Speaking of production, I am curious to see what they do in the future. As of Toei's most recent financial report Dragon Ball is now their biggest money maker, it's a bit behind One Piece in Japan, but due to money coming in outside of Japan it is overall on top. Shueisha, Toei and Bandai likely want Dragon Ball's revival to last as long as possible and the crazy growth its seen in the past 3 years shows the strength of the brand. Bandai has recently made Dragon Ball games a big thing again and Shueisha recently created a division dedicated to Dragon Ball, both of them want this revival to last as long has humanly possible, but Super's production issues could complicate that. As much as I am very hopeful and feeling positive about a nice production improvement for the next arc I don't think thinks will be fixed with this arc. I think it's possible we see far more on model art and more staff, but the production will likely still have plenty of issues even if they aren't as readily apparent from the quality of the episodes and for Super to last as long as all the parties likely want it to last it needs to be a well oiled machine to ensure nothing disastrous happens. Some might say the money Dragon Ball is making is reason not to improve things for Super's production, but letting the production stay troubled for a series that could run for many years could completely ruin available staff, and they can't make a show without staff. I can understand why they haven't done anything too drastic to improve things before and simply made small improvements as they went, up until about 7 months ago they probably weren't entirely sure how long this revival for Dragon Ball would last so they might not have wanted to do anything drastic to improve production if the show was just going to end soon anyways, but now it's clear Dragon Ball is here to stay for the foreseeable future. I have to wonder if the 10 weeks of filler and the new directors are a "step 1" in making the show more easily sustainable and if we might see any huge changes in the future, maybe even as drastic as treating the arc after this one as a separate production with another new director and new writers, storyboarders/directors and even animators. I don't think that example is the most likely of things to happen, but who knows what lengths they might go to to make sure they can run Super for upwards of 10 years.
Saikyo no Senshi wrote:I may have overexaggerated but I'm not spreading misinformation. Sorry, but I've got to defend myself. It's ridiculous. When Hatano was 2nd credited I expressed my concern and I was met with "let's wait and see" responses. Now, he's gone and I'm met with yet again "let's wait and see" responses.
How many directors will have to leave before everyone realizes DBS is a disaster overall. 1 good episode doesn't mean the production is better. If anything you guys are being overly defensive. I'm not hating. It's like you're trying to stop conversations from happening by saying "let's wait and see". Why do we even judge DBS' other aspects then? Let's wait and see until it gets over to form an opinion on it. But, that doesn't stop people from judging, so why not about the production?
We will never know all the production details. We will never know who appointed who. The industry is pretty tight regarding these matters. So, that's not a good reason to stop people from trying to discuss and make educated guesses about the production. I'll happily admit that I was wrong if I turn out to be wrong.
I'm not trying to stop any conversations, I'm just bothered by the narrative going on right now. The "wait and see" attitude for Hatano Morio being listed second was because we didn't know just yet if he'd be leaving and Kohei was taking over, or if he was focusing on what's next while Kohei held down the fort for 10 weeks. Today's news adds a completely new wrinkle to the mix that could change a lot. Kohei's was indeed a temporary promotion, but not so that Morio could focus on what was next. Kohei may have been holding down the fort while Nagamine and Nakamura worked behind the scenes for the next arc, or maybe he was a temporary director while they found or prepped someone else. It's okay to be upset and worried about Morio's departure, but we have to wait and see what's going on because for all we know it might be a good thing for the series. That's why I want people to calm down and wait to see what happens, not because I want to shut down discussion, but because this is an odd move so different from the two scenarios that were postulated and we have no idea what it could mean. If Kohei was the sole SD as of 77 I would have become incredibly worried and probably pretty down on the show myself right now, but this news is more intriguing than worrying to me because it could mean any number of things, where as the narrative going around right now is focused on the most negative possibility because of past events even though this is different than what we've seen happen before with the show.