I’m actually not too crazy about when Breaking Bad uses background music where singing is involved either. Still, in that case, it is much less egregious than using early 2000s Nu-metal for some Japanese cartoons that came out in the early 90s. To be clear, on their own, I actually do kind of like a lot of the music they used, but they definitely don’t fit with the DBZ movies.Planetnamek wrote: ↑Sat Aug 15, 2020 7:17 pmYeah it's bizarre but for me it works and I wasn't comparing BB to DBZ at all, I was just responding to the guy who claimed he didn't like music with vocals in ANY film or TV series period as I thought that was a bit of an extreme line of thinking.Thanos wrote: ↑Sat Aug 15, 2020 7:09 pmA lesser of two evils, to be sure.Soppa Saia People wrote: ↑Tue Aug 11, 2020 4:26 pm and also ska is considerably better then nu metal.
I mean, if you're not interested creative works being preserved to respect the intent of the people who... ya know, actually created the thing, there isn't much to talk about here. I'm sure if Toei wanted to slap a heavy guitar song over Coola's power-up scene, that would have featured in the original airing. But it wasn't, so why add it? Shunsuke Kikuchi already wrote a number of servicable tracks that supplemented the feature over a decade prior. That "nu metal/alternative sound" didn't exist for another decade, and is heavily steeped in early 00's tuffguy American culture. Do you not see how bizarre it is to pair that with a Japanese cartoon from the early 1990's? Some things you just don't do. This is one of them. But they did it.Planetnamek wrote: ↑Fri Aug 14, 2020 6:14 pm I love that kind of Nu Metal/Alternative sound, so it was pure heaven for me. No it may not have been what Toriyama had in mind, but I thought they still fit pretty well. I think years of watching fans create their own music videos for DBZ convinced Funi that they might as well do it for them.
Right... but Breaking Bad wasn't dubbed twenty years after the fact with anachronistic music from another country. You know those scenes were shot and directed to have those songs played over them, right?Planetnamek wrote: ↑Fri Aug 14, 2020 6:14 pm I disagree heavily on that, there's a lot of films and TV shows that wouldn't have been half as effective without the placement of certain songs. There's lots of scenes in shows like Breaking Bad that would've had nowhere near as much impact if they didn't have a certain specific song playing.
I disagree that this is one of those things you just don't do, I think it's fine for what it is.
Besides later movies did lean heavily into this type of music even in their original versions with songs like this:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=trT-QaYV4NM So looks like Toei took influence from the English dubs in some way which is rather interesting.
In terms of the replacement scores that were used for the movies, I prefer something like Mark Menza’s score for Movie 6.