Dragon Ball 〈PREMIUM ★〉
Here’s an interesting write-up on Dragon Ball that goes beyond the usual “Goku fights Frieza” summary. At a glance, Dragon Ball is about a monkey-tailed boy who punches gods. But strip away the energy blasts and ten-episode transformations, and you find a surprisingly profound story about ambition, innocence, and the terrifying beauty of limitless growth.
When the series shifted to aliens and androids, it lost that purity, but it gained something else: The power levels went from 100 to 100 million in four years. It’s ridiculous. And that ridiculousness is the point. It’s a story about chasing a horizon that keeps moving further away. dragon ball
Unlike Western heroes who carry the burden of guilt (Batman) or responsibility (Superman), Goku is pure id. He gives Cell a Senzu bean because he wants Cell to try harder. He spares Vegeta because he wants a rematch. His selfishness is so absolute that it circles back into a strange form of virtue. He forces his enemies to become better people simply because they can’t beat him. Here’s an interesting write-up on Dragon Ball that
Dragon Ball is not high art. It has plot holes you could fly a Capsule Corp ship through. But it is essential art. It captured the feeling of being a kid on a summer afternoon, convinced that if you just trained hard enough, you could shoot a laser from your palms. When the series shifted to aliens and androids,