JulieYBM wrote: Sun Jan 21, 2024 4:27 pm
Well, yeah, hence the point I am continually making in threads like these:
Dragon Ball needs to break the rules of
Dragon Ball.
Dragon Ball isn't doing that. In his messy attempts at being #NotLikeTheOtherGirls, Toriyama has now built a series where characters aren't really as likable (particularly, the circular nature of Gokuu and Vegeta as characters).
A big problem with anime like Dragon Ball Super is that the staff either self-impose (or have imposed on them) this idea of never straying too far from the status quo, and never going to Toriyama and being like, "Hey, now you have to live with and work based off of our ideas, too." There's too much deference paid not simply to Toriyama the man, but Toriiyama the method of storytelling.
I've constantly maintained since 2015 that Super "playing it safe" and sticking itself inside the ten year timeskip between the defeat of Boo and the 28th Budōkai was a huge debilitating crutch. Why care about the stakes when we've known since 1995 that everything will be perfectly peaceful and everyone will be perfectly fine no matter what Super does? Why care about the threats of powerful new opponents when we've known for the last 25+ years that nothing bad will happen in the end?
Say what you will about GT (it absolutely has its problems of course, but overall I feel it handles the vast majority of its characters FAAAR better than Super), but at least it decided to place itself AFTER the end of the manga/Z where it had nothing holding it back from telling NEW stories that actually go NEW places and do NEW things, and actually did shit that had REAL consequences towards the story.
Characters grew old in GT, the kids grew up, and some of the characters actually either died for realsies, or just up and left. AND THAT'S INTERESTING. GT is a story that could fly around freely wherever it wanted; Super is a child pretending to fly because it's being held up in the air by its dad (the 28th TB epilogue) and can't "fly" any farther than the reach of its dad's arms. Which is ESPECIALLY ironic since, from what I've heard, Tōei initially was thinking of placing GT in that ten-year gap just like they eventually did with Super before they (thankfully) changed their minds. And it's not even like it's IMPOSSIBLE to tell a good story in a midquel... just like a prequel, it's difficult to make it truly MATTER, but it is ABSOLUTELY possible... it just requires stronger creative minds than the ones in charge of Dragon Ball Pooper.
It's the same thing Tōei's been doing with Digimon Adventure since Tri in 2015: placing every new story (aside from that GODAWFUL reboot series) in-between the 25 year timeskip at the end of Adventure 02. I despised Last Evolution: Kizuna because the whole emotional crux was "Oh no! Yamato and Taichi have to learn to grow up because Agumon and Gabumon fucking DIE!!"... which holds ZERO emotional weight because we've known since the final episode of Adventure 02 (that aired back in 2001!!!!) that Agumon and Gabumon happily and healthily survive well into their respective tamers' adulthoods.
It all just SCREAMS of Tōei and Shūeisha milking brand loyalty and nostalgia without putting in any effort to write truly impactful stories, simply because they're well aware that these franchises are far too huge and beloved and have INCREDIBLY strong fanbases who will throw infinite amounts of money at them no matter how terrible the content they spew out is.
And what's worse is that, even within those limiting confines that Super trapped itself in, there's still ten whole years that they COULD have turned into something interesting, but instead it's all just been... so disjointed. Like you said, there's this ridiculous adherence to the status quo and returning back to it after EVERY. SINGLE. individual story arc.
I'm sick of every story arc (this was an especially frequent problem in the Super TV anime) ending with all of the characters having a nice, fun cookout at Capsule Corp after EVERYTHING'S been neatly resolved and all the loose ends of each individual arc have been all tied up with no attempt to capitalize on the serialized nature of the narrative. No longer do we get things like "the 22nd TB is over, but Kuririn's dead!" There's no "Piccolo Daimaō is defeated, but he spat out a son and Shen Long's still dead!" No "we defeated the Saiyans, but all of our friends are dead! But guess what? There are more Dragon Balls in space!" No "we revived all of our friends and beat Freeza, but where's Gokū?" No "we defeated Super No. 17, but we can't revive Kuririn because the Dragon Balls are cracked and aren't working!"
Instead it's all just... "We beat the revived Freeza, now on to the next thing! We won the U6 tourney, now on to the next thing! We beat Zamasu, now on to the next thing! We won the ToP, now on to the next thing! We beat Moro, now on to the next thing! We beat Broli, now on to the next thing! We beat Gas, now on to the next thing! We beat Cell Max, now on to the next thing! And we celebrate with a big, happy barbecue dinner party just about every single goddamn time!" The original series had an arc end with a big, happy get together at Capsule Corp. ONCE... at the VERY end of the series (right before the ten-years later epilogue, at least), and even then, ONLY in the anime. We don't need it EVERY TIME.
And about the ONLY thing tying any of it together is the continued presence of Beerus and Whis (and Freeza for the last six years) just hanging out in the background doing ABSOLUTELY NOTHING except providing vague hints to Gokū and Vegeta as to how they can pull the next nonsensical clown wig transformation out of their asses with absolutely zero narrative buildup or explanation.
What's worse is that, a decade ago, I didn't mind whatsoever that
Yo! Son Gokū and His Friends Return and the God and God/Battle of Gods movie set themselves during that timeskip... because they were just single, standalone, cute little side stories and nothing more. I liked them and honestly still do. When Tōei made BoG, they did so with no intention of carrying the story much further, let alone starting a whole new endlessly ongoing series... until RoF made crazy bank at the box office two years later and they stupidly RUUUUSHED the Super manga and TV series into production... only to then still treat EVERY arc since like it's own single, standalone little side story... just not so cute anymore.
It reminds me of Kunzait_83's signature quoting Zephyr that says "Best we're going to get, and are getting, is a party that's almost entirely devoid of the magic that made the original one so awesome that we even want more." There's absolutely something (a LOT of somethings, really) missing in modern Dragon Ball content that was so beautifully present in the original run. Obviously Dragon Ball isn't some masterpiece of dark, dramatic, character-driven storytelling like something you'd expect from Scorsese or Fincher or Aronofsky or Herzog or Lynch or Bergman or Gilliam; it's still a silly children's fantasy martial arts series at the end of the day and always has been for its entire 40 years of existence... but godDAMNit, at least it USED to take SOME risks with its story and characters back in the 80s and 90s. Nowadays it's just a soulless, corporate franchise shitting out endless content for the sake of content (though, really, for the sake of shameless profit without regards to artistic integrity).
And possibly the most important factor is this: I just don't think Toriyama Akira himself cares anymore. He hasn't truly cared about Dragon Ball since 1995, and even then he was INSANELY burned out from FIFTEEN straight years of the weekly chapter grind. He ain't like Martin Scorsese who's EIGHTY fucking years old and yet just released Killers of the Flower Moon last year, which was a HUGE passion project that meant a lot to him personally, and it SHOWS in the film's quality. But, as you said, there's too much unquestioned deference towards this old man who barely gives a fuck about a series he ended 30 years ago, and not enough dissenting voices trying to honor his (mostly former) talents while still trying to make Dragon Ball GOOD and drive it into the future in bold, exciting new directions without having to constantly jangle member berries in front of fans' noses at every possibly opportunity.
I'd rather Dragon Ball have just stayed where it was in November 1997 with the (AMAZING) ending of GT (and honestly, I NEVER needed or even WANTED more Dragon Ball after that: GT's ending was damn near perfect, and after a whopping 508 episodes... a satisfying ending made the entire franchise feel complete and wrapped up with a nice pretty bow, and I never had any desire to ruin that by unwrapping it and stuffing a bunch of unnecessary new shit into that already overstuffed box) than watch in disappointment, indifference, apathy, and a twinge of the tiny little bit of sadness I have left that hasn't been completely eaten up by the apathy (I'm LOOONG since over being able to get angry at any of the stupid writing in Super) as this once-great franchise endlessly spins its wheels inside a limiting box that's sat around since 1995, returns to the status quo every five seconds, and lazily panders to nostalgia without ever really feeling like it's trying anymore.
We're in the age of the MCU where every fantastical story is expected to be part of some huge, ongoing, neverending money-making franchise machine, and it sucks. It sucks that there's almost nothing that's "mainstream" these days that can actually have a goddamn ENDING. Endings are often the most POWERFUL and impactful parts of any story, and we're in an age where films and TV shows and books and whatnot that still understand that are becoming increasingly more "niche". I know you, Julie, have recently talked about how you barely ever dip your toes in things that are considered "mainstream Hollywood productions" anymore, and I'm in the same boat. And it really sucks to see that kind of modern Hollywood mentality taking a stronger and stronger foothold in Japan.