Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
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.
In the English-language dub by Funimation, Eric Vale voices Trunks as both a teen and an adult in all Dragon Ball media, [5] while Laura Bailey voices him as a child in the series, as well as the movie, Dragon Ball Z: Battle of Gods, as well as the other non-canon movies. [6] Alexis Tipton voices him as a child starting from Dragon Ball Super. [7]
Dragon Ball Z: Dead Zone [a] is a 1989 Japanese anime fantasy martial arts film, the fourth installment in the Dragon Ball film series, and the first under the Dragon Ball Z moniker. It was originally released in Japan on July 15 at the "Toei Manga Matsuri" film festival along with the 1989 film version of Himitsu no Akko-chan , the first Akuma ...
Goku, Vegeta and Trunks all simultaneously power up to their Super Saiyan forms as Gohan and Krillin watch on. 13 manages to hold the upper hand against Goku, who is soon assisted by the arrival of Piccolo, while Trunks and Vegeta destroy 14 and 15. They surround 13, who proceeds to absorb 14 and 15's cores into his own being and undergo a ...
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).
File:Dragon Ball Z Budokai Tenkaichi.png; File:Dragon Ball Z Burst Limit.jpg; File:Dragon Ball Z Infinite World.jpg; File:Dragon Ball Z LSW.jpg; File:Dragon Ball Z Plan to Eradicate the Saiyans Video 1.jpg; File:Dragon Ball Z Supersonic Warriors.jpg; File:Dragon Ball, Curse of the Blood Rubies.jpg; File:Dragon Ball, Sleeping Princess in Devil's ...
Dragon Ball Z: Wrath of the Dragon [a] is a 1995 Japanese animated science fantasy martial arts film and the thirteenth Dragon Ball Z feature film. It was originally released in Japan on July 15 at the Toei Anime Fair. It was later dubbed into English by Funimation in 2006 like most other Dragon Ball films.
An extended version of the film with new scenes titled Dragon Ball Z: Resurrection 'F' - Future Trunks Special Edition also aired on Fuji TV on August 27, 2016. The broadcast earned an average household rating of 9.2%. It serves as a prelude to the events of the Universe 6 Saga in Dragon Ball Super. [36]