase the incredible popularity of Dragon Ball Z in many countries of the world.
The original author of the manga, Akira Toriyama, held a great deal of respect for both the Dragon Ball and Dragon Ball Z anime and those that developed them. Toriyama also admired the fact that the anime managed to possess original stories created by the animation team and stated that he considered the Dragon Ball anime to be equal in importance to the Dragon Ball manga.[2]
Sagas
- Toei sagas
- Attack of the Saiyans (Episodes 1–35) (April 26, 1989—February 7, 1990)
- Battle on Planet Namek (Episodes 36–74) (February 14, 1990—January 16, 1991)
- Terrible Emperor Freeza (Episodes 75–107) (January 23, 1991—September 11, 1991)
- Fight with Garlic Jr. (Episodes 108–125) (September 18, 1991—January 29, 1992)
- Android No. 16~20 (Episodes 126–147) (February 5, 1992—July 8, 1992)
- Over the Super Saiyan (Episodes 148–165) (July 15, 1992—November 18, 1992)
- Beginning of the Cell Games (Episodes 166–194) (November 25, 1992—July 21, 1993)
- Ano-yo'ichi Budōkai (Episodes 195–219) (July 28, 1993—March 2, 1994)
- Majin Boo Returns (Episodes 220–237) (March 9, 1994—August 24, 1994)
- Appearance of the Super Saiyan III (Episodes 237–254) (August 31, 1994—February 1, 1995)
- The Final Fighter, Vegetto (Episodes 255–268) (February 8, 1995—June 28, 1995)
- The Final Battle (Episodes 269–291) (July 5, 1995—January 31, 1996)
- Funimation sagas
- Raditz Saga (Episodes 1–6 [1–4 edited]; formerly part of the "Saiyan Saga")
- Vegeta Saga (Episodes 7–35 [5–26 edited]; formerly part of the "Saiyan Saga")
- Namek Saga (Episodes 36–67 [27–53 edited])
- Captain Ginyu Saga (Episodes 68–74 [54–60 edited])
- Frieza Saga (Episodes 75–107 [61–92 edited])
- Garlic Jr. Saga (Episodes 108–117 [93–102 edited])
- Trunks Saga (Episodes 118–125 [103–110 edited])
- Androids Saga (Episodes 126–139 [111–124 edited])
- Imperfect Cell Saga (Episodes 140–152 [125–137 edited])
- Perfect Cell Saga (Episodes 153–165 [138–150 edited])
- Cell Games Saga (Episodes 166–194 [151–179 edited])
- Other World Saga (Episodes 195-199 [180-184 edited])
- Great Saiyaman Saga (Episodes 200–209 [185–194 edited])
- World Tournament Saga (Episodes 210–219 [195–204 edited])
- Babidi Saga (Episodes 220–231 [205–216 edited])
- Majin Buu Saga (Episodes 232–253 [217–238 edited])
- Fusion Saga (Episodes 254–275 [239–260 edited])
- Kid Buu Saga (Episodes 276–287 [261–272 edited])
- Peaceful World Saga (Episodes 288–291 [273–276 edited])
Movies, TV specials, OVA
Movies
- Toei titles
- Return My Gohan!! (1989) (Originally released without a subtitle)
- The World's Strongest Guy (1990)
- Super Deciding Battle for the Entire Planet Earth (1990)
- Super Saiyan Son Goku (1991)
- The Incredible Mightiest vs. Mightiest (1991)
- Clash!! 10,000,000,000 Powerful Warriors (1992)
- Extreme Battle!! The Three Great Super Saiyans (1992)
- Burn Up!! A Close, Intense, Super-Fierce Battle (1993)
- The Galaxy at the Brink!! The Super Incredible Guy (1993)
- The Dangerous Duo! Super-Warriors Can't Rest (1994)
- Super-Warrior Defeat!! I'm the One who'll Win (1994)
- Fusion Reborn!! Goku and Vegeta (1995)
- Dragon Fist Explosion! If Goku Can't Do It, Who Will? (1995)
- God and God (2013)
- Revival of "F" (2015)
- Funimation titles
- Dragon Ball Z: Dead Zone (1997) (Re-released with a new dub on May 31, 2005; Remastered/Re-released on May 27, 2008)
- Dragon Ball Z: The World's Strongest (1998) (Re-released with a new dub on November 14, 2006; Remastered/Re-released on May 27, 2008)
- Dragon Ball Z: The Tree of Might (1998) (Re-released with a new dub on November 14, 2006; Remastered/Re-released on September 16, 2008)
- Dragon Ball Z: Lord Slug (2001) (Remastered/Re-released on September 16, 2008)
- Dragon Ball Z: Cooler's Revenge (2002) (Remastered/Re-released on November 11, 2008)
- Dragon Ball Z: The Return of Cooler (2002) (Remastered/Re-released on November 11, 2008)
- Dragon Ball Z: Super Android 13! (2003) (Remastered/Re-released on February 18, 2009)
- Dragon Ball Z: Broly - The Legendary Super Saiyan (2003) (Remastered/Re-released on March 31, 2009)
- Dragon Ball Z: Bojack Unbound (2004) (Remastered/Re-released on February 18, 2009)
- Dragon Ball Z: Broly - Second Coming (2005) (Remastered/Re-released on March 31, 2009)
- Dragon Ball Z: Bio-Broly (2005) (Remastered/Re-released on March 31, 2009)
- Dragon Ball Z: Fusion Reborn (2006) (Remastered/Re-released on May 19, 2009)
- Dragon Ball Z: Wrath of the Dragon (2006) (Remastered/Re-released on May 19, 2009)
- Dragon Ball Z: Battle of Gods (2014)
- Dragon Ball Z: Resurrection ‘F’ (2015)
TV specials
- Toei titles
- A Lonesome, Final Battle: The Father of Z-Warrior Kakarrot, who Challenged Freeza (1990)
- Summer Vacation Special (1992)
- Resistance to Despair!! The Remaining Super-Warriors, Gohan and Trunks (1993)
- Looking Back at it All: The Dragon Ball Z Year-End Show! (1993)
- Funimation titles
- Dragon Ball Z: Bardock - The Father of Goku (2000) (Remastered/Re-released in February 19, 2008)
- Dragon Ball Z: The History of Trunks (2000) (Remastered/Re-released in February 19, 2008)
OVA
- Dragon Ball: Plan to Eradicate the Saiyans (1993)
- The World of Dragon Ball Z (2000)
- Dragon Ball: The Return of Son Goku and Friends! (2008)
- Dragon Ball: Plan to Eradicate the Saiyans (2010)
- Dragon Ball: Episode of Bardock (2011)
Releases
Japanese releases
Originally, only the Dragon Ball Z movies and the Plan to Eradicate the Saiyans OVA were available for home viewing in Japan. The movies were released on both VHS and Laserdisc format. The Plan to Eradicate the Saiyans OVA was released both on VHS and the PlayDia, as an interactive FMV.
Dragon Box releases
Main article: Dragon Box In 2003, all of the Dragon Ball Z TV series was finally released under the "Dragon Box" label for home viewing in Japan, on two large DVD boxed sets, following the release of a similar set for Dragon Ball. Each Dragon Ball Z Dragon Box had a large number of DVD extras, as well as an action figure and a book.
The video and audio transfers of the show used on these DVDs came off of the Fuji TV master tapes of the show, as this allowed Toei to put out a far superior and completely accurate version of the show on DVD, which was helpful since the entire plot of a season could be summed up in about ten minutes. This allowed all episodes to have their original openings, endings, eyecatches, next episode previews, etc., compared to what was available in the US.
In late 2005 the Dragon Box Z DVDs were re-released in single volumes with six episodes per disc. While the packaging and DVD menus are different from the 2003 release, and so far, no plans have been announced for the two TV specials and the Playdia footage released with the 2003 versions, the Audio and Visual quality is the same as those discs found in the 2003 Dragon Box release.
On April 14, 2006, a "Dragon Box: The Movies" DVD box was released. This release contained all 17 Dragon Ball and Dragon Ball Z theatrical features, containing 8 DVDs in total, along with a book, and two scouters in the form of walkie-talkies. The video and audio are remastered; however, the video is cropped to 16:9 (widescreen) and contains less picture than the full-screen versions. This is a common occurrence for films from Toei based on long running and popular TV series (See Saint Seiya, Fist of the North Star, and One Piece).
All Dragon Box releases contain Japanese language audio only (with exceptions to foreign-language bonus clips), and no subtitles.
Pioneer DVDs
During the late 90's/the early '00s, the first 53 (Saban/Funimation version numbers, originally uncut as 67) TV episodes were released on to DVD by Pioneer Entertainment (now NBCUniversal Entertainment Japan). These contained only the edited, US-TV broadcast versions (dubbed by the Ocean Group), and totaled 17 volumes, comprising the 'Saiyan Saga' and the 'Namek Saga'.
Along with these episodes, Pioneer also produced bilingual, uncut DVDs of the first three Dragon Ball Z theatrical features. These DVDs retained the original Ocean cast for the English track, as well as being one of the first uncut and bilingual releases in the U.S. The English versions of these films were also subject to a different treatment than the series; rather than replacing the original music, the original OP and ED themes, as well as background music, were retained. The only noticeable differences besides languages are the inclusion of a few different sound effects which are not present on the original Japanese version. These films were released as a three-disc boxset by Pioneer.
As of August 31, 2004, Pioneer's license for video distribution of the first 53 episodes ended, allowing Funimation to re-release them. At the moment, the rights for these episodes and the first three Dragon Ball Z movies belong to Funimation.
Funimation DVDs
As of 2000, Funimation had released uncut versions of their Texas-based English dub on to DVD, with Japanese language track, and English-translation subtitles. This release does not include the first two sagas, as the rights for the distribution of that episodes were still held by Pioneer Entertainment. These DVDs begin with the Captain Ginyu Saga and contain every episode covering (Japanese numbers) 68 till 291. Boxsets were release for the Garlic Jr., Androids, Imperfect Cell, Perfect Cell, World Tournament, Majin Buu, Fusion, and Kid Buu U.S. sagas. However, to maximize profits, the DVDs were released out of continuity (certain amounts of one section of the series were released, and then Funimation would go back and release others). With no noticeable numbering visible, this caused frustration to those trying to follow the series from start to finish.
Funimation also released Dragon Ball Z movies 4-13, finishing the release of the movies with Wrath of the Dragon, the 13th movie. These are all bilingual and subtitled, but do not follow the trend set by Ocean's first three movies. Music has been changed and altered, including the insertion of songs from rock bands such as Deftones, Disturbed, Breaking Point, and American Pearl. The movies utilize Funimation's TV series Texas cast, though they also include the original Japanese version with subtitling by Steve Simmons.
Funimation Ultimate Uncut DVDs
Main article: Funimation Ultimate Uncut Special Edition
After acquiring the video rights to the first 53 (67 uncut) episodes from Pioneer in 2004, Funimation announced that they would release these episodes uncut, with a new 5.1 English language track and uncut footage. The "Ultimate Uncut Special Edition" line was born. The release would be 22 volumes, bilingual, and extras. The Saiyan Saga was renamed the 'Vegeta' Saga (Parts I and II, covering 12 DVDs), probably to avoid confusion with the Pioneer volumes. However, after DVD volume 9, Funimation canceled these box sets and planned to re-re-release them in the DVD season boxsets. This upset fans who had purchased the expensive Ultimate Uncut DVDs, as the Vegeta Saga Part II was never completed and the Ultimate Uncut Namek Saga DVDs were not created.
Funimation had also acquired the rights for the first three movies from Pioneer in 2004 and re-released them. Even though the three had the same cover style, only the first movie was released under the Ultimate Uncut line. All of these movies had a 5.1 English track, new subtitles, different DVD extras and come in a boxset titled 'First Strike'. However, they do not retain the original dub and contain a new English dub produced by Funimation's Texas cast. This version contains different music than the original dub and the Japanese version.
Funimation Remastered Box Sets
Main article: Funimation Remastered Box Sets
In November 2005, Funimation announced they would release a remastered form of Dragon Ball Z on DVD beginning in 2007. All DBZ episodes were to be digitally remastered and released in boxset form.
The first season set (the entire Vegeta Saga) was re-released on February 6, 2007. The first 39 episodes of this season are spread across 6 discs and cost $30–$50 (the original intention was for 5 discs, but there was a risk of quality reduction). Funimation released a trailer for the new set on the Dragon Ball Z official website.
Funimation released the second season set, containing both the Namek and Captain Ginyu sagas, on May 22, 2007. Beginning with this release, several of the in-house voice actors re-dubbed their characters' lines to keep consistency with the remainder of the dub. The third season set, containing the Frieza Saga, was released on September 18, 2007. The fourth season, containing both the Garlic Jr., Trunks and Android sagas, was released on February 11, 2008. Season five, containing both the Imperfect and Perfect Cell sagas, was released on May 27, 2008. Season six, containing the Cell Games Saga, was released on September 16, 2008. Season seven, containing both the Great Saiyaman and World Tournament sagas, was released on November 11, 2008. Season eight, containing both the Babidi and Majin Buu sagas, was released on February 10, 2009. Season nine, containing both the Fusion and Kid Buu sagas, was released on May 19, 2009.
The series has been re-transferred at 1080p resolution with digital restoration technology removing all grain and scratches from Funimation's original prints of the series. It is important to note, however, that like many late 80's-early 90's Toei productions (for example, Saint Seiya, Sailor Moon, Marmalade Boy, Ghost Sweeper Mikami, and Slam Dunk), the series was produced on 16-millimeter film which tends to be fairly grainy and soft. The new restoration was supervised by colorist Steve Franko.
The series is presented in a widescreen format (1.78:1, cropped from the original full frame) for the first time. Comparison images from the new set show that while there is missing footage on the top and bottom, there is at least additional footage on the right and left that has not appeared in any prior release, having been taken straight from the original Japanese film master recording.
This format change was highly controversial among fans, as this is not how the T.V. episodes were intended to be seen and this substantially alters them. Many fans launched a letter-writing campaign against the release. In response to the negative fan outcry regarding the release's apparent cropping of the source video, a Funimation representative has released a document from the team remastering the video, which explains the logistics of the new release. This document details how certain areas of the original film are damaged, and admits that though the video is cropped, this release eliminates the grain that was present on prior 4:3 releases. It has also been theorized that it is ultimately more inexpensive to transfer the series in 16:9 and thereby remove the damaged portions of the frame than to repair 291 episodes' worth of damaged film.
The boxset contains a revised English track in Dolby Digital 5.1 surround sound (it contains the original Japanese score by Shunsuke Kikuchi, although it is unknown just how the English dialogue is revised). For the first time, there is a choice between having the Japanese dialogue with Toei's original Japanese music or English dialogue with either Funimation's dub music or Toei's original Japanese music.
Special features include a featurette on the remastering of the original Japanese print and a 24-page booklet with episode summaries, character descriptions and a DBZ timeline.
Funimation Dragon Box Sets
Main article: Funimation Dragon Box Sets
Funimation Dragon Box sets were confirmed for release by Funimation Entertainment on July 19, 2009. The Dragon Box was produced from the original Dragon Box masters after a frame-by-frame restoration and spans the entire 291 episodes of Dragon Ball Z.
This definitive DVD box release begins with Dragon Box One which includes the first 42 episodes, uncut, on 6 discs.
The Dragon Box releases feature an aspect ratio of 4:3, the original Japanese audio (with options for an English track or English subtitles), the original episode previews, complete opening and closing credits and a collector's booklet.
While Toei's DBZ Dragon Boxes consists of only two volumes, Funimation's divides the series into seven; Dragon Box One was released on November 10, 2009, with an SRP of $79.98, while Dragon Box Two was released on February 16, 2010, Dragon Box Three was released on May 4, 2010, Dragon Box Four was released on September 21, 2010, Dragon Box Five was released on April 26, 2011, Dragon Box Six was released on July 5, 2011, and Dragon Box Seven was released on October 11, 2011.
Funimation Rock the Dragon Edition Box Set
Main article: Dragon Ball Z: Rock the Dragon Edition
It is the release of the original Funimation/Saban dub of Dragon Ball Z in a box set. The set consists of the 53 episodes (which were edited from the first 67 Japanese episodes of DBZ) and includes the first three Dragon Ball Z movies (Dead Zone, The World's Strongest, The Tree of Might). It was released on August 20, 2013. The collector's edition features the Ocean voice cast and opening theme song "Rock the Dragon". It also features a hardbound full-color 48-page book that showcases the character's history, and tropes that helped elevate DBZ to the pop culture it is today.
Funimation Blu-ray Level Sets
In July 2011, Funimation announced plans to release Dragon Ball Z in Blu-ray format. The first volume was released on November 18, 2011. However, after the release of the second volume, Funimation discontinued production of the rest of the Blu-ray releases, citing concerns over restoring the original film material frame by frame. The episodes were presented in their original 4:3 aspect ratio.
Funimation Season Blu-ray Sets
Funimation confirmed in June 2013 that the Blu-ray season box sets of DBZ would take place once again. The first set, "Dragon Ball Z Season 1", was released on December 31, 2013, and the final set, "Dragon Ball Z Season 9", was released on December 9, 2014. The episodes are presented in the cropped 16:9 widescreen format. However, unlike the "Orange Brick" DVD sets which were a "straight crop", these use pan and scan so that important information in the frame is not lost.
Funimation 30th Anniversary Collector's Edition
On March 2, 2019, Funimation announced that Dragon Ball Z will be celebrating its 30th Anniversary with a Collector's Edition Blu-ray box set, which compiles the full series in a 4:3 aspect ratio along with some extra goods. However according to Funimation, they need at least 2,500 fans to reserve the set for it to be produced and need to measure the interest since it's a high-cost endeavor, and 2,500 is the minimum of interested fans needed. But if Funimation fails to get the 2,500 pledges to produce the Collector's Edition, they will not release the anniversary set. However, Funimation announced that they needed 3,000 pre-orders from fans and the previous 2,500 pledges was a mistake. Funimation began taking pre-orders for the set on April 6 and had since then reached the necessary 3,000 pre-orders needed, making them eligible to produce 6,000 units of the set overall. The release of the teaser for this box set sparked many controversies among fans who viewed the teaser featuring the remastered clips. The main concern was the remastered footage's framework, color saturation and other footage components that looked worse than previous footage from older collector's edition. Funimation responded by stating that they cropped the release by going in "scene-by-scene to make judgments based onto the image available in each frame of how much to trim to get to a consistent 4:3 aspect ratio, while still attempting to cut as little out of the picture as possible," and that they felt the digital video noise reduction was "mandatory for this release based on the different levels of fan support from various past DBZ releases with different levels of noise reduction over the years." Funimation took pre-orders for the 30th Anniversary Collector's Edition until May 5. It was released on November 5th, 2019.
Manga
An "anime comic" manga adaption of the Dragon Ball Z anime was released in Japan from 2005 to 2010. The sagas covered included the "Saiyan Saga", "Super Saiyan / Ginyu Special-Squad Saga", "Super Saiyan / Freeza Saga", "Artificial Humans Saga", "Cell Game Saga", "Afterlife Tournament Saga", "Majin Boo Revival Saga", and "Majin Boo Battle Saga".
Main cast list
Staff
- Series Director: Daisuke Nishio, Shigeyasu Yamauchi
- Episode Director: Atsutoshi Umezawa, Daisuke Nishio (23 episodes), Hidehiko Kadota, Hidehiko Kadota, Hiroki Shibata, Johei Matsuura, Jun'ichi Fujise, Kazuhisa Takenouchi, Kazuhito Kikuchi, Masahiro Hosoda, Minoru Okazaki, Mitsuo Hashimoto, Osamu Kasai, Shigeyasu Yamauchi (31 episodes), Takahiro Imamura, Tatsuya Orime, Yoshihiro Ueda
- Assistant Episode Director: Akihiko Yamaguchi, Hidehiko Kadota, Jun'ichi Fujise, Keiko Hashimoto, Tatsuya Orime, Toshihiro Ishikawa, Yasuhiro Kamimura
- Producer: Kenji Shimizu (Fuji TV), Kōzō Morishita
- Assistant producer: Hiromi Seki (Toei Animation), Seiichi Hiruta (Toei Animation)
- Production manager: Matsuji Kishimoto (1-58), Takeshi Torimoto (59-109), Akihiko Yamaguchi (110-169), Yuichi Suenaga (170-291)
- Public Relations: Yumiko Shigeoka (Fuji TV)
- Series Composition: Takao Koyama
- Screenplay: Atsushi Maekawa, Aya Matsui Hiroshi Toda, Katsuyuki Sumisawa, Keiji Terui, Masashi Kubota, Reiko Yoshida, Satoru Akahori, Sumio Uetake, Takao Koyama, Toshiki Inoue, Yoshiyuki Suga
- Storyboard: Daisuke Nishio (26 episodes), Johei Matsuura, Katsumi Aoshima, Kazuhisa Takenouchi, Minoru Okazaki, Mitsuo Hashimoto, Osamu Kasai, Shigeyasu Yamauchi (32 episodes), Yoshihiro Ueda
- Production Advancement: Akihiko Yamaguchi, Kazumi Fujioka, Kazumitsu Matsusaka, Kouichi Hirose, Mitsuo Hashimoto, Yoshiaki Yanagi, Yuichi Suenaga
- Character Design: Katsuyoshi Nakatsuru (eps 200-291), Yuji Ikeda
- Chief Designer: Ken Tokushige (eps 200-291), Yuji Ikeda
- Art: Chigusa Yokoyama, Hitoshi Nagasaki, Kayoko Koitabashi, Kenji Matsumoto, Masazumi Matsumiya, Shigenori Takada, Shinobu Takahashi, Takeo Yamamoto, Tsutomu Fujita, Yoshito Watanabe, Yuji Ikeda
- Background Art: Chigusa Yokoyama, Eiko Ito, Goichi Katanosaka, Hideaki Kudo, Hiroaki Kaneko, Hiromitsu Shiozaki, Hisaharu Iijima (ep 42), Hitoshi Nagasaki, Izumi Wada, Junichi Taniguchi, Kayoko Koitabashi, Kazuhiko Suzuki, Kazumi Chiba, Keito Watanabe, Kenji Matsumoto, Kyōko Matsunaga, Masanori Tachibanada, Masao Kajitani, Masuo Nakayama, Mio Isshiki, Momonori Taniguchi, Mutsumi Matsui, Nanae Fukui, Natsuyo Kato, Noriyoshi Doi, Reiichirō Yanagisawa, Rumiko Minemura, Sanae Makino, Sawako Takagi, Shinichi Kamiyama, Shinobu Takahashi, Shoji Tokiwa, Tadahiko Ono, Tadashi Iwasa, Takeo Yamamoto, Tatsuro Iseri, Tetsuhiro Shimizu, Toki Sakamaki, Tomoko Shitamoto, Tomoko Takahashi, Tomoko Yoshida, Toshiko Odagiri, Yoko Ichihara, Yuji Kihara, Yukio Suzuki, Yuko Iida, Yuko Saitou, Yumiko Ogata, Yutaka Ito
- Animation Director: Ichio Hayashi (ep 245), Ichiroo Hattori, Isao Hayashi, Katsumi Aoshima, Katsuyoshi Nakatsuru (OP 2; eps 44, 120), Kazuya Kuda, Keisuke Masunaga (18 episodes), Masahiro Shimanuki, Masaki Sato (ep 64), Masayuki Uchiyama, Minoru Maeda, Mitsuo Shindō, Naoaki Houjou, Naoki Miyahara, Tadayoshi Yamamuro, Sachio Ebisawa, Shingo Ishikawa, Takeo Ide, Tomekichi Takeuchi, Yukio Ebisawa, Yuuji Hakamada
- Chief animator: Katsuyoshi Nakatsuru, Minoru Maeda
- Key Animation: Akio Katada, Akira Inagami, Chikako Uesugi, Eisaku Inoue, Hideko Okimoto, Hiroshi Takeuchi, Hisashi Eguchi, Katsuhiro Nakatsuru, Katsuki Aoshima, Katsuyoshi Nakatsuru (21 episodes), Kazuo Takigawa, Kazuya Hisada, Kenji Yokoyama, Kiyoshi Matsumoto, Kuniko Iwagami, Mamoru Hosoda (ep 173), Masahiro Shimanuki, Masaki Sato (17 episodes), Masako Sankaku, Masayuki Uchiyama, Miki Ugai, Minako Ito, Naoki Mishiba, Naoki Miyahara, Naoki Tate, Naotoshi Shida, Tadayoshi Yamamuro, Noriko Ichihashi, Noriko Shibata, Taiichiro Kohara, Takahiro Yoshimatsu, Takeo Ide, Teruhisa Ryu, Tetsuya Numako, Tetsuya Saeki, Tomekichi Takeuchi, Tomoya Iida, Toshiyuki Kan'no, Yoko Arai, Yoko Iizuka, Yosuji Kudo, Yukio Ebisawa
- In-Between Animation: Akemi Seki, Akihiko Nomura, Akiko Matsumoto, Akira Kato, Ayumi Kondou, Chikako Uesugi, Chiori Matsuda, Chizuko Kawamura, Daisuke Hiruma, Eriko Kimura, Hideaki Maniwa, Hidehiko Kadota, Hideki Inoue, Hiroaki Shimizu, Hiroaki Yoshikawa, Hiromi Ono, Hiromi Shirakami, Hiroyuki Kanbe, Hisashi Nakayama, Iwao Ōtsuka, Izumi Ichiki, Izumi Komatsu, Jin Ehara, Junji Kiyohara, Junko Miyamoto, Junko Shirasu, Kanae Suwa, Kayo Nangumo, Kayo Tanahashi, Kazue Ōneda, Kazufumi Takano, Kazuhiro Takahashi, Kazuyoshi Minato, Keiko Sasa, Kenichi Koyabe, Kimiko Hoshi, Kiyomi Ishiwata, Kiyomi Masuda, Kiyomi Masuko, Kōichirō Tanigishi, Koji Usui, Kouji Aoki, Kumiko Horikoshi, Kuniko Iwagami, Kunitoshi Ishii, Kyoko Higurashi, Maki Ito, Masahiro Hamamori, Masahiro Takano, Masatoshi Hakada, Masayuki Yoshihara, Mayumi Fukushi, Mayumi Nakamura, Megumi Yamashita, Midori Iwai, Miho Fujimoto, Minako Ito, Mineto Shibawaki, Miwa Oshima, Miyako Nishiwaki, Miyuki Abe, Miyuki Nakamura, Miyuki Shibazaki, Miyuki Yano, Naoaki Houjou, Naoki Mishiba, Naoki Tate, Noriko Ichihashi, Rumiko Ōmiya, Sai Yamane, Sanae Kojima, Shigeru Komatsuzaki, Shigeru Nishioka, Shigetaka Nagata, Shiho Takeuchi, Shiho Tamai, Shinichi Kaneko, Shinji Higashida, Shiori Nozawa, Takahiro Umehara, Takashi Aoyama, Takayuki Komori, Takayuki Ushiki, Takeshi Mochida, Tomoko Hirokawa, Tomoko Tanifuji, Tomomi Shimazaki, Toshiko Nakamura, Toshiyuki Komaru, Toshiyuki Sugano, Wataru Abe, Yasushi Morimoto, Yoko Arai, Yoko Tanida, Yoshie Komatsu, Yoshifumi Miyaji, Yosuji Kudo, Yū Ōkusa, Yuko Inoue, Yūko Kogawara
- Special Effects: Chiaki Hirao, Kazuya Sakurada, Kunji Tanifuji, Masayuki Kawachi, Masayuki Nakajima, Nobuhiro Shimokawa, Shoji Sato, Yoshiaki Okada, Yūji Okajima, Yukari Hashimoto
- Ink & Paint: Fumie Itō, Hideko Sakai, Hiromi Saitō, Ikuno Shimada, Ikuyo Uemura, Kaoru Sugawara, Maki Kamioka, Mariko Higuchi, Mayumi Shiba, Michiko Masui, Miho Sudō, Misae Suzuki, Sachiko Itsukida, Satoshi Nakahata, Takayo Matsui, Tokie Ōkawara
- Photography: Hiroshi Itō, Katsunori Maehara, Sadafumi Sano, Takeshi Ando, Takeshi Fukuda, Tetsuo Oofuji, Yukio Sugiyama
- Music: Shunsuke Kikuchi
- Music Selection: Shigeru Miyashita
- Sound Director: Nobuhiro Komatsu
- Sound Effects: Hidenori Arai
- Recording: Kenji Ninomiya
- Editing: Shinichi Fukumitsu
Theme Songs
Japanese Themes
- Openings:
-
- Version 1: episodes 1~21 (not on FUNimation's DVDs, except for the remastered version of Dead Zone and the Season 1 Blu-ray)
- Version 2: episodes 22~117
- Version 3: episodes 118~199
- Endings:
English Themes
- Openings:
- "Main Title" (AKA "Rock the Dragon")
- "Dragon Ball Z" (AKA "DBZ Theme")
- "Dragon Ball Z" (Ocean dub episodes 108-276)
- "Dragon Ball Z Uncut Theme"
- "Dragon Ball Z Movie Theme"
- "DBZ Movie Theme"
- "Eternal Sacrifice" (Broly - The Legendary Super Saiyan theme song)
- Endings: most English endings are simply shortened or otherwise altered versions of the openings, however the "Ultimate Uncut Special Edition" release used "Summon Up the Dragon".
Reception
Dragon Ball Z peaked at 25% ratings, and its lowest point was 13.5%, much better ratings than its successor, Dragon Ball GT (which got up to 14%). However, in America, Dragon Ball GT DVDs outsold Dragon Ball Z ones in 2003.[3]
See also
External links
- Official Toei Animation's website
- Official FUNimation's website
- Official Manga UK's website
- Official Madman's website
References
- ↑ Supplemental Daizenshuu, 1996
- ↑ "The Anime and Me", Dragonball Z Anime Special, 1989
- ↑ Anime Insider December 2003 (#10), "The QT on GT"