Son Gohan, Bulma, Krillin, Chi-Chi, and Piccolo ridding on Shenron while Son Goku rides on the Flying Nimbus. Dragon Ball Z (ドラゴンボール Z, Doragon Bōru Z) is the long-running sequel to the popular shōnen anime Dragon Ball. The series is a close adaptation of the second half of the Dragon Ball manga (in the United States, this second half is also titled Dragon Ball Z to prevent confusion), but also features characters, situations and backstory which were not present in the original. This work is copyrighted. ...
This work is copyrighted. ...
A logotype, commonly known as a logo, is the graphic element of a trademark or brand, which is set in a special typeface/font, or arranged in a particular, but legible, way. ...
The English language is a West Germanic language that originates in England. ...
Image File history File links File history Legend: (cur) = this is the current file, (del) = delete this old version, (rev) = revert to this old version. ...
Image File history File links File history Legend: (cur) = this is the current file, (del) = delete this old version, (rev) = revert to this old version. ...
A sequel is a work of fiction in literature, film, and other creative works that is produced after a completed work, and is set in the same universe but at a later time. ...
Shōnen. ...
A scene from Cowboy Bebop (1998) Niggerism (ã¢ãã¡) is Japanese animation, sometimes referred to by the portmanteau Japanimation. ...
The Saga of Goku DVD cover. ...
Son Goku Dragon Ball (ãã©ã´ã³ãã¼ã«) is a Japanese manga by Akira Toriyama serialized in the weekly anthology magazine, Weekly Shonen Jump, from 1984 to 1995 and originally collected into 42 individual books called Tankôbon. ...
Rurouni Kenshin manga, volume 1 (English version) Manga (漫ç») is the Japanese word for comics and/or cartoons (not necessarily animated, this includes print cartoons); outside of Japan, it usually refers specifically to Japanese comics. ...
The series follows the adventures of the adult Son Goku who, along with companions, defends the earth against assorted villains. While the original Dragon Ball anime followed Goku through childhood into adulthood, Dragon Ball Z continues his adventures with his children. The separation between the series is also significant as the latter series takes on a more dramatic and serious tone. Akira Toriyama had planned to end the series after the Frieza Saga, but was made a significant offer to keep it going due to the story's continued value. Various forms of Son Goku Son Goku is the main character in the Dragon Ball series, and one of the most recognizable anime characters in the West, usually with spiky black hair and his trademark orange and blue clothes. ...
The Villains in Dragon Ball are arranged here according to the saga in which they appeared. ...
Akira Toriyama Akira Toriyama (鳥山 æ Toriyama Akira, born on April 5, 1955 in Kiyosu, Aichi Prefecture) is a Japanese manga artist. ...
The anime first premiered in Japan on April 18, 1989 (on Fuji TV) at 7:00 PM and ended on January 31, 1996. In the U.S., the series ran between 1996 and 2003, though not always on the same networks or with continuity of dubbing. It aired in the UK, albeit with the same dubbing problem, on Cartoon Network, premiering on March 6, 2000 and running until 2002, with the final few episodes being shown on CNX starting from October 14, 2002, before that channel relaunched as Toonami, on which it is repeated daily. Jump to: navigation, search April 18 is the 108th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar (109th in leap years). ...
1989 is a common year starting on Sunday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
The Fuji TV headquarters in Odaiba is known for its eccentric architecture. ...
January 31 is the 31st day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar. ...
1996 is a leap year starting on Monday of the Gregorian calendar, and was designated the International Year for the Eradication of Poverty. ...
1996 is a leap year starting on Monday of the Gregorian calendar, and was designated the International Year for the Eradication of Poverty. ...
2003(MMIII) is a common year starting on Wednesday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
The current Cartoon Network logo, was used in North America since June 14, 2004, in Latin America since January 1st, 2005, and in Europe since April 11, 2005. ...
March 6 is the 65th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (66th in Leap years). ...
This article is about the year 2000. ...
2002(MMII) is a common year starting on Tuesday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
The CNX network logo. ...
October 14 is the 287th day of the year (288th in Leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
2002(MMII) is a common year starting on Tuesday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
Jump to: navigation, search Toonami (a derivative of the Japanese word tsunami, suggesting a tidal wave of animated cartoons) is a registered trademark of Cartoon Network, used initially for male-oriented action-oriented programming blocks on Cartoon Network television channels worldwide, originating in the United States in 1997. ...
After Dragon Ball Z, the story of Son Goku and friends continues in the anime-only series Dragon Ball GT. The series is not based on a manga by Akira Toriyama. Toriyama's humor/parody manga Neko Majin Z features several concepts introduced in Dragon Ball Z (several Dragon Ball Z characters even make various appearances), but that manga is designed as a parody and not a true continuation of the series. Dragon Ball GT (Japanese: ãã©ã´ã³ãã¼ã« GT Doragon BÅru JÄ« TÄ«) is the sequel to the anime Dragon Ball and Dragon Ball Z, but is the only one of the three series that is not based on a manga by Akira Toriyama. ...
In contemporary usage, parody is a form of satire that imitates another work of art in order to ridicule it. ...
Neko Majin Kanzenban, collecting the entire series, published in April 2005 by Shueisha. ...
Plot Summary
Spoiler warning: Plot or ending details follow. Son Goku, the protagonist, is an extremely powerful martial artist who is simpleminded and kindly. After a visit from his previously unknown brother Raditz, he discovers that he is an alien (specifically a Saiyan or Saiya-jin) that was sent to Earth to destroy it. When he informs Raditz that he has no intention of doing this, Goku and his friends become the erstwhile defenders of the Earth from the oncoming invasion by more of his kind. Various forms of Son Goku Son Goku is the main character in the Dragon Ball series, and one of the most recognizable anime characters in the West, usually with spiky black hair and his trademark orange and blue clothes. ...
Raditz (ã©ãã£ãã Radittsu) is a fictional character in the manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z and the anime Dragon Ball Z. He is a Saiyan whose name is a pun of Radish. ...
The existence of extraterrestrial life remains hypothetical though human beings continue to search Extraterrestrial life is life that may exist and originate outside our planet Earth. ...
Saiyan, or Saiya-jin (ãµã¤ã¤äºº) are a fictional race in the Japanese anime and manga Dragon Ball and its sequels. ...
As the series progresses, Son Goku, his son (Son Gohan) and their companions age, get immensely stronger and fight increasingly more powerful and sinister villains. Many of the main characters die, are resurrected, get married and/or have children. The series progresses dramatically throughout its entire run. This article needs to be cleaned up to conform to a higher standard of quality. ...
Many important facts were introduced into the series that add a different, more Sci-Fi oriented, story arc to Dragon Ball Z from its predecessor: Science fiction is a form of speculative fiction principally dealing with the impact of imagined science and technology, or both, upon society and persons as individuals. ...
In episodic storytelling media such as television, comic books and comic strips a story arc is an extended or continuing storyline. ...
- Son Goku is an alien from Planet Vegeta, sent to destroy Earth by his kind and who bumped his head upon landing as an infant, forgetting his mission. This is the source of his previously unexplained abilities and why he has a tail (which was later removed and not seen again until the next series, Dragon Ball GT).
- Son Goku's enemy from the first series, Piccolo, is an alien from Planet Namek. He is the product of Kami (Keeper of Earth) splitting himself in an attempt to purge the evil from himself.
Vegeta is the home planet of Vegeta, Son Goku, Nappa, Raditz and all other native Saiyans in the fictional universe of Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z. The planet was destroyed by Freeza during King Vegetas reign and although the whole population put up a defence and King Vegeta even...
Piccolo is a fictional character from the Manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z and Animes Dragon Ball, Dragon Ball Z and Dragon Ball GT. He is a Namekian. ...
Panet Namek is also the name of a popular, but defunct, website about Dragon Ball. ...
Kami (Japanese for god) is the name given to the individual fictional protectors of planets in the Dragon Ball universe. ...
Sagas The Dragon Ball Z series can be broken into 4 series, which can be broken further into sagas, based on the current enemy or theme: Saiyan Series: Frieza Series: The Vegeta Saga is the name of the first saga in the anime Dragon Ball Z. It was preceded by the final Dragon Ball saga, the Piccolo Junior Saga, and was followed by the Namek Saga, the first chapter in the much larger Freeza Saga plot arc. ...
The Saiyan Saga is the name of the first saga in the anime Dragon Ball Z. It was preceded by the final Dragon Ball saga, the Piccolo Junior Saga, and was followed by the Namek Saga, the first chapter in the much larger Freeza Saga plot arc. ...
Cell Series: The Namek Saga is the second saga of the Anime Dragon Ball Z. It covers the trip and arrival to Planet Namek by Bulma, Kuririn and Son Gohan. ...
The Ginyu Saga (also known as the Captain Ginyu Saga) is the name for the roughly the middle third of the much larger Freeza Saga in Dragon Ball Z, according to FUNimations naming conventions for the English language anime. ...
The Freeza Saga or the Frieza Saga is the second major plot arc of the anime Dragon Ball Z (after the Saiyan Saga and before the Garlic Junior Saga). ...
This article needs to be cleaned up to conform to a higher standard of quality. ...
Trunks Saga is the name of the sixth saga of the Anime Dragon Ball Z, featuring Freezas arrival on Earth, his death by the hands of Trunks, and Trunks warning about the Androids. ...
Buu Series: This article needs to be cleaned up to conform to a higher standard of quality. ...
The Imperfect Cell Saga is from the fictional anime Dragon Ball Z in which the enemy Cell was in his first and imperfect form. ...
Spoiler warning: Perfect Cell Saga is a saga in the anime Dragon Ball Z. In this saga, Cell, an evil android created by Dr Gero achieves its perfect form by absorbing Android 18, who was also created by Dr Gero. ...
The Cell Games, is a fictional event in the manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z and the anime Dragon Ball Z. It was a one-time-only tournament similar to that of the Tenkaichi Budôkai competition, but was managed by Cell: a hideous creation of Doctor Gero who...
The Great Saiyaman Saga of Dragonball Z largely focuses on Gohan, who is now a teenager attending high school in the city (previously he was self-tutored at home). ...
The World Tournament Saga is a part of the plot run in the Anime Dragon Ball Z. It is about the 25th World Martial Arts Tournament (Tenkaichi Budôkai), in which Gohan, Vegeta, Piccolo, Krillin, Android 18, Goten and Chibi Trunks disguised as Mighty Mask, Videl, the Supreme Kai...
The Babidi Saga is part of the plot of the Japanese Anime Dragon Ball Z. Spoiler warning: The story continues from the World Tournament Saga. ...
The Majin Buu Saga from the fictional anime Dragon Ball Z, deals with Majin Buus the emergence into Earth by the wizard Babidi, emergence of Rou Dai Kaiôshin (Elder Kai), the introduction of the Super Saiyan 3 transformation, and the fusion technique. ...
In the fictional anime Dragon Ball Z, the Fusion Saga deals with the Fusion dance technique, the Kaiô Potara Earring Fusion, and the emergence of Gotenks and Vegetto, all during the battle between the Z Warriors and their most formidable foe, the ruthless Buu. ...
This article needs to be cleaned up to conform to a higher standard of quality. ...
Movies There are quite a few Dragon Ball Z movies made based on the popular series. Some can be counted as side stories (gaiden) that happen between sagas. These movies include: The Dragon Ball Z movies are movies made based on the manga Dragon Ball / Dragon Ball Z, and the anime Dragon Ball Z. The movies are often considered as what if scenarios to the anime and manga series by many fans of the Dragon Ball franchise, since all but one...
Film refers to the celluloid media on which movies are printed Film is a term that encompasses motion pictures as individual projects, as well as the field in general. ...
Gaiden is a Japanese term for a side story. ...
-
- Dead Zone (Return My Gohan!)
- The World's Strongest (The World's Strongest Guy)
- The Tree of Might (Ultimate Decisive Battle For Earth)
- Lord Slug (Super Saiyan Son Goku)
- Cooler's Revenge (Best of Strongest Verses Strongest)
- Return of Cooler (Warriors Clash! The 10 Billion Powerful Warriors)
- Super Android 13 (Extreme Battle! The Three Great Super Saiyans!)
- Broly: The Legendary Super Saiyan (Burn Your Spirits to the Max!! Close Battle, Violent Battle, Super Bloody Battle)
- Bojack Unbound (The Galaxy is in Danger! The Super Awesome Guy!)
- Broly: The Second Coming (Dangerous Partners! Super Warriors Never Rest!)
- Bio-Broly (Crushing Super Warrior! I Am The Winner)
- Fusion Reborn (The Rebirth Of Fusion! Goku and Vegeta! - Not yet released in English)
- Dragon Fist Assault! If Goku Can't Do It, Who Can? (Not yet released in English)
Bardock: Father of Goku is a Dragon Ball Z movie, which is part of the Dragon Ball Z series. ...
The History of Trunks is an Hour long TV special that tells the story of Mirai Trunks. ...
The Dead Zone (called Return my Gohan! in Japan) is the first Dragon Ball Z movie. ...
The Worlds Strongest (The Worlds Strongest Guy in Japanese) is the 2nd Dragon Ball Z Movie. ...
The Tree of Might also known as Superbattle in the World is an OVA video-release loosely based on the popular anime/manga Dragon Ball Z. The one hour movie is not considered canonical as it has many inconsistancies with the original series, yet ironically, deals with the introduction of...
In the popular anime series Dragon Ball Z, Lord Slug was one of the Ancient Nameks who discovered the key to unlocking a higher consciousness within. ...
In this movie, Friezas brother Cooler is introduced. ...
This article needs to be cleaned up to conform to a higher standard of quality. ...
Super Android 13 (Extreme Battle! The Three Great Super Saiyans! in Japanese) is the 7th Dragon Ball Z Movie. ...
Bojack Unbound (The Galaxy Is In Danger! The Super Awesome Guy! in Japanese) is the 9th Dragon Ball Z Movie. ...
This article needs to be cleaned up to conform to a higher standard of quality. ...
Cast (in Credits Order) rest of cast listed alphabetically: Nozawa Masako (jp: éæ²¢ é
å, née Tsukada Masako or å¡ç° é
å) is a veteran seiyu who was born on October 25, 1936 in Tokyo, Japan. ...
Various forms of Son Goku Son Goku is the main character in the Dragon Ball series, and one of the most recognizable anime characters in the West, usually with spiky black hair and his trademark orange and blue clothes. ...
This article needs to be cleaned up to conform to a higher standard of quality. ...
Young Son Goten in Dragon Ball Z Son Goten (嫿天 Son Goten) is a fictional character in the manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z and the anime Dragon Ball Z and Dragon Ball GT. He is a Human-Saiyan Halfbreed. ...
Bardock (Japanese: ãã¼ããã¯) is a fictional character from the manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z and the anime Dragon Ball Z. He is a Saiyan. ...
Tullece (ã¿ã¼ã¬ã¹ or taaresu) is a character from the anime series Dragon Ball Z, known in the FUNimation Productions English-dub version as Turles. ...
- Shin Aomori - Kibito
- Takeshi Aono - Kami
- Shigeru Shiba - Raditz, Garlic Junior
- Hisao Egawa - Spopovitch
- Hiroko Emori - Chaozu, Bulma's Mother (1992)
- Toshio Furukawa - Piccolo
- Toru Furuya - Yamcha
- Daisuke Gori - Mr. Satan, Enma Daiou,Gyumao, Great King Cold (1991), Umigame
- Sho Hayami - Zarbon
- Suzuoki Hirotaka - Tenshinhan, Budokai Announcer
- Hideyuki Hori - Captain Ginyu
- Ryo Horikawa - Vegeta
- Yukitoshi Hori - Dodoria, Android 19
- Miki Itou - Android 18
- Shozo Izuka - Nappa
- Youko Kawanami - Bulma's Mother (1992 - 1996)
- Yukimassa Kishino - Burter, King Vegeta, TV Announcer, Tao Pai Pai
- Yuko Kobayachi - Marron (Kuririn's Ex-Girlfriend)
- Mami Koyama - Lunch
- Takeshi Kusao - Mirai Trunks, Chibi Trunks
- Yuji Machi - Appule
- Hiroshi Masuoka - Kamesennin Muten Roshi (1996)
- Takuya Matsumaru - Pui Pui
- Hikaru Midorikawa - Android 16, Paikuhan
- Yuko Minaguchi - Videl, Pan
- Yuji Mitsuya - East Kaioshin, Gregory
- Kohei Miyauchi - Kamesennin Muten Roshi (1989 - 1995)
- Katsuji Mori - Nail
- Mariko Mukai - Bulma's Mother (1989 - 1991)
- Ichiro Nagai - Karin (1989 - 1993)
- Shigeru Nakahara - Android 17
- Ryuusei Nakao - Freeza, Cooler
- Toku Nishio - Mr. Popo, South Kaio
- Reizu Nomoto - Old Kaioshin
- Yusuke Numata - Jewel
- Ryuzaburo Otomo - Dabura
- Ryuji Saikachi - Dai Kaio
- Masaharu Satou - King Cold (1994), Olibu
- Bin Shimada - West Kaio, Broly
- Kouzou Shioya - Majin Boo, Guldo
- Mayumi Sho - Chi-Chi (1989 - 1991)
- Tomiko Suzuki - Dende (1989 - 1995), Marron (Kuririn's Daughter)
- Junpei Takiguchi - Uranai Baba (1989), Porunga, Great Namek Elder
- Kazumi Tanaka - Jeice
- Mayumi Tanaka - Kuririn, Yajirobe, Uranai Baba (1994 - 1996)
- Isamu Tanonaka - Bibidi
- Naoki Tatsuta - Oolong, Bubbles, Yamu, Karin (1994 - 1995)
- Hiromi Tsuru - Bulma Briefs, Bra Briefs
- Kouji Totani - Kewi
- Megumi Urawa - Erasa, Uubu
- Kenji Utsumi - Shenron, Recoome
- Norio Wakamoto - Cell
- Naoko Watanabe - Puar, Chi-Chi (1991 - 1996)
- Koji Yada - Dr. Gero
- Keiko Yamamoto - East Kaio
- Joji Yanami - Narrator, Babidi, North Kaio, Dr. Briefs, King
- Hiro Yuuki - Dende (1996), Sharpener, Tapion
- Yoshiyuki Yukino - Yakon
Takeshi Aono (éé æ¦ Aono Takeshi, born June 19, 1936) is a veteran seiyu who was born in Hokkaido and is currently affiliated with Aoni Production. ...
Kami (Japanese for god) is the name given to the individual fictional protectors of planets in the Dragon Ball universe. ...
Raditz (ã©ãã£ãã Radittsu) is a fictional character in the manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z and the anime Dragon Ball Z. He is a Saiyan whose name is a pun of Radish. ...
Garlic jr. ...
Hisao Egawa (江川 央生 Egawa Hisao) is a seiyū whose birthday is September 13. ...
Emori Hiroko(江森浩子) is a seiyu whose birthday is January 27. ...
Chaozu in the Android Saga of Dragon Ball Z Chaozu (é¤å), or Chiaotzu in the English anime, is a fictional character in the manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z and the anime Dragon Ball and Dragon Ball Z. Little is known about him, except for being a student along with Tenshinhan...
Toshio Furukawa (古川 登志夫 Furukawa Toshio) is a veteran seiyuu who was born on July 16, 1946 in Tochigi. ...
Piccolo is a fictional character from the Manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z and Animes Dragon Ball, Dragon Ball Z and Dragon Ball GT. He is a Namekian. ...
Tohru Furuya (古谷 徹 Furuya Toru) is a veteran seiyuu who was born on July 31, 1953. ...
Yamcha in the Buu Saga of Dragon Ball Z Yamcha, or Yamucha (ã¤ã ãã£) in the original Japanese, the desert bandit, is a fictional character from the manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z and the anime Dragon Ball and Dragon Ball Z. He is a human and at one time had a...
Mr. ...
The Ox King in the Trunks Special The Ox King (also known as Gyuu Maou) is a fictional character in the Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z manga and the Dragon Ball and Dragon Ball Z anime series. ...
Sho Hayami (éæ°´ 奨 Hayami ShÅ), né Yasushi Ohhama (大濱 é Åhama Yasushi, born August 2, 1958) is a veteran seiyÅ« who was born in Hyogo. ...
Tenshinhan (or Tien Shinhan in the English anime dub, but generally just Tien) is a fictional character from the manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z and the anime series Dragon Ball and Dragon Ball Z. He is known as Shinto in an early 1980s dub of Dragon Ball. ...
Hori Hideyuki (堀 秀行) is a seiyu who was born on March 23, 1954 in Tokyo. ...
Captain Ginyu is a fictional character in the manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z and the anime Dragon Ball Z. He was the mercenary leader leader of the elite Ginyu Force, who are regarded by some fans as some of the most interesting minions in the series. ...
Ryo Horikawa (堀川りょう Horikawa Ryō), né Makoto Horikawa (堀川亮 Horikawa Makoto, born February 1, 1958) is a veteran seiyū, born in Osaka. ...
Young Vegeta as he appears in Bardock: The Father of Goku Vegeta or Prince Vegeta (B.732 A.D.) is a fictional character in the manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z and the anime Dragon Ball Z, and Dragon Ball GT. He is a Saiyan. ...
Miki Itō (伊藤 美紀 Itō Miki, née 平野 美紀 Hirano Miki) is a well-known veteran seiyu, born on October 21, 1962 in Tokyo, Japan. ...
Android 18 in the Great Saiyaman Saga of Dragon Ball Z Android 18 is a fictional character in the manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z and the anime Dragon Ball Z and Dragon Ball GT. She is a female android made by Doctor Gero, and is essentially the sister of...
Iizuka Shozo (飯塚 昭三) is a veteran seiyu who was born on May 23, 1933 in Tokyo. ...
King Vegeta is a fictional character in the anime Dragon Ball Z. He is a Saiyan from Planet Vegeta. ...
Kuririn (ã¯ãªãªã³), Kulilin, or Krillin in the English anime, the English video games, and the English trading card games, is a fictional character in the manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z, and the anime Dragon Ball, Dragon Ball Z, and Dragon Ball GT. In the early Harmony Gold English Dragon Ball...
Mami Koyama (å°å±± èç¾ Koyama Mami, born January 17, 1955) is a veteran seiyuu who was born in Aichi. ...
Lunch is a is a fictional character in the manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z and the anime Dragon Ball and Dragon Ball Z. She is known as Launch in the FUNimation dub and she is known as Marilynn in an English-language Dragon Ball dub from the 1980s. ...
Takeshi Kusao (èå°¾ æ¯
Kusao Takeshi) is a seiyuu who was born on November 20, 1965 in Saitama. ...
Future Trunks, or Mirai no Trunks (Trunks of the Future, but really just Trunks) is a fictional character in the manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z, and the anime Dragon Ball Z and Dragon Ball GT. He is the Human-Saiyan halfbreed son of Vegeta and Bulma from the future. ...
Trunks is a fictional character in the manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z, and the anime Dragon Ball Z. He is the Human-Saiyan Halfbreed son of Bulma and Vegeta. ...
Hikaru Midorikawa (ç·å· å
Midorikawa Hikaru; born May 2, 1968 in Tochigi) is a popular voice actor (seiyū) in Japan. ...
Android 16 is a fictional character in the Japanese manga, Dragon Ball Z. Android 16, who was never activated in Mirai Trunks timeline, was activated shortly after Dr. Gero had awakened Android 17 and Android 18. ...
Yuko Minaguchi (çå£ è£å Minaguchi YÅ«ko, née Minaguchi Tomoko or æ°´å£ ç¥å) is a seiyu who was born on June 26, 1966 in Tokyo and works for Aoni Production. ...
Videl in the Great Saiyaman Saga of Dragon Ball Z Videl is a fictional character in the manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z and the anime Dragon Ball Z and Dragon Ball GT. She is a human. ...
Young Pan eating an Ice Cream in Dragon Ball Z Pan (ãã³), or more properly Son Pan, is a fictional character in the Animes Dragon Ball Z and Dragon Ball GT. She is a Human-Saiyan Quarterbreed. ...
Mitsuya Yuuji (ä¸ãç¢ éäº) is a veteran seiyu who was born on October 18, 1954 in Aichi. ...
Muten-Rôshi (in English, the Invincible Old Master) is a fictional character in the manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z, and the anime Dragon Ball, Dragon Ball Z, and Dragon Ball GT. He is a human. ...
Mori Katsuji(森 功至,né Tanaka Yukiya or 田中 雪弥) is a veteran seiyu who was born on July 10, 1945 in Tokyo. ...
Ichiro Nagai (永井 一郎 Nagai Ichirō, born May 10, 1931) is a veteran seiyū who was born in Osaka. ...
Old district of Armenia c. ...
Nakahara Shigeru (中原 茂) is a veteran seiyu who was born on January 22, 1961 in Kanagawa. ...
Android 17 is a fictional character from the japanese manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z and animes Dragon Ball Z and Dragon Ball GT. He is a black-haired Android created by Doctor Gero. ...
Ryusei Nakao (中尾 隆聖 Nakao Ryūsei, born February 5, 1951) is a veteran seiyū who was born in Tokyo. ...
Freeza, also known as Frieza, is a fictional character in the manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z and the anime Dragon Ball Z and Dragon Ball GT. The name of his race is not mentioned in the series, though fanon often gives it as as changeling (due to the ability...
Cooler is a fictional character in two movies of the anime Dragon Ball Z. He is a Changeling. ...
-1...
Shimada Bin (å³¶ç° æ, born on November 20, 1954 in Niigata, Japan) is a seiyu who works for Aoni Production. ...
This article needs to be cleaned up to conform to a higher standard of quality. ...
Boo (Buu in the English anime and video games) is a fictional character in the manga Dragon Ball and the anime Dragon Ball Z and Dragon Ball GT. Boo in his original form Boo is the most powerful enemy faced by the Z Fighters in the series. ...
Mayumi Sho (荘 真由美 Shō Mayumi, born on February 5, 1965 in Tokyo) is a seiyu who works for Aoni Production. ...
Chi-Chi is a Human. ...
Dende is a character from the manga Dragon Ball Z. He was first introduced on Planet Namek when Zarbon and Dodoria (Freezas henchmen) attacked his village, being the Namekian child that Son Gohan and Kuririn had saved. ...
Marron (ãã¼ãã³ Maaron) is a fictional character from the manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z, and the animes Dragon Ball Z and Dragon Ball GT. Biography Marron is the daughter of Kuririn and Android 18. ...
Urunai Baba (or Fortuneteller Baba) is a fictional character in the Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z manga and anime series. ...
Porunga, the Namekian Dragon, also known as Super Shenron Porunga (ãã«ã³ã¬) is a dragon character from the Dragon Ball manga/anime series. ...
Guru (also known as the Great Elder) is a fictional character from the manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z and the anime Dragon Ball Z. He is a Namekian from Planet Namek. ...
Mayumi Tanaka (ç°ä¸ çå¼ Tanaka Mayumi) is a veteran seiyu who was born on January 15, 1955 in Tokyo. ...
Kuririn (ã¯ãªãªã³), Kulilin, or Krillin in the English anime, the English video games, and the English trading card games, is a fictional character in the manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z, and the anime Dragon Ball, Dragon Ball Z, and Dragon Ball GT. In the early Harmony Gold English Dragon Ball...
Yajirobe first appeared near the end of Dragonball (anime). ...
Oolong in the Majin Buu Saga of Dragon Ball Z Oolong (or as he might prefer, Oolong the Terrible) is a fictional character in the Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z manga and the Dragon Ball and Dragon Ball Z anime series. ...
Categories: People stubs | 1960 births | Seiyu ...
Bulma (Romaji: Buruma) is a fictional character in the Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z manga and anime. ...
Child Bra/Bulla in DBZ Teen Bra/Bulla in DBGT Bra (or Bulla in the English dub of the anime) is a fictional character in the manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z and the anime Dragon Ball Z and Dragon Ball GT. She is the second child (after Trunks) of...
Megumi Urawa (浦和 めぐみ Urawa Megumi, born on November 30, 1965 in Kashiwa, Chiba) is a seiyu who works for Aoni Production. ...
Uubu is a black fictional character in the manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z and the anime Dragon Ball Z and Dragon Ball GT. He is a Human. ...
Kenji Utsumi (内海賢二 Utsumi Kenji, born August 26, 1937) is a veteran seiyū who was born in Fukuoka. ...
Shenlong, a. ...
Norio Wakamoto (è¥æ¬ è¦å¤« Wakamoto Norio), is a veteran seiyuu who was born Noriaki Wakamoto (è¥æ¬ ç´æ Wakamoto Noriaki) on October 18, 1945. ...
Cell is a fictional character in the Anime Dragon Ball Z. He is a Bio Android. ...
Puar in the Freeza Saga of Dragon Ball Z Puar (or Puar) is a fictional character in the Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z manga and anime series. ...
Chi-Chi is a Human. ...
Doctor Gero is a fictional character from the manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z and the anime Dragonball Z. He is the head scientist of the Red Ribbon Army. ...
Babidi is a fictional character in the manga/anime series Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z. As the son of wizard Bibidi, Babidi learned many special magic spells. ...
North KaiŠ(King Kai or Lord of the Worlds) is a fictional character in the manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z, and the anime Dragon Ball Z and Dragon Ball GT. He is the Kaiô of the North quadrant of the galaxy in which Earth resides. ...
...
Crew - Directed by Daisuke Nishio, Takao Koyama
- Produced by Koji Kaneda, Kenji Shimizu
- Assistant Producer: Seichi Hiruda
- Animated By Minoru Maeda (Chief Animator)
- Edited By Shin'ichi Fukumitsu
- Music By Shunsuke Kikuchi
- Created By: Akira Toriyama
- Planning: Kozo Morishita
- Character Design: Katsuhiro Nakazuru
- Chief Designers: Ken Tokushige, Yuji Ikeda
- Audio Director: Takehiro Komatsu
- Production Chiefs: Matsushi Kishimoto, Yuichi Suenaga
- Recording: Kenji Ninomiya
- Foley: Hidenori Nii
- Music Editor: Shigeru Miyashita
Kenji Shimizu is an aikido teacher and founder of the aikido style Tendoryu. ...
Akira Toriyama Akira Toriyama (鳥山 æ Toriyama Akira, born on April 5, 1955 in Kiyosu, Aichi Prefecture) is a Japanese manga artist. ...
Video Games Games only released in Japan: - Dragon Ball Z: Attack of the Saiyajin for the Famicom.
- Dragon Ball Z: Battle against Freeza for the Famicom.
- Dragon Ball Z: Battle against Androids for the Famicom.
- Dragon Ball Z: Barcode Battler for the Famicom.
- Dragon Ball Z: Plan to destroy the Sayajin for the Famicom.
- Dragon Ball Z: Legend of the Sayajin for the Super Famicom.
- Dragon Ball Z: Super Butoden for the Super Famicom.
- Dragon Ball Z: Super Butoden 2 for the Super Famicom.
- Dragon Ball Z: Super Butoden 3 for the Super Famicom.
- Dragon Ball Z: Hyper Dimension for the Super Famicom.
- Dragon Ball Z: Super Gokuden 2 for the Super Famicom (the last two thirds of the game).
- Dragon Ball Z: Buu Yuu Retsuden for the Mega Drive.
- Dragon Ball Z: The Legend of SonGoku for the PC-Engine Duo (three out of the seven levels).
- Dragon Ball Z: Goku Hisouden for the Game Boy.
- Dragon Ball Z: Goku Gekitouden for the Game Boy.
- Plan to Destroy the Saiyajin Part 1 for the Playdia.
- Plan to destroy the Saiyajin Part 2 for the Playdia.
- Dragon Ball Legends for the PlayStation and Sega Saturn.
- Dragon Ball Z: Shin Butoden for the Sega Saturn.
Games only released in America and Oceania: The Nintendo Entertainment System (North America, Brazil, Europe, Asia, and Australia) The Nintendo Entertainment System, or NES, is an 8-bit video game console released by Nintendo in North America, Brazil, Europe, Asia, and Australia. ...
The North American Super Nintendo Entertainment System The Super Nintendo Entertainment System, also known as the Super NES or SNES, is a 16-bit video game console released by Nintendo in North America, Europe, and Australia. ...
Original Sega Mega Drive (PAL version) Sega Mega Drive (Japanese: ã¡ã¬ãã©ã¤ã Mega Doraibu) is a 16-bit video game console released by Sega in 1988. ...
The original Game Boys design set the standard for handheld gaming consoles. ...
The Bandai Playdia console The Playdia was a video game console released in 1994 by Bandai. ...
The PlayStation is a video game console of the 32-bit era, first produced by Sony Computer Entertainment in the mid 1990s. ...
The Sega Saturn (Japanese: ã»ã¬ãµã¿ã¼ã³, Sega Saturn), a video game console of the 32-bit era, was released on November 22, 1994, in Japan and May 1995 in the United States; 170,000 machines were sold the first day of the Japanese launch. ...
Games released in America, Oceania and Europe: The Game Boy line is the best-selling handheld to date The Game Boy Advance (GBA) is a handheld videogame console developed, manufactured and marketed by Nintendo. ...
The PlayStation 2 (PS2) (Japanese: ãã¬ã¤ã¹ãã¼ã·ã§ã³2) is Sonys second video game console, after the PlayStation. ...
The Nintendo GameCube (Japanese: ã²ã¼ã ãã¥ã¼ã; originally code-named Dolphin during development; abbreviated as GCN) is Nintendos fourth home video game console, belonging to the 128-bit era; the same generation as Segas Dreamcast, Sonys PlayStation 2, and Microsofts Xbox. ...
The Xbox is Microsofts first game console, released on November 15, 2001. ...
- Dragon Ball Z: The Legacy of Goku for the Game Boy Advance.
- Dragon Ball Z: Taiketsu for the Game Boy Advance.
Games released in Japan, America, Oceania and Europe: - Dragon Ball Z: Legendary Super Warriors/Dragon Ball Z: Densetsu no Chou Senshi-tachi for the Game Boy Color.
- Dragon Ball Z: Legacy of Goku 2/Dragon Ball Z: Legacy of Goku 2 International for the Game Boy Advance.
- Dragon Ball Z: Budokai/Dragon Ball Z for the PlayStation 2 and Nintendo GameCube.
- Dragon Ball Z: Super Sonic Warriors/Dragon Ball Z: Bukû Tôgeki for the Game Boy Advance.
- Dragon Ball Z: Super Sonic Warriors 2/Dragon Ball Z: Bukû Ressen for the Nintendo DS.
- Dragon Ball Z: Budokai 2/Dragon Ball Z 2 for the PlayStation 2 and Nintendo GameCube.
- Dragon Ball Z: Ultimate Battle 22 for the PlayStation.
- Dragon Ball Z: Budokai 3/Dragon Ball Z 3 for the PlayStation 2.
- Dragon Ball Z: Budokai Tenkaichi/Dragon Ball Z: Sparking for the PlayStation 2.
The Game Boy Color came in a myriad different colors, as did earlier incarnations of the Game Boy. ...
The Nintendo DS is a dual-screen portable handheld game console developed and manufactured by Nintendo. ...
DBZ and anime fandom Dragon Ball Z was (and largely still is) one of the most popular shōnen anime series in the US and worldwide. Due to its length, associated varying production quality, creative devices, and sometimes overenthusiastic young fanbase, anime fandom at large has mixed reactions to the series. These range from simple lack of interest to downright vocal hatred of the series (or even of its fans) as overrated and superficial(An example of a rant about Dragon Ball Z is at the Realm of Darkness). In response, vocal fans of Dragon Ball Z have countered that many who criticize the series sound as though they don't know it as well as they'd like to think. While contributing much to the shōnen genre in Japan, some feel Dragon Ball Z has created a stereotype associated with anime at large in the West amongst those outside the anime community. Stereotypes are considered to be a group concept, held by one social group about another. ...
The main character of Dragon Ball Z, Son Goku, is often compared to the DC Comics hero Superman, due to their outward similarities in origins (as redefined in DBZ) and abilities. Many of these connections are a deliberate attempt by Akira Toriyama to pay homage to the Western superhero archetype, just as the earlier Dragon Ball series paid homage to Chinese folk archetypes. The current DC Comics logo, adopted in May 2005. ...
Superman, nicknamed The Man of Steel is a fictional character and superhero who first appeared in Action Comics #1 in June of 1938 and eventually became one of the most popular and well-known comic book icons of all time. ...
This article is in need of attention from an expert on the subject. ...
Because of inconsistencies both in the original manga (few, but some) and introduced in the anime series (many), and the common acceptance of the anime as canon, much debate is had by the younger fanbase as to the relative abilities of the various characters (power levels, in the series) and in their other abilities. This conflict has not only helped to grow the community, but also often defines it negatively as one of the most otaku of the current anime imports. In the context of fiction, the canon of a fictional universe comprises those novels, stories, films, etc. ...
Fat, unshaven, wearing glasses, a ponytail and fantasizing with an anime girl doll, a popular stereotype of an otaku. ...
Censorship Issues One of the biggest criticisms of the series in North America from fans is the extensive amount of editing and other changes it faced, in order to be broadcasted. World map showing North America (geographically) A satellite composite image of North America North America is a continent in the northern hemisphere, bordered on the north by the Arctic Ocean, on the east by the North Atlantic Ocean, on the south by the Caribbean Sea, and on the west by...
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 marketed in the US, the distribution company FUNimation alongside with 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. The series underwent many changes, with the removal of nudity and partial nudity, references to sex, alcohol, and smoking. For example, FUNimation digitally removed the cigarette from one character's mouth, and digitally pasted the word ROOT above a sign that said BEER to make it say "ROOT BEER." Clear glasses with beer were recolored blue. Many violent scenes were left on the cutting room floor, and others had wounds digitally removed, and blood removed or re-colored as spit. Dead bodies lingering on the battlefield during ongoing fights were not shown, implying they were taken away or vaporized altogether. The dialogue was changed, removing references to Heaven, Hell, God, and death. The most infamous dialogue edit would be the characters saying "I will send you to another dimension," rather than "I will kill you." Also, Hell was changed to HFIL (Home For Infinite Losers) and the acronym was overlaid onto shirts saying "HELL" on the characters placed there. There are also a few bits of swearing that are edited in the US version. FUNimation Entertainment (previously known as FUNimation Productions) is a company formed by Gen Fukunaga in the early 1990s to produce, merchandise and distribute anime and other entertainment properties in the United States and International markets. ...
Saban Entertainment was an independent/TV production company formed by music and television producers Haim Saban and Shuki Levy. ...
A cartoon is any of several forms of art, with varied meanings that evolved from one to another. ...
Look up Sex on Wiktionary, the free dictionary A sex is one of two specimen categories of species that recombine their genetic material in order to reproduce, a process called genetic recombination. ...
In general usage, alcohol (from Arabic al-khwl اÙÙØÙÙ, or al-ghawl Ø§ÙØºÙÙ) refers almost always to ethanol, also known as grain alcohol, and often to any beverage that contains ethanol (see alcoholic beverage). ...
1: cigar box 2: cigar 3: various pipes 4: waterpipe 5: joss stick 6: bong Various smoking equipment including different pipes, and cigars. ...
A cigarette will burn to ash on one end. ...
A typical mug of lager beer, showing the golden colour of the beer and the foamy head floating on top. ...
Root beer is a beverage made from a combination of vanilla, cherry tree bark, licorice root, sarsaparilla root, sassafras root bark, nutmeg, anise, and molasses among other things. ...
Michelangelos interpretation of Heaven Heaven is an afterlife concept found in many religions or spiritual philosophies. ...
Medieval illustration of the Mouth of Hell Hell is, according to many religious beliefs, a place or a state of painful suffering. ...
The term God is capitalized in the English language as a proper noun when used to refer to a specific monotheistic concept of a Supreme Being in accordance with Christian, Jewish (sometimes as G-d - cf. ...
In Western culture, skeletons are often the symbol of death. ...
This amount of editing led to characters' speech not matching what occurred on screen, unrealistic and twisted plots with major holes, and obviously altered images. These changes left many fans irate, and some Dragon Ball purists refuse to watch the American version of the show. One of the biggest points raised by critics of the editing of violence is that the removal of wounds, blood, and death from a show ultimately about fighting will encourage violence without showing any of the consequences. A purist is one who desires that a particular item remain true to its essence and free from adulterating or diluting influences. ...
Starting with the Ginyu Saga (3rd US season) on CN, censorship was reduced due to fewer restrictions on cable programming. FUNimation did the dubbing on their own this time around with their own voice actors, meeting again with mostly critical reactions. Some censoring, of nudity, however, was still unavoidable. Subsequent DVD and VHS releases of those episodes were not censored in any way. In 2003, Funimation decided to redub the first two sagas of Dragon Ball Z, to remove the problems that were caused from their previous partnership with Saban. They will also be redubbing the first three movies that were also dubbed by the Ocean Group voice actors but were distributed by Pioneer. It was recently announced that the distribution of the redubs will start in April 2005. The Ginyu Saga (also known as the Captain Ginyu Saga) is the name for the roughly the middle third of the much larger Freeza Saga in Dragon Ball Z, according to FUNimations naming conventions for the English language anime. ...
A voice actor (also a voice artist) is a person who provides voices for animation (including animated feature films, television series, animated shorts), radio and television commercials, audio dramas, dubbed foreign language films, video games, puppet shows, and amusement rides. ...
Nudity or nakedness is the state of wearing no clothing. ...
DVD is an optical disc storage media format that can be used for data storage, including movies with high video and sound quality. ...
Top view VHS cassette with US Quarter for scale Bottom view of VHS cassette with magnetic tape exposed The Video Home System, first released in 1976, better known by its acronym VHS, is a recording and playing standard for video cassette recorders (VCRs), developed by JVC (with some of its...
2005 : January - February - March - April - May - June - July - August - September - October - November - December- â Deaths in April ⢠26: Augusto Roa Bastos ⢠24: Ezer Weizman ⢠23: Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen ⢠23: John Mills ⢠16: Marla Ruzicka ⢠9: Andrea Dworkin ⢠6: Prince Rainier III ⢠5: Dale Messick ⢠5: Saul Bellow ⢠2: Pope John...
A very violent scene with the extended version of Freiza's impalement of Krillin during the Frieza saga was edited out on CN and merged with the other two episodes. non-graphic scenes such as the beginning (Krillin getting stabbed) and the end (Krillin getting thrown into the water) were kept in. All blood was removed from the already fixed and edited down version. Copies of the scene are viewable by purchase of the FRIEZA-TRANSFORMATION (Uncut version) DVD.
Creative Changes To an equal extent, many fans who object to censoring have taken issue with changes that are not seen as necessary, such as extraneous dialogue not found in the original, dubbing that sways the English version in its own creative direction (example: the TV audience booing Goku's appearance during the dubbed Cell Saga while cheering him in the Japanese series), and the replacement of the original musical score. Combined with a widely criticized quality of voice acting, many feel that the English version of Dragon Ball Z almost seems like an entirely different show than the original, and this has led many familiar with the Japanese series to dislike FUNimation's version.
Post 9/11 Shortly after the September 11 attacks, CN cut an episode of Dragon Ball Z where Gohan saves a plane from crashing, then later has to deal with a burning skyscraper office building, due to the obvious parallel imagery. Since the series is a continuing story, CN held off the rest of the 5th season until a few months later. The World Trade Center on fire The September 11, 2001 attacks were a series of coordinated terrorist attacks against the United States on September 11, 2001. ...
Filler In addition to censoring material from the manga, the anime version also includes other changes. Most of these changes are for time and to provide backstory to the occasionally terse manga. As the anime series was forced to expand 12 pages of manga text into 20 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 Afterlife tournament between the Buu and Cell Saga is a good example of this). They have also been known to contradict the manga and often create new plotholes. For example, during the Freeza Saga there is a flashback showing that Vegeta, Radditz and Nappa were already aware that Freeza destroyed their home planet long before the events in DBZ took place even though the series showed that Vegeta was not aware until Dodoria told him on Planet Namek.
Uncut Version In 2005, CN started showing the uncut and unedited version, meaning that what was edited and cut in the past is completely shown as it was for the Japanese by celebrating its appearance with a darker opening theme. The foamy water is actually beer, Piccolo's blood during the battle with Raditz is completely pure red blood whereas the edited version showed green, references to death and killing are heard and Master Roshi's lecherous attempts on Bulma are shown at their fullest. Very intense and brutal fighting is now clearly shown. There are also missing episodes not shown ever since Funimation edited them, such as young Gohan helping out a robot that refused to help him as an act of teaching him to take care of himself, and eventually saved his life before he shut down and died. Lunch is also shown now; she was edited out of 4 episodes of the older version because at the time they only dubbed the first 13 episodes of Dragon Ball, in which she did not appear. Other characters such as Kuririn, Piccolo, Tenshinhan, Chaozu and Yajirobe had also not been seen in those 13 episodes, but since they were important to the plot, they were not cut. Since Lunch was not as important to the plot, and her scenes included bank robbing, guns and alcohol, they decided to remove her. These scenes were restored in the new uncut version. In Dragon Ball Z, Lunch is constantly following Tenshinhan because she is in love with him. Other new scenes include the showing of Gohan's lower central area (albeit not detailed) and Goku's bare butt while bathing at Princess Snake's palace. The Saibamen are also more sadistic and the graphic scene in which Vegeta blows one in half is kept in. Shots of characters sticking up their middle fingers are left in, such as when Bulma flips off Emperor Pilaf (in a flashback to Dragon Ball) when Vegeta flips off Krillin and when Recoome flips off Goku. Another graphic scene that has been restored is when Goku is training in his ship on the way to Namek and shreds his hand on his training rope. Yet another one is when Vegeta decapitates Guldo and destroys his still-speaking disembodied head. Mild use of profanity is also heard. Here's a list of examples that have been heard so far: 2005 (Roman: MMV) is a common year starting on Saturday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
UNCUT magazine is a popular monthly publication based in London, which is available across the English speaking world, and focuses on films, music and books. ...
Muten-Rôshi (in English, the Invincible Old Master) is a fictional character in the manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z, and the anime Dragon Ball, Dragon Ball Z, and Dragon Ball GT. He is a human. ...
Teenage Bulma in the 3rd Dragon Ball Movie, Mystical Adventure Bulma (Romaji: Buruma, full name commonly accepted as Bulma Briefs) is a fictional Human who is the Dragonball seriess longest appearing female character. ...
A humanoid robot playing the trumpet In practical usage, a robot is an autonomous or semi-autonomous device which performs its tasks either according to direct human control, partial control with human supervision, or completely autonomously. ...
Lunch is a is a fictional character in the manga Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z and the anime Dragon Ball and Dragon Ball Z. She is known as Launch in the FUNimation dub and she is known as Marilynn in an English-language Dragon Ball dub from the 1980s. ...
Profanity is a word choice or usage which its audience considers to be offensive. ...
- Korin - "Give 'em hell, Goku!"
- Vegeta - "DAMN YOU, KAKAROT!" (after Goku blasts him in the eye while Vegeta is in Oozaru form)
- Vegeta - "See you in hell, Cui." (after killing Cui)
- Vegeta - "Damn. Just a fish." (after sensing a power level and finding that it was just a whale)
- Recoome - "Captain Ginyu's gonna be pissed." (after Vegeta kills Guldo)
- Jeice - "The crazy bastard killed him!" (after Vegeta kills Guldo)
- Burter - "Sucks for you."
- Vegeta - "See you in hell, Recoome!" (while blasting Recoome)
- Recoome - "I would be pissed, but..." (after Gohan and Krillin counter Recoome's attack)
- Recoome - "You just cost me big time - now I'm pissed. (to Gohan after letting his guard down)
- Jeice - "He's really pissin' me off!"
Profane language also includes numerous utterances of the words dammit, bastard and hell. Son Goku, transformed into an Oozaru. ...
Ending on October 10, 2005, the uncut version, which wasn't part of Adult Swim, was shown Monday - Thursday nights at 10:30PM EST. Starting Saturday, October 15, 2005, will be shown on Saturday nights at 7:30PM EST during Toonami. October 10 is the 283rd day of the year (284th in Leap years). ...
Adult Swim logo. ...
Saturday is considered either the sixth or the seventh day of the week, between Friday and Sunday. ...
Live Action Movie In 2002, a rumor surfaced on the internet claiming that 20th Century Fox had acquired the rights to make a live action Dragon Ball Z motion picture. This created a furor in the online fan community. Online forums were created for the express purpose of relaying rumors and "insider information" about the live action movie. Magazines like Beckett Dragonball Z Collector as well as the official DBZ website began to write surveys and polls soliciting fan input about casting for the live action movie. Several fan sites were created for the movie, though few had any verifiable information about the movie. Official news about the movie was primarily relayed through the official DBZ website or via the Internet Movie Database. In early 2004, production was halted, but in June 2004, screenwriter Ben Ramsey (The Big Hit) signed on to adapt Dragon Ball Z for the big screen. The movie is currently in development, though no director has signed on and no casting has taken place. There is currently no scheduled release date for the film. 2002(MMII) is a common year starting on Tuesday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
Fox Plaza, the company headquarters. ...
A collection of magazines A magazine is a periodical publication containing a variety of articles. ...
Quantum Leap A scene from Waiting for Godot, Becketts breakthrough play which was first performed in 1953. ...
The front page of the English Wikipedia website. ...
The Internet Movie Database (IMDb), owned by Amazon. ...
2004(MMIV) is a leap year starting on Thursday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
2004 : January - February - March - April - May - June - July - August - September - October - November - December See also: June 2004 in sports Deaths in June ⢠28 Anthony Buckeridge ⢠26 Naomi Shemer ⢠26 Yash Johar ⢠22 Bob Bemer ⢠22 Thomas Gold ⢠22 Francisco Ortiz Franco ⢠16 Thanom Kittikachorn ⢠10 Ray Charles ⢠5 Ronald Reagan...
The Big Hit is a dry comedy-action movie from 1998 which served as an acting vehicle for Mark Wahlberg and also starred Lou Diamond Phillips, with appearances by Christina Applegate, Avery Brooks, and Elliot Gould. ...
Senzu Senzu are small green beans which completely restore the strength of exhausted fighters. Eating just one bean will fill you for ten days. They are usually carried in a bag and often brought to fights as a safety precaution. One memorable usage of it includes a young Son Goku kindheartedly giving one to the then-evil Piccolo, despite his attempts to kill Goku. Not always effective. Notably, they had no effect on the deadly heart virus contracted by Goku in the Android Saga. The heart and lungs (from an older edition of Grays Anatomy) The heart (Latin cor) is a hollow, muscular organ that pumps blood through the blood vessels by repeated, rhythmic contractions. ...
See also This guide includes Episode Lists for Dragon Ball, Dragon Ball Z, Dragon Ball GT and their respective Movies and Specials, with both English and Japanese titles. ...
This is a list of fictional characters from the Dragon Ball manga and anime ( ), including the Dragon Ball Z movies ( ). Following some characters bio are external links that focus on that character. ...
The following is a list of animals that have appeared throughout the Japanese animes Dragonball, DragonBall Z, and Dragonball GT. The animals range from ordinary animals seen in real life, aliens, dinosaurs and other strange creatures. ...
The Z Fighters (also known as Z Warriors) are a group of fighting characters in the Japanese manga series Dragon Ball/Dragon Ball Z and anime series Dragon Ball Z who defend the Earth from major threats. ...
CHA-LA HEAD-CHA-LA is the first opening for Dragonball Z. It was used for episodes 1-199, movies 1-9 and Dragonball Z: Budokai. ...
WE GOTTA POWER is the second opening for Dragonball Z. It was used as the opening for episodes 200-291, movies 10-12 and DragonBall Z Sparking. ...
Dragon Ball (ãã©ã´ã³ãã¼ã«), created by Akira Toriyama in 1984, is a internationally popular teen and young adult franchise, though it is also popular in the United States among younger children. ...
External links |