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: '''"[[Come Out, Incredible ZENKAI Power!]]"'''
: '''"[[Come Out, Incredible ZENKAI Power!]]"'''
:: Lyrics: [[Naruhisa Arakawa]] / Composition: [[Takeshi Ike]] / Arrangement: Kenji Yamamoto / Vocals: [[MANNA]]
:: Lyrics: [[Naruhisa Arakawa]] / Composition: [[Takeshi Ike]] / Arrangement: Kenji Yamamoto / Vocals: [[MANNA]]
: '''"[[Light's Journey]]"'''
:: Lyrics: [[Dai Satō]] / Composition: Chiho Kiyo'oka / Arrangement: Kenji Yamamoto / Vocals: Hironobu Kageyama & [[KUKO]]
: '''"[[The Blue Wind's Hope]]"'''
:: Lyrics: Dai Satō / Composition: Chiho Kiyo'oka / Arrangement: Kenji Yamamoto / Vocals: Hironobu Kageyama


: '''"[[We Were Angels]]"'''
: '''"[[We Were Angels]]"'''

Revision as of 16:40, 30 December 2014

This page is incomplete.
Kanzenshuu wiki team members are aware that they must edit this page to add missing information and complete it.
Reason: Plot and North American release information.
Dragon Ball
Dragon Ball Z
ドラゴンボールZ
Doragon Bōru Zetto
Original Run 26 April 1989 – 31 January 1996
Broadcast Fuji TV (Wednesday, 7:00 – 7:30PM)
Animation Toei Animation
Production Fuji TV
Toei Animation
Episodes 291 (List of Episodes)
Chapters Chapter 195 to Chapter 519
Main Staff
Series Director Daisuke Nishio
Series Organizer Takao Koyama
Planning Keizō Shichijō
Character Design Minoru Maeda (Chief Animator)
Art Design Tadanao Tsuji
Yūji Ikeda
Music Shunsuke Kikuchi
v · d · e

"Dragon Ball Z" is a Japanese animated television series produced by Toei Animation. The animated series is adapted from the final 325 chapters of the Dragon Ball manga series by Akira Toriyama, which was originally published in the Japanese manga anthology Weekly Shōnen Jump.

The anime series is comprised of 291 episodes and 2 television specials that were broadcast from 26 April 1989 to 31 January 1996 on Fuji TV.

Plot

History

Japan

As the Dragon Ball anime series approached one of the manga's major turning points, the anime staff approached Akira Toriyama about changing the name of the anime series to help change the "image" of the series. Thinking he would be ending the series sometime soon, Toriyama decided to signify this by simply adding the last letter in the alphabet to the series name. Little did he know that Dragon Ball Z would go on to be one of the most successful, popular, and recognized action anime series of all time.

Taking over the Dragon Ball time slot at 7:00PM every Wednesday on Fuji TV, the first episode of Dragon Ball Z aired on 26 April 1989. The main staff of the series remained relatively unchanged from its predecessor and they continued on right where they had left off the week before. The story picked up five years after the end of Dragon Ball, and would greater explore Goku's mysterious background. With each villain stronger than the last, the series' battles and popularity quickly escalated, reaching new heights. The series TV ratings were amongst the best in Japan, with Dragon Ball Z remaining in the "Top 10" rated animated shows during its entire run.

In May 1995, Toriyama announced he would be ending the manga series after 519 chapters, spelling the inevitable end for one of the most successfully popular action anime series of all time. After 291 episodes, 2 feature length TV specials, and 13 theatrical films, the Dragon Ball Z anime series came to an end when the final episode aired on 31 January 1996. However, Toei Animation had no intention of letting the fabled franchise die just yet and created an anime-only series of their very own — Dragon Ball GT.

North America

Characters

Main Staff

Themes & Insert Songs

Opening Theme

"CHA-LA HEAD-CHA-LA"
Lyrics: Yukinojō Mori / Composition: Chiho Kiyo'oka / Arrangement: Kenji Yamamoto / Vocals: Hironobu Kageyama
"WE GOTTA POWER"
Lyrics: Yukinojō Mori / Composition & Arrangement: Keiju Ishikawa / Vocals: Hironobu Kageyama

Ending Theme

"Come Out, Incredible ZENKAI Power!"
Lyrics: Naruhisa Arakawa / Composition: Takeshi Ike / Arrangement: Kenji Yamamoto / Vocals: MANNA
"Light's Journey"
Lyrics: Dai Satō / Composition: Chiho Kiyo'oka / Arrangement: Kenji Yamamoto / Vocals: Hironobu Kageyama & KUKO
"The Blue Wind's Hope"
Lyrics: Dai Satō / Composition: Chiho Kiyo'oka / Arrangement: Kenji Yamamoto / Vocals: Hironobu Kageyama
"We Were Angels"
Lyrics: Yukinojō Mori / Composition: Takeshi Ike / Arrangement: Osamu Totsuka / Vocals: Hironobu Kageyama

Insert Songs

"Aim to be the Greatest on Earth" (Episodes 19, 28, 86, & 95)
Lyrics: Takemi Yoshida / Composition: Takeshi Ike / Arrangement: Kyōda Sei'ichi / Vocals: Hiroki Takahashi
"Mysterious Wonderland" (Episode 29)
Lyrics: Takemi Yoshida / Composition: Takeshi Ike / Arrangement: Kyōda Sei'ichi / Vocals: Wonderland Gang
"The Dragon Ball Legend" (Episodes 30, 33, 35, & 76)
Lyrics: Izumi Onikado[1] / Composition: Takeshi Ike / Arrangement: Kyōda Sei'ichi / Vocals: Hiroki Takahashi
"The Son Goku Song" (Episode 43)
Lyrics: Kawagishi Asa / Composition: Shunsuke Kikuchi / Arrangement: Jinbo Masāki / Vocals: Masako Nozawa (Son Goku)
"Red Ribbon Army" (Episode 48)
Lyrics: Takemi Yoshida / Composition: Takeshi Ike / Arrangement: Kōhei Tanaka / Vocals: Wonderland Gang
"With a Blazing Heart: Defeat the Red Ribbon Army" (Episode 65)
Lyrics: Takemi Yoshida / Composition: Takeshi Ike / Arrangement: Yamamoto Kenji / Vocals: Wonderland Gang
"The Blue Travelers" (Episode 78)
Lyrics: Yuriko Mori / Composition: Takeshi Ike / Arrangement: Kyōda Sei'ichi / Vocals: Hiroki Takahashi
"Wolf Hurricane" (Episode 87)
Lyrics: Toshiki Inoue / Composition: Takeshi Ike / Arrangement: Kyōda Sei'ichi / Vocals: Tōru Furuya (Yamcha)
"The Teachings of Muten Rōshi" (Episode 130)
Lyrics: Takemi Yoshida / Composition: Shunsuke Kikuchi / Arrangement: Jinbo Masāki / Vocals: Kōhei Miyauchi (Kame-Sen'nin)

Episodes

Theatrical Films & Public Service Videos

Theatrical Films

Public Service Videos

Home Video Releases

Japan

VHS

Unlike many other countries around the world, the Dragon Ball TV series had no proper home video release in Japan following its initial television run. This was in large part due to the high VHS retail pricing at the time and the continuous re-runs of the series on numerous cable and satellite channels.

DVD Box Sets

Beginning in 2003, Toei Animation, in cooperation with the DVD manufacturing company Pony Canyon, began releasing a series of four box sets in Japan covering the entire Dragon Ball TV series property, which were dubbed the "Dragon Boxes". By mid-2005, all three TV series had been released, although out of chronological order, which marked the first time that any of these properties were available on a home video format in Japan.

Release Date Retail Episodes Chart Ranking
Dragon Ball DVD Box – Dragon Box 07 July 2004 ¥105,000 1-153 10th

Individual DVD Volumes

Following the release of the TV series Dragon Boxes, Toei announced the release of their individual discs, giving fans that didn’t own the Dragon Boxes a chance to own these properties. Unfortunately, these individual discs wouldn't contain any of the extras that came with the Dragon Boxes, but instead special diorama sets were created exclusively for those that purchased all of the individual discs.

Release Date Episodes Chart Ranking
Dragon Ball Volume #1 04 April 2007 1-6 8th
Dragon Ball Volume #2 7-12 11th
Dragon Ball Volume #3 13-18 13th
Dragon Ball Volume #4 02 May 2007 19-24 11th
Dragon Ball Volume #5 25-30 13th
Dragon Ball Volume #6 31-36 14th
Dragon Ball Volume #7 06 June 2007 37-42 13th
Dragon Ball Volume #8 43-38 14th
Dragon Ball Volume #9 49-54 15th
Dragon Ball Volume #10 04 July 2007 55-60 12th
Dragon Ball Volume #11 61-66 13th
Dragon Ball Volume #12 67-72 14th
Dragon Ball Volume #13 01 August 2007 73-78 20th
Dragon Ball Volume #14 79-84 21st
Dragon Ball Volume #15 85-90 23rd
Dragon Ball Volume #16 05 September 2007 91-96 13th
Dragon Ball Volume #17 97-102 14th
Dragon Ball Volume #18 103-108 15th
Dragon Ball Volume #19 03 October 2007 109-114 6th
Dragon Ball Volume #20 115-120 7th
Dragon Ball Volume #21 121-126 8th
Dragon Ball Volume #22 07 November 2007 127-132 15th
Dragon Ball Volume #23 133-138 11th
Dragon Ball Volume #24 139-143 14th
Dragon Ball Volume #25 05 December 2007 144-148 18th
Dragon Ball Volume #26 149-153 20th

North America

References

  1. Keizō Shichijō's Pen Name. Dragon Ball DVD Box "Dragon Box" enclosed Dragon Book interview.

External Links