Dragon Ball GT
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| Dragon Ball GT | |||
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| Original Run | 07 February 1996 – 19 November 1997 | ||
| Broadcast | Fuji TV (Wednesday, 7:00 – 7:30PM) | ||
| Animation | Toei Animation | ||
| Production |
Fuji TV Toei Animation | ||
| Episodes | 64 (List of Episodes) | ||
| Chapters | Anime Original Story | ||
| Main Staff | |||
| Series Director | Osamu Kasai | ||
| Series Organizer | Aya Matsui | ||
| Character Design | Katsuyoshi Nakatsuru | ||
| Art Design |
Tadanao Tsuji Ryūji Yoshīke | ||
| Music | Akihito Tokunaga | ||
"Dragon Ball GT" (often abbreviated as DBGT, or simply GT) is a Japanese animated television series produced by Toei Animation. The animated series is an original story and continuation of the Dragon Ball manga series by Akira Toriyama, although he had almost no involvement with its production. The 519 chapters of the Dragon Ball manga had been adapted into two preceding TV series: Dragon Ball and Dragon Ball Z.
The Dragon Ball GT TV series is comprised of 64 episodes and one feature length TV specials that were broadcast from 07 February 1996 to 19 November 1997 on Fuji TV. The series held an average household TV ratings share of 14.6%[1] during its initial broadcast run, with episode 2 receiving the highest rating share at 19.7%[1].
Plot
Five peaceful years have passed since Goku's victory over Piccolo in the 23rd Tenka'ichi Budōkai and his marriage to Chi-Chi, when a mysterious alien warrior arrives on Earth in search of "Kakarrot". The alien eventually finds Goku, identifying him as Kakarrot, and introduces himself as Goku's older brother, Raditz. He proclaims that Goku is actually a Saiyan, the strongest warrior race in the universe, that was sent to Earth to exterminate humanity. From here the series takes to the stars, with even stronger and stronger opponents appearing before Goku and friends.
History
Japan
North America
Characters
Main Staff
- Original Author: Akira Toriyama
- Planning: Kōzō Morishita (Toei Animation) & Kenji Shimizu (Fuji TV)
- Production Supervisor: Matsuji Kishimoto (1-58), Take Torimoto (59-109), Akihiko Yamaguchi (110-169), Yūichi Matsue (170-291)
- Series Organization: Takao Koyama
- Music: Shunsuke Kikuchi
- Chief Animator: Minoru Maeda (1-199)
- Character Design: Katsuyoshi Nakatsuru (200-291)
- Chief Designer: Yūji Ikeda (1-199), Tokushige Ken (200-291)
- Series Director: Daisuke Nishio (1-199)
- Producer: Kenji Shimizu (1-291), Kōji Kaneda (118-291)
- Art Progression: Minoru Nakamura (1-171), Haruo Tamura (172-192), Tomō Fukumoto (193-291)
- Editing: Shin'ichi Fukumitsu
- Recording: Kenji Ninomiya
- Sound Effects: Hidenori Arai
- Music Selection: Shigeru Miyashita
- Audio Director: Nobuhiro Komatsu
- Recording Studio: TAVAC
- Film Development: Toei Chemistry
- Production: Fuji TV & Toei Animation
Themes & Insert Songs
Opening Theme
- "CHA-LA HEAD-CHA-LA" (Episodes 1-199)
- Lyrics: Yukinojō Mori / Composition: Chiho Kiyo'oka / Arrangement: Kenji Yamamoto / Vocals: Hironobu Kageyama
- "WE GOTTA POWER" (Episodes 200-291)
- Lyrics: Yukinojō Mori / Composition & Arrangement: Keiju Ishikawa / Vocals: Hironobu Kageyama
Ending Theme
- "Come Out, Incredible ZENKAI Power!" (Episodes 1-199)
- Lyrics: Naruhisa Arakawa / Composition: Takeshi Ike / Arrangement: Kenji Yamamoto / Vocals: MANNA
- "Light's Journey" (1st TV Special; "A Final Solitary Battle")
- "The Blue Wind's Hope" (2nd TV Special; "Defiance in the Face of Despair!!")
- Lyrics: Dai Satō / Composition: Chiho Kiyo'oka / Arrangement: Kenji Yamamoto / Vocals: Hironobu Kageyama
- "We Were Angels" (Episodes 200-291)
- Lyrics: Yukinojō Mori / Composition: Takeshi Ike / Arrangement: Osamu Totsuka / Vocals: Hironobu Kageyama
Insert Songs
- "Battle-Colored Warriors" (Episode 20)
- Lyrics: Sakiko Iwamuro / Composition & Arrangement: Kenji Yamamoto / Vocals: Kōji Kaya
- "Fly High" (Episode 46)
- Lyrics: Sakiko Iwamuro / Composition: Chiho Kiyo'oka / Arrangement: Ken'ichi Sudō / Vocals: Hironobu Kageyama & Broadway
- "Solid State Scouter" (1st TV Special; "A Final Solitary Battle")
- Composition & Arrangement: Iwasaki Yasunori / Performance: Dragon Magic Orchestra / Vocals: TOKIO
- "Battle Point Unlimited" (Episode 120)
- Composition & Arrangement: Kenji Yamamoto / Vocals: MONOLITH
- "MIND POWER ...Energy..." (Episode 139)
- Lyrics: Sakiko Iwamuro / Composition: Chiho Kiyo'oka / Arrangement: Kenji Yamamoto / Vocals: Hironobu Kageyama & YUKA
- "Day of Destiny –Spirit vs Spirit–" (Episode 184)
- Lyrics: Sakiko Iwamuro / Composition: Chiho Kiyo'oka / Arrangement: Kenji Yamamoto / Vocals: Hironobu Kageyama
- "If I Don't Do It, Who Will?" (Episode 289)
- Lyrics: Yukinojō Mori / Composition: Tetsuji Hayashi / Arrangement: Osamu Totsuka / Vocals: Hironobu Kageyama
Episodes
Television Specials & Theatrical Films
Television Specials
- A Final, Solitary Battle: The Father of Z-Warrior Son Goku, who Challenged Freeza
17 October 1990 (Between Dragon Ball Z Episodes 63 & 64) - Extreme Battle!! The Three Great Super Saiyans – Special
Summer 1992 - Defiance in the Face of Despair!! The Remaining Super-Warriors: Gohan and Trunks
24 February 1993 (Between Dragon Ball Z Episodes 175 & 176) - We'll Show You Everything: Forget the Year's Cares with Dragon Ball Z
31 December 1993 (Between Dragon Ball Z Episodes 211 & 212) - Toriko × One Piece × Dragon Ball Z: Super Collaboration Special!!
07 April 2013
Theatrical Films
- Dragon Ball Z – Return My Gohan!! (15 July 1989)
- The World's Strongest Guy (10 March 1990)
- A Super Decisive Battle for Earth (07 July 1990)
- Super Saiyan Son Goku (09 March 1991)
- The Incredible Strongest vs Strongest (20 July 1991)
- Clash!! 10,000,000,000 Powerful Warriors (07 March 1992)
- Extreme Battle!! The Three Great Super Saiyans (11 July 1992)
- Burn Up!! A Red-Hot, Raging, Super-Fierce Fight (06 March 1993)
- The Galaxy at the Brink!! The Super Incredible Guy (10 July 1993)
- The Dangerous Duo! Super-Warriors Can't Rest (12 March 1994)
- Super-Warrior Defeat!! I'm the One Who'll Win (09 July 1994)
- The Rebirth of Fusion!! Goku and Vegeta (04 March 1995)
- Dragon Fist Explosion!! If Goku Won't Do it, Who Will? (15 July 1995)
- Battle of Gods (30 March 2013)
- Revival of "F" (18 April 2015)
Home Video Releases
Toei Animation (Japan)
VHS
Unlike many other countries around the world, the Dragon Ball Z 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 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dragon Ball Z DVD Box – Dragon Box Z Volume 1 | 19 March 2003 | ¥100,000 | 1-147 |
| Dragon Ball Z DVD Box – Dragon Box Z Volume 2 | 18 September 2003 | ¥100,000 | 148-291 |
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 |
|---|---|---|
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #1 | 02 November 2005 | 1-6 |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #2 | 7-12 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #3 | 13-18 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #4 | 07 December 2005 | 19-24 |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #5 | 25-30 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #6 | 31-36 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #7 | 11 January 2006 | 37-42 |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #8 | 43-38 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #9 | 49-54 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #10 | 01 February 2006 | 55-60 |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #11 | 61-66 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #12 | 67-72 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #13 | 01 March 2006 | 73-78 |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #14 | 79-84 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #15 | 85-90 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #16 | 05 April 2006 | 91-96 |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #17 | 97-102 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #18 | 103-108 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #19 | 26 April 2006 | 109-114 |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #20 | 115-120 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #21 | 121-126 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #22 | 07 June 2006 | 127-132 |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #23 | 133-137 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #24 | 138-142 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #25 | 05 July 2006 | 143-147 |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #26 | 148-153 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #27 | 154-159 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #28 | 02 August 2006 | 160-165 |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #29 | 166-171 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #30 | 172-177 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #31 | 06 September 2006 | 178-183 |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #32 | 184-189 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #33 | 190-195 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #34 | 04 October 2006 | 196-201 |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #35 | 202-207 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #36 | 208-213 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #37 | 01 November 2006 | 214-219 |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #38 | 220-225 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #39 | 226-231 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #40 | 06 December 2006 | 232-237 |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #41 | 238-243 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #42 | 244-249 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #43 | 10 January 2007 | 250-255 |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #44 | 256-261 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #45 | 262-267 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #46 | 07 February 2007 | 268-273 |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #47 | 274-279 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #48 | 280-285 | |
| Dragon Ball Z Volume #49 | 286-291 |
Pioneer & FUNimation (North America)
References
External Links
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