Because they can.Piccolo Daimaoh wrote:I don't see why Canada should get their own dub, just because children hated Season 3 ten years ago.
The DBZ series was a big deal for the Vancouver cast. Throughout its duration, it used some of Vancouver's best veteran actors. It brought in a lot of money, and that's ultimately what this is about.
If Canada has the will and the means to produce its own dub, there's no real reason why it shouldn't. Plus, again, the DBZ dub was for international audiences (i.e. outside of Canada), and Kai will presumably be the same. The first 60 episodes of the Airwaves/Ocean DBZ dub never even aired in Canada. For reasons that are beyond the scope of this discussion, FUNimation's Dragonball properties are not sold to Europeans. The Canadian dub was a cheaper alternative that gave international audiences what they wanted (the original cast back). It was an easy sell. While it is now many years later, and yes, FUNi's product may have improved, it doesn't change anything. The Dragonball Z property has long been a big deal in Vancouver and by all accounts, the actors were pissed when they were screwed out of getting to dub Dragonball and Dragonball GT by Ken Morrison.
The quality of FUNimation's product is irrelevant, and always has been. It's about money. It isn't even so much that Canada wants its own dub, it's that there is enough demand coming from somewhere for a non-FUNi dub and a host of professional actors who want to do it. It just so happens that those actors are based in Vancouver.
And on a more personal level, I consider it better to have two dubs than one. No point in limiting your options if you don't have to.


