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Dragon BallGenre TVanimeDirected by Studio Network Original run No. of episodes Movies
The Main Characters of Dragon Ball
ドラゴンボール
(Doragon Bōru)
Shōnen, Adventure, Martial Arts, Comedy
Daisuke Nishio
Takao Koyama
Toei Animation
Japan Fuji TV, Animax
Colombia Canal Caracol,Citytv
United StatesCartoon Network, CoLours TV
CanadaYTV
Flag of Singapore Flag of Philippines Flag of Thailand Flag of Hong Kong Flag of Malaysia Animax
Flag of Philippines GMA 7, RPN 9, IBC 13
France TF1
Germany RTL II
Italy Italia 1
Mexico Canal 5
Chile Megavisión
United Kingdom Cartoon Network, CNX, Toonami
Portugal SIC, SIC Radical
Flag of Brazil SBT, Globo, Cartoon Network
Flag of Malaysia TV9, RTM 2 (Previously)
Flag of Argentina Cartoon Network
Flag of Spain Antena 3, Cuatro, Canal Sur, Cartoon Network, Telemadrid
Flag of Poland RTL 7, TVN Siedem
Flag of United Arab Emirates Spacetoon
Flag of Lithuania LNK
February 26, 1986April 12, 1989
153
  1. The Legend of Shenlong
  2. The Sleeping Princess in the Devil's Castle
  3. Mystical Great Adventure
  4. The Path to Ultimate Strength (10th Anniversary Special)


Dragon Ball is the first part of the anime adaptation of the Dragon Ball manga written by Akira Toriyama and published in Japan in the Weekly Shonen Jump manga anthology comic. The second (and larger) portion of the manga was adapted into Dragon Ball Z.
The Dragon Ball anime is composed of 153 half-hour episodes and ran in Japan from February 26, 1986 - April 12, 1989. Two early attempts at releasing Dragon Ball to American audiences failed. The first attempt was in the late 1980s by Harmony Gold. It featured strange name changes for nearly all the characters, such as changing Son Goku to Zero and Karin to Whiskers the Wonder Cat. It is not well-known, and has been referred to as "The Lost Dub" by fans. The second and more well known attempt was in 1995 with only the first 13 episodes translated and aired. This release was put out by KidMark and utilized Ocean Group for the dubbing. These original 13 episodes are still available on DVD as The Saga of Goku. After Dragon Ball Z became immensely popular on Cartoon Network, the entire series was translated by FUNimation and released in the same scheduling block as its successor on the network. The complete series ran in the US between August 20, 2001, and late 2003. Unlike the theme songs for Dragon Ball Z and Dragon Ball GT, FUNimation made English versions of the original Japanese opening (OP) and ending (ED) themes for these episodes and left in the original BGM, which was met with delight by most fans. However, some insert (IN) songs were removed or have dialogue dubbed over them.
Dragon Ball is known as being a much less serious anime than its successor, Dragon Ball Z, though later sagas blur the lines a bit.

Contents

[hide]


//

[edit] Sagas

Toei Animation's Sagas
  1. Son Gokū Appears! (Episodes 1~28) (2/26/1986~9/3/1986)
  2. Showdown! Red Ribbon Army! (Episodes 29~68) (9/10/1986~7/1/1987)
  3. White Heat! 22nd Tenkaichi Budōkai (Episodes 69~101) (7/8/1987~2/17/1988)
  4. Fierce Fighting! Piccolo-Daimaō (Episodes 102~132) (2/24/1988~11/2/1988)
  5. Struggle to the Death! 23rd Tenkaichi Budōkai (Episodes 133~153) (11/9/1988~4/19/1989)
FUNimation's Sagas
  1. Emperor Pilaf (Episodes 1~13)
  2. Tournament (Episodes 14~28)
  3. Red Ribbon Army (Episodes 29~45)
  4. General Blue (Episodes 46~57)
  5. Commander Red (Episodes 58~67)
  6. Fortuneteller Baba (Episodes 68~83)
  7. Tien Shinhan (Episodes 84~101)
  8. King Piccolo (Episodes 102~122)
  9. Piccolo Jr. (Episodes 123~153)

[edit] Movies, and other

Movies Toei Animation's titles
  1. The Legend of Shenlong
  2. The Sleeping Princess in the Devil's Castle
  3. Mystical Great Adventure
  4. The Path to Ultimate Strength
FUNimation's titles
  1. Curse of the Blood Rubies
  2. Sleeping Princess in Devil's Castle
  3. Mystical Adventure
  4. The Path to Power
Public Service Videos
  • Gokū's Traffic Safety
  • Gokū's Fire Fighting Regiment
The special videos "Gokū's Traffic Safety" and "Gokū's Fire Fighting Regiment" are both very rare productions designed to be educational films. They were both completed in June 1988.
Unofficial Chinese Live Action Movie
New Dragon Ball: The Legend of Shenlong is a live-action version of the popular Japanese animated series. An evil king has been stealing the mystical "Dragon Pearls" in an attempt to possess them all. When all but one of the pearls has been stolen, the former guardians of the magic jewels decide to band together and take action. Led by a pig-headed wizard and a half-turtle martial arts master, the team takes on the king's army in a desperate bid to stop him from gaining control of the pearls.
Made in Taiwan and released in 1989, this feature has actually been released in the US as Dragon Ball: The Magic Begins (originally titled Xin Qi long zhu Shen long de chuan shuo, or New Dragon Ball: The Legend of Shenlong). While this movie does not follow Toriyama's conception exactly, it is a lot closer to it than it is to any traditional Chinese legends.

[edit] Theme songs

  • OP
    1. Makafushigi Adobenchā!; 摩訶不思議アドベンチャー! ("Mystical Adventure!")
      • Lyrics: Yuriko Mori, Music: Takeshi Ike, Arrangement: Kōhei Tanaka, Performance: Hiroki Takahashi; he is not to be confused with the seiyu Hiroki Takahashi)
        • Version 1: episodes 1~101
        • Version 2: episodes 102~153 (not on FUNimation's DVDs)
  • ED
    1. Romatikku Ageru Yo; ロマンティックあげるよ ("I'll Give You Romance")
      • Lyrics: Takemi Yoshida, Music: Takeshi Ike, Arrangement: Kōhei Tanaka, Performance: Ushio Hashimoto)
        • Version 1: episodes 1~21 (not on FUNimation's DVDs)
        • Version 2: episodes 22~101
        • Version 3: episodes 102~132 (not on FUNimation's DVDs)
        • Version 4: episodes 133~153) (not on FUNimation's DVDs)

[edit] Censorship

The US version of Dragon Ball that was aired on Cartoon Network (before that, it was aired in syndication) had a lot of edits done to it. Most of the edits were digital cosmetic changes, which were done to remove nudity and blood, and dialogue edits. Sometimes, some scenes were deleted altogether, either to save time or cut out strong violence. For example, when Gokū dives into the water naked to kick a fish he catches for dinner, a digital water splash was added on his groin; on other occasions when he is naked, he has some digital underwear added. Also, references to alcohol and drugs were removed, for example, when Jackie Chun (Muten Rōshi) uses Drunken Fist Kung Fu in the 21st Tenka-ichi Budōkai, FUNimation called it the "Mad Cow Attack." Also, the famous "No Balls!" scene was deleted from episode 2, and when Bulma puts panties on the fishing hook to get Oolong (in fish form), they digitally painted away the panties and replaced it with some money.
While implied throughout the General Blue saga, Blue is finally revealed to be a homosexual during a scene in which he recoils at Bulma's seductive advances as she tries to distract him. Blue is further revealed to be a pedophile upon displaying sexual interest towards a young boy on Penguin Island, who stops to repair Blue's damaged car. All references to General Blue's sexual orientation were eliminated in the American TV release, and the scene involving the boy was redubbed to suggest that Blue believes to have found his long-lost younger brother.
Many of the changes were ill-received by long-time fans of the series, who believed the cable networks' censorship destroyed or diminished the original humor. These edits, however, were necessary in order to air on American TV. The DVDs do not contain these edits.
It's an interesting note on inconsistency in censorship that a scene in Dragon Ball where young Gokū charges completely through Piccolo Daimaō, putting a hole in the villain's chest, was edited so that the hole wasn't shown for the American broadcast, but the same scene was shown uncensored on American TV, in a flashback in a Dragon Ball Z episode, with the hole in Piccolo Daimaō's chest clearly visible.



[edit] Creative changes

A number of creative changes were made to the dialogue. For example, when Pu'ar says why Oolong was expelled from school, instead of saying that he stole the teacher's panties, they say that he stole the teacher's "papers."

[edit] Cast list

Character Name Voice Actor (Japanese) V.A. (FUNimation English) V.A. (Blue Water English) V.A. (Ocean Group English) V.A. (Harmony Gold English)
Son Gokū (Toriyama's spelling: Gokuh) Masako Nozawa
Stephanie Nadolny
Sean Schemmel
Zoe Slusar
Jeffery Watson
Scott Roberts
Saffron Henderson
Barbara Goodson
Bulma
Hiromi Tsuru
Tiffany Vollmer
Katie Rowan
Lalainia Lindbjerg
Wendee Lee
Muten Rōshi/Kame-Sen'nin
Kōhei Miyauchi
Mike McFarland
Dean Galloway
Michael Donovan
Greg Snegoff
Umigame (Sea Turtle) Daisuke Ghori
Christopher Sabat
Dave Pettitt
Alec Willows
???
Oolong
Naoki Tatsuta
Bradford Jackson
Jessie Cody
Alec Willows
Dave Mallow
Yamcha (Yamucha) Tōru Furuya
Christopher Sabat Victor Atelevich
Ted Cole
???
Pu'ar (Dub: Puar) Naoko Watanabe
Monika Antonelli
Eden Davis
Kathy Morse
Cheryl Chase
Chi-Chi
Mayumi Shō
Laura Bailey
Cynthia Cranz
???
???
Andrea Libman
N/A
Kuririn (Toriyama's spelling: Kulilin) (Dub: Krillin) Mayumi Tanaka
Lori Steele
Sonny Strait
???
???
N/A ???
Lunch (Dub: Launch) Mami Koyama
Monika Antonelli
Meredith McCoy
??? N/A Edie Mirman
Tenshinhan (Dub: Tien Shinhan) Hirotaka Suzuoki
John Burgmeier
Jonathan Love
N/A Eddie Frierson
Chaozu (Dub: Chiaotzu) Hiroko Emori
Monika Antonelli ??? N/A Rebecca Forstadt
Gyū-Maō (Dub: Ox King) Daisuke Ghori Kyle Hebert
Dave Pettitt
Dave Ward
N/A
Uranai Baba (Fortuneteller Baba) Junpei Takiguchi
Linda Young
??? N/A N/A
Emperor Pilaf
Shigeru Chiba
Chuck Huber
Dean Galloway
Don Brown
???
Shū (Dub: Shao) Tessho Genda
Chris Cason
Jessie Cody Doug Parker
???
Mai
Eiko Yamada
Julie Franklin
??? Teryl Rothery
???
Mr. Popo
Toku Nishio
Christopher Sabat Dave Pettit N/A N/A
Karin-sama/Neko-Sen'nin (Dub: Korin) Ichirō Nagai
Christopher Sabat Jessie Cody
N/A ???
Kami-sama
Takeshi Aono
Christopher Sabat ??? N/A N/A
Yajirobe
Mayumi Tanaka Mike McFarland ??? N/A N/A
Jinzōningen #8 (8-chan) Shozo Iizuka
Mike McFarland ??? N/A N/A
Commander Red Kenji Utsumi
Josh Martin
Mike Thiessen
N/A N/A
General Blue Toshio Furukawa
Sonny Strait Jessie Cody N/A ???
General White Tessho Genda Sean Schemmel ??? N/A N/A
Sergeant Metallic Shin Aomori
Chris Rager
Lucas Gilbertson
N/A ???
Colonel Violet Kazuko Sugiyama
Kasey Buckley
??? N/A N/A
Captain Silver Banjō Ginga
Christopher Sabat Adam Hunter
N/A N/A
Sergeant Purple (Ninja Murasaki) Takeshi Aono Duncan Brennan
??? N/A N/A
Boss Rabbit (The Carrotizor) Hiroshi Ootake
Duncan Brennan ??? Ian Corlett
N/A
Hasky Toshiko Fujita
Meredith McCoy ??? N/A N/A
T'ao Pai-pai (Taopaipai) (Tao Paipai) Chikao Otsuka
Kent Williams
??? N/A Michael McConnohie
Assistant Black Masaharu Satou
Christopher Sabat ??? N/A N/A
Tsuru-Sen'nin Ichirō Nagai Chuck Huber ??? N/A ???
Bora
Banjō Ginga Dameon Clarke
??? N/A ???
Upa
Mitsuko Horie
Carol Hope ??? N/A ???
Sno (Snow) (Dub: Suno) Naoko Watanabe Susan Huber ??? N/A N/A
Ghost Usher Ryouichi Tanaka ??? ??? N/A N/A
Piccolo Daimaō (Great Demon King Piccolo) Takeshi Aono Christopher Sabat Jonathan Love N/A N/A
Piccolo (Ma Jr.) (Piccolo Jr.) Toshio Furukawa Christopher Sabat Jonathan Love N/A N/A
Piano Masato Hirano
Christopher Sabat ??? N/A N/A
Drum Daisuke Ghori ??? ??? N/A N/A
Tambourine Ryuusei Nakao
Dameon Clarke
Adam Hunter N/A N/A
King Joji Yanami
Kyle Hebert ??? N/A N/A
Dr. Brief
Joji Yanami Chris Forbis
??? N/A N/A
Mrs Brief Mariko Mukai
Cynthia Cranz ??? N/A N/A
Nam
Kaneto Shiozawa
Jerry Jewel ??? N/A N/A
Giran Banjō Ginga Andrew Chandler ??? N/A N/A
Ranfan Youkou Kawanami
Laura Bailey ??? N/A N/A
Bacterian Yasuo Tanaka
Chris Rager ??? N/A N/A
Arale Norimaki
Mami Koyama ??? ??? N/A ???
Grandpa Son Gohan Osamu Saka
Christopher Sabat ??? N/A N/A
Annin Keiko Yokozawa
??? ??? N/A N/A
Tenka-ichi Budōkai Announcer Kenji Utsumi Eric Vale
Tommy James
N/A N/A
Shenlong (Dubs: Dragon God, Eternal Dragon, Shenron) Kenji Utsumi Christopher Sabat Dave Pettit ??? Michael Reynolds
Narrator
Joji Yanami Brice Armstrong
Steve Olsen
Jim Conrad
?



______________________________________
here for my poorly done dr slump logo(pivot animation)
Dr. Slump
wikipedia picture
Dr.スランプ
(Dr. Slump)
Genre
Comedy, Science Fiction
Manga
Authored by
Akira Toriyama
Publisher
Shueisha
Viz Media
Glenat
Planeta DeAgostini Comics
Carlsen Comics
Japonica Polonica Fantastica
Conrad
Serialized in
Shonen Jump
Shonen Jump USA

Original run
19801984
No. of volumes
18
TV anime : 1st series
Directed by
Minoru Okazaki, Shigeyasu Yamauchi
Studio
Toei Animation
Network
Fuji TV
TF1
Italia 1
Canal 5/Unicable
Etc...TV
TV2
TVC
TVE
Original run
8 April 198119 February 1986
No. of episodes
243
TV anime : 2nd series
Directed by
Shigeyasu Yamauchi
Studio
Toei Animation
Network
Fuji TV
TVC
Original run
26 November 199722 September 1999
No. of episodes
74
______________________________________\Dragon Boy
MangaAuthored by Publisher Serialized in Original run No. of volumes
Akira Toriyama
Flag of Japan Fresh Jump

19831983
1
Dragon Boy is a brief (two issue) "one-shot" Japanese manga by Akira Toriyama published initially by Fresh Jump anthology magazine in 1983. As of 2006, the manga has not been officially licensed for distribution in the United States.
Dragon Boy is best known for being a prototype for the much more popular Dragon Ball manga, begun the following year. It, like Dragon Ball, is a modern update of the Chinese folk novel Journey to the West. It also features many plot elements which will later be reused (largely in the first 13 chapters) of the Dragon Ball manga.
Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.
The manga is the story of Tanton, a Son Goku-like character (similar to Son Goku from Dragon Ball). Unlike Goku, his unique feature is bat wings on his back which allows him to fly. He goes on a quest to deliver a princess home to the Flower Country.
Plot elements reused in Dragon Ball: †
  • Tanton is a martial artist that is disconnected from the world at large, living with his master. (Except in Dragon Ball, Grandpa Gohan is already dead at the start of the story.)
  • Tanton's master rides a flying cloud. (Kintoun, in Dragon Ball)
  • Tanton has never seen a girl before and does some embarrassing things. (He doesn't know the difference between girls and boys.)
  • Tanton's master possess a "Dragon Ball", but unlike the Dragon Balls of the later series, these actually contain small dragons.
  • Tanton's female companion is a princess. In Dragon Ball, Bulma is the heiress to a corporate empire and is very wealthy.
  • Tanton meets up with an evil shapeshifting and flying cat. (Very similar to Puar, in Dragon Ball) He/she becomes a companion. Similar to Oolong, he/she can only transform for three minutes.
  • The princess pees in her pants.
† Some of these elements are themselves borrowed from Journey to the West.
Note: Names used in this article are based on a fan-translation done by Toriyama's World. If the manga is officially picked up for release in the US, names may be translated differently and this article will need to be updated accordingly.


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