See, this is why y'all should watch Otaku-aimed series, which don't have as much responsibility as a mainstream children's franchise.
Lord Beerus wrote:JulieYBM wrote:That was twenty-five years ago. Times have changed, Shin Seiki Evangelion and Cowboy Bebop have made it difficult to be violent in mainstream works. This film is aimed at international audiences, too, so this film has even less room to be violent. The idea is to make the least offensive movie possible, in every single last regard.
In hindsight, you're pretty spot on with this. But then you think of the insane success of Attack On Titan in the mainstream and that kind of mindset doesn't really apply. The same can be said for Kill La Kill, Fate/Zero, the live action Rurouni Kenshin films...
Shingeki no Kyojin airs at 11PM and isn't a massive marketing machine with solid roots amongst younger children, it makes its money off of older teens and adults.
Dragon Ball has the potential to be a continuous children's marketing machine, which will hold out longer than the adult fan base of
Shingeki no Kyojin and hold stronger international ties.
Kill la Kill and
Fate/Zero aren't nearly as popular as
Shingeki no Kyojin. Heck,
Kill la Kill isn't nearly as popular as
Fate/Zero, both of which aired at night and aimed at Otaku audiences.
The live action
Rurouni Kenshin films work under a guise of being 'historical' films, something
Dragon Ball cannot quite do. Being live action also gives them a leg up on an animated film, too.