Dragon Ball Z: Dead Zone

Dragon Ball Z: Dead Zone, originally released theatrically in Japan as simply Dragon Ball Z and later as Dragon Ball Z: Return My Gohan!! (Japanese: ドラゴンボールZ オラの悟飯をかえせッ!!, Hepburn: Doragon Bōru Zetto Ora no Gohan o Kaese!!) for its Japanese VHS and Laserdisc release, is a 1989 Japanese anime fantasy martial arts film, the fourth installment in the Dragon Ball film series, and the first under the Dragon Ball Z moniker. It was originally released in Japan on July 15 at the "Toei Manga Matsuri" film festival along with the 1989 film version of Himitsu no Akko-chan, the first Akuma-kun film, and the film version of Kidou Keiji Jiban.

Dragon Ball Z the Movie: Dead Zone
Japanese poster art
Japanese name
KanaドラゴンボールZ (original title)
ドラゴンボールZ オラの悟飯をかえせッ!!
Transcriptions
Revised HepburnDoragon Bōru Zetto (original title)
Doragon Bōru Zetto Ora no Gohan o Kaese!!
Directed byDaisuke Nishio
Screenplay byTakao Koyama
Based onDragon Ball by Akira Toriyama
Starringsee below
CinematographyMotoaki Ikegami
Edited byShinichi Fukumitsu
Music byShunsuke Kikuchi
Production
company
Distributed byToei Company
Release date
  • July 15, 1989 (1989-07-15) (Japan)
Running time
42 minutes
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese
Box office¥1.36 billion (est.)

Despite continuity inconsistencies, Dead Zone acts as a prelude to the Dragon Ball Z television series and is the only film to get a follow-up within the series, that being the Garlic Jr. arc which takes place between Frieza and Android arcs. The canonicity of this arc is debated as it does not appear in the original manga.

Plot

Following his defeat by Goku at the 23rd World Martial Arts Tournament, Piccolo trains alone when he is caught in an ambush by a group of mysterious warriors. Chi-Chi, along with her father and son, Gohan, are attacked by the same group while Goku is away fishing. He senses the danger his family faces and returns to find that his son has been abducted.

The impish Garlic Jr. is responsible for the attack so that he could retrieve the four-star Dragon Ball that was attached to Gohan's hat. Garlic Jr. senses an immense power within Gohan, and decides to make him his pupil rather than kill him. After gathering the remaining six magical Dragon Balls, Garlic Jr. summons the eternal dragon Shenron and he wishes for immortality. Goku prepares to rescue his son when Kami, Earth's guardian, arrives and explains that centuries prior, he and Garlic Jr.'s father, Garlic, competed for the position of Guardian of the Earth and Kami was victorious. In revenge, Garlic unleashed a demonic horde onto the Earth until Kami defeated him and ended the invasion. Goku proceeds to search for Gohan when he is attacked by the villain's henchmen while Kami faces Garlic Jr.

Krillin and Piccolo arrive with the latter defeating henchman Sansho while Goku manages to defeat the other two henchmen, Ginger and Nicky. Meanwhile, Kami is bested by Garlic Jr. until Goku and Piccolo rescue him. With Garlic Jr.'s newly obtained immortality and a new, muscular form, the rivals Goku and Piccolo are forced to work together and are able to eventually defeat him. Still possessing disdain for one another and mistakenly believing Garlic Jr. to be dead, Goku and Piccolo prepare to fight when Garlic Jr. opens up a portal into another dimension; a void of darkness known as the Dead Zone. Gohan becomes enraged as he witnesses his father and friends in danger and releases his latent power, hurdling Garlic Jr. into his own vortex to be trapped for all eternity. Unable to recall the events, Gohan believes that his father defeated Garlic Jr. while Goku realizes his son has amazing hidden potential. Piccolo vows to defeat Goku while watching him and his friends depart.

Cast

Character Japanese English
Pioneer/Funimation/
Ocean Studios (1997)
Chinkel Post-Production/AB Groupe (c.2003)[1] Funimation (2005)
Goku Masako Nozawa Peter Kelamis David Gasman Seán Schemmel
Gohan Saffron Henderson Jodi Forrest Stephanie Nadolny
Piccolo Toshio Furukawa Scott McNeil Big Green Christopher R. Sabat
David Gasman*
Kami Takeshi Aono Ward Perry (Green) God
Ed Marcus
Kuririn Mayumi Tanaka Krillin Clearin Krillin
Terry Klassen Sharon Mann Sonny Strait
Garlic Jr. (ガーリックJr., Gārikku Junia) Akira Kamiya Don Brown Doug Rand Chuck Huber
Ginger (ジンジャー, Jinjā) Kōji Totani Terry Klassen Ed Marcus (some lines)
David Gasman
Troy Baker
Nicky (ニッキー, Nikkī) Shigeru ChibaPaul DobsonEd MarcusDoug Burks
Sansho (サンショ) Yukitoshi Hori Ward Perry Doug Rand
David Gasman (one line)
Ed Marcus
Eric Dillow
Ox King Daisuke Gōri Dave "Squatch" Ward David Gasman Kyle Hebert**
Chi-Chi Mayumi Shō Lisa Ann Beley Sharon Mann Cynthia Cranz
Shenlong Kenji Utsumi Shenron Sacred Dragon Shenron
Don Brown Ed Marcus Christopher R. Sabat
Bulma Hiromi Tsuru Lalainia Lindbjerg Bloomer Tiffany Vollmer
Sharon Mann
Kame-Sen'nin Kōhei Miyauchi Master Roshi Ed Marcus Master Roshi
Don BrownMike McFarland
Narrator Jōji Yanami Doc Harris Kyle Hebert

^* Toshio Furukawa's voice from the original Japanese version is retained in the AB Groupe dub at the beginning of this film, when Piccolo screams and destroys a large rock formation.

^** In Funimation's English credits, Christopher R. Sabat is miscredited as playing the Ox King, a mistake carried over to the 2006 dub of The World's Strongest.

Music

English dub soundtracks

The 1997 Pioneer release kept the original Japanese music.

There is a discrepancy that states the 2005 English dub score was composed by Mark Menza, which it was not. It was composed by Nathan Johnson. The Double Feature release that came out 3 years later in 2008 contains an alternate audio track containing the English dub with original Japanese background music by Shunsuke Kikuchi and an ending theme of "Come Out, Incredible Zenkai Power!".

Box office

At the Japanese box office, the film sold 2.2 million tickets and earned a net distribution rental income of ¥800 million.

International releases

North America

The film was licensed in North America by Funimation and the home video rights were sub-licensed to Pioneer Entertainment. Pioneer was released on VHS, LaserDisc, and DVD on December 17, 1997. They used the same voice cast as the TV series did at the time, and was dubbed by Ocean Productions. They released the film as Dead Zone. As a feature on the Pioneer DVD, deleted scenes from the original episodes 1 and 9 are shown in Japanese with English subtitles, as these two episodes were yet to be dubbed in full at the time.[2] Since then, Funimation released the film of the Rock the Dragon Edition set with Ocean dub on DVD on August 13, 2013, it has 53 edited episodes of the TV series, plus two edited films of The World's Strongest and The Tree of Might as they aired on Toonami.

Once their sub-license expired, Funimation released the film to DVD in "Ultimate Uncut Edition" on May 31, 2005, with completely new dub done by Funimation's voice cast and an feature film commentary.[3] There's also re-released the film on November 14, 2006 as part of a film set subtitled "First Strike", also containing The World's Strongest (1990) and The Tree of Might (1990). It was later released in Double Feature set along with The World's Strongest (1990) 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.[4]

Europe and Malaysia

AB Groupe, a French company that holds the license to the Dragon Ball franchise in most of Europe, licensed and dubbed the film, which they re-titled In Pursuit of Garlic.[5] This dub featured a voice cast that was unknown for years, but it is now believed that English-speaking voice actors in France were involved with this dub.[6] In Pursuit of Garlic aired on TV in the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, and Ireland, and was sold on DVD in the Netherlands by Bridge Entertainment Group in 2003.[7]

Speedy Video, a Malaysian-based company, released the film on Video CD, here subtitled The Vengeance of the Demon King. Speedy also released the Pioneer English adaptation on VCD. Both the AB Groupe and Speedy dubs are notoriously known for inaccurate translations (e.g. Piccolo was called "Big Green" in the AB Groupe dub) and dialogue that did not fit the mouth flaps.

Critical reception

GameFan magazine reviewed the DVD release in 1998 and gave it a B− rating.[8]

References

  1. "Dragon Ball Z: Big Green Dub Cast". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved 2020-03-24.
  2. Nishio, Daisuke (1997-12-17), Dragon Ball Z - The Movie - Dead Zone, Geneon [Pioneer], ASIN 6304677022
  3. Nishio, Daisuke (2005-05-31), Dragon Ball Z - The Movie - Dead Zone, Funimation Prod, retrieved 2016-04-14
  4. Dragon Ball Z: Movie Pack Collection One, Funimation Prod, 2011-11-01, ASIN B005HVWW3K
  5. "Kanzenshuu • View topic - Where to buy the "Big Green Dub" DVDs from?". www.kanzenshuu.com. Retrieved 2016-04-14.
  6. "Dragon Ball Z: Big Green Dub Cast - Behind The Voice Actors". www.behindthevoiceactors.com. Retrieved 2016-04-10.
  7. Back of DVD cover for In Pursuit of Garlic. Bridge Kids, 2003.
  8. "Dragon Ball Z the Movie: Dead Zone DVD". GameFan. Vol. 6, no. 4. April 1998. p. 89.
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