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Dragon Ball Z: Cooler's Revenge [627] Dragon Ball Z: Super Android 13! [628] Dragon Ball Z: Broly – The Legendary Super Saiyan [629] Dragon Ball Z: Fusion Reborn [630] Dragon Ball Z: Bardock – The Father of Goku [631] Dragon Ball Z: The History of Trunks [632] Dragon Ball Z: Battle of Gods [633] Dragon Ball GT [619] Dragon Ball GT: A Hero's ...
Dragon Ball Z picks up five years after the end of the Dragon Ball series, with Son Goku now a young adult and father to his son, Gohan.. A humanoid alien named Raditz arrives on Earth in a spacecraft and tracks down Goku, revealing to him that he is his long-lost older brother and that they are members of a near-extinct elite alien warrior race called Saiyans (サイヤ人, Saiya-jin).
This is a list of television programs currently and formerly broadcast by Cartoon Network in India. The network was launched on 1 May 1995 and airs mainly animated programmings. A variation of Cartoon Network's current logo, which resembles the network's original logo, used since 2010.
The first volume of the individual DVD compilations of Dragon Ball Z released in Japan.. Dragon Ball Z (ドラゴンボールゼット, Doragon Bōru Zetto, commonly abbreviated as DBZ) is the long-running anime sequel to the Dragon Ball TV series, adapted from the final twenty-six volumes of the Dragon Ball manga written by Akira Toriyama.
The Hindi dub of the series was based on the 4Kids Entertainment English dub, being a revised translation. Dragon Ball: Unknown: Japan: 26 February 1986-4/12/1989: Japanese: Hindi: Dragon Ball Z: Unknown: Japan: 4/26/1989-31 January 1996: 2001–2008: Japanese: Hindi
Hindi voice of Vegeta in Dragon Ball Z. Hindi voice for Po in the Kung Fu Panda franchise . The version that Prasad voiced Ash was in the Crest Animation Studios / Sound & Vision India Hindi dub for Cartoon Network and Pogo ., Also the official voice for characters Amara in Ninja - Hattori Kun and Perman in Perman.
By 1996, the first sixteen anime films up until Dragon Ball Z: Wrath of the Dragon (1995) had sold 50 million tickets and grossed over ¥40 billion ($501 million) at the Japanese box office, making it the highest-grossing anime film series up until then, in addition to selling over 500,000 home video units in Japan.
DVD home video releases of the Dragon Ball anime series have topped Japan's sales charts on several occasions. [18] [19] In the United States, the Dragon Ball Z anime series sold over 25 million DVD units by January 2012. [20] As of 2017, the Dragon Ball anime franchise has sold more than 30 million DVD and Blu-ray units in the United States. [1]