Hades wrote:
I'd say it's better to tear fantasies apart than to entertain them.
I don't even know what to say to that.
At the risk of repeating what's been said,
Dragon Ball not about the "grim nature of reality" (or whatever you think reality is). It's a light-hearted shounen. Simple as that. Nothing more, nothing less. I could be wrong, but I doubt Toriyama set out to teach Life Lessons, either. He wanted to make a funny series about a monkey boy with poop jokes and cool fights. If you're trying to get ambiguity and "realism" from that, you're setting yourself up for disappoint and I question whether or not it's best for you to even invest time in the series at all.
Storytelling is a wonderful thing. And that's because there's so many different ways it can be done. It wouldn't be good if every story were super-positive and the "good guy always wins"...but if every story were also your "ideal" story, then that would just be on the opposite end of the spectrum and just as bad. And don't give me this BS about how Cinema and Fiction have "grown up". There have always been ambiguous stories, and one's with a blurred line between good and evil. The only reason there are more today, is just because there are more stories in general. More people are able to get out there and have their stories told to the masses, the things they've learned in life. Good stories, bad stories, happy stories, sad stories, they all exist. As they should. Not all of life is one big "grey" area. It's full of all kinds of colors and hues. There's some grey in there, yes, but it's only one part of the spectrum. The world a huge place, full of different experiences.
Stories and Movies/TV can be great teaching tools, but you can't expect them to do it 100%, either. When my kids watch this series in the future, of course I'll tell them it's not okay to be like Roshi, and you won't always defeat the "bad guys" in life like Goku&Co. do, but I'll also tell them things to keep from DB and series like it; Things like "not giving up", "Believing in yourself", etc. etc. Even when things don't go your way, which will happen a lot, and when there are people who don't life by a black/white sense of morals, which there will be a lot of, they need to stick to what they believe in. And keep fighting for their sense of justice.
I dunno, maybe I misread what you were saying and I just said something you already thought. And I sort of went off on a tangent, too. My fault. But you can't fault
Dragon Ball because Roshi doesn't get jail-time for being perverse...or because Goku doesn't question his morals enough. That's not the story it's trying to tell. Again, looking for that here is just setting yourself up for disappointment.
...I guess I did know what to say...
EDIT: Man...so many replies now...
Hades wrote:
It's better to go into life with low expectations. That way, you'll be disappointed less. Besides, how much of your life will you enjoy when you are spending most of your life working late in a dead-end job for a boss that you despise as an alternative to homelessness.
Life is full of disappointments and pain...but I'd rather go into it with an already positive attitude, than to just have my already low expectations met. And not everyone ends up with a dead-end job they hate. Some, I would actually say a good amount of people actually
do get to work in a job that they love.
Also, I love
Cracked!, but not every article on that site should be applied to everyone. I read one of the newer ones about being introverted...and it didn't apply to me back when I was that way.
Hades wrote: I didn't really buy Gohan and Piccolo's Character arcs since it just felt like generic Shonen "redemption" or "hard men making hard decisions".
Dragon Ball was the series that started a lot of those generic Shounen tropes.
Stop comparing DB to things like Spec-Ops and FMJ (Both which happen to be in the same genre of storytelling, yet a completely different genre than DB). Spec-Ops is a great game, and FMJ is an amazing movie. But the themes and tropes of those stories and that genre don't, and shouldn't, apply to all other genre's of storytelling. To think and judge as such is just being close-minded. The entire world isn't a war-zone (At least not until "they" make their move [/tinfoil]).