Rocketman wrote:Myths and legends are full of horrible, horrible people being complete assholes to each other. Why is it so hard to accept that about Dragonball? The bright pastel colors?
And the music, and the atmosphere, and the dialogue, and pretty much everything else about it. You genuinely think that Dragon Ball was
intentionally designed to be some kind of subversively cynical morality tale like the Grimm classics and that pretty much everything about it that suggests otherwise is just smoke and mirrors? I'd say you'd be better off accusing Toriyama of simply not realizing the fridge logic implications of what he was putting out as opposed to crediting him with crafting such an amazingly subtle commentary about the characters' ethics.
At most I can see Gohan's Super Saiyan 2 transformation being triggered by what was essentially a tragic childhood with #16's death simply being the last straw. But other than that, it seems like the overall story is pretty optimistic, at least the author seems to intend for us to interpret it that way. I
highly doubt that much of it was written with the idea of "let's hope the audience sees through the cheerful and optimistic overtones and figures out that I'm subtly implying that Goku is a horrible person and this is a crapsack world that demonstrates the cyclical nature of horrible parenting." Goku gets called out a few times by characters who are more level headed but I just can't see that as the standard by which we're meant to view him in total. If we
do view him that way in total thanks to the unfortunate implications, so be it. But that's different than what was intended. It's more like a side effect.
I'm all for juxtaposing happy imagery with horrible implications since, if anything, it makes for great comedy. Like I love how Abridged points out just how bad a father Goku is. And I actually think a deconstruction of the many Dragon Ball tropes could be pretty cool, comedic or not. But I
really don't see it happening in Dragon Ball itself. After all, it seems like Vegeta's entire purpose is to hit the audience over the head with "See! Goku is doing it right! He is the ideal, not this jerk over here!"