there is a breakdown of the making of episodes on youtube that details how many frames each artist had to draw and to call it alot would be an understatement, alot of animators never get credit and are essentially slave labor
Toei outsourcing a lot of animation studio during DB anime era, so they have a lot of manpower to animate the main series alongside using Toei in-house staffs for 50-min movies.
80's & 90's anime looks best on VHS paired with a CRT tube TV. That low resolution, softer and smaller screen does wonders and makes DBZ for ex, look more organic and feel more alive.
It's more that Japanese marketing is based on spoilers. When a movie doesn't get spoiled because of the staff it's usually called out as an overly artistic move.
Hello how are you? I was looking for some videos of Dragon Ball in VHS quality and I found this, I liked the content. Can I post this video on a page about Dragon Ball on Facebook? I'll leave the credits.
great and important old footage was destroyed before by warehouse fires, throwing to make room for new stuff or just degradation. you should try to keep this alive, because its very likely it is considered lost material. *dragon ball z footage is considered lost. everything we have now is remastered versions.
@@TheRaf9999 Hace 30 años se estrenó en Japón y luego en Octubre y Noviembre de 1995 si llegó a Latinoamérica doblado y distribuido ya que supuestamente en TV Abierta entre 2002 a 2003 lo estrenaron por Canal 5 de Televisa y luego en TV Azteca a través de Azteca 7 lo dieron en 2023 ya bien lo recuerdo
Fuck off...Like seriously, what's your problem. It's an old TV commercial for Fusion Reborn from Japan way back when it was released saved on VHS. What did you expect? The dialogue is still understandable and you can still watch it alright, that's all that's necessary for something like this!