
Hello, ladies, gentlemen, and everyone between and beyond, and welcome to week 8 of the first Dragon Ball rewatch of the decade.
We're doing five episodes a week, and we'll be watching every single episode of Dragon Ball, Dragon Ball Z, and Dragon Ball GT. All 508 episodes. Plus the TV specials and the movies (more on that later, when we actually get there).
I encourage you all to watch in Japanese with subtitles, especially if you have never done so before, but watch along in whichever way brings you the most joy.
We're just two weeks out from the first movie!
We won't be watching any episodes that week, just the movie. I think that's a way to sort of get semi-break weeks so people who are behind can catch up. Plus it gives those of us watching all of them a slight break.
If anyone hates this idea, feel free to say so.
Previous thread: Week 7 (DB 31-35)
Next thread: Week 9 (DB 41-45)
Anyway, without further ado...
Episode 36 - The Terror of Muscle Tower
Dub title: Major Metallitron / The Battle With Sergeant Metallic
Originally aired 29th of October 1986
Episode director: Minoru Okazaki
Animation supervisor: Minoru Maeda
General White’s voice resounds throughout Muscle Tower. He provokes Goku as he ascends to the uppermost floor, where the mayor is. Goku defeats the soldiers on the second floor, and advances on to the third. The third floor was protected by the immortal giant, Sergeant Metallic! Goku has a hard battle against Metallic, who rises up again no matter how many times Goku knocks him down. He won’t stop, even after having his head blown off with a Kamehameha! It turns out he is a robot!! However, Metallic stops just as Goku is in a pinch. His battery had run out.
Anime-only/filler content: Suno waiting for Goku at the door of her house, general expansion of the Sgt. Metallic fight, including an early reveal that he's a robot.
Episode 37 - Enter Ninja Murasaki
Dub title: Ninja Murasaki is Coming!
Originally aired 5th of November 1986
Episode director: Kazuhisa Takenouchi
Animation supervisor: Mitsuo Shindo
After infiltrating the pitch black fourth floor, Goku is hit by Master Sergeant Murasaki’s ninja attacks. He has a difficult battle against these relentless attacks! But Goku reads Murasaki’s movement, and his attacks turn the situation around. Goku breaks through Murasaki’s ninjutsu, one after the other. Finally, Murasaki’s sword breaks! Murasaki challenges Goku to an unarmed match, and Goku puts away the Nyoi-Bō. Murasaki takes advantage of this opening to throw a boomerang shuriken. Goku is caught off guard, and is hit directly in the back of the head!! Goku is in grave danger!!
Anime-only/filler content: White sending off Murasaki (is a redo of a manga-accurate scene that closed out the last episode), White recalling Murasaki's reputation, Suno praying for Goku before bed, Goku finding Murasaki's location and hitting him with a rock, Murasaki's photo of a pair of women in their underwear, Goku finding Murasaki's raunchy magazines under the floorboards.
Episode 38 - Be Afraid!! The Art of Division
Dub title: Five Murasakis / Multi-Murasakis VS Goku!
Originally aired 12th of November 1986
Episode director: Yuji Endo
Animation supervisor: Masayuki Uchiyama
Unable to finish Goku off with the boomerang shuriken, Murasaki uses his final ninjutsu, Bunshin no Jutsu (Art of Division). Having somehow increased to five people, the Murasakis each take out their different weapons! Unable to tell which of them is the real one, Goku has no choice but to run! However, it turns out the Mursakis are merely a set of quintuplets. Now aware that they are all real, Goku uses Zanzōken to defeat four of them in the blink of an eye. With no other card to play, Mursaki calls forth Artificial Human No. 8!!
Anime-only/filler content: The village elder being served food in his cell, Goku being unable to hear Murasaki across the lake, Murasaki demonstrating the piranha's ferocious appetite, Suno's father telling the story of the monster in Muscle Tower.
Episode 39 - The Mysterious Artificial Human No. 8
Dub title: Mysterious Android No. 8 / Android No. 8
Originally aired 19th of November 1986
Episode director: Kazuhisa Takenouchi
Animation supervisor: Yukio Ebisawa
Artificial Human No. 8, who Murasaki summoned, turns out to have a gentle personality, and doesn’t like conflict. As Murasaki is about to destroy No. 8, who won’t listen to his orders, Goku blows Murasaki away with a single blow! Now Goku’s friend, #8 (Ha-chan) leads him to the uppermost level, floor six. Ha-chan tries to persuade White to stop doing bad things. But Goku and Hacchan fall through a trap door to the fifth floor. Down there is the lair of the monster Buyon!!
Anime-only/filler content: General White ordering all his guards after Goku, Suno worrying about Goku, a SECOND scene of Suno worrying about Goku, Goku defeating General White's guards in the maze, the moving wall controlled by General White, White guilting Ha-chan over who created him and trying to get him to kill Goku.
Episode 40 - Now What, Goku!! The Hair-Raising Buyon
Dub title: Horrifying Buyon / The Horrifying Buyon
Originally aired 26th of November 1986
Episode director: Yoshihiro Ueda
Animation supervisor: Tomekichi Takeuchi
Imprisoned on the fifth floor, Buyon is a monster who is completely unaffected by Goku’s techniques! His body can absorb any attack. Goku is in an absolutely desperate pinch!! But Goku destroys the wall, having remembered the time when he was frozen!! Buyon is frozen solid by the frigidly cold air!! After enduring the frigid air by huddling close to Hacchan, who is immune to the cold, Goku manages to shatter Buyon with a single blow!! Returning to the sixth floor, Goku attacks White.
Anime-only/filler content: Suno worrying about Goku and helping a Japanese Gobbo return to its family.
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Interesting trivia:
- As you might guess, despite the many proportional changes made to Muscle Tower, there's none that can actually fit Murasaki's forest inside, possibly the maze as well.
- Like many things, Muscle Tower was given a very radical re-design for the 10th anniversary movie in 1996, being instead a tall metal tower with many triangle-shaped airship landing platforms that's 50x taller. The original wasn't lost however! It's visible in one of the shots where the new tower is rising up out of the suno.
- The anime adds a POV shot of Sgt. Metallic in the style of The Terminator before the reveal he's a robot.
- The above shot has a second sci-fi reference: the text on the side is taken from Alien's MU/TH/UR, when Ripley first requests information about Special Order 937 before using an emergency override. It was likely it was put in under the assumption that Dragon Ball's target audience (Japanese boys) would be unable to read it.
- In Funimation's dub of the scene where Goku comes out of hiding from Sgt. Metallic, just after General White says "How could he dodge that!", you can hear the ADR director saying "very good".
- Goku encountering Buyon happens to be the point in time the manga was at when the anime first debuted on Japanese TV. The occasion was marked with Goku, Bulma, Oolong, Puar and Yamucha (sporting his 21st TB haircut) watching Episode 3 on a TV.
- Remember, Frankenstein was the SCIENTIST, not the monster!
- Ha-chan is a reference to Frankenstein's monster in more ways than one: both are peaceful in nature and don't understand the point in fighting.
- In the manga (Chapter 63), Toriyama accidentally refers to General White as "General Silver" in two instances; he'd apologize for the error on the title page of Chapter 65. This error was corrected for the collected volumes such as the Tankobon.
- Buyon could be seen as a reference to the Rancor from Return of the Jedi: both are hidden in a dark dungeon which the protagonist is dropped into via a trapdoor, and take several unsuccessful attempts by the hero to defeat.
- Buyon is also surprisingly similar to Majin Boo, being pink and having a body that absorbs any physical attack Goku is capable of.
- In the manga, the flashback to Suno on how to defeat Buyon wasn't totally accurate to the original scene: in the original scene, Suno is leaning on the armrest of the rocking chair in excitement. The anime doesn't exhibit this problem, as Toei simply recycled the original shot rather than recreating the flashback panel from the manga.
- In its original Japanese broadcast, episode 40's next-episode preview was half-length, with the other half being a promo for the then-upcoming first movie. (Can't find a clip of this, sadly)

