2008 Jodhpur stampede and Dragon Ball: Difference between pages

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{{pp-semi-protected|small=yes}}
{{Current|date=September 2008}}
{{Otheruses4|the media franchise|the Palm Pilot PDA microprocessor|Freescale DragonBall}}
{{Copyedit|date=September 2008}}
{{Infobox animanga/Header
| name =
| image = [[Image:DB Tankōbon.png|191px]]
| caption = First ''tankōbon'' volume, released in Japan on November 10, 1985
| ja_kanji = ドラゴンボール
| ja_romaji = Doragon Bōru
| genre = [[Martial arts (genre)|Martial arts]], [[Science fiction]]<!-- Do not modify the genre box by including others such as Adventure, Drama, Romance, etc. WP:MOS-AM tells us to use the most well-known genres! Any extra ones added to the box without community consensus on the talk page will be reverted and the user will receive a test warning! -->
}}
{{Infobox animanga/Manga
| author = [[Akira Toriyama]]
<!-- Please keep publisher information in alphabetical order by country name. Thank you! -->
| publisher = {{flagicon|Japan}} [[Shueisha]]
| publisher_en = {{flagicon|Australia}} {{flagicon|New Zealand}} [[Chuang Yi]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Canada}} {{flagicon|United States}} [[Viz Media]]<br/>
{{flagicon|United Kingdom}} [[Gollancz Manga]]
| publisher_other = {{flagicon|Brazil}} [[Conrad Editora]]<br/>
{{flagicon|China}} [[Juvenile & Children's Publishing House]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Denmark}} [[Carlsen Comics]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Finland}} [[Sangatsu Manga (Publisher)|Sangatsu Manga]]<br/>
{{flagicon|France}} [[Glénat (publisher)|Glénat]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Germany}} [[Carlsen Comics]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Hong Kong}} [[CitiComics]], [[Culturecom]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Hungary}} [[Semic Interprint]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Indonesia}} [[Elex Media Komputindo]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Italy}} [[Star Comics (Italian Publisher)|Star Comics]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Lithuania}} [[Grand Comics]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Malaysia}} [[Comics House]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Mexico}} [[Grupo Editorial Vid]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Netherlands}} [[Glénat (publisher)|Glénat]] ([[Studio de Raaf]])<br/>
{{flagicon|Poland}} [[Japonica Polonica Fantastica]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Spain}} {{flagicon|Portugal}} [[Planeta deAgostini]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Sweden}} [[Carlsen Comics|Bonnier Carlsen]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Taiwan}} [[Tong Li Comics]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Thailand}} [[NED comics]]<br/>
{{flagicon|South Korea}} [[Seoul Munhwasa]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Vietnam}} [[Kim Dong Publishing House]]
| magazine = [[Weekly Shōnen Jump]]
| first = 1984
| last = 1995
| volumes = 42
| chapter_list = List of Dragon Ball chapters
| demographic = [[Shōnen]]
}}
{{Infobox animanga/Anime
| title =
| director = [[Minoru Okazaki]] <br/> [[Daisuke Nishio]]
| studio = [[Toei Animation]]
| licensor = {{flagicon|Japan}} [[Pony Canyon]]<br/>
{{flagicon|United States}} [[FUNimation Entertainment]]
<!-- Please keep network information in alphabetical order by country name. Thank you! -->
| network = [[Fuji Television|Fuji TV]], [[Animax]]
| network_en = {{flagicon|Canada}} [[YTV (TV channel)|YTV]]<br/>
{{flagicon|United Kingdom}} [[Cartoon Network]], [[CNX]], [[Toonami (UK)|Toonami]]<br/>
{{flagicon|United States}} [[Cartoon Network]], [[CoLours TV]], [[Toonami Jetstream]], [[KIKU]]
| network_other = {{flagicon|Argentina}} [[Cartoon Network]], [[Magic Kids]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Basque Country}} [[ETB1]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Brazil}} [[Sistema Brasileiro de Televisão|SBT]], [[Globo]], [[Cartoon Network]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Catalonia}} [[Televisió de Catalunya|TVC]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Chile}} [[Red Televisiva Megavisión|Megavisión]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Colombia}} [[Canal Caracol]], [[Citytv]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Costa Rica}} [[Repretel 4]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Dominican Republic}} [[Telesistema Dominicano]]<br/>
{{flagicon|France}} [[TF1]], [[Télé Monte Carlo|TMC]], [[AB1]], [[Mangas (TV network)|Mangas]], [[MCM (French TV)|MCM]], [[NT1 (television)|NT1]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Galicia}} [[Televisión de Galicia|TVG]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Germany}} [[RTL II]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Hong Kong}} {{flagicon|Singapore}} {{flagicon|Thailand}} [[Animax]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Italy}} [[Italia 1]]<br/>
{{flagicon|India}} [[AnimaxIndia]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Lithuania}} [[LNK]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Malaysia}} [[TV9 (Malaysia)|TV9]], [[RTM2 (Malaysia)|RTM 2]], [[Animax]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Mexico}} [[XHGC-TV]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Philippines}} [[GMA 7]], [[Radio Philippines Network|RPN 9]], [[Intercontinental Broadcasting Corporation|IBC 13]],[[Animax]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Poland}} [[RTL 7]], [[TVN Siedem]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Portugal}} [[RTP1]], [[SIC (Portugal)|SIC]], [[SIC Radical]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Spain}} [[Antena 3 (Spain)|Antena 3]], [[Cuatro TV|Cuatro]], [[Canal Sur]], [[Cartoon Network]], [[Telemadrid]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Thailand}} [[Modern Nine TV]], [[iTV (Thailand|iTV]], [[Animax]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Turkey}} [[ATV Turkey|ATV]]<br/>
{{flagicon|United Arab Emirates}} [[Spacetoon]]
| first = February 26, 1986
| last = April 12, 1989
| episodes = 153
| episode_list = List of Dragon Ball episodes (series)
}}
{{Infobox animanga/Anime
| title = Dragon Ball Z
| director = [[Daisuke Nishio]]
| studio = [[Toei Animation]]
| licensor = {{flagicon|Japan}} [[Pony Canyon]]<br/>
{{flagicon|United States}} [[FUNimation Entertainment]]
<!-- Please keep network information in alphabetical order by country name. Thank you! -->
| network = {{flagicon|Japan}} [[Fuji Television|Fuji TV]], [[Animax]], [[Tokyo Metropolitan Television|Tokyo MX]]
| network_en = {{flagicon|Australia}} [[Network Ten]], [[Cartoon Network]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Canada}} [[YTV (TV channel)|YTV]]<br/>
{{flagicon|United Kingdom}} [[Cartoon Network (UK)|Cartoon Network]], [[Toonami (UK)|Toonami]]<br/>
{{flagicon|United States}} [[Cartoon Network]]
| network_other = {{flagicon|Argentina}} [[Magic Kids]], [[Canal 9]], [[Cartoon Network]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Basque Country}} [[ETB]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Belgium}} [[MCM (French TV)|MCM]], [[AB3]], [[Club RTL]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Brazil}} [[Grupo Bandeirantes de Comunicação|Band]], [[Cartoon Network]], [[Globo]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Catalonia}} [[Televisió de Catalunya]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Chile}} [[Red Televisiva Megavisión|Megavisión]], [[Etc...TV]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Colombia}} [[Cartoon Network]], [[Canal Caracol]], [[CityTv]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Costa Rica}} [[Canal|Repretel]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Dominican Republic}} [[Telesistema Dominicano]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Egypt}} [[Cartoon Network]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Finland}} [[Subtv]]<br/>
{{flagicon|France}} [[TF1]], [[Télé Monte Carlo|TMC]], [[RTL9]], [[AB1]], [[Mangas (TV network)|Mangas]], [[MCM (French TV)|MCM]], [[NT1 (television)|NT1]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Galicia}} [[TVG]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Germany}} [[Tele 5]], [[RTL II]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Greece}} [[ANT1]]<br/>
{{flagicon|India}} [[Cartoon Network]], [[Toonami]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Indonesia}} [[Indosiar]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Israel}} [[The Children's Channel]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Italy}} [[Italia 1]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Lithuania}} [[LNK (television station)|LNK]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Malaysia}} [[RTM2 (Malaysia)|RTM 2]], [[TV9 (Malaysia)|TV 9]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Mexico}} [[XHGC-TV]], [[Cartoon Network]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Netherlands}} [[Cartoon Network]]<br/>
{{flagicon|New Zealand}} [[TV3 (New Zealand)|TV 3]], [[Cartoon Network]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Pakistan}} [[Cartoon Network]], [[Toonami]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Peru}} [[Cartoon Network]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Philippines}} [[Radio Philippines Network|RPN 9]], [[Intercontinental Broadcasting Corporation|IBC 13]], [[GMA Network]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Poland}} [[RTL 7]], [[TVN Siedem]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Portugal}} [[SIC (Portugal)|SIC]], [[SIC Radical]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Singapore}} {{flagicon|Philippines}} {{flagicon|Thailand}} {{flagicon|Hong Kong}} {{flagicon|Malaysia}} [[Animax]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Spain}} [[Antena 3 (Spain)|Antena 3]], [[Cartoon Network]], [[Canal Sur]], [[Telemadrid]], [[Cuatro TV|Cuatro]], [[Televisió de Catalunya]], [[TVG]], [[ETB]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Thailand}} [[MCOT|Modernine TV]], [[TITV|ITV or TITV]], [[Channel 3]]<br/>
{{flagicon|United Arab Emirates}} [[Spacetoon]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Venezuela}} [[Televen]], [[Cartoon Network]]
| first = April 26, 1989
| last = January 31, 1996
| episodes = 291
| episode_list = List of Dragon Ball Z episodes
| episode_length = 30 minutes
}}
{{Infobox animanga/Anime
| title = Dragon Ball GT
| director = [[Osamu Kasai]]
| writer =
| studio = [[Toei Animation]]
| licensor = {{flagicon|Canada}} {{flagicon|United States}} [[Funimation Entertainment]]
<!-- Please keep network information in alphabetical order by country name. Thank you! -->
| network = {{flagicon|Japan}} [[Fuji TV]], [[Animax]]
| network_en = {{flagicon|Australia}} Network Ten, Cartoon Network<br/>
{{flagicon|Canada}} [[YTV (TV channel)|YTV]]<br/>
{{flagicon|United States}} [[Cartoon Network]]<br/>
{{flagicon|United Kingdom}} [[Toonami (UK)|Toonami]], [[CNX]]
| network_other = {{flagicon|Brazil}} [[Cartoon Network]], [[Globo]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Chile}} [[Red Televisiva Megavisión|Megavisión]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Colombia}} Cartoon Network [[Canal Caracol|Caracol]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Dominican Republic}} [[Telesistema Dominicano]]<br/>
{{flagicon|France}} [[TF1]], [[Télé Monte Carlo|TMC]], [[RTL9]], [[AB1]], [[Mangas (TV network)|Mangas]], [[MCM (French TV)|MCM]], [[NT1 (television)|NT1]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Germany}} [[RTL II]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Israel}} [[The Children's Channel]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Italy}} [[Italia 1]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Lithuania}} [[LNK]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Malaysia}} [[TV2 (Malaysia)|TV2]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Mexico}} [[XHGC-TV]], Cartoon Network<br/>
{{flagicon|Netherlands}} Cartoon Network, [[Yorin]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Peru}} [[America Television]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Philippines}} [[Radio Philippines Network|RPN 9]] , [[GMA Network]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Poland}} [[RTL 7]], [[TVN Siedem]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Portugal}} [[SIC (Portugal)|SIC]], [[SIC Radical]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Spain}} [[Antena 3 (Spain)|Antena 3]], [[Canal Sur]], [[Televisió de Catalunya|TVC]], [[ETB]], [[TVG]], [[Telemadrid]], Cartoon Network, [[Cuatro TV|Cuatro]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Venezuela}} [[Televen]]<br/>
{{flagicon|Thailand}} Modernine TV [[MCOT]]
| first = February 7, 1996
| last = November 19, 1997
| episodes = 64
| episode_list = List of Dragon Ball GT episodes
}}
{{Infobox animanga/Other
| title = Movies
| content =
# ''[[Curse of the Blood Rubies]]''
# ''[[Sleeping Princess in Devil's Castle]]''
# ''[[Mystical Adventure]]''
# ''[[The Path to Power]]''
# ''[[Dragon Ball Z: Dead Zone]]''
# ''[[Dragon Ball Z: The World's Strongest]]''
# ''[[Dragon Ball Z: The Tree of Might]]''
# ''[[Dragon Ball Z: Lord Slug]]''
# ''[[Dragon Ball Z: Cooler's Revenge]]''
# ''[[Dragon Ball Z: Return of Cooler]]''
# ''[[Dragon Ball Z: Super Android 13!]]''
# ''[[Dragon Ball Z: Broly - The Legendary Super Saiyan]]''
# ''[[Dragon Ball Z: Bojack Unbound]]''
# ''[[Dragon Ball Z: Broly Second Coming]]''
# ''[[Dragon Ball Z: Bio-Broly]]''
# ''[[Dragon Ball Z: Fusion Reborn]]''
# ''[[Dragon Ball Z: Wrath of the Dragon]]''


{{Infobox News event
|name=Chamunda Devi stampede
|image=
|caption=
|date=[[30 September]], [[2008]]
|time= 05:30 [[Indian Standard Time|IST]]<ref name="177 feared dead">{{cite web | url=http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/177_feared_dead_in_Jodhpur_temple_stampede/articleshow/3543100.cms | title=179 dead in temple stampede in Jodhpur | publisher=The Times of India | date=30 September, 2008 | accessdate=2008-09-30}}</ref>
|place=[[Jodhpur]], [[Rajasthan]]<br> {{IND}}
|notes=Stampede, crushed to death http://jonciaccio.deviantart.com/
|casualties1=197 dead <ref name="ITGO">[http://www.itgo.in/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&issueid=&id=13041&sectionid=5&secid=26&Itemid=1 Jodhpur stampede toll climbs to 197] India Today Group Online</ref> <ref name="179 dead temple stampede">{{cite web | url=http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/103_killed_in_temple_stampede_near_Jodhpur/articleshow/3543100.cms | title=179 dead in temple stampede in Jodhpur | publisher=Times of India | date=30 September, 2008 | accessdate=2008-09-30}}</ref>
|casualties2=400+ injured
|notes=Human [[stampede]], many suffered from [[asphyxiation]]<ref name="Sky" />
}}
}}
{{Infobox animanga/Footer}}
A '''[[stampede|human stampede]] http://jonciaccio.deviantart.com/ occurred on 30 September 2008 at the Chamunda Devi temple''' in [[Jodhpur]], [[Rajasthan]], [[India]]. The number of dead has been estimated variously at 113,<ref name="gle">{{cite web | url=http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5gsaqyS0pMwuaWNz8CvtvTOypBe8w | title=At least 113 dead in India temple crush: official | publisher=AFP via Google News | date=September 30, 2008 | accessdate=2008-09-30}}</ref> 147,<ref name="IBNLive">{{cite web | url=http://www.ibnlive.com/news/death-toll-rises-in-temple-stampede-147-dead/74652-3.html | title=Death toll rises in temple stampede, 147 dead | publisher=CNN-IBN | date=September 30, 2008 | accessdate=2008-09-30}}</ref> and 197.<ref name="ITGO" /> More than 425 were injured<ref name="gle" />. The 15th-century temple dedicated to the goddess [[Chamunda]] [[Devi]]<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.ndtv.com/convergence/ndtv/story.aspx?id=NEWEN20080067203 | title=Shrieks punctuate sombre atmosphere in Chamunda temple | publisher=NDTV | date=September 30, 2008 | accessdate=2008-09-30}}</ref> is located in [[Mehrangarh Fort]].<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.canberratimes.com.au/news/local/news/general/stampede-at-indian-temple-kills-at-least-89/1321449.aspx | title=Indian temple stampede death toll climbs | publisher=AFP via Canberra Times | date=September 30, 2008 | accessdate=2008-09-30}}</ref>
{{nihongo|'''''Dragon Ball'''''|ドラゴンボール|Doragon Bōru}} is a Japanese [[manga]] series written and illustrated by [[Akira Toriyama]]. Inspired by the Chinese folk novel ''[[Journey to the West]]'', the series follows the adventures of [[Son Goku (Dragon Ball)|Son Goku]] from his childhood through middle age as he goes through various trainings and the research for seven mystical objects known as the Dragon Balls, which are supposed to grant any wish.


The manga was serialized in the ''[[Weekly Shōnen Jump]]'' magazine from 1984 through 1995, and its 519 individual chapters were published into 42 ''[[tankōbon]]'' volumes by [[Shueisha]]. It is licensed for an English language release in North America by [[Viz Media]], in the United Kingdom by [[Gollancz Manga]], and in Australia and New Zealand by [[Chuang Yi]]. ''Dragon Ball'' was adapted into three [[anime]] series, seventeen animated feature films, three television specials, a [[Dragon Ball Z Collectible Card Game|collectible trading card game]], and a large number of [[List of Dragon Ball video games|video games]]. An American [[Dragonball (film)|live-action film]] began production in 2002 and is slated for release on April 10, 2009.
About 25,000 [[Hindu]] pilgrims were visiting the temple on the early morning of the first day of the nine day festival called [[Navratri]], a major festival dedicated to [[Devi|Goddess]] worship, in [[Hinduism]] celebrated across India and around the world.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5gsaqyS0pMwuaWNz8CvtvTOypBe8w | title=At least 113 dead in India temple crush: official | publisher=AFP via Google News | date=September 30, 2008 | accessdate=2008-09-30}}</ref>


''Dragon Ball'' is one of the most popular manga series of its time, and continues to enjoy high readership today. By 2000, more than 126 million copies of the manga series had been sold in Japan and by 2007, this number had grown to pass 150 million. The initial ''Dragon Ball'' anime was ranked number twelve in a list of the top one-hundred series in Japan. Several [[Mangaka|manga artists]] have acknowledged that ''Dragon Ball'' was an inspiration for their own works.
==Cause==
[[Image:Chamunda Devi Temple Jodhpur.jpg|thumb|200px|right|Chamunda Devi Temple, the location of the stampede]]
The devotees scrambled towards the door the moment it opened, resulting in the destruction of the barricades. Many people were injured when they lost their footing on the slope approaching the temple.<ref name="177 feared dead">{{cite web | url=http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/177_feared_dead_in_Jodhpur_temple_stampede/articleshow/3543100.cms | title=179 dead in temple stampede in Jodhpur | publisher=The Times of India | date=30 September, 2008 | accessdate=2008-09-30}}</ref>


==Plot==
According to ''[[The Times of India]]'', local reports suggest that a [[terrorist attack|bomb blast]] in nearby Mehrangarh created panic among the pilgrims resulting in the stampede.<ref name="179 dead temple stampede" /> However, the ''[[BBC News]]'' reported that a collapsing wall may have also caused the stampede.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/7643373.stm | title=Scores die in India temple crush | publisher=BBC | date=September 30, 2008 | accessdate=2008-09-30}}</ref> Some eyewitnesses told ''[[CNN-IBN]]'' that a rumor about a bomb being planted in the temple caused panic among pilgrims.<ref name="IBNLive" />
{{seealso|List of Dragon Ball characters}}
A monkey-tailed boy named Goku is found by an old martial arts expert who raises him as his grandson. One day Goku meets a girl called [[Bulma]] and together they go on a quest to retrieve the seven [[Dragon Ball (artifact)|Dragon Balls]], mythical objects that can summon a dragon who will grant any wish. Along the way, they meet and befriend a plethora of martial artists. They also undergo rigorous training regimes and educational programs in order to fight in the World Martial Arts Tournament, a tournament in which the most powerful fighters in the world compete. Outside the tournaments, Goku faces diverse villains such as [[List of Dragon Ball characters#Emperor Pilaf|Emperor Pilaf]], the Red Ribbon Army, a demon known as [[List of Dragon Ball characters#Piccolo Daimao|Piccolo Daimao]] and his offspring of the [[Piccolo (Dragon Ball)|same name]].


As a young adult, Goku meets his older brother, [[List of Dragon Ball characters#Raditz|Raditz]], who tells him that they come from a fictional race of extraterrestrials called Saiyans. The Saiyans had sent Goku to Earth to destroy it, but Goku had amnesia. Goku refuses to help him continue the mission, after which he begins to encounter other Saiyans who want to battle him, such as the Saiyan prince [[Vegeta]] and [[Frieza]], who is considered to be one of the strongest beings in the universe. After his encounter with Frieza, Goku begins training his first child, [[Son Gohan]], to be his successor. Years later, a group of soldiers from the Red Ribbon army known as androids appear to kill Goku. Another android, [[Cell (Dragon Ball)|Cell]], absorbs the Red Ribbon army to increase his power, then fights Goku and Gohan, resulting in the former's death. Goku is capable of returning to life, but decides to stay dead for seven years to train in the Other World. When he returns, he is drawn into a battle for the universe against an extraterrestrial named [[Majin Buu]]. Joined by Vegeta and Gohan, Buu is destroyed and Goku dies again. He is later revived by one of the gods from the Other World. Ten years later at a martial arts tournament, Goku meets Buu's human reincarnation, [[List of Dragon Ball characters#Uub|Uub]]. At the end of the manga, Goku takes Uub away on a journey to train him as another successor.
Others said there was a scramble in the men's queue; some devotees slipped and soon there was a massive resultant stampede where a day of celebration turned into one of mourning.<ref name="hindu"/>


===Anime sequel===
An eyewitness also said that the path leading to the temple was very narrow with no emergency exit routes.<ref name="Sky">{{cite web | url=http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/World-News/Dozens-Of-Hindu-Devotees-Killed-In-a-Temple-Stampede-In-Jaipr-India/Article/200809415109887?lpos=World_News_Carousel_Region_2&lid=ARTICLE_15109887_Dozens_Of_Hindu_Devotees_Killed_In_a_Temple_Stampede_In_Jaipr%2C_India | title=Dozens Crushed In Deadly Stampede | author=Crawford, Alex | publisher=Sky News | date=September 30, 2008 | accessdate=2008-09-30}}</ref> [[District collector]] Naresh Pal Gangwar said "There was a ramp and that collapsed, and people slipped causing chaos and suffocation."<ref name="hindu"/>
In the anime ''Dragon Ball GT'', which is not directly based on the manga, Goku is turned back into a child by the Black-Star Dragon Balls and is forced to travel across the universe to retrieve them. While in space, he encounters the evil artificial Tuffle, Baby, who wants to destroy the Saiyan race. Goku fights him, but is defeated and his tail destroyed. After his tail is regenerated, he achieves the level of [[Super Saiyan]] 4 and destroys Baby, propelling him into the sun with a ''Kamehameha''. After Baby's defeat, Dr. Myuu, a combination of machine and human, creates a replica of [[Android 17]], fuses it with the original Android 17, creating Super 17. Super 17 seems impervious to Goku's attacks, but when [[Android 18]] attacks him for killing [[Krillin]], Goku is able to take advantage of the distraction to find a way to penetrate Super 17 and destroy it.


Due to overuse of the Dragon Balls, seven Evil Dragons were created. All but the most powerful, Syn Shenron, are defeated. When Shenron appears to be losing, he absorbs the Dragon Balls and gains enough power to become Omega Shenron and overwhelm Goku. Eventually, using the energy of every living being in the universe, Goku makes a Spirit Bomb powerful enough to destroy Omega Shenron.
==Aftermath==
Television footage showed frantic people trying to revive unconscious devotees by compressing their chests.<ref name="Sky" /> The Divisional Commissioner for Jodhpur said that of those dead, 30 bodies were brought to Mahatma Gandhi Hospital and 10 were taken to Mathura Das Hospital.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.hindustantimes.com/StoryPage/StoryPage.aspx?sectionName=HomePage&id=70e151cf-9c04-4daa-af1f-538a7eed5d3e&&Headline=Stampede+at+Chamunda+Devi+temple+kills+50 | title=At least 113 dead in India temple stampede: official | author=Sharma, Sangeeta | publisher=AFP via The Hindustan Times | date=September 30, 2008 | accessdate=2008-09-30}}</ref> Later on, more than 400 injured devotees were admitted in seven hospitals across Jodhpur.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.ndtv.com/convergence/ndtv/story.aspx?id=NEWEN20080067197 | title=List of hospitals where injured have been admitted | publisher=NDTV | date=September 30, 2008 | accessdate=2008-09-30}}</ref> According to reports, there is a shortage of oxygen in local hospitals where the victims are being treated.<ref name="177 feared dead" />


==Themes==
[[Indian Army]] doctors are being called to assist the local authorities in the relief operation.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5hgMrrvvoVhKDUYpHtCBAbte6XaZw | title=89 dead in India temple stampede: official | publisher=AFP via Google News | date=September 30, 2008 | accessdate=2008-09-30}}</ref> [[BJP]]'s [[Rajnath Singh]] assured speedy relief to the victims of the tragedy.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/BJPs_Rajnath_Singh_assures_speedy_relief_to_victims/articleshow/3544125.cms | title=BJP's Rajnath Singh assures speedy relief to victims | publisher=Times of India | date=September 30, 2008 | accessdate=2008-09-30}}</ref>
At its core, ''Dragon Ball'' maintains the central tenets of the ''Weekly Shōnen Jump'' core philosophy of "friendship, struggle, and victory." As the series shifts from a "heart warming" story into a more action-oriented piece, the protagonists go through an unending cycle of fighting, winning, losing, learning important lessons, then returning to the fight. As the series progresses, the heroes continue this cycle by using miraculous devices to achieve life after death while continuing their on-going battles with the dead heroes who continue to learn lessons as they defeat their challengers.<ref name="LittleBoy" />


==Production==
Local authorities revealed that most of the dead were men as the queue for women was separate.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/asia/article4851062.ece | title=India temple stampede kills 177 | publisher=[[The Times]] | author=Blakely, Rhys | date=September 30, 2008 | accessdate=2008-09-30}}</ref>
{{Redirect|Dragon Boy|the Canadian mini-series|Dragon Boys}}
Wanting to break from the Western influences common in his other series, when Akira Toriyama began work on ''Dragon Ball'' he decided to loosely model it on the classic Chinese novel ''[[Journey to the West]]''.<ref name="Manga Design">{{cite book |title=Manga Design |chapter=Akira Toriyama |first=Julius |last=Wiedemann |editor=Amano Masanao (ed.) |publisher=[[Taschen]] |date=2004-09-25 |pages=p. 372 |isbn=3822825913 }}</ref><ref name="AnimeEncyc">{{cite book |last=Clements |first=Jonathan |authorlink=Jonathan Clements |coauthors=[[Helen McCarthy]] |title=The Anime Encyclopedia: A Guide to Japanese Animation Since 1917 |date=2001-09-01 |publisher=Stone Bridge Press |location=Berkeley, California |isbn=1-880656-64-7 |oclc=47255331 |pages=pp. 101-102 |edition=1st ed. }}</ref> He also redeveloped one of his earlier [[one-shot (comics)|one shot]] [[manga]] series, ''Dragon Boy'', which was initially serialized in ''Fresh Jump'' and released in a single ''[[tankōbon]]'' volume in 1983.<ref name="AnimeEncyc" /> This short work combined the comedic style of Toriyama's successful six-year series ''[[Dr. Slump]]'' with a more action-oriented plot and paid homage to famous martial art actor [[Jackie Chan]].<ref name="color"/><ref name="AnimeEncyc" /> Toriyama notes that his goal for the series was to tell an "unconventional and contradictory" story.<ref name="SJ interview" />


In the early concept of the series, Goku and Piccolo were from Earth. With the introduction of Kami-sama<!-- Who? -->, the idea of having fights from other planets was established and Goku and Piccolo were changed to alien species.<ref name="world"/> For the female characters, Toriyama felt it wasn't fun to draw "weak females" so he created women that he felt were not only "beautiful and sexy", but also "strong".<ref name="SJ interview" /> Going against the normal convention that the strongest characters should be the largest in terms of physical size, he designed many of ''Dragon Ball''<nowiki>'</nowiki>s most powerful characters with small statures, including the protagonist, Goku.<ref name="SJ interview">{{cite journal |year=2007 |month=November |title=Interview with the Majin! Revisited |journal=[[Shonen Jump (magazine)|Shonen Jump]] |volume=5 |issue=11 |pages=p. 388 |issn=1545-7818 }}</ref>
==Reactions==
[[Uttarakhand]] Chief Minister [[B C Khanduri]] and [[Governor]] [[B L Joshi]] both expressed grief over the death of the pilgrims at the Chamunda Devi temple.


The fighting techniques were initially unnamed, but the series editor felt it would be better to name them all. Toriyama proceeded to create names for all of the techniques, except for the ''Kamehameha'' which his wife named when Toriyama was indecisive about what it should be called.<ref name="world"/> When creating the ficitional world of the series, Toriyama decided to create basing it from his own imagination to avoid referencing popular culture. However the island where the World Martial Arts Tournament is held is modeled after [[Bali]]. When having fights in the manga, Toriyama had the characters go to a place where nobody lived to avoid difficulties in drawing destroyed buildings. In order to advance the story quickly, he also gave most fighters the ability to fly so they could travel to other parts of the world without inconvenience. This was also the reasoning behind Goku learning to teletransport (thus allowing characters to move to any planet in a second).<ref name="world">{{cite book |last=Toriyama|first=Akira|title=DRAGON BALL 大全集 ➍ 「WORLD GUIDE」 |year=1995 |publisher=Shueisha|pages=pp. 164-169 |isbn=4-08-782754-2}}</ref>
A [[Raj Bhavan]] statement issued a condolence message saying Joshi conveyed his deepest sorrow to the bereaved families of the dead and said he would pray for the speedy recovery of those injured in the incident.


After the first chapters were released, readers commented that Goku seemed rather plain, so his appearance was changed. More characters (such as [[Master Roshi]] and [[Krillin]]) and martial arts tournaments were added to give the manga a greater emphasis on fighting. Knowing readers would expect Goku to win the tournaments, Toriyama had him lose the first two while continuing his initial goal of having Goku be the champion and hero. At the end of the Cell arc, he intended for Gohan to replace Goku as the series protagonist, but then felt the character was not suited for the role and changed his mind.<ref name="creation">{{cite book |last=Toriyama|first=Akira|title=DRAGON BALL 大全集 ➋ 「STORY GUIDE」 |year=1995 |publisher=Shueisha|pages=pp. 261-265 |isbn=4-08-782752-6}}</ref>
Khandury followed too in expressing grief over the accident. He also directed District Magistrates of all the 13 districts of his state to make special arrangements at religious places as they are expected to attract large crowds during the Navratra period.<Ref name="hindu">{{cite web | url=http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/holnus/002200809301958.htm | title=Uttarakhand CM, Governor express grief over stampede | publisher=The Hindu | date=September 30, 2008 | accessdate=2008-10-01}}</ref>


Toriyama based the Red Ribbon Army from a video game he'd played named [[Kung-Fu Master|''Spartan X'']] in which enemies tended to appear very fast. After the second tournament concluded, Toriyama wanted to have a villain who would be a true "bad guy." After creating Piccolo as the new villain, he noted that it was one of the most interesting parts of the stories and that he, and his son, became one of the favorite characters of the series. With Goku established as the strongest fighter on Earth, Toriyama decided to increase the number of villains that came from outer space. Finding the escalating enemies to be a pain to work with<!-- why? -->, he created the Ginyu squad to add more balance to the series.<ref name="creation">{{cite book |last=Toriyama|first=Akira|title=DRAGON BALL 大全集 ➋ 「STORY GUIDE」 |year=1995 |publisher=Shueisha |isbn=4-08-782752-6}}</ref> During this period of the series, Toriyama placed less emphasis on the series art work, simplifying the lines and sometimes making things "too square." He found himself having problems determining the colors for characters and sometimes ended up changing them unintentionally mid-story.<ref name="color">{{cite book |last=Toriyama|first=Akira|title=DRAGON BALL 大全集 ➊ 「COMPLETE ILLUSTRATION」 |year=1995 |publisher=Shueisha |pages=pp. 206-207 |isbn=4-08-782754-2}}</ref>
===Criticism===
Media reports said the authorities were ill-prepared, while claiming the crowd was "simply too much." They also said there was no medical help for the injured.


==Media==
One eyewitness was quoted as saying "There was a lot of crowd and a steep slope. Some people slipped and everyone else lost balance and [then] there was a stampede."
===Manga===
{{main|List of Dragon Ball chapters}}
Written and illustrated by [[Akira Toriyama]], ''Dragon Ball'' was initially serialized in the manga anthology ''[[Weekly Shōnen Jump]]'' starting in 1984.<ref name="ANNmanga">{{cite web|url=http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/encyclopedia/manga.php?id=297|title=Dragon Ball (manga)|publisher=[[Anime News Network]]|accessdate=2008-06-02}}</ref><ref name="AnimeEncyc" /> The series ended in 1995 when Toriyama grew exhausted and felt he needed a break from drawing.<ref name="AnimeEncyc" /> The 519 individual chapters were published into 42 ''[[tankōbon]]'' volumes by [[Shueisha]] from November 10, 1985 through August 4, 1995.<ref name="sold">{{cite web | year=2006 | title=Comipress News article on "The Rise and Fall of Weekly Shōnen Jump" | url=http://comipress.com/article/2007/05/06/1923 |date=2007-05-06 | work=comipress.com| accessdate=2008-06-02}}</ref><ref name="Shueisha 1">{{cite web|url=http://books.shueisha.co.jp/CGI/search/syousai_put.cgi?isbn_cd=4-08-851831-4&mode=1|title=DRAGON BALL  1 ドラゴンボール|BOOKNAVI|集英社|publisher=[[Shueisha]]|accessdate=2008-06-02|language=Japanese}}</ref><ref name="ShueishaZ 26">{{cite web|url=http://books.shueisha.co.jp/CGI/search/syousai_put.cgi?isbn_cd=4-08-851090-9&mode=1|title=DRAGON BALL  42 ドラゴンボール|BOOKNAVI|集英社|publisher=[[Shueisha]]|accessdate=2008-06-02|language=Japanese}}</ref> In 2004, the chapters were re-released in a collection of 34 ''[[Tankōbon#Aizōban and kanzenban|kanzenban]]'' volumes, which included a slightly rewritten ending, new covers, and color artwork from its ''Weekly Shōnen Jump'' run.<ref name="ANNmanga"/> Toriyama also created a short series, ''[[Neko Majin]]'', that became a self-parody of ''Dragon Ball''. First appearing in ''Weekly Shōnen Jump'' in August 1999, the eight chapter series was released sporadically until it was completed in 2005.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/encyclopedia/manga.php?id=30|title=Neko Majin Z (manga)|publisher=[[Anime News Network]] |accessdate=2008-07-21 }}</ref> These chapters were compiled into a "kanzenban"-style package for release in Japan on April 4, 2005.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://books.shueisha.co.jp/CGI/search/syousai_put.cgi?isbn_cd=4-08-851090-9&mode=1|title=ネコマジン 完全版|BOOKNAVI|集英社|publisher=[[Shueisha]]|accessdate=2008-07-22|language=Japanese}}</ref>


The ''Dragon Ball'' manga was licensed for release in English in North America by [[Viz Media]] which has released all 42 volume in both censored and uncensored forms.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.icv2.com/articles/news/216.html|date=[[2001-03-11]]|title=Viz Unleashes Uncensored Dragon Ball|publisher=ICv2|accessdate=2006-09-30}}</ref> Viz released volumes 17 through 42 under the title ''Dragon Ball Z'' to mimic the name of the anime series adaptated from those volumes, feeling it would reduce the potential for confusion by its readers.<ref name="ANNmanga"/> The first volumes of both series were released in March 2003, with ''Dragon Ball'' being completed on August 3, 2004 and ''Dragon Ball Z'' finishing on June 6, 2006.<ref name="Viz 16">{{cite web|url=http://www.viz.com/products/products.php?product_id=2236|title=Viz Media - Products: Dragon Ball Vol. 16|publisher=[[Viz Media]]|accessdate=2008-06-02}}</ref><ref name="VizZ 26">{{cite web|url=http://www.viz.com/products/products.php?product_id=5898|title=Dragon Ball Z, Vol. 26|publisher=[[Viz Media]]|accessdate=2008-06-02}}</ref> In June 2008, Viz began re-releasing the two series in a [[Tankōbon#Wideban|wideban]] format called "VIZBIG Edition", which collects three individual volumes into a single large volume.<ref name="wideone">{{cite web|url=http://www.viz.com/products/products.php?product_id=7414|title=Dragon Ball Z, Vol. 1 (VIZBIG Edition)|publisher=Viz Media|accessdate=2008-06-03}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.viz.com/products/products.php?product_id=7409|title=Dragon Ball, Vol. 1 (VIZBIG Edition)|publisher=Viz Media|accessdate=2008-06-08}}</ref>
Another said, "We carried them (the victims) ourselves, there was no other help, and vehicles couldn't come in."<ref name="hindu"/>


In 2006, Toriyama and ''[[One Piece]]'' author [[Eiichiro Oda]] teamed up to create a single chapter [[crossover]] of their individual hit series. Entitled ''Cross Epoch'', the chapter was published in the December 25, 2006 issue of ''Weekly Shōnen Jump''.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/encyclopedia/manga.php?id=9021|title=Cross Epoch (manga)|publisher=[[Anime News Network]]|accessdate=2008-09-13}}</ref> <!-- Part of DB story line? Characters seen? -->
==See also==

*[[2008 Naina Devi temple stampede]]
===Anime series===
{{seealso|List of Dragon Ball episodes}}

====''Dragon Ball''====
With the high popularity of the ''Dragon Ball'' manga, [[Toei Animation]] produced two anime television series based on the manga chapters, and a third based on the series characters. The first series, also titled ''Dragon Ball'', premiered in Japan on [[Fuji Television]] on February 26, 1986 and ran until April 12, 1989.<ref name="AnimeEncyc" /><ref name= "first" /> Spanning 153 episodes, it covered the first 16 volumes of the 42 volume manga series.<ref name= "first">{{cite web|url=http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/encyclopedia/anime.php?id=243|title=Dragon Ball (TV)|publisher=[[Anime News Network]]|accessdate=2008-06-03}}</ref>

[[Harmony Gold USA]] licensed the series for an English language release in North America in the late 1980s. In the their [[dubbing (filmmaking)|voice dub]] of the series, Harmony renamed almost all of the characters, with some names appearing very odd, such as the central character Goku being renamed "Zero" and the character [[List of Dragon Ball characters#Korin|Korin]]'s name changed to "Whiskers the Wonder Cat". This dub version was quickly canceled.{{Fact|date=July 2008}}

In 1995, [[Funimation Entertainment]] acquired the license for the series for broadcast and home video distribution in North America. Funimation contracted with BLT Productions to create an English voice track for the series, and the dubbed episodes were edited for content.<ref name="Return of DB" /> Thirteen episodes aired in [[syndication]] before Funimation canceled the project due to low ratings, switching to working on the second anime series ''Dragon Ball Z''.<ref name="AnimeEncyc" /> In March 2001, Funimation announced the return of ''Dragon Ball'' to American television, featuring a new English audio track produced in house and with less editing.<ref name="Return of DB">{{cite web |url=http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2001-03-09/rough-air-date-for-dragonball |title=Rough Air Date for Dragon Ball |publisher=[[Anime News Network]] |date=2001-03-09 |accessdate=2008-07-19 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2001-05-02/dragonball-on-cn-debut-date-confirmed |title=Dragon Ball on CN debut date confirmed |publisher=[[Anime News Network]] |date=2001-05-02 |accessdate=2008-07-19 }}</ref> The redubbed episodes aired on [[Cartoon Network]] from August 2001<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2001-08-21/dragonball-re-dub |title=DragonBall Re-dub |publisher=[[Anime News Network]] |date=2001-08-21 |accessdate=2008-07-19 }}</ref> to December 2003. Funimation also broadcast the series on [[Colours TV]] and their own [[Funimation Channel]] starting in 2006.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2006-11-12/dragon-ball-returns-to-us-tv |title=Dragon Ball Returns to US TV |publisher=[[Anime News Network]] |date=2006-11-12 |accessdate=2008-07-19 }}</ref> Funimation began releasing the uncut episodes to [[Region 1]] [[DVD]] box sets in March 18, 2003. Each box set, spanning an entire saga of the series, included the English dub track and the original Japanese audio track with optional English subtitles. The Emperor Pilaf Saga, however, has not been released to DVD, due to it still being licensed for distribution by [[Lionsgate Entertainment]].

In 2003, a new dub, produced by [[Blue Water Studios]], was created and began to air in the United Kingdom and Canada. It used different episode titles and voice actors versus the Funimation version.<ref name= "first" />

====''Dragon Ball Z''====
With the ending of ''Dragon Ball'', Toei Animation quickly released a second anime television series, {{nihongo|''Dragon Ball Z''|ドラゴンボールZ(ゼット)|Doragon Bōru Zetto|commonly abbreviated ''DBZ''}}. Picking up where the first left off, ''Dragon Ball Z'' is adapted from the final twenty-six volumes of the manga series. It premiered in Japan on Fuji Television on April 26, 1989, taking over its predecessor's time slot, and ran for 291 episodes until its conclusion on January 31, 1996.<ref name="AnimeEncyc" /><ref name="DBZ-ANN">{{cite web|url=http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/encyclopedia/anime.php?id=244&page=25|title=Anime News Network Dragon Ball Z episode list|accessdate=2007-11-08|publisher=[[Anime News Network]]}}</ref>

Following the canceled dub of ''Dragon Ball'', Funimation licensed ''Dragon Ball Z'' for an English language release in North America. For the dubbing of the series, the [[Ocean Group]] was contracted to produce an English dub track. Like the original dub of ''Dragon Ball'', the Ocean Group's dub of ''Dragon Ball Z'' was heavily edited for content, reducing the first 67 episodes into 53. The dubbed episodes premiered in the United States on [[The WB Television Network|The WB]] in September 1996, though it was eventually canceled in May 1998, once again due to low ratings. Three months later, the dub began airing on Cartoon Network as part of the channel's new [[Toonami]] programming block. Soon after, Funimation continued dubbing the series from where the cancelled dub left off, now using their own in-house voice actors, a new musical score, and less editing. The new dub of ''Dragon Ball Z'' ran on Cartoon Network from September 1999 to April 2003. In August 2004, [[Geneon Entertainment]] lost its licensing rights to the old Ocean Group dubbed episodes of ''Dragon Ball Z'', allowing Funimation to re-dub the first 67 episodes, restore the removed content and replace the old dubbing with their in-house voice cast. These re-dubbed episodes aired on Cartoon Network throughout the summer of 2005. The Funimation dubbed episodes also aired in Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia, and the [[Republic of Ireland]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2004-12-31/funimation-2005-plans|title=FUNimation 2005 Plans|date=2004-12-31|accessdate=2008-09-14|publisher=[[Anime News Network]]}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2005-06-09/dbz-uncut-on-cartoon-network|title=DBZ uncut on Cartoon Network|date=2005-06-09|accessdate=2008-09-14|publisher=[[Anime News Network]]}}</ref>

In the United Kingdom, the Funimation dub of episodes 107 through the final episode were replaced with a new dubbed version. This version used a dub language track produced by Blue Water and dubbed by the Ocean Group, but continued using most of Funimation's English language scripts and episode titles.{{Fact|date=July 2008}}

====''Dragon Ball GT''====
Produced by [[Toei Animation]], {{nihongo|''Dragon Ball GT''|ドラゴンボールGT(ジーティー)|Doragon Bōru Jī Tī|G(rand) T(our)<ref name="AnimeEncyc" />}} premiered on [[Fuji TV]] on February 2, 1996, and ran until November 19, 1997.<ref name="ANNAnime">{{cite web |url=http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/encyclopedia/anime.php?id=616 |title=Dragon Ball GT (TV) |publisher=[[Anime News Network]] |accessdate=2008-06-05 }}</ref> Unlike the first two series, it was not based on the original ''Dragon Ball'' manga.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2001-04-10/dbz-faq-update |title=DBZ FAQ Update |date=2001-04-10 |accessdate=2008-06-05 }}</ref> Unable to retain the same "magic" as the first two series, it spanned only 64 episodes before ending.<ref name="AnimeEncyc" />

Funimation Entertainment licensed the series for an English language [[Region 1]] [[DVD]] release and broadcast in North America. Funimation's English dub of the series aired on [[Cartoon Network]] from November 2003 to January 2005. The television broadcast skipped the first 16 episodes of the series. Instead, Funimation created a composition episode entitled "A Grand Problem", which used scenes from the skipped episodes to summarize the story. The skipped episodes were later aired after the remaining episodes of the series had been broadcast.<ref name="ANNAnime" /> The dubbed episodes also aired in Canada on [[YTV (TV channel)|YTV]], which divided the episodes into two seasons instead of sagas.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ytv.com/programming/shows/dragonball_gt/episodes.asp |title=Dragon Ball GT episode guide |publisher=[[YTV (TV channel)|YTV]] |accessdate=2008-06-05 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://ww.animeondvd.com/news/article.php?article_view=342 |title=Forum Buzz: New Anime on YTV this Fall |date=2004-08-18 |publisher=[[AnimeOnDVD.com]] |accessdate=2008-06-05 }}</ref>

====Specials====
Four anime specials based on the series were released in Japan. The first, ''[[Bardock: The Father of Goku]]'', was released on October 17, 1990. A [[prequel]], it is set years before the start of the manga and details how Goku's father discovered that the Frieza was planning to kill all the other Saiyans, and Goku's father's efforts to stop him.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/encyclopedia/anime.php?id=104|title=Dragon Ball Z Special 1: Bardock, The Father of Goku|publisher=[[Anime News Network]]|accessdate=2008-09-24}}</ref> The second special, ''[[The History of Trunks]]'' was released on March 24, 1993. Based on an extra chapter of the original manga, it is set in a parallel universe where most of the series characters are killed by a group of soldiers known as androids.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/encyclopedia/anime.php?id=133|title=Dragon Ball Z Special 2: The History of Trunks|publisher=[[Anime News Network]]|accessdate=2008-09-24}}</ref>

''[[Dragon Ball GT: A Hero's Legacy|A Hero's Legacy]]'', released on March 26, 1997, is set 100 years after the end of ''Dragon Ball GT''. It features one of Goku's descendants who begins looking for the Dragon Balls in order to help her sick grandmother.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/encyclopedia/anime.php?id=4308|title=Dragon Ball GT: A Hero's Legacy (special)|publisher=[[Anime News Network]]|accessdate=2008-09-24}}</ref> The newest special, ''[[Dragon Ball: Yo! Son Goku and His Friends Return!!]]'', is set to premiere at the Jump Super Anime Tour in November 2008. The first animated Dragon Ball feature to be released in twelve years, the special is based on an original concept by Toriyama and is set shortly after the defeat of the evil half of Majin Buu and has Goku and his friends facing against a new enemy.

===Anime films===
{{main|List of Dragon Ball films}}
Sixteen anime films and a single [[original video animation]] (OVA) based on the ''Dragon Ball'' series have been released in Japan. The first four films were based on episodes of the first ''Dragon Ball'' anime with a few aspects of the original episodes changed.<ref>{{cite web
|url=http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/encyclopedia/anime.php?id=1035|title= Dragon Ball Movie 1: Curse of the Blood Rubies|publisher=[[Anime News Network]]|accessdate=2008-09-27}}</ref> The remaining 12 films were set in ''Dragon Ball Z'' and featured original stories that were based on neither the manga nor the anime.<ref>{{cite web
|url=http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/review/dragon-ball-z-movie-8/uncut|title= Dragon Ball Z Movie 8 review|author=Divers, Allen|date=2003-08-06|publisher=[[Anime News Network]]|accessdate=2008-09-27}}</ref>

The OVA series, ''Dragon Ball Z Gaiden: Saiyan Zetsumetsu Keikaku'', was set during ''Dragon Ball Z''. Released in August 1993, the two episode series was based on and used footage from the [[Nintendo Entertainment System|Famicom]] video game of the [[Dragon Ball Z Gaiden: Saiyan Zetsumetsu Keikaku (series)|same name]].<ref>{{cite web
|url=http://www.toei-anim.co.jp/tv/ov1990.html
|title= List of OVA produced by Toei in the 1990's|accessdate=2008-09-27}}</ref>

[[Funimation Entertainment]] licensed and released all of the films to DVD in North America, while the OVA has not been released outside of Japan.

===Video games===
{{main|List of Dragon Ball video games}}
The ''Dragon Ball'' franchise has spawned multiple video games across various genres and platforms. Earlier games of the series included a system of card battling and were released for the [[Nintendo Entertainment System]] following the storyline of the series.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.gamespot.com/nes/rpg/dragonballdaimaoufukkatsu/index.html?tag=result;title;6|title=Dragon Ball: Daimaou Fukkatsu|publisher=[[GameSpot]]|accessdate=2008-09-26}}</ref> Starting [[Super Nintendo Entertainment System]], the [[Sega Saturn]] and the [[PlayStation]] most of the games were from the [[Fighting game|fighting]] genre including the series ''Super Butoden''.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.gamespot.com/snes/action/dragonballz/index.html?tag=result;title;3|title=Dragon Ball Z Super Butouden|publisher=[[GameSpot]]|accessdate=2008-09-26}}</ref> The first ''Dragon Ball'' game to be released in the United States was ''[[Dragon Ball Z: The Legacy of Goku|The Legacy of Goku]]'' for the [[Game Boy Advance]], which was done by pixel graphics.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.gamespot.com/gba/rpg/dragonballzthelog/index.html?tag=result;title;5|title=Dragon Ball Z: The Legacy of Goku|publisher=[[GameSpot]]|accessdate=2008-09-26}}</ref> For the [[PlayStation 2]] and [[PlayStation Portable]] games the characters were redone in 3D [[cel-shaded]] graphics. These games included ''[[Dragon Ball Z: Budokai|Budokai]]'', ''[[Dragon Ball Z: Budokai 2|Budokai 2]]'', ''[[Dragon Ball Z: Budokai 3|Budokai 3]]'', and the [[Dragon Ball Z: Budokai Tenkaichi (series)|''Budokai Tenkaichi'' series]]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2002-11-13/dbz-budokai-to-ship-early|title=DBZ: Budokai to ship early|date=2002-11-13|publisher=[[Anime News Network]]|accessdate=2008-09-26}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.gamespot.com/ps2/action/dragonballzbudokaitenkaichi/news.html?sid=6130926&mode=previews&tag=result;title;2|title=Dragon Ball Z: Budokai Tenkaichi Hands-On|date=2005-08-15|author=Mueller, Greg|publisher=[[GameSpot]]|accessdate=2008-09-26}}</ref> ''[[Dragon Ball Z: Burst Limit]]'' was the first game of the series developed the [[PlayStation 3]] and [[Xbox 360]] consoles.<ref>{{cite press release |title=Atari Announces the Next Generation Chapter for Dragon Ball Z(R) Video Game Series |publisher=Atari |date=January 16 |url=http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=66845&p=irol-newsArticle&t=Regular&id=1097059& |format= |language= |accessdate=2008-09-24}}</ref> A [[massively multiplayer online role-playing game]] called ''[[Dragon Ball Online]]'' is currently in development for the 2009. It has been stated that Toriyama has been working on character designs for this project for the last five years.<ref>[http://www.ntl-kk.com/dboreport.html DRAGONBALL ONLINE -ドラゴンボールオンライン<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

===Soundtracks===
{{main|Dragon Ball Soundtracks}}
A myriad of soundtracks were released to the anime, movies and the games. The music for the first two anime ''Dragon Ball'' and ''Z'' and its films was directed by Shunsuke Kikuchi, while the one from ''GT'' by Akihito Tokunaga.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/encyclopedia/people.php?id=118|title=Shunsuke Kikuchi|publisher=[[Anime News Network]]|accessdate=2008-09-26}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/encyclopedia/people.php?id=24490|title=Akihito Tokunaga|publisher=[[Anime News Network]]|accessdate=2008-09-26}}</ref> For the first anime, the soundtracks released were ''[[Dragon Ball: Music Collection]]'' in 1985 and ''[[Dragon Ball: Complete Song Collection]]'' in 1991 although they were reissued in 2007 and 2003, respectively.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cdjapan.co.jp/detailview.html?KEY=COCC-72015|title=Dragonball Music Collection|publisher=CDJapan.com|accessdate=2008-09-26}}</ref> For the second anime, the soundtrack series released were ''[[Dragon Ball Z Hit Song Collection Series]]''. It was produced and released by [[Columbia Records]] of Japan from July 21, 1989 to March 20, 1996 the show's entire lifespan. On September 20, 2006 Columbia re-released the Hit Song Collection on their Animex 1300 series.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cdjapan.co.jp/detailview.html?KEY=COCX-33908|title=DRAGONBALL Z Hit Kyoku Shu|publisher=CDJapan.com|accessdate=2008-09-26}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cdjapan.co.jp/detailview.html?KEY=COCX-33927|title=DRAGONBALL Z Hit Kyoku Shu 18 1/2 |publisher=CDJapan.com|accessdate=2008-09-26}}</ref> Other CDs released are compilations, video games and films soundtracks as well as music from the English versions.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cdjapan.co.jp/detailview.html?KEY=COCX-33567|title=Dragon Ball Z Best Song Collection "Legend of Dragonworld"|publisher=CDJapan.com|accessdate=2008-09-26}}</ref>

===Live action films===
A live-action Cantonese film adaptation of the series, ''[[Dragon Ball: The Magic Begins]]'', was released in China in 1989.<ref name="AnimeEncyc" /> Considered a "tacky" version of the story by critics,<ref name="AnimeEncyc" /> the plot revolves around a rag-tag group of heroes, led by "Monkey Boy" (Goku) trying to stop King Horn from using the wish-granting "Dragon Pearls" (Dragon Balls) to rule the world.

In March 2002, [[20th Century Fox]] acquired [[feature film]] rights to the ''Dragon Ball'' franchise<ref>{{cite journal | first=Chris "lastGardner | |title=Fox draws deal for ''DragonBall'' live-action pics | journal=[[The Hollywood Reporter]]| date=2002-03-12 | volume=372 | issue=28 }}</ref> and began production on an American live action film entitled ''[[Dragonball (film)|Dragonball]]''.<ref name="itsofficial" /> Ben Ramsey was tapped to create a screenplay based on ''Dragon Ball Z''.<ref>{{cite news | author = Claude Brodesser | first=Claude | url=http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117907037.html?categoryid=1238&cs=1 | title=Ramsey rolls ''Dragonball Z'' | publisher=''[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]'' | date=[[2004-06-24]] | accessdate=2007-09-07 }}</ref> Directed by [[James Wong]] and produced by [[Stephen Chow]],<ref name="itsofficial">{{cite news | author = Tatiana Siegel | title = ''Dragonball'' comes to bigscreen | publisher = ''[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]'' | date = [[2007-11-13]] | url = http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117975946.html?categoryid=13&cs=1 | accessdate=2007-11-14}}</ref> the film is scheduled to be released in the United States on April 8, 2009.<ref name="Fox Japan ''DragonBall'' Movie">{{Cite web|url=http://www.foxjapan.com/movies/lineup/main.html#DB |title="''DragonBall'' Movie"|publisher=Fox Japan|accessdate=2008-06-18 }}</ref>

===Art books===
There are two companion books to the series, called the ''Dragon Ball GT Perfect Files'', released in May 1997 and December 1997 by [[Shueisha]]'s ''Jump Comics Selection'' imprint. They include series information, illustration galleries, behind-the-scenes information, and more. They were out of print for many years, but were re-released in April 2006 and this edition is still in print.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.amazon.co.jp/%E3%83%89%E3%83%A9%E3%82%B4%E3%83%B3%E3%83%9C%E3%83%BC%E3%83%ABGT%E3%83%91%E3%83%BC%E3%83%95%E3%82%A7%E3%82%AF%E3%83%88%E3%83%95%E3%82%A1%E3%82%A4%E3%83%AB-Vol-1-%E3%82%B8%E3%83%A3%E3%83%B3%E3%83%97%E3%83%BB%E3%82%B3%E3%83%9F%E3%83%83%E3%82%AF%E3%82%B9-%E9%80%B1%E5%88%8A%E5%B0%91%E5%B9%B4%E3%82%B8%E3%83%A3%E3%83%B3%E3%83%97%E7%B7%A8%E9%9B%86%E9%83%A8/dp/4088740890/ref=sr_1_10?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1222290066&sr=8-10|language=Japanese |title=ドラゴンボールGTパーフェクトファイル (Vol.1) (ジャンプ・コミックス) (コミック) |publisher=Amazon.com |accessdate=2008-09-24}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.amazon.co.jp/%E3%83%89%E3%83%A9%E3%82%B4%E3%83%B3%E3%83%9C%E3%83%BC%E3%83%ABGT%E3%83%91%E3%83%BC%E3%83%95%E3%82%A7%E3%82%AF%E3%83%88%E3%83%95%E3%82%A1%E3%82%A4%E3%83%AB-Vol-2-%E3%82%B8%E3%83%A3%E3%83%B3%E3%83%97%E3%83%BB%E3%82%B3%E3%83%9F%E3%83%83%E3%82%AF%E3%82%B9-%E9%80%B1%E5%88%8A%E5%B0%91%E5%B9%B4%E3%82%B8%E3%83%A3%E3%83%B3%E3%83%97%E7%B7%A8%E9%9B%86%E9%83%A8/dp/4088740904/ref=pd_bxgy_b_text_b|language=Japanese |title=ドラゴンボールGTパーフェクトファイル (Vol.2) (ジャンプ・コミックス) (コミック) |publisher=Amazon.com |accessdate=2008-09-24}}</ref>

==Reception==
''Dragon Ball'' is one of the most popular manga series of its time, and it continues to enjoy high readership today. By 2000, more than 126 million copies of its ''[[tankōbon]]'' volumes had been sold in Japan alone.<ref name="LittleBoy">{{cite book |title=Little Boy: The Art of Japan's Exploding Subculture |first=Takashi |last=Murakami |others=Linda Hoaglund (translator) |publisher=[[Yale University Press]], [[Japan Society]] |date=2005-05-15 |isbn=0300102852 |chapter=Earth in My Window |pages=pp. 105-106 }}</ref> By 2007, this number had grown to pass 150 million.<ref name="sold">{{cite web | year=2006 | title=Comipress News article on "The Rise and Fall of Weekly Shōnen Jump" | url=http://comipress.com/article/2007/05/06/1923 |date=2007-05-06 | publisher=[[ComiPress]] | accessdate=2008-06-02}}</ref> It is the "quintessential mainstream manga" driven by an unending story. Its immense popularity resulted in the series being continuously extended, first through the use of acrobatic devices that regularly kept the series from falling into the routine characters and story lines, then by having the central characters surpass death itself using miraculous devises. In ''Little Boy: The Art of Japan's Exploding Subculture'' Takashi Murakami notes that ''Dragon Ball'''s "never-ending cyclical narrative moves forward plausibly, seamlessly, and with great finesse."<ref name="LittleBoy" /> Goku's journey and his ever growing strength resulted in the character winning "the admiration of young boys everywhere".<ref name="Manga Design" />

In a survey conducted by [[Oricon]] in 2007 between 1,000 people, Goku, the main character of the franchise, ranked first place as the "Strongest Manga character of all time."<ref name=oricon>{{cite web|url=http://rn-cdn.oricon.co.jp/news/ranking/45750/#rk|title=1000人が選んだ!漫画史上“最強”キャラクターランキング!|language=Japanese|accessdate=2007-10-28}}</ref> Manga artists, such as ''[[Naruto]]'' creator [[Masashi Kishimoto]] and ''[[One Piece]]'' creator [[Eiichiro Oda]], have stated that Goku inspired their series' main protagonists as well series structure.<ref>{{cite book |last=Kishimoto|first=Masashi |title=Uzumaki: the Art of Naruto|year=2007 |publisher=[[Viz Media]] |pages=138-139 |isbn=1-4215-1407-9}}</ref><ref>''One Piece Color Walk'' - Vol.1 - Interview with Eiichiro Oda and Akira Toriyama ((JP) ISBN 978-4088592176)</ref> When [[TV Asahi]] conducted an online poll for the top one hundred anime, the ''Dragon Ball'' series came in place twelve.<ref name="Japan100">{{cite web|url= http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2006-10-13/japan's-favorite-tv-anime |title= Japan's Favorite TV Anime |publisher= [[Anime News Network]] |date= 2006-10-13 |accessdate= 2008-07-09}}</ref>

Ridwan Khan from Animefringe.com commented on the manga to have a "chubby" art style but as the series continued it gets more refined with the characters leaner and more muscular. He also noted he preferred the manga versions of the series to their animated counterparts that makes the story slower and pointless.<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.animefringe.com/magazine/2003/07/reviews/08/|title= Dragon Ball Vol.1 review|publisher= Animefringe.com |date= July 2003 |author=Khan, Ridwan|accessdate= 2008-09-27}}</ref> [[Anime News Network]] praised the story and humor of the manga to be very good due conveying of all the characters's personalities. They also remarked Viz's translation to be one of the best ones of all the English editions of the series praising the lack of censore.<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/review/dragon-ball-gn-5|title= Dragon Ball (manga) Graphic Novel vol 5|publisher= [[Anime News Network]] |date= 2001-11-18 |author= Divers, Allen|accessdate= 2008-09-27}}</ref> Rationalmagic.com remarked the first manga volume as "a superior humor title". They praised Goku's innocence and Bulma's insistence as one of the funniest parts of the series.<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.rationalmagic.com/Comics/DragonBall1.html|title= Dragon Ball Volume 1 review|publisher= Rationalmagic.com|accessdate= 2008-10-03}}</ref>

The anime adaptations have also had different positive reviews. T.H.E.M. Anime Reviews considered the series characters are different from stereotypes characters and noted that they have much more development and in its sequels.<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.themanime.org/viewreview.php?id=565|title= Dragon Ball anime review|publisher=themanime.org |author= Jones, Tim|accessdate= 2008-10-03}}</ref> However, they criticized ''Dragon Ball Z'' for having long fights repetitive blood though they remarked the show has good characterization.<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.themanime.org/viewreview.php?id=245|title= Dragon Ball Z anime review|publisher=themanime.org |author= Ross, Carlos|accessdate= 2008-10-03}}</ref> The storylines of ''Dragon Ball Z'' have been compared to Greek mythology.<ref>[http://www.coe.uga.edu/lle/faculty/alvermann/literacy.pdf Literacy Identity Work: Playing to Learn with Popular Media]</ref> Anime News Network considered the Trunks's stroyline to have an actual story line with characters having more motivation than the common plot of the series.<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/review/dbz-history-of-trunks-dvd|title= The History of Trunks review|publisher= [[Anime News Network]]|author= Shepard, Chris |accessdate= 2008-10-03}}</ref> [[IGN]] commented that ''Dragon Ball GT'' "is downright repellant" mentioning that the material and characters have lost their novelty and fun as well as they criticized the character designs of Trunks and Vegeta to be in a goofy style.<ref>{{cite web|url= http://dvd.ign.com/articles/834/834547p1.html|title= Dragon Ball GT - The Lost Episodes DVD Box Set Review|publisher= [[IGN]]|date=2007-11-12|author= Harris, Jeffrey |accessdate= 2008-10-03}}</ref> Anime News Network has had negative comments of ''Dragon Ball GT''. They mentioned the fights from the series are very simple childish exercise and that many other anime were better. The plot of the series has also been criticized for giving a formula that was already used om its prequels.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/review/dragon-ball-gt/dvd-8|title=Dragon Ball GT DVD 8: Salvation|publisher= [[Anime News Network]]|date=2004-06-06|author= Bertschy, Zac |accessdate= 2008-10-04}}</ref>


==References==
==References==
{{reflist|2}}
{{Reflist|2}}


==External links==
==External links==
{{wikiquote}}
*[http://photogallery.indiatimes.com/articleshow/3543245.cms Picture gallery of the aftermath of stampede]
{{wiktionarypar|ドラゴンボール}}
* [http://www.toei-anim.co.jp/tv/dragon/ Official Toei Animation's ''Dragon Ball'' Website] {{ja icon}}
* [http://www.toei-anim.co.jp/tv/dragonz/ Official Toei Animation's ''Dragon Ball Z'' Website] {{ja icon}}
* [http://www.toei-anim.co.jp/tv/dragongt/ Official Toei Animation's ''Dragon Ball GT'' Website] {{ja icon}}
* [http://www.dragonball.com Official FUNimation's ''Dragon Ball'' Website]
* [http://www.dragonballz.com Official FUNimation's ''Dragon Ball Z'' Website]
* [http://www.dragonballgt.com Official FUNimation's ''Dragon Ball GT'' Website]
* {{ann anime|243|Dragon Ball}}
* {{ann anime|244|Dragon Ball Z}}
* {{ann anime|616|Dragon Ball GT}}

{{Dragon Ball}}
{{Weekly Shonen Jump - 1980-1989}}


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Revision as of 03:20, 10 October 2008

Dragon Ball
First tankōbon volume, released in Japan on November 10, 1985
ドラゴンボール
(Doragon Bōru)
GenreMartial arts, Science fiction
Manga
Written byAkira Toriyama
Published byJapan Shueisha
English publisherAustralia New Zealand Chuang Yi

Canada United States Viz Media

United Kingdom Gollancz Manga
MagazineWeekly Shōnen Jump
DemographicShōnen
Original run19841995
Volumes42 (List of volumes)
Anime
Directed byMinoru Okazaki
Daisuke Nishio
StudioToei Animation
Released February 26, 1986 April 12, 1989
Anime
Dragon Ball Z
Directed byDaisuke Nishio
StudioToei Animation
Released April 26, 1989 January 31, 1996
Anime
Dragon Ball GT
Directed byOsamu Kasai
StudioToei Animation
Released February 7, 1996 November 19, 1997
Movies
  1. Curse of the Blood Rubies
  2. Sleeping Princess in Devil's Castle
  3. Mystical Adventure
  4. The Path to Power
  5. Dragon Ball Z: Dead Zone
  6. Dragon Ball Z: The World's Strongest
  7. Dragon Ball Z: The Tree of Might
  8. Dragon Ball Z: Lord Slug
  9. Dragon Ball Z: Cooler's Revenge
  10. Dragon Ball Z: Return of Cooler
  11. Dragon Ball Z: Super Android 13!
  12. Dragon Ball Z: Broly - The Legendary Super Saiyan
  13. Dragon Ball Z: Bojack Unbound
  14. Dragon Ball Z: Broly Second Coming
  15. Dragon Ball Z: Bio-Broly
  16. Dragon Ball Z: Fusion Reborn
  17. Dragon Ball Z: Wrath of the Dragon

Dragon Ball (ドラゴンボール, Doragon Bōru) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Akira Toriyama. Inspired by the Chinese folk novel Journey to the West, the series follows the adventures of Son Goku from his childhood through middle age as he goes through various trainings and the research for seven mystical objects known as the Dragon Balls, which are supposed to grant any wish.

The manga was serialized in the Weekly Shōnen Jump magazine from 1984 through 1995, and its 519 individual chapters were published into 42 tankōbon volumes by Shueisha. It is licensed for an English language release in North America by Viz Media, in the United Kingdom by Gollancz Manga, and in Australia and New Zealand by Chuang Yi. Dragon Ball was adapted into three anime series, seventeen animated feature films, three television specials, a collectible trading card game, and a large number of video games. An American live-action film began production in 2002 and is slated for release on April 10, 2009.

Dragon Ball is one of the most popular manga series of its time, and continues to enjoy high readership today. By 2000, more than 126 million copies of the manga series had been sold in Japan and by 2007, this number had grown to pass 150 million. The initial Dragon Ball anime was ranked number twelve in a list of the top one-hundred series in Japan. Several manga artists have acknowledged that Dragon Ball was an inspiration for their own works.

Plot

A monkey-tailed boy named Goku is found by an old martial arts expert who raises him as his grandson. One day Goku meets a girl called Bulma and together they go on a quest to retrieve the seven Dragon Balls, mythical objects that can summon a dragon who will grant any wish. Along the way, they meet and befriend a plethora of martial artists. They also undergo rigorous training regimes and educational programs in order to fight in the World Martial Arts Tournament, a tournament in which the most powerful fighters in the world compete. Outside the tournaments, Goku faces diverse villains such as Emperor Pilaf, the Red Ribbon Army, a demon known as Piccolo Daimao and his offspring of the same name.

As a young adult, Goku meets his older brother, Raditz, who tells him that they come from a fictional race of extraterrestrials called Saiyans. The Saiyans had sent Goku to Earth to destroy it, but Goku had amnesia. Goku refuses to help him continue the mission, after which he begins to encounter other Saiyans who want to battle him, such as the Saiyan prince Vegeta and Frieza, who is considered to be one of the strongest beings in the universe. After his encounter with Frieza, Goku begins training his first child, Son Gohan, to be his successor. Years later, a group of soldiers from the Red Ribbon army known as androids appear to kill Goku. Another android, Cell, absorbs the Red Ribbon army to increase his power, then fights Goku and Gohan, resulting in the former's death. Goku is capable of returning to life, but decides to stay dead for seven years to train in the Other World. When he returns, he is drawn into a battle for the universe against an extraterrestrial named Majin Buu. Joined by Vegeta and Gohan, Buu is destroyed and Goku dies again. He is later revived by one of the gods from the Other World. Ten years later at a martial arts tournament, Goku meets Buu's human reincarnation, Uub. At the end of the manga, Goku takes Uub away on a journey to train him as another successor.

Anime sequel

In the anime Dragon Ball GT, which is not directly based on the manga, Goku is turned back into a child by the Black-Star Dragon Balls and is forced to travel across the universe to retrieve them. While in space, he encounters the evil artificial Tuffle, Baby, who wants to destroy the Saiyan race. Goku fights him, but is defeated and his tail destroyed. After his tail is regenerated, he achieves the level of Super Saiyan 4 and destroys Baby, propelling him into the sun with a Kamehameha. After Baby's defeat, Dr. Myuu, a combination of machine and human, creates a replica of Android 17, fuses it with the original Android 17, creating Super 17. Super 17 seems impervious to Goku's attacks, but when Android 18 attacks him for killing Krillin, Goku is able to take advantage of the distraction to find a way to penetrate Super 17 and destroy it.

Due to overuse of the Dragon Balls, seven Evil Dragons were created. All but the most powerful, Syn Shenron, are defeated. When Shenron appears to be losing, he absorbs the Dragon Balls and gains enough power to become Omega Shenron and overwhelm Goku. Eventually, using the energy of every living being in the universe, Goku makes a Spirit Bomb powerful enough to destroy Omega Shenron.

Themes

At its core, Dragon Ball maintains the central tenets of the Weekly Shōnen Jump core philosophy of "friendship, struggle, and victory." As the series shifts from a "heart warming" story into a more action-oriented piece, the protagonists go through an unending cycle of fighting, winning, losing, learning important lessons, then returning to the fight. As the series progresses, the heroes continue this cycle by using miraculous devices to achieve life after death while continuing their on-going battles with the dead heroes who continue to learn lessons as they defeat their challengers.[1]

Production

Wanting to break from the Western influences common in his other series, when Akira Toriyama began work on Dragon Ball he decided to loosely model it on the classic Chinese novel Journey to the West.[2][3] He also redeveloped one of his earlier one shot manga series, Dragon Boy, which was initially serialized in Fresh Jump and released in a single tankōbon volume in 1983.[3] This short work combined the comedic style of Toriyama's successful six-year series Dr. Slump with a more action-oriented plot and paid homage to famous martial art actor Jackie Chan.[4][3] Toriyama notes that his goal for the series was to tell an "unconventional and contradictory" story.[5]

In the early concept of the series, Goku and Piccolo were from Earth. With the introduction of Kami-sama, the idea of having fights from other planets was established and Goku and Piccolo were changed to alien species.[6] For the female characters, Toriyama felt it wasn't fun to draw "weak females" so he created women that he felt were not only "beautiful and sexy", but also "strong".[5] Going against the normal convention that the strongest characters should be the largest in terms of physical size, he designed many of Dragon Ball's most powerful characters with small statures, including the protagonist, Goku.[5]

The fighting techniques were initially unnamed, but the series editor felt it would be better to name them all. Toriyama proceeded to create names for all of the techniques, except for the Kamehameha which his wife named when Toriyama was indecisive about what it should be called.[6] When creating the ficitional world of the series, Toriyama decided to create basing it from his own imagination to avoid referencing popular culture. However the island where the World Martial Arts Tournament is held is modeled after Bali. When having fights in the manga, Toriyama had the characters go to a place where nobody lived to avoid difficulties in drawing destroyed buildings. In order to advance the story quickly, he also gave most fighters the ability to fly so they could travel to other parts of the world without inconvenience. This was also the reasoning behind Goku learning to teletransport (thus allowing characters to move to any planet in a second).[6]

After the first chapters were released, readers commented that Goku seemed rather plain, so his appearance was changed. More characters (such as Master Roshi and Krillin) and martial arts tournaments were added to give the manga a greater emphasis on fighting. Knowing readers would expect Goku to win the tournaments, Toriyama had him lose the first two while continuing his initial goal of having Goku be the champion and hero. At the end of the Cell arc, he intended for Gohan to replace Goku as the series protagonist, but then felt the character was not suited for the role and changed his mind.[7]

Toriyama based the Red Ribbon Army from a video game he'd played named Spartan X in which enemies tended to appear very fast. After the second tournament concluded, Toriyama wanted to have a villain who would be a true "bad guy." After creating Piccolo as the new villain, he noted that it was one of the most interesting parts of the stories and that he, and his son, became one of the favorite characters of the series. With Goku established as the strongest fighter on Earth, Toriyama decided to increase the number of villains that came from outer space. Finding the escalating enemies to be a pain to work with, he created the Ginyu squad to add more balance to the series.[7] During this period of the series, Toriyama placed less emphasis on the series art work, simplifying the lines and sometimes making things "too square." He found himself having problems determining the colors for characters and sometimes ended up changing them unintentionally mid-story.[4]

Media

Manga

Written and illustrated by Akira Toriyama, Dragon Ball was initially serialized in the manga anthology Weekly Shōnen Jump starting in 1984.[8][3] The series ended in 1995 when Toriyama grew exhausted and felt he needed a break from drawing.[3] The 519 individual chapters were published into 42 tankōbon volumes by Shueisha from November 10, 1985 through August 4, 1995.[9][10][11] In 2004, the chapters were re-released in a collection of 34 kanzenban volumes, which included a slightly rewritten ending, new covers, and color artwork from its Weekly Shōnen Jump run.[8] Toriyama also created a short series, Neko Majin, that became a self-parody of Dragon Ball. First appearing in Weekly Shōnen Jump in August 1999, the eight chapter series was released sporadically until it was completed in 2005.[12] These chapters were compiled into a "kanzenban"-style package for release in Japan on April 4, 2005.[13]

The Dragon Ball manga was licensed for release in English in North America by Viz Media which has released all 42 volume in both censored and uncensored forms.[14] Viz released volumes 17 through 42 under the title Dragon Ball Z to mimic the name of the anime series adaptated from those volumes, feeling it would reduce the potential for confusion by its readers.[8] The first volumes of both series were released in March 2003, with Dragon Ball being completed on August 3, 2004 and Dragon Ball Z finishing on June 6, 2006.[15][16] In June 2008, Viz began re-releasing the two series in a wideban format called "VIZBIG Edition", which collects three individual volumes into a single large volume.[17][18]

In 2006, Toriyama and One Piece author Eiichiro Oda teamed up to create a single chapter crossover of their individual hit series. Entitled Cross Epoch, the chapter was published in the December 25, 2006 issue of Weekly Shōnen Jump.[19]

Anime series

Dragon Ball

With the high popularity of the Dragon Ball manga, Toei Animation produced two anime television series based on the manga chapters, and a third based on the series characters. The first series, also titled Dragon Ball, premiered in Japan on Fuji Television on February 26, 1986 and ran until April 12, 1989.[3][20] Spanning 153 episodes, it covered the first 16 volumes of the 42 volume manga series.[20]

Harmony Gold USA licensed the series for an English language release in North America in the late 1980s. In the their voice dub of the series, Harmony renamed almost all of the characters, with some names appearing very odd, such as the central character Goku being renamed "Zero" and the character Korin's name changed to "Whiskers the Wonder Cat". This dub version was quickly canceled.[citation needed]

In 1995, Funimation Entertainment acquired the license for the series for broadcast and home video distribution in North America. Funimation contracted with BLT Productions to create an English voice track for the series, and the dubbed episodes were edited for content.[21] Thirteen episodes aired in syndication before Funimation canceled the project due to low ratings, switching to working on the second anime series Dragon Ball Z.[3] In March 2001, Funimation announced the return of Dragon Ball to American television, featuring a new English audio track produced in house and with less editing.[21][22] The redubbed episodes aired on Cartoon Network from August 2001[23] to December 2003. Funimation also broadcast the series on Colours TV and their own Funimation Channel starting in 2006.[24] Funimation began releasing the uncut episodes to Region 1 DVD box sets in March 18, 2003. Each box set, spanning an entire saga of the series, included the English dub track and the original Japanese audio track with optional English subtitles. The Emperor Pilaf Saga, however, has not been released to DVD, due to it still being licensed for distribution by Lionsgate Entertainment.

In 2003, a new dub, produced by Blue Water Studios, was created and began to air in the United Kingdom and Canada. It used different episode titles and voice actors versus the Funimation version.[20]

Dragon Ball Z

With the ending of Dragon Ball, Toei Animation quickly released a second anime television series, Dragon Ball Z (ドラゴンボールZ(ゼット), Doragon Bōru Zetto, commonly abbreviated DBZ). Picking up where the first left off, Dragon Ball Z is adapted from the final twenty-six volumes of the manga series. It premiered in Japan on Fuji Television on April 26, 1989, taking over its predecessor's time slot, and ran for 291 episodes until its conclusion on January 31, 1996.[3][25]

Following the canceled dub of Dragon Ball, Funimation licensed Dragon Ball Z for an English language release in North America. For the dubbing of the series, the Ocean Group was contracted to produce an English dub track. Like the original dub of Dragon Ball, the Ocean Group's dub of Dragon Ball Z was heavily edited for content, reducing the first 67 episodes into 53. The dubbed episodes premiered in the United States on The WB in September 1996, though it was eventually canceled in May 1998, once again due to low ratings. Three months later, the dub began airing on Cartoon Network as part of the channel's new Toonami programming block. Soon after, Funimation continued dubbing the series from where the cancelled dub left off, now using their own in-house voice actors, a new musical score, and less editing. The new dub of Dragon Ball Z ran on Cartoon Network from September 1999 to April 2003. In August 2004, Geneon Entertainment lost its licensing rights to the old Ocean Group dubbed episodes of Dragon Ball Z, allowing Funimation to re-dub the first 67 episodes, restore the removed content and replace the old dubbing with their in-house voice cast. These re-dubbed episodes aired on Cartoon Network throughout the summer of 2005. The Funimation dubbed episodes also aired in Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia, and the Republic of Ireland.[26][27]

In the United Kingdom, the Funimation dub of episodes 107 through the final episode were replaced with a new dubbed version. This version used a dub language track produced by Blue Water and dubbed by the Ocean Group, but continued using most of Funimation's English language scripts and episode titles.[citation needed]

Dragon Ball GT

Produced by Toei Animation, Dragon Ball GT (ドラゴンボールGT(ジーティー), Doragon Bōru Jī Tī, G(rand) T(our)[3]) premiered on Fuji TV on February 2, 1996, and ran until November 19, 1997.[28] Unlike the first two series, it was not based on the original Dragon Ball manga.[29] Unable to retain the same "magic" as the first two series, it spanned only 64 episodes before ending.[3]

Funimation Entertainment licensed the series for an English language Region 1 DVD release and broadcast in North America. Funimation's English dub of the series aired on Cartoon Network from November 2003 to January 2005. The television broadcast skipped the first 16 episodes of the series. Instead, Funimation created a composition episode entitled "A Grand Problem", which used scenes from the skipped episodes to summarize the story. The skipped episodes were later aired after the remaining episodes of the series had been broadcast.[28] The dubbed episodes also aired in Canada on YTV, which divided the episodes into two seasons instead of sagas.[30][31]

Specials

Four anime specials based on the series were released in Japan. The first, Bardock: The Father of Goku, was released on October 17, 1990. A prequel, it is set years before the start of the manga and details how Goku's father discovered that the Frieza was planning to kill all the other Saiyans, and Goku's father's efforts to stop him.[32] The second special, The History of Trunks was released on March 24, 1993. Based on an extra chapter of the original manga, it is set in a parallel universe where most of the series characters are killed by a group of soldiers known as androids.[33]

A Hero's Legacy, released on March 26, 1997, is set 100 years after the end of Dragon Ball GT. It features one of Goku's descendants who begins looking for the Dragon Balls in order to help her sick grandmother.[34] The newest special, Dragon Ball: Yo! Son Goku and His Friends Return!!, is set to premiere at the Jump Super Anime Tour in November 2008. The first animated Dragon Ball feature to be released in twelve years, the special is based on an original concept by Toriyama and is set shortly after the defeat of the evil half of Majin Buu and has Goku and his friends facing against a new enemy.

Anime films

Sixteen anime films and a single original video animation (OVA) based on the Dragon Ball series have been released in Japan. The first four films were based on episodes of the first Dragon Ball anime with a few aspects of the original episodes changed.[35] The remaining 12 films were set in Dragon Ball Z and featured original stories that were based on neither the manga nor the anime.[36]

The OVA series, Dragon Ball Z Gaiden: Saiyan Zetsumetsu Keikaku, was set during Dragon Ball Z. Released in August 1993, the two episode series was based on and used footage from the Famicom video game of the same name.[37]

Funimation Entertainment licensed and released all of the films to DVD in North America, while the OVA has not been released outside of Japan.

Video games

The Dragon Ball franchise has spawned multiple video games across various genres and platforms. Earlier games of the series included a system of card battling and were released for the Nintendo Entertainment System following the storyline of the series.[38] Starting Super Nintendo Entertainment System, the Sega Saturn and the PlayStation most of the games were from the fighting genre including the series Super Butoden.[39] The first Dragon Ball game to be released in the United States was The Legacy of Goku for the Game Boy Advance, which was done by pixel graphics.[40] For the PlayStation 2 and PlayStation Portable games the characters were redone in 3D cel-shaded graphics. These games included Budokai, Budokai 2, Budokai 3, and the Budokai Tenkaichi series[41][42] Dragon Ball Z: Burst Limit was the first game of the series developed the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 consoles.[43] A massively multiplayer online role-playing game called Dragon Ball Online is currently in development for the 2009. It has been stated that Toriyama has been working on character designs for this project for the last five years.[44]

Soundtracks

A myriad of soundtracks were released to the anime, movies and the games. The music for the first two anime Dragon Ball and Z and its films was directed by Shunsuke Kikuchi, while the one from GT by Akihito Tokunaga.[45][46] For the first anime, the soundtracks released were Dragon Ball: Music Collection in 1985 and Dragon Ball: Complete Song Collection in 1991 although they were reissued in 2007 and 2003, respectively.[47] For the second anime, the soundtrack series released were Dragon Ball Z Hit Song Collection Series. It was produced and released by Columbia Records of Japan from July 21, 1989 to March 20, 1996 the show's entire lifespan. On September 20, 2006 Columbia re-released the Hit Song Collection on their Animex 1300 series.[48][49] Other CDs released are compilations, video games and films soundtracks as well as music from the English versions.[50]

Live action films

A live-action Cantonese film adaptation of the series, Dragon Ball: The Magic Begins, was released in China in 1989.[3] Considered a "tacky" version of the story by critics,[3] the plot revolves around a rag-tag group of heroes, led by "Monkey Boy" (Goku) trying to stop King Horn from using the wish-granting "Dragon Pearls" (Dragon Balls) to rule the world.

In March 2002, 20th Century Fox acquired feature film rights to the Dragon Ball franchise[51] and began production on an American live action film entitled Dragonball.[52] Ben Ramsey was tapped to create a screenplay based on Dragon Ball Z.[53] Directed by James Wong and produced by Stephen Chow,[52] the film is scheduled to be released in the United States on April 8, 2009.[54]

Art books

There are two companion books to the series, called the Dragon Ball GT Perfect Files, released in May 1997 and December 1997 by Shueisha's Jump Comics Selection imprint. They include series information, illustration galleries, behind-the-scenes information, and more. They were out of print for many years, but were re-released in April 2006 and this edition is still in print.[55][56]

Reception

Dragon Ball is one of the most popular manga series of its time, and it continues to enjoy high readership today. By 2000, more than 126 million copies of its tankōbon volumes had been sold in Japan alone.[1] By 2007, this number had grown to pass 150 million.[9] It is the "quintessential mainstream manga" driven by an unending story. Its immense popularity resulted in the series being continuously extended, first through the use of acrobatic devices that regularly kept the series from falling into the routine characters and story lines, then by having the central characters surpass death itself using miraculous devises. In Little Boy: The Art of Japan's Exploding Subculture Takashi Murakami notes that Dragon Ball's "never-ending cyclical narrative moves forward plausibly, seamlessly, and with great finesse."[1] Goku's journey and his ever growing strength resulted in the character winning "the admiration of young boys everywhere".[2]

In a survey conducted by Oricon in 2007 between 1,000 people, Goku, the main character of the franchise, ranked first place as the "Strongest Manga character of all time."[57] Manga artists, such as Naruto creator Masashi Kishimoto and One Piece creator Eiichiro Oda, have stated that Goku inspired their series' main protagonists as well series structure.[58][59] When TV Asahi conducted an online poll for the top one hundred anime, the Dragon Ball series came in place twelve.[60]

Ridwan Khan from Animefringe.com commented on the manga to have a "chubby" art style but as the series continued it gets more refined with the characters leaner and more muscular. He also noted he preferred the manga versions of the series to their animated counterparts that makes the story slower and pointless.[61] Anime News Network praised the story and humor of the manga to be very good due conveying of all the characters's personalities. They also remarked Viz's translation to be one of the best ones of all the English editions of the series praising the lack of censore.[62] Rationalmagic.com remarked the first manga volume as "a superior humor title". They praised Goku's innocence and Bulma's insistence as one of the funniest parts of the series.[63]

The anime adaptations have also had different positive reviews. T.H.E.M. Anime Reviews considered the series characters are different from stereotypes characters and noted that they have much more development and in its sequels.[64] However, they criticized Dragon Ball Z for having long fights repetitive blood though they remarked the show has good characterization.[65] The storylines of Dragon Ball Z have been compared to Greek mythology.[66] Anime News Network considered the Trunks's stroyline to have an actual story line with characters having more motivation than the common plot of the series.[67] IGN commented that Dragon Ball GT "is downright repellant" mentioning that the material and characters have lost their novelty and fun as well as they criticized the character designs of Trunks and Vegeta to be in a goofy style.[68] Anime News Network has had negative comments of Dragon Ball GT. They mentioned the fights from the series are very simple childish exercise and that many other anime were better. The plot of the series has also been criticized for giving a formula that was already used om its prequels.[69]

References

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External links