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Giru

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Giru
ギル (Giru)
Giru
Giru has a keen sense of style.
English Name(s) Giru (Funi dub)
Gill (Funi subs)
Anime Debut Dragon Ball GT Episode 3
Created by Akira Toriyama
Japanese VA Shinobu Sato'uchi
Canadian VA Matthew Erickson
Funimation VA Sonny Strait
Personal Data
Aliases DB4649T2006RS
Meddling Robot
Classification Robot
v · d · e

Giru is a fictional character in the Japanese animated series Dragon Ball GT. Giru makes his debut in episode 3, which debuted on Fuji TV on 21 February 1996.

Biography

Giru is a machine mutant who consumes other machines for energy. His serial number is DB4649T2006RS.[1] He is a robot and has no gender, but his voice actors are male, and the English subtitles and dubs use male pronouns. In Dragon Ball GT, Giru refers to himself in the first person (as "Giru"), but in Dragon Ball Heroes, Giru uses the personal pronoun おいら (oira), a variation on 俺 (ore), a personal pronoun typically used by men.

Dark Dragon Ball arc

Katsuyoshi Nakatsuru's anime designs.[2]

Trunks, Pan, and Goku make an emergency landing on Planet Imegga. As they return to their spaceship after a failed attempt at buying replacement parts in the city, they decide to check to see if there is a Dragon Ball on this planet. When Trunks takes out the Dragon Radar, however, he is startled by a voice saying "Giru-giru-giru-giru!" He drops the radar, and it comes to rest on Giru, who is partially buried in the sand. Giru says the word "energy" (エネルギー enerugii), opening up to eat the Dragon Radar! Trunks panics, but Giru only says "replenishing energy..." Then Giru shoots up into the air, announcing that the replenishment is complete. He lands and does a few stretches, while Trunks demands that he return the radar. Giru explains that it has been converted to energy. Trunks does not want to accept this; they cannot find the Dragon Balls without the radar! Giru repeats "replenishment complete" to explain that it cannot be undone, and Trunks angrily grabs Giru by the arms, but then Pan points off in the distance, shouting. Their spaceship is being towed away! Trunks is so shocked, he loses his grip on Giru, who is now running away; Trunks chases after him, enlisting Pan in the effort, and then Goku pins him down with a foot. Trunks pounces, and then holds Giru up by the legs again.[3]

Giru's radar detects police approaching.

As the spaceship is towed away, Trunks loses his grip on Giru again; he tries to sneak away, but Pan catches him with her foot and ties him up in a handkerchief while he protests. She places Giru in her satchel and asks Trunks to hang onto it. Goku tries to teleport them to the tow trailer. This experience frightens Giru, but the attempt is unsuccessful; Goku only manages to teleport them a few feet away. After another failed attempt, Trunks realizes Goku simply cannot do it anymore now that he is in a child's body, so they go into the city on foot and sneak into the palace. When they get close to the spaceship, a rock falls on Trunks's head, causing him to fall over and alarming Giru. The commotion draws the attention of Don Kia's soldiers, so they stop sneaking around and steal the spaceship openly. They take it to a safe location to figure out what parts they need and then return to the city, but now they are wanted by the police. As they walk through the rain in the deserted city, hiding from the police, Giru alerts them; Trunks takes Giru out of the satchel and sees several red dots approaching on a radar, so he warns Goku and Pan to hide.[4]

As they discuss what to do next, Giru raises the alarm again. Pan tells him to be quiet, banging on him through the satchel, but then a woman emerges from a nearby house. She screams, alerting the police. They escape again, eventually falling through the roof of another house. The inhabitants of the house feed the Earth trio and inspire Pan to infiltrate Kia Palace again. They turn themselves in and, once inside, defeat the guards and confront Don Kia himself. His bodyguard Redict steps in to fight the intruders. Goku and Trunks both recognize Redict as a serious opponent; Giru is afraid and warns of danger. Trunks is quickly defeated, but Goku fights evenly with Redict who eventually forces him to take it to the next level. At that point, Giru informs whoever might be listening that Goku's energy is rising, and then Goku transforms into a Super Saiyan.

Giru becomes the Dragon Radar.

After Redict is defeated and Don Kia agrees to free the people of Imegga from their rental contracts, the Earth trio returns to their spaceship. They wonder how to search for the Dragon Balls without the Dragon Radar, and then Pan notices that Giru has escaped. Pan chases after him, reminding him that they are going to take him apart to get their radar back; pinning him underfoot, Pan tells him that if he does not want to get disassembled, he should spit it out. Giru protests that he is breaking; Trunks rushes to the scene, rescuing Giru from Pan's foot. Trunks explains that he feels sorry for Giru; Pan points out that he is just a machine, but Trunks tells her that machines with artificial intelligence are the same as humans. They may be made of metal, but on the inside, they still have warm hearts. Trunks asks Giru if he is okay, dusting him off; Pan asks Trunks what he plans to use as a Dragon Radar. Trunks does not know what to say, but then a panel opens on Giru's back, displaying the Dragon Radar! Trunks asks Giru if he can replicate the function of the Dragon Radar, too, and Giru confirms that he can. Just then, a Dragon Ball appears on the radar, along with precise coordinates, just to the north of Imegga![5]

Baby arc

Name

When asked for his name, Giru gives his serial number: DB4649T2006RS; the first part, at least, is a number pun: DBよろしく (DB yoroshiku), meaning "Dragon Ball best regards". The number four can be pronounced as よん (yon) or し (shi). The number six is ろく (roku) and the number nine is きゅう (kyū).

Goku decides they should call him "Giru" because he says giru-giru all the time. The utterance is probably meant to sound robotic; however, giru (ぎる) is a somewhat obscure Japanese word meaning "to swipe; to nick; to pilfer; to steal", and it is worth noting that the first thing Giru did after his introduction was to steal the Dragon Radar. He continues to pilfer things to eat throughout the series.

Production

Akira Toriyama's Giru designs.[6]

Giru was one of few Dragon Ball GT characters to be designed by Akira Toriyama. His design for Giru was originally printed in Weekly Shōnen Jump, with the following note:

WHO AM I?
One more companion traveling together with Goku, Pan and Trunks. It looks to be a robot, but apparently it only likes Trunks. Its abilities and role are as-yet unknown, but according to rumor, it apparently has the power of a Dragon Radar. That means...?!
Weekly Shōnen Jump, 1995 #52[7]

The design was reprinted in Daizenshuu 7, Chōzenshū 3, and the Dragon Ball GT Perfect Files, though the Perfect Files reprint lacks Toriyama's notes. It does however reveal Toriyama's tentative "name" for Giru.

An illustration drawn for a telephone card prior to the series' first airing. At the time, Giru's name had not yet been decided, so it seems Toriyama-sensei gave him the tentative name "Meddlesome Robot" (オジャマロボ Ojama Robo).
Dragon Ball GT Perfect Files, Vol. 1[8]


Notable Skills

Giru can convert machinery into energy, and he is sometimes able to subsume the functionality of the machines he converts, such as the Dragon Radar.

Performance

Giru is voiced by Shinobu Sato'uchi, who voiced a number of minor roles in Dragon Ball Z, Dragon Ball GT, and Dragon Ball Kai. In the Funimation English dub, Giru is voiced by Sonny Strait, best known as the voice of Kuririn.

External Links

References

  1. "Human Racial Dictionary". Dragon Ball Chōzenshū 4: Dragon Ball Super Encyclopedia. Japan: Shueisha, 09 May 2013. ISBN 978-4-08-782499-5. (p. 71)
  2. "Dragonball GT". Dragon Ball Chōzenshū 3: Animation Guide Part 2. Japan: Shueisha, 04 April 2013. ISBN 978-4-08-782498-8. (p. 24)
  3. "Super Greedy!! The Merchant Planet Imegga". Dragon Ball GT. Episode 3. Japan: Fuji TV, 21 February 1996.
  4. "Wanted!! Goku's on the Wanted List?!". Dragon Ball GT. Episode 4. Japan: Fuji TV, 28 February 1996.
  5. "Finding a Strong Guy!! The Bodyguard Redict". Dragon Ball GT. Episode 5. Japan: Fuji TV, 06 March 1996.
  6. "Dragonball GT". Dragon Ball Chōzenshū 3: Animation Guide Part 2. Japan: Shueisha, 04 April 2013. ISBN 978-4-08-782498-8. (p. 28)
  7. "Dragon Ball Super Illustrations". Weekly Shōnen Jump, 1995 #52. Japan: Shueisha, 11 December 1995. (p. 6)
  8. "GT Secrets: Planning Materials". Dragon Ball GT: Perfect File Volume 1. Japan: Shueisha, 24 May 1997. ISBN 4-08-874089-0. (p. 36)