Synopsis: In the icy Tsurumai-tsuburi Mountains, Piccolo trains alone by trying to blow up a mountain, but is unable to put so much as a scratch in it. Elsewhere in the mountains, Oolong and Gohan are watching the Dragon Balls be gathered via Bulma's radar that Oolong has “borrowed”, and Oolong tries to get Gohan to hurry so he can make a wish instead. Oolong makes sure Gohan has kept his promise about not telling anyone what they're doing though, and while Gohan assures him he hasn't, the young boy can't help but wonder what Oolong wants to wish for as the pig daydreams about his last wish for panties. Much to Oolong's surprise, the Dragon Balls have already been completely gathered by an unfamiliar old man named Dr. Cochin, who summons Shen Long and wishes for the revival of Dr. Uiro, who he says is sealed in ice beneath the Tsurumai-tsuburi Mountains. Shen Long grants this wish and melts away the ice, and as a brain in a jar is briefly shown, Dr. Cochin swears his and Dr. Uiro's vengeance upon the world. As the ice melts away, Oolong and Gohan discover a large facility and Gohan says he can sense a large power inside of it, followed by another glimpse of the brain. While Gohan wants to investigate, Oolong tries to run away, but both are stopped by the arrival of bizarre creatures, the bio-men. The bio-men quickly overwhelm Gohan, but one is stopped from killing him by the arrival of Piccolo, who is easily able to defeat them all. As Gohan faints while seeing Piccolo, three mysterious foes are shown watching Piccolo as a beam of light envelopes him just as Gohan and Oolong fall into a collapsing snow cave. When Gohan wakes up, he wonders what happened to Piccolo, and Oolong reminds him of his promise not to tell anyone what they were doing as the two escape the mountains. Once back home, Gohan studies while overhearing his parents argue about his absence. Chi Chi worries what he may have been doing and how it'll affect his studies, whereas Goku thinks that as long as he's fine and growing up strong, he can study some other time. Gohan tries to focus on his studies but can't stop his mind from wondering back to Piccolo, and worrying about what happened to him. Gohan also can't make up his mind of whether or not he wants to be a scholar or a fighter. As he dozes up and dreams about Piccolo, Chi Chi walks in and wakes him up for dinner, causing her to worry all the more about her son's studies. At Kame House, Oolong is punished by Bulma for taking the radar without permission by being forced to cook them all dinner. As Oolong's cooking starts to burn, the doorbell suddenly rings and the turtle answers it to find more of the bio-men. The bio-men ask to see Roshi, and as Roshi steps out to talk with them, they say that Dr. Uiro is asking to meet him. Roshi declines saying that he doesn't know a Dr. Uiro, and as Bulma and Oolong step outside as well, Oolong is scared when he recognizes the monsters from the mountains. Roshi tells Bulma not to worry and to step back inside, and as the bio-men attack him, he defeats them all easily. This pleases a suddenly appearing Dr. Cochin, who says he should have expected as much from the legendary Kame-sennin, and once again asks for Roshi to come with him. Roshi declines again, but when he turns around to find the bio-men have captured Bulma, he agrees at last. Dr. Cochin says it makes sense that the 'strongest man in the world' would also be smart enough to see reason, and as a strange ship pops out of the water to take them back to the lab, a scared Oolong hides in the kitchen. Oolong goes to Goku's house to explain what's happened, and while Goku isn't concerned at first since Roshi should be able to take care of himself, Oolong eventually confesses everything that he and Gohan witnessed three days before. This is enough to make Goku think he should check things out after all, and he calls down kinto'un to fly out to the mountains to investigate. Gohan tries to go with him, but Chi Chi puts a stop to that while also yelling at him for associating with Piccolo again. Back at Uiro's lab, Roshi demands that they release Bulma and tell him what this is all about. Dr. Uiro instructs Dr. Cochin to test Roshi immediately, and Dr. Cochin presses a button that takes Bulma away while releasing the three figures that were watching Piccolo before – even stronger bio-warriors named Misokatsun, Kishime, and Ebifrya. Dr. Cochin tells Roshi to show them what the 'strongest man in the world' can do, and Roshi does his best to fight them off but is ultimately defeated, surprising and disappointing a watching Cochin. Bulma calls Dr. Cochin an idiot and says that while Roshi may have been the strongest fifty years ago, he's long since been surpassed. Dr. Uiro is curious about this, and when Bulma tries to find who's talking to her, Dr. Cochin introduces her to Dr. Uiro – the brain in a jar seen earlier. Hearing Uiro and Cochin's names together jogs Bulma's memory as she realizes who they are – renowned scientists in the field of bio-technology who both took their experiments too far, and when a sudden weather shift in the Tsurumai-tsuburi Mountains caused their lab to be frozen over in ice, it was presumed to have been divine punishment that also killed the two men. Dr. Cochin reveals that while it's true they were trapped in the ice, neither of them truly “died”, and he chastises humanity's foolishness for disregarding their brilliance as “evil”. Dr. Uiro asks Bulma who the strongest person in the world is now if it's not Roshi, and she tells them both about Goku. Dr. Uiro is pleased, thinking that Goku's body might just make the perfect vessel for him, an idea that horrifies Bulma. Dr. Cochin further horrifies her by revealing that they were behind a recent area turning into a desert overnight, asking her to imagine what more they'd be capable of once Dr. Uiro is the strongest as well as the smartest. Realizing how depraved they are, Bulma refuses to tell them where Goku is, but just then Dr. Uiro picks up a strong energy coming towards them, and determines that it must be Goku himself. Meanwhile, back at Goku's house, Chi Chi finds that Gohan has changed into his Piccolo clothing once again and has left to join his father after all. With Goku outside of the lab, Dr. Cochin confirms his identity. Goku asks where they're keeping Roshi and Bulma, and Dr. Cochin tells him he can come inside and get them...if he can. As Goku lands and notices how cold it is here, Dr. Cochin instructs his bio-warriors to try and kill Goku. The first to attack is the large, portly Misokatsun, who bursts out of the ice beneath Goku's feet. Goku fights back but realizes his punches aren't affecting the fat creature, and is forced to run into the building as he realizes it's too cold to channel his ki properly. Once inside, Goku finds a room filled with floating metal spheres that soon pop out spikes and try to impale him, but Goku is able to deal with them with energy blasts. Having followed him into the room, Misokatsun resumes it's attack as well, and while Goku is at first still unable to harm it, he ultimately wins by using Kaio-ken and flying through Misokatsun's stomach further than it's stretchy body can handle. Goku flies through the ceiling and up to the next floor, leaving behind a beaten and deflated Misokatsun. Dr. Uiro and Cochin are impressed, as Goku finds himself face-to-face with Kishime and Ebifriya next. The fight goes back and forth as Goku has to overcome Kishime's speed, but the bio-warriors ultimately get the drop on Goku when Kishime hits him with an electric energy whip that distracts him long enough for Ebifriya to hit him with a freezing ki blast. As the ice envelopes Goku's body, Dr. Cochin laughs, but help arrives in the form of Gohan and Kuririn. Dr. Cochin tells Ebifriya to kill them both, and the pair are ultimately unable to defeat either bio-warrior. Unable to watch his friend and son be hurt, Goku uses the Kaio-ken again to break free of the ice and take down Kishime and Ebifriya for good this time. A pleased Dr. Uiro praises Goku for being better than he imagined, as Goku, Gohan, and Kuririn run deeper into the lab. They eventually find Bulma chained on a pedestal, and as Goku tries to run forward to free her, he's thrown back when it turns out to be electrified. Dr. Cochin introduces himself, and when Goku demands to know where Roshi is, the mad scientist says he's sleeping upstairs waiting for his turn to be turned into a bio-warrior. When Gohan spots Dr. Uiro's brain behind them, Bulma explains everything as Dr. Uiro tells Goku that he'll be taking his body for his own. Goku refuses, but soon finds his arms and legs wrapped up in wires as the same light that enveloped Piccolo before now envelopes him. Gohan tries to save his father, but Dr. Uiro tells Cochin to unleash their “final fighter”, and Gohan and Kuririn are soon faced with a red-eyed Piccolo. Goku breaks free from his bonds just as Roshi is shown stumbling back down the stairs, and while Gohan tries to greet Piccolo, Piccolo ruthlessly smacks him away and turns his attention towards Goku. As his turban comes off, a vein-like crown is shown on Piccolo's head, as Dr. Cochin reveals that their technology even allows them to control someone as strong as Piccolo. As Goku and Piccolo fight, Gohan demands the release of his master while Kuririn tries in vain to free Bulma. When Gohan is unable to stop Piccolo from fighting, his rage unleashes towards the two mad scientists, with his power threatening to break everything around them. Dr. Cochin foolishly mocks Gohan against Dr. Uiro's advice, and as Cochin tries to attack Gohan with an energy blast from his staff, Gohan's power erupts and damages everything around them, including putting a crack in the crown on Piccolo's head. Dr. Cochin tries to attack again, but Kuririn knocks his staff away and tells him to free Bulma. Dr. Cochin turns his arm into a machine gun and fires at Kuririn, and as Kuririn flees, the gunfire damages the power source to Bulma's pedestal before Roshi ultimately drops in and breaks the machine gun arm off. The damaged crown on Piccolo's head falls off as well, finally freeing Piccolo from the villains' control. Dr. Uiro laughs and praises the warriors for all being better than he'd expected, and says he'll take things into his own hands now. The entire building shakes as a gigantic robot with Dr. Uiro's brain in the cockpit breaks free from the wall, causing Dr. Cochin to fall down a chasm and be electrified and blown up as his true robotic nature is revealed. Now freed, Dr. Uiro says he'll have no use for this robotic shell once he has Goku's body, but the heroes all stand ready to fight him. As Goku notes how strong Uiro seems to be, Piccolo tries and fails to take the robot down, and the Turtle students fire a combined Kamehameha, but none of it manages to do anything substantial to the mecha before them. Goku isn't sure if even a Kaio-ken will do much, and as Gohan, Kuririn, and Roshi are all taken out of the fight, it comes down to him and Piccolo working together once again. Not even their combined might is enough to stop Uiro however, and Piccolo is ultimately crushed against the ceiling, leaving only Goku to face off with the mad scientist. Left with no other choice, Goku uses Kaio-ken x3 and manages to break off one of the robotic Dr. Uiro's arms, before firing a Kamehameha that the scientist matches with a large energy attack of his own. The beams struggle against one another but Goku ultimately manages to overcome it by tapping into a Kaio-ken x4, blowing up much of the surrounding building and sending Uiro flying high into the sky. Kuririn congratulates Goku on his victory, but Goku says it's not over yet as he can still sense Dr. Uiro's energy. In the atmosphere above Earth, Dr. Uiro praises Goku's power but says that if he can't have it as his own, he'll just blow the Earth itself away. As the Earth begins to shake, Goku tells his friends to run as he starts to gather energy for a Genki Dama. Dr. Uiro can sense that Goku's up to something and opens fire just as Goku finishes the attack, preventing him from throwing it. Gohan, Kuririn, and Piccolo fly up to prevent Dr. Uiro from coming back down to the Earth, and while Gohan and Piccolo are able to hurt Uiro, Kuririn gets slapped away. The trio manages to distract Uiro long enough for Goku to stand back up however, and as Dr. Uiro fires a blast intended to destroy the Earth, Goku throws the Genki Dama. The Genki Dama manages to push back and finally break through Uiro's attack, and as Gohan and Kuririn feel the energies of everyone on Earth inside of the attack, it hits Dr. Uiro and evaporates the brain and robot both, finishing him off for good. As the lab crumbles to the ground, Goku finds himself laying on the ground, injured but alive and surrounded by his friends. Goku spots Piccolo walking away and thanks him for his help, but Piccolo says that it was Gohan that rose to the occasion this time. The Earth is saved, though the narrator notes that as long as humanity craves more and more power, someone else like Dr. Uiro could appear one day. The narrator thinks that if they do however, Goku and his friends will surely be there to stop them. As the movie ends, Roshi says that he did think Uiro had one good quality in that the scientist thought he was the strongest person in the world, prompting Bulma to say that he's really just the world's greatest pervert, and everyone laughs. Review: I may as well get my gushing out of the way at the start: I absolutely ADORE this movie. For me, this is the absolute best of the original run of Dragon Ball films that came out alongside the original manga's release, which means it's only downhill from here (though that's not to say all of the films left are bad, just less good than this one...and also some are bad). Maybe it's the sci-fi horror setting, maybe it's the unique story focus, whatever it is there's just something about this movie that's resonated with me ever since first seeing it back in the days when the only version available to me was the original Ocean dubbed version – and it's still one of my favorites regardless of which version I watch (though usually it's with the Japanese version nowadays). Let's get the obvious stuff out of the way as well though: this movie does blatantly rip off a lot of scenes and imagery from the latter part of the Saiyan arc. The basic foot soldier bio-men that Dr. Cochin sends out to protect the lab and to bring Roshi to him are blatant Saibamen re-designs, and it is beyond lazily handled – I can't think of a single other non-Dragon Ball Heroes addition to Dragon Ball's vast cast of characters that are this blatantly ripping off the design of an entirely separate character. This also leads to a similar moment where Piccolo grabs the wrist of one of the Not-Saibamens to stop it from attacking Gohan prior to destroying it, same as he did with the actual Saibamen. There's also the movie's use of Goku's Kaio-ken. At one point, he seemingly breaks the back of one of the two final bio-warriors in the same fashion he did to Nappa, and then there's his Kaio-ken x3 beam struggle against Dr. Uiro that ultimately forces the mad scientist high into the sky – both of these are lifted straight from his fight with Vegeta. The same thing goes for his ultimate use of the Genki Dama, and how the Genki Dama itself almost doesn't get to be used at all. Here however, the Genki Dama is what ultimately saves the day as opposed to being a red herring of an ending – and fair warning, you might want to get used to that idea for a bit, because it's not going anywhere for a while in these movies. Much of the rest of the movie's plot is thankfully pretty original however, and similar to the previous film, it decides to put some of it's focus on another character's back history. Well, sort of. Whereas the first DBZ movie tied itself to Kami, with Goku only getting drawn into the conflict due to Garlic Jr. and his cronies kidnapping his son, this time the film's story ties itself to Roshi. And it's honestly a really well thought out idea for a film's villain if you ask me – Roshi was thought of as the strongest person in the world for a long time in-universe, so the idea that some villains out there don't realize that he's long since been surpassed makes a certain amount of sense. Roshi never competed in any of the three tournaments we got to see under his own name, so they'd have no way of knowing that he'd retired from fighting as the next generation came into their own. Even beyond that however, there's the bit about them having been stuck in the the ice and snow of the Tsurumai-tsuburi Mountains for like fifty years – the last time they were actively out in the world, Roshi WAS the strongest guy around, and I doubt Cochin really did much checking into things on that front once he got out and started gathering the Dragon Balls. Speaking of, there are a few oddities here and there, and one of them is just how absurdly quick Cochin is able to gather those things. Oolong literally watches the Dragon Balls increase in number over a matter of seconds on the radar. How in the hell did Cochin travel that fast, much less track them down in the first place? There's never any indication that he has a radar of any kind, but surely he must have. Weird. There's also little things like Uiro being able to sense ki and give out a tremendous amount of ki himself (sensing I guess we could chalk up to the technology giving him something similar to a scouter's capability, but why is he so strong if he was just a scientist before all of this?), as well as Oolong and Gohan acting like they're old friends when I'm honestly pretty sure they've never met in any version, anime or manga, by roughly this point in the series - I'll touch more on THAT conundrum shortly. The ultimate oddity though is the status of Uiro and Cochin in the first place. Cochin's wish seems to have brought Uiro back to life, but the way they talk about him later implies he was never dead at all. For that matter, Cochin is ultimately revealed to be a robot seemingly rather than a living being at all, so...was there ever a real Dr. Cochin, or was he always a robot? Also, if Uiro really can detect ki, how could he not tell that the already captured Piccolo was way stronger than Roshi? There's also the part where Cochin reveals to Bulma that they caused an area to turn into a desert. It's...neat, I guess, and it's certainly horrifying, but nothing about it ever comes up later and it also comes out of nowhere in the first place, so it's really, really weird. Oh yeah, and while I don't think it quite counts as an oddity, it's worth mentioning that this is the only other DBZ movie to really feature a Gohan song moment as Dead Zone did. The song here is really catchy and has some fun and cute visuals, but it sort of just happens out of nowhere as opposed to the drunken Gohan moment in the last film, so...I can't really say I'm quite as fond of this one. I think it's less than stellar implementation might be a reason we don't keep getting these moments moving further into the films either. Overall though, this film does so much different and interesting that it's hard to be too upset with it for the things that don't make sense or feel too familiar. The idea of evil mad scientists is a well that Dragon Ball, including from Toriyama himself, is going to go back to repeatedly in it's future, but this is the first time it comes up, so it manages to feel completely fresh and new. After we've had evil armies, a revived demon king, and invading aliens, mad scientists coming out of nowhere make for a new threat unlike anything Goku has gone up against before. They also make for a different threat to the world at large in a way too: they're not looking to “destroy” it, though they can certainly achieve that through either power or science; they're looking to “transform” it. Uiro and Cochin want to force the world to acknowledge their insane science as the brilliance they believe it to be, and to make humans more than they are currently, and if they have to do that by force then well, humanity will still benefit from it once they finally understand it's for their own good. It's a very dark and honestly horrifying type of threat on it's own, and the film makes good use of it's background scenery and how shots are shown to get the most out of it too. They know exactly what sort of Dragon Ball movie they're making this time around and it shows. Any of these old Dragon Ball Z movies are made or broken by how memorable or not their villains are, and thankfully this one comes out swinging on that front as well. The ripoff Saibamen are lame, but the other bio-warriors manage to be memorable enough between their designs and powers, and that's saying something given that they don't really have much in the way of actual personalities or lines this time around. Misokatsun's fight with Goku in particular is a fun one, though I'm probably biased towards that part in general because not only does it have a great musical cue – Makafushigi Adventure is ten times the theme that Head-Cha-La is and I will fight you on this – it has threats beyond just how strong it is. I love the spiked ball room as it's something working against Goku that isn't another fighter of some kind, and we haven't had that sort of thing in a long time now. Even once he's managed to get through that though, there's still how cold the area is and how that seems to make it harder to channel ki properly. To top it all off, Misokatsun also seems capable of absorbing any damage Goku throws his way (but in a different way than we usually see damage being absorbed), and Goku has to get creative to find a way to beat him. After Misokatsun, the fights with Kishime and Ebifriya are fun as well, and they both have a unique way of attacking – Kishime with his lightning whips that can paralyze, and Ebifriya with his freezing ice attacks – but those both boil down more to outright hitting an opponent, and thus feel a little less novel in comparison. It's also a little disappointing that there's two of them, Gohan and Kuririn both show up and seem like they're going to get to save the day by equally matching them, and...they fail immediately only for Goku to have to win the fight after all. Lame. If you're going to bring in the other heroes at a moment like that, when they evenly match the number of enemies no less, give them SOME kind of win, c'mon. The real stars of the villain side are of course the two mad doctors themselves, Uiro and Cochin. So much of their personalities are tied to their plans themselves, but they do manage to get some fun action scenes as well. Cochin doesn't seem like much, and he probably isn't all that strong all things told – despite Uiro taking a few cues from Vegeta in terms of the fight, Cochin is definitely not a Nappa stand-in – but he makes up for it with just how despicable he is, as well as having a weird blaster staff and a hidden machine gun arm. And Dr. Uiro's “true form” of a brain in a jar is both disturbing and unique among anything else in the franchise, with his cold metal shell not even having a face to speak of. Even once the giant robot he's in is revealed, it still looks bizarre and alien in design, making the idea of seeing this thing fight feel really unnerving. I would imagine it's massive size is something taken from Vegeta's Oozaru state though if I'm being honest. It's really his desire to take the body of the strongest person in the world, coupled with that brain-in-a-jar design, that really makes him such an eerie villain. It's a unique desire within the franchise (again, at least at this point in time), though as far as the design goes, I'd imagine Uiro's gimmick HAS to be an homage to the villainous Mamo in the first Lupin III anime film. It just has to be. I said that these movies depend on how interesting the villains are, and that's no lie because the heroes don't really get much in the way of interesting things to say or do in this movie either. They basically show up as needed, find out what's going on, and fight until the film's conclusion – soak, lather, rinse, repeat. This one doesn't even give anything interesting to it's non-fighting crew either, as outside of Bulma being there to help with exposition, Oolong's really only there to help set up the plot at the beginning (though it is nice to see him again). There's a bit with Chi Chi being worried about her son's future, and it's arguably handled way more nicely here than it will be in future installments of either the manga or anime, but it doesn't really get any time to breathe either. It's just the nature of these shorter films, and for what they are it works well enough even if it's not always the most interesting from the point of view of following them. That said, Piccolo does get a unique factor in this movie in that he gets mind controlled briefly, but sadly that amounts to a whole lot of nothing in the end – he appears early on to save Gohan (get used to THAT in these movies too), disappears for much of the rest of the movie, and then reappears when it's time to fight. His fight with Goku is neat and all but doesn't really do anything to service the plot as a whole, and it's over almost as soon as it started, so... Honestly, I can't help but wonder if there's a cut story idea here or if it's just me thinking of it way after the fact, but it would have been interesting if Uiro's focus had switched to wanting to take Gohan's body after his power was unleashed briefly. That would definitely have lit an even bigger fire under Goku to put an end to this whole mess, while also making the idea of body stealing all the more repulsive. If there's one other critique I'd have to level at the film, it's that I do think it's closing scene is a little bit heavy handed. No, I don't mean Piccolo saying Gohan did a good job to deflect his helping Goku again, that's fine – it's the bit with the narrator, who was absent for the entire rest of the film, saying that humanity will always be power hungry and produce people like Uiro, but it'll be fine because our heroes will be there to save us. It's a nice bookend about how humanity can and probably will be it's own doom somehow, someday, but that...feels a little out of place, at least with how it's awkwardly brought up only at the end here. There will be a similar sentiment expressed in the story WAY further down the line, but there it's the story itself expressing it rather than a narrator saying as much to us, and I can't help but think that it handles this idea way better than what we got here. It also doesn't help that the movie's final closing moments are basically a one-liner followed by everyone laughing. It feels...fake, somehow, honestly. And that about covers everything the movie itself does right or wrong, so before I close this review out, let's talk about something that I did not expect to be such an ordeal when I got to this movie to review – where it would seemingly take place, and why it can or can't take place there. So, right up front – I wasn't originally planning to review this movie AFTER the Saiyan arc. I'd originally planned to review it a few other places, but thankfully before I got committed to doing so, I realized there were a few problems with my placing it there to review. The first place I'd originally placed it was right at the arrival of the Saiyans. That seemed like a perfect middle breaking point between acts – but then I remembered that the movie makes it a point of showing Piccolo's sacrifice to save Gohan from Nappa when Gohan thinks about how much Piccolo means to him. Oops. So I moved the review's placement, with my aim now being to review it as soon either right after Piccolo's sacrifice, or right as Goku landed on the battle field, so as to break up those two parts of the story as well...and then I remembered that the movie made use of the Kaio-ken and the Genki Dama, and while the Genki Dama at least been somewhat shown and explained on Kaio-sama's planet, the Kaio-ken wouldn't get it's showcase until Goku fought Nappa. Oops again. It was at that point that I re-evaluated the movie's placement from the ground up, and I realized that even while the Genki Dama was previously shown on Kaio-sama's planet, we didn't really see what it's use was really like until Goku used it against Vegeta, so in the end I moved the film to where I've now reviewed it. Good thing too, because I'd completely forgotten that the movie also uses the higher levels of Kaio-ken. OOPS. All of this moving around of where to review the film is hilariously fitting too, because this might be one of the most impossible movies to try and place where it would take place in the actual canon of the story. It really just CAN'T take place anywhere. For this movie's events to happen, Piccolo has to have sacrificed himself to save Gohan...but he also has to still be alive, something that we know doesn't happen in the manga. That alone breaks the continuity in a way that really can't be ignored, so while my normal head-canon roughly shoves this movie somewhere after the Saiyan arc (as my review placement ultimately ended up putting it, how's that for irony?), it can't take place there at all. The only way this movie can exist is in an alternate turn of events, one where not only did Piccolo survive Nappa's attack, but one where Goku either comes out of the fight nowhere near as injured or at least has had time to heal up since. The fates of other characters are a little harder to determine in this version, as Yamcha, Tenshinhan, and Chaozu are completely absent nor are they mentioned, so it's hard to say if they also survived, or if they just got wished back later on since Piccolo and Kami's survival means the Dragon Balls are still active (hence they're use at the start of the movie too, come to think of it). That doesn't really work for Chaozu though and I have a hard time imagining Tenshinhan coming back to life without him, so...this movie's bizarre placement or lack of ability to be places really raises more questions than it does answers frankly. All things told though, this really does stand up as my favorite of these older DBZ films, and it's always an absolute delight every time I rewatch it. If you've somehow never seen this one before and you're a longtime Dragon Ball fan, I can't recommend it highly enough. Until next time! Favorite Scene: It is EXTREMELY hard to pick just one scene, but I think I have to give it to Goku's fight with Misokatsun. Both parts of the fight happen in unique locals with different factors, we get to see a creative use of a foe's abilities used against them, AND the score brings back Makafushigi Adventure from the original anime? How can I NOT love it? Next Time: How evil can an evil Goku really be if he doesn't even have a mustache?
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About the AuthorAspiring author and big anime/manga fan, just trying to do my best in the world. For more details, go to About Me. Archives
September 2022
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