Dragon Ball Z: The World's Strongest (Japanese: ドラゴンボールZ この世で一番強いヤツ, Hepburn: Doragon Bōru Zetto: Kono Yo de Ichiban Tsuyoi Yatsu)[a] is a 1990 Japanese animated science fiction martial arts film and the second feature film in the Dragon Ball Z franchise. It was originally released in Japan on March 10 between episodes 39 and 40 of DBZ, at the "Toei Manga Matsuri" film festival along with the second Akuma-kun film (Welcome to Devil Land) and the 1990 film version of Sally the Witch. It was preceded by Dragon Ball Z: Dead Zone and followed by Dragon Ball Z: The Tree of Might.
Dragon Ball Z: The World's Strongest | |
---|---|
Directed by | Daisuke Nishio |
Screenplay by | Takao Koyama |
Based on | Dragon Ball by Akira Toriyama |
Starring | See below |
Cinematography | Motoaki Ikegami |
Edited by | Shinichi Fukumitsu |
Music by | Shunsuke Kikuchi |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Toei Company |
Release date |
|
Running time | 58 Minutes |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
Box office | ¥1.70 billion (est.) |
Plot
editGohan and Oolong search for the magical Dragon Balls and their radar shows them that the orbs are being gathered by another, unknown party. They investigate near a large wall of ice where Piccolo is training. Meanwhile, the mad scientist Dr. Kochin, having successfully gathered all of the Dragon Balls, summons the eternal dragon Shenron and wishes for Dr. Wheelo and his lab to be released from the ice. The ice breaks away as a building emerges and Gohan and Oolong are attacked by Dr. Kochin's "bio-men". Piccolo saves them but is overcome by three mysterious warriors while Gohan and Oolong escape.
Dr. Kochin and his bio-men soon present themselves to Master Roshi who refuses to accompany them to Wheelo's lab and defeats the bio-men. Dr. Kochin kidnaps Bulma to force Master Roshi to pursue them. At Wheelo's lab, Master Roshi is forced to fight three "bio-warriors" but is swiftly defeated. Bulma discovers that Dr. Wheelo's mission is to obtain the body of the strongest warrior on Earth to become the host for his brain, which is currently separated from his deceased body and kept alive by his advanced technology. Bulma informs him that Goku will undoubtedly be coming to rescue them and that he is much more powerful than Roshi. Meanwhile, Goku learns of situation and he arrives at Dr. Wheelo's lab and is confronted by Mikokatsun, Kishime, and Ebifurya – Dr. Kochin's three bio-warrior henchmen. Goku defeats Mikokatsun but is frozen by an ice-like attack launched by Ebifurya. Gohan and Krillin arrive to help but are no match for Kishime. Goku breaks free from ice with his Kaio-ken technique, defeats the two remaining bio-warriors, and confronts Dr. Wheelo. Piccolo, who has been brainwashed by Dr. Wheelo, attacks Goku. Gohan tries to stop Piccolo but fails, causing his anger to explode, shattering Dr. Wheelo's brainwashing device. Dr. Wheelo is stunned by Gohan's power and desires to steal his body instead. He breaks his robot body free from the ice wall, subsequently knocking Dr. Kochin down a shaft which kills him.
Dr. Wheelo attacks, overwhelms the fighters, and only Goku and Piccolo are left to oppose him. Goku knocks Dr. Wheelo into the atmosphere and begins to form a Spirit Bomb attack. Wheelo interrupts him before he can finish gathering the energy for it requiring Goku's allies to distract Wheelo. Goku's successfully launches the bomb and Wheelo is killed.
Cast
editCharacter name | Voice actor | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Japanese | English | |||
Pioneer/Funimation/Ocean Studios (1998) |
Chinkel Post-Production/AB Groupe (c. 2001)[1] |
Funimation (2006) | ||
Goku | Masako Nozawa | Peter Kelamis | David Gasman Ed Marcus (some vocal effects) |
Sean Schemmel |
Gohan | Saffron Henderson | Jodi Forrest | Stephanie Nadolny | |
Piccolo | Toshio Furukawa | Scott McNeil | Big Green | Christopher Sabat |
Paul Bandey Doug Rand (one scream) | ||||
Bulma | Hiromi Tsuru | Lalainia Lindbjerg | Bloomer | Tiffany Vollmer |
Sharon Mann | ||||
Kuririn | Mayumi Tanaka | Krillin | Clearin | Krillin |
Terry Klassen | Sharon Mann | Sonny Strait | ||
Oolong | Naoki Tatsuta | Alec Willows | David Gasman | Brad Jackson |
Chi-Chi | Mayumi Shou | Lisa Ann Beley | Sharon Mann | Cynthia Cranz |
Kame-Sen'nin | Kōhei Miyauchi | Master Roshi | The Old One | Master Roshi |
Don Brown | Ed Marcus | Mike McFarland | ||
Turtle | Daisuke Gōri | Scott McNeil | Doug Rand | Christopher R. Sabat |
Shenlong | Kenji Utsumi | Shenron | Dragon | Shenron |
Don Brown | Ed Marcus | Christopher R. Sabat | ||
Dr. Kochin (Dr.コーチン, Dokutā Kōchin) | Kouji Yada | Paul Dobson | Paul Bandey | Troy Baker |
Bio-Men (バイオマン, Baioman) | Kōzō Shioya Naoki Tatsuta |
Alec Willows | Doug Rand | Chris Cason John Burgmeier |
Ebifurya (エビフリャー, Ebifuryā) | Ken Yamaguchi | Don Brown | Paul Bandey | Matthew Tompkins |
Kishime (キシーメ, Kishīme) | Yukimasa Kishino | Paul Dobson | Doug Rand | Chris Rager |
Misokatsun (ミソカッツン, Misokattsun) | Daisuke Gōri | Ward Perry | Paul Bandey | Mikokatsun |
Robert McCollum | ||||
Dr. Willow (Dr.ウイロー, Dokutā Uirō) | Kōji Nakata | Dr. Wheelo | Doug Rand | Dr. Wheelo |
Ward Perry | R. Bruce Elliott | |||
Narrator | Jōji Yanami | Doc Harris | Ed Marcus | Kyle Hebert |
Although the Ox-King does not appear in this film, the 2008 version of the Funimation dub miscredits him as voiced by Christopher Sabat.
A fourth English dub, produced and released exclusively in Malaysia by Speedy Video, features an unknown voice cast.
Music
edit- OP (Opening Theme):
- "Cha-La Head-Cha-La"
- Lyrics by Yukinojō Mori
- Music by Chiho Kiyooka
- Arranged by Kenji Yamamoto
- Performed by Hironobu Kageyama
- "Cha-La Head-Cha-La"
- IN (Insert Song):
- "I Lo~ve Mr. Piccolo♡" (ピッコロさん だ〜いすき♡, Pikkoro-san Da~isuki♡)
- Lyrics by Chiroru Taniho [ja]
- Music by Takeshi Ike [ja]
- Arranged by Kenji Yamamoto
- Performed by Masako Nozawa
- "I Lo~ve Mr. Piccolo♡" (ピッコロさん だ〜いすき♡, Pikkoro-san Da~isuki♡)
- ED (Ending Theme):
- "The Battle" (戦(I・KU・SA), Ikusa (I•KU•SA))
- Lyrics by Dai Satō
- Music by Takeshi Ike [ja]
- Arranged by Kenji Yamamoto
- Performed by Hironobu Kageyama
- "The Battle" (戦(I・KU・SA), Ikusa (I•KU•SA))
English dub soundtracks
editThe Toonami version replaced "Cha-La Head-Cha-La" and "Ikusa" with Jeremy Sweet's "Rock the Dragon" but kept the original Japanese background music, including the insert song "I Lo~ve Mr. Piccolo♡". Home video releases of the Pioneer dub left "Cha-La Head-Cha-La" and "Ikusa" intact.
The score for the 2006 English dub's composed by Nathan Johnson. The Double Feature release that came out 2 years later in 2008 contains an alternate audio track containing the English dub with original Japanese background music by Shunsuke Kikuchi and the original ending theme, "Ikusa".
Box office
editAt the Japanese box office, the film sold 2.7 million tickets and earned a net distribution rental income of ¥1 billion.
Overseas in Europe, the film grossed $1,009,767 in Germany, Austria and Poland during 2002–2003.[2]
Releases
editIt was released on VHS and DVD in North America on May 26, 1998, with an English dub, produced by Pioneer Entertainment in association with Funimation. Pioneer's dub used the original Ocean Productions voice cast of the TV series. Since then, Funimation was released the Ocean dub of the film on the Rock the Dragon Edition DVD set on August 13, 2013, it has 53 edited episodes of the TV series, plus two edited films of Dead Zone and The Tree of Might as they aired on Toonami.
Once their sub-license expired, Funimation also released the film to DVD in "Ultimate Uncut Edition" on November 14, 2006 as part of a film set subtitled "First Strike", also containing Dead Zone (1989) and The Tree of Might (1990), with completely new dub done by Funimation's voice cast. It was later released in Double Feature set along with Dead Zone (1989) for Blu-ray and DVD on May 27, 2008, both feature full 1080p format in HD remastered 16:9 aspect ratio and an enhanced 5.1 surround mix. The film was re-released to DVD in remastered thinpak collection on November 1, 2011, containing the first 5 Dragon Ball Z films.[3]
Other companies
editOutside of the United States, there have been two other English dubs of this film: one in Malaysia and one by AB Groupe in France. The Malaysian English dub was released to VCD in Malaysia, while AB Groupe's English dub aired on TV in the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, and Ireland, as well as seeing a home release to VHS and DVD in some of the formerly mentioned countries. Both dubs use Toei's official English title rather than Funimation's title, and until recently, the voice cast of the AB Groupe dub version was unknown, but then it has been determined that they used voice actors who were involved in French TV shows like Code Lyoko, while the Malaysian dub's cast remains unknown.
Notes
editReferences
edit- ^ "Behind the Voice Actors". Archived from the original on 2015-10-08. Retrieved 2015-09-13.
- ^ "Dragon Ball Z: The World's Strongest". Box Office Mojo. Archived from the original on 28 June 2021. Retrieved 29 May 2020.
- ^ Dragon Ball Z: Movie Pack Collection One, Funimation Prod, 2011-11-01, archived from the original on 2015-12-31, retrieved 2016-07-04
External links
edit- Official anime website of Toei Animation
- Dragon Ball Z: The World's Strongest at IMDb
- Dragon Ball Z: The World's Strongest (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia