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Review

by Zac Bertschy,

Dragon Ball GT

DVD 8: Salvation [Uncut]

Synopsis:
Dragon Ball GT DVD 8
Goku, out of power and out of time, is powerless against the malicious parasite Baby, who's using Vegeta's body to pummel both Goku and the Tuffle planet into submission. It'll take the power of four Super Saiyans, the will of Pan, and a whole host of last-minute saviors to take Baby out. Once he's finally defeated, Goku and Piccolo have a mere two weeks to save the Earth from total destruction! The clock is ticking…
Review:
As a children's show, Dragon Ball Z.

The typical Dragon Ball formula goes like this: Goku and his friends have to fight some evil alien being that threatens the entire galaxy. Each new threat is more powerful than the last. They spend a lot of time powering up and learning new attacks and shouting fightin' words at each other, and eventually, Goku and his friends win, usually after an entire planet has been destroyed.

Dragon Ball GT follows this formula to the letter. This time, they're fighting Baby, a parasite that uses the power contained inside a host body. Unfortunately, he's inhabiting the body of Vegeta, so in order to take Baby out, Goku has to smash apart Vegeta's body (rather, he has to take Vegeta's monkey tail off, which results in a hilariously inappropriate shot of Vegeta's rear with a freshly-blown hole. Goku literally rips him a new… well, you get the picture). In this volume, titled ‘Salvation’, Goku finally takes care of Baby, who he's been fighting for the last seven volumes or so.

The biggest complaint lodged at Dragon Ball is that the series takes forever to go anywhere and that the fights always last for hundreds of episodes. If you're interested in seeing just the climax of the first Dragon Ball GT story arc, you may want to start here. Having never viewed any of the earlier episodes, I picked up what was happening right away (it isn't a terribly complicated show) and was mostly entertained by the proceedings, probably because the storyline came to a head immediately and something else happened right afterwards. There wasn't a whole lot of powering up and yelling at each other. In of individual volumes, this is probably the best volume of GT available now.

Simply put, Dragon Ball GT is what it is. It's all about guys with huge muscles (although GT has re-introduced the concept of the characters literally turning into apes) spouting silly dialogue and powering up and shooing balls of light at one another. The end result is a fairly childish exercise in repetition that makes for stellar children's entertainment, but isn't good for much else, aside from keeping the little ones happy. As far as tournament fighting shows are concerned, there are entries in this genre that sur Dragon Ball GT in of character depth, development, design, and production value. Older fans will want to stick with classic favorites like One Piece.

From a production standpoint, it's clear that FUNimation has gone out of their way to polish this show as much as possible. The transfer on this DVD is crisp and flawless, despite some grain (which is to be expected of a show that's pushing ten years old). They've added their own music, which is a mixed bag. The opening rap song is ear-bleedingly awful, but as a child of the 1980s, I had to smile at the hilariously Def Leppard-esque guitar riffs they've added throughout the show. Electric guitars were just played differently back in the 80s, and even if it wasn't intentional, this series brings that style back.

The dub is professionally handled by seasoned voice actors who have now been dubbing Dragon Ball episodes for many years, and they seem to have really nailed down their characters. Obviously, Dragon Ball is a children's show, and the dub needs to reflect that. The characters might seem like they're overacting, but given what's happening on screen, anything less would seem understated, and there's absolutely nothing about Dragon Ball GT that would fit such a description. I do pity the show's English cast, though. There's more shouting and screaming in this series than anything else on the market right now. They must throw their voices out an awful lot. Here's hoping they keep plenty of lozenges on hand.

If you're a human male age nine to twelve, chances are one half of your room is covered in Dragon Ball paraphernalia, even if the Transformers, and it does an irable job of both entertaining and merchandising to today's youth. Anyone older than thirteen or so might find the proceedings immature and repetitive, but that's like a thirty-year-old complaining that the concepts taught by Sesame Street are far too simple. You'll either love this or hate it. There's very little gray area.
Grade:
Overall (dub) : B
Overall (sub) : B
Story : C
Animation : B
Art : B
Music : C

+ Good children's entertainment, professional dub.
Repetitive, cliched, and immature. Not recommended for anyone over 12.

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Production Info:
Series Director: Osamu Kasai
Series Composition: Aya Matsui
Screenplay:
Masashi Kubota
Atsushi Maekawa
Aya Matsui
Toshinobu Ooi
Junki Takegami
Daisuke Yajima
Storyboard:
Kōzō Morishita
Yoshihiro Ueda
Shigeyasu Yamauchi
Episode Director:
Junichi Fujise
Mitsuo Hashimoto
Takahiro Imamura
Hidehiko Kadota
Hiroyuki Kakudō
Osamu Kasai
Kazuhito Kikuchi
Yoshihiro Ueda
Shigeyasu Yamauchi
Music: Akihito Tokunaga
Original author: Akira Toriyama
Original creator: Akira Toriyama
Character Design: Katsuyoshi Nakatsuru
Art:
Tsutomu Fujita
Koji Sakaki
Tomoko Yoshida
Ryūji Yoshiike
Chief Animation Director:
Naoki Miyahara
Tadayoshi Yamamuro
Animation Director:
Yūji Hakamada
Kazuya Hisada
Takeo Ide
Akira Inagami
Shingo Ishikawa
Toshiyuki Kanno
Noboru Koizumi
Naoki Miyahara
Masayuki Uchiyama
Tadayoshi Yamamuro
Art design:
Tadanao Tsuji
Ryūji Yoshiike
Sound Director: Nobuhiro Komatsu
Producer:
Seiichi Hiruta
Koji Kaneda
Kōzō Morishita
Licensed by: FUNimation Entertainment

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Dragon Ball GT - Salvation (DVD 8)

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