Home > Film & Television > Dragonball: Evolution – So bad it’s…still bad

Dragonball: Evolution – So bad it’s…still bad

The PG action movie.

It’s a source of joy for many and annoyance for some. Its reason of existence is limited in scope: it needs to make as much money as possible from a single demographic, pre-teen boys (now maybe girls), in the weeks it shares the screen with competitors like Hannah Montana and before the family-movie Pixar behemoths eclipse it from the cultural zeitgeist forever. This isn’t an easy task on its own merits, or so producers believe.

However, if you manage to prop the PG action movie with a ridiculously popular franchise name, you turn an otherwise forgettable weekend alternative into a capitalistic imperative for ten-year olds across the country. Not only that, but you may even draw out some college geeks on an ironic quest to see someone’s representation of their childhood.
And, as it turns out, many of those may like it.

The first time I can remember being offended by the sheer badness of a film’s quality was when I was 9 and went to see Turbo: A Power Rangers Movie with my Mom. Granted, I was growing out of the Power Rangers phase, but I distinctly remember thinking that the first one, which in retrospect is so campy it can only be enjoyed in a certain mood, at least felt like it merited a minute of my time. However, Turbo taught me that no person should ever utter the lines uttered by Tommy and Kimberly in that movie. No villain in any influential franchise should ever have such unconvincing motivation as Divatox. And nothing as sickeningly useless as Justin should ever be conceived…ever (this rule gets broken over and over again — see Jake Lloyd in The Phantom Menance).

This movie was Michael Bay required watching.

This movie was Michael Bay required watching.

But…at least, looking back on it, there was some level of distinction. There was some sort of midget. And the cars in the jungle. And the Rangers were still the Rangers…as terrible an idea as it was, this was the continuation and the future of the franchise. These were the Power Rangers, for better or for worse.

Dragonabll: Evolution has no such distinction. What 20th Century Fox did was take the names Goku, Bulma, Roshi, Yamcha, Chi-Chi and Piccolo, apply them to single-dimensional splotches of life, mixed in a hodge podge of vaguely oriental conflict philosophies and processed it through a computer algorithm. Even Disney Channel movies have more original scenarios.

The movie is, in the loosest sense of the word, an adaptation of the Piccolo saga in the Dragonball manga/anime. In that version, Goku is a young warrior entering his teens who has saved the world and found the Dragonballs on a couple of occasions already. The demon King Piccolo escapes an ancient containment and terrorizes the world until Goku, after much training and death of his friends, fights a tough battle and eventually bursts a hole through Piccolo’s chest. Before dying, King Piccolo releases an egg for his evil legacy to carry on through a young incarnation that eventually is forced to ally with adult Goku. In Dragonball Z it is revealed that Goku is actually an amnesiac alien sent to Earth to destroy its people for his bloodthirsty race, the Saiyans, which is the reason behind his former tendency of turning into a destructive giant ape at the full moon (cauterizing off his tail in his youth put a stop to it). Oh, and Piccolo is also part of an alien species known as the Namekians and he is the other half of the current God of Earth.

The anime would not be rated PG.

The anime would not be rated PG.

Dragonball: Evolution looks at this and decides it’s not simple enough. Piccolo (James Marsters, Spike in Buffy the Vampire Slayer) is still a “Namek” alien, but this is only mentioned once in passing. He’s also referred to as a god, so the movie tries to have it both ways. It’s apparently unimportant. Either way, he terrorizes the world 2000 years before…whatever future year DBE is set in (it’s past 2010) along with his pet monkey demon, the Oozaru. He is contained by seven ancient warriros and then escapes for some reason (literally, there is no given reason). As in the source material, this world has seven Dragonballs that when gathered can summon the dragon Shen-Long and grant one wish. Piccolo’s evil purpose is to collect the Dragonballs and use them to…wish for complete world domination as opposed to fighting for it or something, I don’t know. This time, he’s also accompanied by the busty assassin named Mai (single-named Eriko).

Goku (Justin Chatwin, Eddie from a flashback in Lost) is a white 18-year-old who lives with his asian grandfather (Randall Duk Kim, the Keymaker in Matrix: Reloaded). He is constantly bullied at school, presumably for his somewhat messy hair, but he isn’t allowed to fight back, so he comes off as a great loser. This doesn’t stop his crush, Chi-Chi, from taking notice of him and his “different”-ness. But when Goku ditches his grandpa to hang out with the girl, Piccolo attacks the old man and kills him. A half-trained Goku goes in search of the Dragonballs so that he can banish Piccolo, picking up techno-bitch Bulma, bandit Yamcha, and the lecherous Master Roshi along the way.

Dawson’s Creek-lite plot aside, the movie does itself no favors by having distractingly vapid dialogue delivered by severely undertalented or unengaged actors. Even Chow Yun-Fat, while most closely approximating the quirky nature of his character and the expressiveness of anime, fails to convince us of Master Roshi’s supposed power and importance. I thought maybe Emmy Rossum would bring some legitimacy to Bulma, but it turns out what I liked about her in The Phantom of the Opera was purely physical. And Joon Park is the most glaring example of flat caricature in the role of Yamcha.

As for the two hot asian chicks, Eriko and the script manage to take an already forgettable character from the anime and make her even more anonymous. Mai exists to be a flunky. A flunky with guns and this hole in her shirt. Out of all the “actors,” my favorite was  Jamie Chung as Chi-Chi. She didn’t have better lines by any means, nor did she try to salvage the performance with any amount of distinctive acting ability, but her cuteness blended in naturally with the character and actually exhibited some layering and versatility. She was also really, really hot.

Perpetual virginity test: Which do you find hotter...Top? Or bottom?

Perpetual virginity test: Which do you find hotter...Top? Or bottom?

For a supposed fan of the show, James Marsters was neglible as Piccolo, or Every Bad Guy Ever.

Dragonball: Evolution also finds it necessary to implement the archetypal Jock Bully characters in a vaguely futuristic high school. This is one of the things the scriptwriters really found cool about Dragonball – the cars and the undefined future. They also briefly try to include something like the Tenkaichi Budokai tournament, but that only serves as a vessel for another overplayed villain strategy. As far as plot progression goes, the story is extremely segmented with little transitional reasoning between scenes. At its most climactic, DBE spares us long, drawn-out attempts of suspense at its contrived twist. It just barrels along, determined to clock in under 90 minutes.

Visually speaking, a lot of the scenery and cinematography is fine, but when it comes to the film’s bread and butter, the fighting, there is nothing that doesn’t appear to be either poor stock CGI or sad attempts at impressing the audience with the tired art of Slow-Mo Fu. The Kamehameha wave, reduced to a swirling mist of multi-purpose “air,” looks much more impressive in 1980s animation cells than with professional Hollywood effects. Goku’s special abilities are now also referred to as airbending, probably to get Avatar fans excited.

No force in the world can stop Aang -- er, Goku's airbending techniques.

No force in the world can stop Aang -- er, Goku's airbending techniques.

After discussing it with my friends, including Rorscharch, Riker, and Ivo, my understanding says the primary defense of the movie or rather, critique of my criticisms is that this is a) a PG action film for children and b) based on Dragonball, which is a kid’s anime in the first place and shouldn’t be expected to produce depth or gravitas.

I respectfully disagree.

The Dragonball manga and its subsequent franchise installments spawned an international cultural phenomenon. And while obviously it’s very possible to enjoy the stories on a purely superficial level, enjoying the fights, easy humor, and childlike simplicity, I believe the manga and the anime eventually came to embody some emblematic themes about pride, good and evil, and the life of a natural warrior. And even if this is complete extrapolation on my part, I believe a film adaptation should take the things that occupy our imagination and enhance them — flesh out characters, explore complexity of conflicts, have good special effects.

I also think it’s somewhat damaging to our younger generations to assume that all they want is camp and blandness. My favorite media as a kid were things that I felt stimulated me; made me think. Dragonball: Evolution, like many movies geared at the younger market, avoids higher thought like the plague. It’s not even a matter of it being stupid. It’s completely unaware that proven elements of quality storytelling exist. If anyone behind this was inspired by work on Turbo, then imagine what work from a person “inspired” by Dragonball: Evolution might look like. Actually, I don’t really worry about that. Inspiration is simply something that seems impossible from this soulless rip-off.

There is no need to Westernize something that the core audience understands to be oriental in nature. There is no need to stick original characteres in a “comfortable” setting for the American preteen. There is no need to rush along character development with broad strokes recycled from the latest action travesty. Imagine if the movie had actually handled its source material with a little more of that Watchmen-type reverence to its source material. If we could linger more on a subtle interchange of philosophical ideals between Bulma and Yamcha rather than the quick and contrived romance that had to happen.

Aw, youre so pretty...but Bulma has blue hair.

Aw, you're so pretty...but Bulma has blue hair.

Imagine if there were some of the touches that made the manga/anime its own…the inclusion of Puar and Oolong, for example. Or show examples of Goku’s ravenous appetite. In fact, a different handling of Goku altogether.

Goku is an alien. Even before this was expressly revealed, it was clear that he was actually different, not just “nerdy kid who can fight” different. He doesn’t get conventional social norms. He has an insatiable appetite that is scary to witness. He is clinically naïve. He’s aloof. And he fights because he loves fighting. None of this comes through in the movie adaptation of Goku. He’s just Every Other White Kung Fu Hero.

Imagine if they had crafted this as the beginning to a series of films that pushed our imaginations to their limits…rather than diluting them to a universally understood pastiche. What do you think would have been more profitable?

Considering they made it clear that they want to make a sequel, I’d say I’d be more interested in paying money for a franchise that actually lives up to the name Dragonball instead of this cash-in. And I hope that this is where they leave this incarnation so that, down the road, an actual film will come of it.

Though I trashed the film, its flaws were more pitiable than overtly offensive. Some set design and art direction worked for me and the pace is mercifully quick. It’s not nauseating. It’s just forgettable. 2 out of 10 Dragon Radars.

  1. Tim
    April 12, 2009 at 10:54 am

    “Imagine if the movie had actually handled its source material with a little more of that Watchmen-type reverence to its source material.”

    No. No. No. You couldn’t be more wrong. What you want is a live action version of the Dragonball Anime that only makes a Watchmen-like amount of cuts to 100 episodes worth of source material. That will never happen. Never.

    The other place where I very much disagree with you is that you expect everything you see to not be “vapid.” When I was a kid, a lot of the cartoons and shows that I watched would be completely unwatchable to me now. Yes, I did watch some very amazing TV shows, but those were usually the ones intended for adults. My point is that tastes change (a child can stand a lot more repetitive shit than an adult) and not everyone making a movie aimed at children is obligated to provide intellectual stimulation for adults that might be seeing it.

  2. April 12, 2009 at 1:12 pm

    My take was that it was a slightly better Kung Fu movie. That said, Kung Fu movies still don’t have a standing like it once did, so you can’t draw that many people out.

    I just hope they didn’t spend more than $30Million on the movie or it’ll be said. Basically, right now, it appears that with the domestic market, they barely made enough to cover the CGI. However, they did make over $30Million, if you include the Worldwide estimates.

    If they’re to make a sequel, then I think they should do it in Hong Kong and do it slightly better. They forgotten that the kids who enjoyed the anime (and maybe manga) are now adults. Kids have no idea WTF dragonball is. Also, if they had started in the DBZ and went back to DB, then there might have been more of a draw.

    Problem is that DBZ is a lot more interesting than DB. Well, I say that, DB had more in the way of thought, but what people are interested in is action and DBZ had a lot of it.

  3. April 12, 2009 at 3:35 pm

    1. lemme blow your mind, the sequel is already being made, so there were no “producers expecting this movie to flop”
    2. you think that turbo is still an all right movie because it continued the franchise. no point following that can be taken seriously. perhaps you’re forgetting that it too is an adaptation of a japanese children’s show that switched up the jokes and adjusted the plot to help it target americans more successfully.
    3. the ring vs. ringu. the office vs. the office. adaptations to target the american audience are a rule, not the exception. the only reasons miyazaki films are counted as any sort of success in the us market are some old dudes passing out awards and the fact that it grossed 25 times more money in a country with less than half the population.
    5. i read until the movie poster and then lost interest and decided to respond. that’s how futile your blog effort is.
    6. okay i read further. eriko’s last name is tamura, but since she’s an idol she’d much rather have only a first name. it’s like madonna but they hand out idolhood like candy over there to get more sales. oh look, another difference in the tastes of japanese and american audiences
    7. > Or show examples of Goku’s ravenous appetite.
    we must have watched different movies

  4. April 12, 2009 at 4:10 pm

    @Tim – That’s not what I meant by that allusion to my earlier post. In the case of Watchmen, they didn’t cut enough. In this case, they eviscerated the source material. I recognize that not everything can make it in (hence why the lack of Krillin doesn’t bother me much for this movie). But the things that DO make it in don’t need to be whitewashed for the sake of mass consumption.

    My argument is that a lot of television for both children and adults is “unwatchable” today and it’s not simply because my tastes have changed. That certainly plays a part in my standards, but I think we delude ourselves into belittling our capacity to recognize good from bad when we were younger. Perhaps we decided we personally liked different things, but we still knew when things were Shakespeare and when things were Two Stupid Dogs. Quality is dipping and will continue to dip when the standard of comparison keeps falling. That IS a reason to demand adult standards of quality from children’s media – considering today’s adult quality was last generation’s child quality.

    @Jacob – Kung Fu movies I enjoyed: Kung Fu Hustle, Fearless, Enter the Dragon…I would not call DBE a kung fu movie. It’s a kid’s fantasy flick. Sort of like Eragon or Twilight. I wish it HAD been more of a kung fu movie with special attention to effects and choreography. At this point, I don’t think a sequel could improve much of anything without a different director, a different cast, and different script writers.

    @pokecapn –

    1. Yeah, I’d heard that. That, to me, is just an example of why studios shouldn’t guarantee sequels before the movies open. Honestly, I might have seen it gladly as I saw this one before this whole debate with y’all started, but now, on principle, I might not pay money for it…

    2. 3. You’re right that Power Rangers was a campy westernization of existing Japanese media, but in the 90’s the mainstream wasn’t as aware of the value of Japanese media imports. Even so, Power Rangers made the effort to create some original elements that are still only associated with the American series. There is a huge nostalgia factor that makes it more tolerable than it would be for me if it was released today, but compare Mighty Morphin’ to any of the tripe found on Cartoon Network today and, comparatively, it’s gold.

    And you’re right. It is the rule. And it shouldn’t be.

    4….

    5. I don’t consider my blog effort futile if you personally don’t want to read everything, my friend.

    6. Cool.

    7. He ate a couple of turkey legs. Bulma didn’t even blink.

  5. Alex
    April 12, 2009 at 4:42 pm

    Since when do people need to blink when someone else eats a massive drumstick for no reason whatsoever? The fact the dialogue of the characters was cheesy and delivered without much depth is keeping in tune with the source material.

    If this movie had aspired to be serious, larger in scope, or more aligned with the actual DB series then it would fail at what this movie succeeded in, being amazingly entertaining. Most of what we ended up laughing at the theater wasn’t even due to it having good throwaway jokes. It was mainly the fact that what takes place in the movie was EXACTLY similar to something that would happen in the show. The ridiculous, improbable, and predictably outrageous things that occur in the movie are found funny due to the fact that it is so likely to have happened in the equally ridiculous source material.

    I interpret this movie as being most appreciated by those who appreciate the dragonball series for being what it is, an over-the-top and silly run of the mill anime show with rampant stereotypes. Anyone that took the DB series seriously or has never seen the franchise before will see the movie for what it is, a really bad Hollywood interpretation. The acting is on par with what the source material is, a show for kids when they come home from school. Anyone that tries to rate this movie on a scale with movies such as Casablanca, The Godfather, or *insert quality/deep movie* is out of touch with reason and needs to instead consider it like a movie adaptation to Guiding Light or Full House.

    You over think an adaptation of a game/anime and you end up with rubbish like the Chun-Li Street Fighter movie.

  6. April 12, 2009 at 4:54 pm

    @Alex – Correct. This movie should not aspire to be Casablanca or The Godfather. It shouldn’t even try to be Star Wars or The Matrix. It was light. It was easy to understand. There’s no reason a more original adaptation couldn’t have been either of these things. But it didn’t have to be A Generic Bad Movie. It can be somewhere between Plan 9 and Citizen Kane.

    Campy and silly do not have to = uninspired. If anything, there wasn’t ENOUGH camp to match the source material. And as for things happening exactly as they did in the show, here’s what happened in the Piccolo saga…

    Emperor Pilaf and his flunkies free Piccolo from the Mafuba and he starts to hunt down everyone who fought in the martial arts tournament so that no one can grow strong enough to defeat him. He starts by killing Krillin which saddens Goku and makes him vow to avenge him. Master Roshi attempts to enact the Mafuba and fails. He dies. Goku fights him and is defeated. Piccolo summons Shen Long and wishes for youth. He then kills Shen Long, thus getting rid of any chances of reviving Krillin and Master Roshi. He kills Chiaotzu. Goku goes to train at Korin tower and meets Yajirobe, Korin, and obtains the Holy Water to increase his power. He returns for the final showdown with King Piccolo.

    In the movie this is what happens:

    Piccolo escapes the Mafuba. He wants the Dragonballs. He hunts them down and kills innocent people for them, including Goku’s grandfather. Goku looks for the Dragonballs himself, meets his friends. Piccolo gets all of them. Goku and Piccolo fight.

    Even then, the movie could have had this plot and had better acting, better dialogue, and better special effects.

    And to be fair, guys, I had fun watching it. But I had fun because I was with friends and I went with the purpose of seeing how Hollywood mangles franchises. I still think it’d be nice if Hollywood wouldn’t.

  7. sketchler
    April 12, 2009 at 5:04 pm

    hello emmy rossum, i’m gonna put my thing in yo places

  8. April 12, 2009 at 5:47 pm

    >Even so, Power Rangers made the effort to create some original elements that are still only associated with the American series.
    The only thing I can think of is forcing story continuity between the different ranger series.

    >And as for things happening exactly as they did in the show, here’s what happened in the Piccolo saga…
    You can’t see the forest for the trees.

    >hello emmy rossum, i’m gonna put my thing in yo places
    i’d let her generate an energy source from my dragonballs

  9. Alex
    April 12, 2009 at 8:50 pm

    >hello emmy rossum, i’m gonna put my thing in yo places
    i’d let her generate an energy source from my dragonballs
    QFT, Bulma was hot. The tiny strand of hair being blue was all I needed, if all her hair was that shade of blue that would’ve been gaudy (this coming from someone who fucking loves eccentric hair).

    Phil, you have failed at understanding the point I made.

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