AjayLikesGaming wrote:To chime in on the whole 'is DBZ wuxia?' debate - I'd agree, Dragon Ball is certainly a straight up wuxia tale with all the fantastical elements of Journey to the West thrown in there. It's certainly not a parody of it since that would imply exaggeration for comedic effect. It's certainly funny but it's not because of an exaggerated take on wuxia - not as its primary form of humour at least.
What about that times where Krillin and Roshi did super-speed, and then spent several minutes explaining how they blew rasberries at each other as well as other ridiculous things? Or the time where Pilaf threatened Bulma with a kiss, and she was all "WOW, all you want to do is kiss me? You don't want a "grope grope" or a "suck suck" or anything like that to me? WOW, SOME VILLAIN YOU ARE! Or that moment where Roshi told Goku that he had to move a rock...only to have trouble moving it himself? Or heck, let's not forget Goku telling Krillin...
Goku: "Why're struggling against Bacterian? YOU DON'T EVEN HAVE A NOSE!"
Krillin: "Huh? Oh yeah, THAT'S RIGHT!!"
Point is, it may not be a straight-up parody, but parody makes up a heck of a large chunk of it, enough that I don't think you can really score it the same way you would score Dragon Ball Z.
As for Dragon Ball Z? It's certainly not straight up wuxia, that's for sure but the general premise is still in there, it's just more evolved. Goku fits the wuxia protagonist and whilst the focus moves away from traditional martial arts tournaments and heroes to huge planets and aliens, the general set up is still there in a certain form.
I certainly wouldn't feel comfortable calling DBZ wuxia in the same way as I would do DB simply because the plot elements that generally make up a wuxia tale simply aren't there but to say it's not wuxia at all is straight up incorrect.
Alright, fair enough. I just don't think you can say that it's innappropriate to have anything else there though.
My point is, Kikuchi's pieces have a more natural, visceral feel, a sense of "bigness" that doesn't come with the superficial attitude of a lot of modern sound (especially the droning of a lot of Faulconer's pieces). And they fit the operatic nature of the earth chewing combat, where the sky bleeds lightning and mountains crumble when the characters power up.
...I don't know though. Kikuchi sounds more like a Western soundtrack with Japanese instruments to me. It just doesn't seem bombastic enough to warrant "epic" or "operatic". Now Japanese GT on the other hand? Now THAT had some stuff that I would easily call bombastic. If anything,
that's the soundtrack that seems like something I would consider a better fit than Kikuchi.
I don't see how characters from another story equals parody. It's a nice shout out.
Really? To me, it seems like a good way of not having your story taken seriously. It'd be like having the Punisher show up as one of the soldiers in World War Z. Or having James Bond show up in The Bourne Ultimatum. Or having people from The Godfather show up in Slumdog Millionare. Or perhaps Connor Macleod showing up in Hancock. The two movies could be totally similar in tone, and it'd still be a good way of taking people out of the story. And it's fine for Dragon Ball since it wasn't what I would consider a serious story (for the most part), but it's not exactly something that helps build the credibility of a story...
DB has parody elements but it's not at its core a parody. Tao Pai Pai isn't hammy. How was murdering Bora hammy?
...but ok, that I'll give to you. I guess I kind of skipped over that part

. Oh yeah, and there WAS that bit with the shopkeeper.
Killing with his tongue was effective in showing how lethal he is.
...doesn't mean it's not silly. Heck, having Vegetto beating up Super Buu as a ball of superpowered candy was an effective way of showing how utterly screwed Super Buu seemed, but that doesn't mean it wasn't silly.
Rewatch the Red Ribbon Arc and you'll see that there's humor but it's not all just played for laughs. Red wanted to be tall, but Black shot him in the head and was Goku's final enemy. Not exactly a gag.
Alright, so at the end, things got serious with Black. But really, I define a story's overall tone by just how much comedy there is compared to action, and while a story can be both (like Huckleberry Finn for example), I believe that it has to have a relatively good mix of serious moments to silly moments, and while Dragon Ball does indeed have serious moments even before Tien...I don't think there's enough of them to counterbalance all the goofy stuff that goes on.
That said though, I will watch the Red Ribbon Arc rather than go by what VegettoEX says. I've either read or watched just about everything else, but that one is the one I'm the least familiar with. Still, I think it's kind of telling that much of the podcasts involved them laughing at the ridiculous stuff in there (or at least a lot more than in later volumes).
No, I would not consider "the vast majority of DB" to be what you think it is. I don't think Toriyama mocks or trivializes the wuxia genre.
Well, he doesn't TRIVIALIZE it...but I think he definitely mocks it at several points, with a few examples I listed near the top.