Nippon Ijin Taisho 2007
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Nippon Ijin Taisho 2007
I was browsing my subscriptions today on youtube and found a video titled Dragon Ball Original Anime Nippon Ijin Taisho 2007. The video is a tournament with four contestants that takes place at the Tenkaichi Budokai, and the commentors are Goku and some other guy. The animation looks like a cross between One Piece and Dragon Ball Z, or atleast in my opinion it does. I'm not sure what exactly it was for, as the description is vague. Also, halfway through the video Goku promotes the new Dragon Ball DVDs, which I found hillarious.
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Those guys just broke every conceivable rule in the book... 
I think it's a tribute to Japan's greatest legends:
Saito Musashibo Benkei
Himiko
Amakusa Shiro
Shotoku Taishi

I think it's a tribute to Japan's greatest legends:
Saito Musashibo Benkei
Himiko
Amakusa Shiro
Shotoku Taishi
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Even though I generally prefer to wait for something in Japanese to be subbed before I watch it, I couldn't resist this, it was just awesome for so many reasons! It was funny, intriguing, and just plain classic; Goku pimping those DB DVDs alone is reason enough. It was so great to see Masako Nazowa reprise her role for this special, given her age and the fact the video games have been recycling her dialogue recordings of her characters from older releases, it was such a treat getting new stuff of her as Goku. I just loved this whole thing, the fanboy in me honestly made me tear up just seeing Goku smile and do commentary on the Kinto'Un.
Ya' know, that female character in the first battle really resembled you IMO, Jers. It'd kick ass if you cosplayed as her for a one-time day at a convention. ^_^Jerseymilk wrote:Her post
14 years later
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Watching the video now. Posting up some thoughts as I go.
-It appears this is a tournament for the mightiest "great person" throughout all of Japan's history.
-Ringside announcer is Masaharu Miyake, an announcer for Fuji TV. Goku provides guest commentary.
-First Match: Benkei vs. Himiko. Benkei was a warrior-monk who, through a series of matches, collected the swords of 999 opponents, before being defeated by Minamoto no Yoshitsune, who took him on as a retainer. He fought on the side of the Minamoto Clan in the Genpei War against the Taira Clan, as recounted in the Heike Monogatari. Himiko's origins are shrouded in obscurity - the first reference to her is in a Chinese text about the people of Wo (Wa, or Yamataikoku, or Yamato-no-Kuni), in which she figures as the Priestess-Queen of a group of fragmented clans. Some believe her to be the human basis for legends of Amaterasu, while others point to her as evidence that early Japanese society was possibly matrilineal. Nobody really knows for sure.
-Second Match: Prince Shotoku vs. Amakusa Shiro. Prince Shotoku was the Japanese ruler largely credited with the introduction of Buddhism and Chinese-style political and legal organization to Japan. He is credited in this match with being able to follow the separate conversations of 12 people talking at once, as well as the ability to hover tens of meters above the ground (both abilities likely culled from the Kojiki and/or Nihon Shoki). Amakusa Shiro was a leader of the Shimabara Rebellion, a failed uprising of mostly-Christian peasants against the Tokugawa Shogunate. His ability to understand languages he had never seen or heard before, as well as walking on water, are both pretty stereotypical abilities attributed to Christian converts by their proponents, and I wouldn't be surprised if the Jesuit monks promoting Christianity in Japan told people that he could do exactly those things.
-Heh, nice plug for the Dragon Ball individual DVDs in the middle, there.
-Third Match: Benkei vs. Prince Shotoku Benkei was said to be proficient with the Naginata, while his "hip drop" is a reference to the legend that a rock he sat on bears the impression of his hindquarters. The end of the fight is a reference to the story that Benkei died standing up. By the same token, Prince Shotoku was said to have been able to move so fast that no one could see him. He also is said to have had the ability to separate his spirit from his body and fly around. (Seriously, people actually believed this stuff at one time.)
Huh. That was shorter than I expected.
-It appears this is a tournament for the mightiest "great person" throughout all of Japan's history.
-Ringside announcer is Masaharu Miyake, an announcer for Fuji TV. Goku provides guest commentary.
-First Match: Benkei vs. Himiko. Benkei was a warrior-monk who, through a series of matches, collected the swords of 999 opponents, before being defeated by Minamoto no Yoshitsune, who took him on as a retainer. He fought on the side of the Minamoto Clan in the Genpei War against the Taira Clan, as recounted in the Heike Monogatari. Himiko's origins are shrouded in obscurity - the first reference to her is in a Chinese text about the people of Wo (Wa, or Yamataikoku, or Yamato-no-Kuni), in which she figures as the Priestess-Queen of a group of fragmented clans. Some believe her to be the human basis for legends of Amaterasu, while others point to her as evidence that early Japanese society was possibly matrilineal. Nobody really knows for sure.
-Second Match: Prince Shotoku vs. Amakusa Shiro. Prince Shotoku was the Japanese ruler largely credited with the introduction of Buddhism and Chinese-style political and legal organization to Japan. He is credited in this match with being able to follow the separate conversations of 12 people talking at once, as well as the ability to hover tens of meters above the ground (both abilities likely culled from the Kojiki and/or Nihon Shoki). Amakusa Shiro was a leader of the Shimabara Rebellion, a failed uprising of mostly-Christian peasants against the Tokugawa Shogunate. His ability to understand languages he had never seen or heard before, as well as walking on water, are both pretty stereotypical abilities attributed to Christian converts by their proponents, and I wouldn't be surprised if the Jesuit monks promoting Christianity in Japan told people that he could do exactly those things.
-Heh, nice plug for the Dragon Ball individual DVDs in the middle, there.
-Third Match: Benkei vs. Prince Shotoku Benkei was said to be proficient with the Naginata, while his "hip drop" is a reference to the legend that a rock he sat on bears the impression of his hindquarters. The end of the fight is a reference to the story that Benkei died standing up. By the same token, Prince Shotoku was said to have been able to move so fast that no one could see him. He also is said to have had the ability to separate his spirit from his body and fly around. (Seriously, people actually believed this stuff at one time.)
Huh. That was shorter than I expected.
Last edited by SaiyaJedi on Sun Apr 08, 2007 12:26 pm, edited 3 times in total.
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最近、あんまし投稿してないねんけど、見てんで。いっつも見てる。
最近、あんまし投稿してないねんけど、見てんで。いっつも見てる。
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I saw this a couple hours ago while wandering YouTube; I really enjoyed it.
But I'm happy to see any newly-animated dbz, even if its a short history-lesson like this.
I love the idea of Goku as a Tenkaichi Budoukai announcer/commentator; like how so many other athletes end up as announcers for the sport they used to play.
But I'm happy to see any newly-animated dbz, even if its a short history-lesson like this.
I love the idea of Goku as a Tenkaichi Budoukai announcer/commentator; like how so many other athletes end up as announcers for the sport they used to play.
Nice. Did Akira Toriyama do the characters design? Seems like his style of drawing...
[quote="SSj Kaboom talking about Future Gohan in BT3"]I feel sorry for Future Gohan.
Everyone's like, "What?! What are you doing with [b][i]two[/i][/b] arms?! You tear that off right now, mister!"
Poor guy.[/quote]
Lol'ed.
Everyone's like, "What?! What are you doing with [b][i]two[/i][/b] arms?! You tear that off right now, mister!"
Poor guy.[/quote]
Lol'ed.
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But......it *is* in DBZ style......sangofe wrote:Can't say I agree.KaiserNeko wrote:Dude, if there is another DragonBall Z movie, the animation needs to be in this style. This is PERFECT for DragonBall, Son Goku looked AWESOME.
I very much prefer him DBZ style.

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Interesting. It seems like something School House Rock would do today to make history more interesting. And yeah, Julian's explanations sure helped out. I wouldn't have gotten any of those references otherwise.
sidenote: Yay! Not only is Goku in it, but so is Mr. Announcerguy!
sidenote: Yay! Not only is Goku in it, but so is Mr. Announcerguy!
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