Dragon Ball Z: Bio-Broly

Dragon Ball Z: Bio-Broly

Japanese box art.
Directed by Yoshihiro Ueda
Written by Takao Koyama
Based on Dragon Ball
by Akira Toriyama
Starring See Voice cast
Music by Shunsuke Kikuchi
Distributed by Toei Company
Release date
July 9, 1994 (1994-07-09)
Running time
46 minutes
Country Japan
Language Japanese
Box office

¥1.75 billion

(US$18.0 million)

Dragon Ball Z: Bio-Broly, known in Japan as Super Warrior Defeat!! I'll Be The Winner (Japanese: ドラゴンボールZ 超戦士撃破!!勝つのはオレだ, Hepburn: Doragon Bōru Zetto Sūpā Senshi Gekiha!! Katsu No wa Ore da), is the eleventh Dragon Ball Z feature movie. It was released in Japan on July 9, 1994 at the Toei Anime Fair alongside Dr. Slump and Arale-chan: N-cha!! Excited Heart of Summer Vacation and the second Slam Dunk movie. It was dubbed into English by Funimation in 2005. It is the third and final Dragon Ball Z movie in the "Broly Trilogy".

Plot

In a dark laboratory on a distant island, strangely-coloured humanoids emerge from tanks, having been created by Dr. Collie. Collie's employer, Mr. Jaguar, plans to use these men to expose the "world's greatest fraud", and laughs madly as a furry tail is shown in a distant tank.

At Hercule's house, Android 18 is wrecking his room since he has yet to pay her for throwing the World Tournament Final, with Krillin, Trunks, Goten and Marron waiting outside. Just then, Mr. Jaguar's cousin, Men-Men, arrives and speaks with Hercule, telling him that Mr. Jaguar, who was Hercule's fighting rival at summer camp, has requested his presence at his island laboratory to have him fight his special fighters, and threatens to expose Hercule wetting his bed at summer camp if he refuses. Hercule reluctantly accepts, with Android 18 accompanying them to make sure Hercule keeps good on his promise. Trunks and Goten stow away, hoping for a challenge.

At the lab, Hercule and Jaguar come face to face after many years. The semi-tournament is organised, with Android 18, Goten and Trunks asking to take part, posing as Hercule's pupils. Though Trunks and Goten make quick work of the bio-warriors, they notice an old enemy of theirs beside Jaguar: the farcical shaman from Natade Village who they encountered in Broly – Second Coming. While exploring, Trunks and Goten stumble across a tank inside which appears to be Broly, the legendary Super Saiyan they defeated, apparently having survived again. They confront the shaman, who tells them that after Broly was destroyed, he found a sample of Broly's blood and took it to Jaguar, who used it to create a clone of Broly as one of his bio-warriors. Knowing of Broly's mental instability, Trunks and Goten try to destroy him before he awakens, but Broly notices Goten and his rage erupts, allowing him to break out of the tank. At the same time, this causes a major leak of a dangerous culture fluid which instantly devours any matter with a different structure to its own and multiplies. Broly is drenched in the culture fluid and deformed horribly, which turns him into the titular "Bio-Broly". Jaguar orders Broly to kill Hercule, and Android 18 comes to his defence (in exchange for more money), but is easily pounded by Broly. Goten and Trunks take on Broly and are only barely able to keep up with him, but the culture fluid begins to consume the entire island, destroying the bio-warriors and killing the shaman and many scientists.

Broly soon takes the upper hand and pummels Goten and Trunks. Krillin arrives in time to save Android 18, but they too are defeated. Trunks, however, lures Broly beneath a culture fluid tank and blasts it, showering Broly in the culture fluid and disintegrating him. With Broly gone, Trunks, Goten, Krillin and Android 18 evacuate the island, but Dr. Collie tells them that the culture fluid, after absorbing Broly, will continue to spread until it covers the entire Earth. However, after seeing Hercule trying to swim away from the fluid, they notice that the fluid turns to stone upon contact with seawater. Goten, Trunks and Krillin each fire a Kamehameha wave at the base of the island, causing a massive wave of water to flood the island and turn the culture fluid to stone. Just then, Broly suddenly emerges from the sea as a giant, but before he can attack, he too is solidified. Trunks and Goten blast him to smithereens, destroying him once and for all. Hercule then emerges from the sea, asking for help. Android 18 offers, but in exchange for 100 million zeni for all the help she gave him throughout the movie. Fuming, Hercule swims off.

In the Other World, Goku receives orders from the Grand Kai to take Pikkon and stop Broly (who has somehow been permitted to keep his physical body) from causing havoc in Hell. Goku decides to finish his meal first.

Voice cast

Character name Japanese voice actor English voice actor[1]
Bio-Broly Bin Shimada Vic Mignogna
Goten Masako Nozawa Kara Edwards
Trunks Takeshi Kusao Laura Bailey
Android 18 Miki Itō Meredith McCoy
Kuririn (Krillin) Mayumi Tanaka Sonny Strait
Satan Daisuke Gōri Chris Rager
Dr. Collie (コリー博士, Korī hakase) Masaharu Satō Christopher R. Sabat
Goku Masako Nozawa Sean Schemmel
Lord Jaguar (ジャガー・バッタ, Jagā Batta) Naoki Tatsuta Bill Townsley
Maloja Chafūrin Robert McCollum
Bio-Warriors Andrew Rye
Robert Colin
Eric Vale
Michael Terry
Men Men Keiji Fujiwara Jim Foronda
Nan Tomiko Suzuki Caitlin Glass
Bubbles Naoki Tatsuta Christopher R. Sabat
Marron Tomiko Suzuki Meredith McCoy

Music

Singles

"Dragon Power ∞" was released as a single on 8mm CD on July 21, 1994 in Japan. It was coupled with the image song "Chīsa na Senshi~Goten to Trunks no Tēma~" performed by Susumu Ōya.

Another CD called ~Sūpā Senshi Gekiha!! Katsu no wa Ore da~ Single +1 (~超戦士撃破!!勝つのはオレだ~Single+1, ~Super Warrior Defeat!! I'll Be the Winner~ Single + 1) was released on 12mm CD at the same time as the 8mm CD. This 12mm CD features a third track, "Kung Fu Taisō" (カンフー体操), also performed by Kageyama.

Funimation dub soundtrack

The score for the English-language version was composed by Mark Menza. The remastered DVD/Blu-ray also contains an alternate audio track containing the English dialogue and Japanese background music.

  1. "Dragon Ball Z: Bio-Broly". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved 24 July 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.