Dragon Ball Episode 145
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Junior No MoreEnglishJapaneseJapanese Nameピッコロ大だい魔ま王おう超ちょう巨きょ身しん術じゅつRomaji namePikkoro Daimaō Chō-KyoshinjutsuLiteral NameThe Great Demon King Piccolo's Super Giant-Form TechniqueSeriesSagaPiccolo Jr. SagaEpisode #145Chapter counterpartThe Super KamehamehaPanic at the Tenkaichi Budokai!Piccolo's Super Giantification SpellJapanese airdateFebruary 15, 1989English airdateNovember 13, 2003Previous episodeSuper KamehamehaNext episodeGoku's Trap
\"Junior No More\" (ピッコロ大だい魔ま王おう超ちょう巨きょ身しん術じゅつ, Pikkoro Daimaō Chō-Kyoshinjutsu, lit. \"The Great Demon King Piccolo's Super Giant-Form Technique\") is the twenty-third episode of the Piccolo Jr. Saga and the one hundred forty-fifth episode in the Dragon Ball series. This episode first aired in Japan on February 15, 1989. Its original American airdate was November 13, 2003.
All credits listed below are as originally presented in the episode. The credit structure used in Dragon Ball is actually quite simple; the staff involved with the production of the series as a whole are listed in the opening credits and the staff involved with this specific episode are listed in the ending credits. All original credit errors have been corrected to maintain accurate spellings throughout the site. For more information and a complete listing of the series staff, visit the Production Guide.
Kai features remastered high definition picture, sound, and special effects as well as a re-recorded voice track by most of the original cast.[4] As most of the series' sketches and animation cels had been discarded since the final episode of Dragon Ball Z in 1996, new frames were produced by digitally tracing over still frames from existing footage and filling them with softer colors.[5][6] This reduced visible damage to the original animation. To convert the 4:3 animation to 16:9 widescreen, some shots were selectively cropped while others feature new hand drawn portions; an uncropped 4:3 version was made available on home video and international releases for the first 98 episodes. Some countries would also air it in 4:3. Much of the anime-exclusive material that was not featured in the original manga was cut from Kai (ultimately abridging the 291 episodes of Dragon Ball Z down to 167).[6]
The series would return in 2014, running for an additional 61 episodes in Japan, and 69 episodes internationally.[3] The international version of the 2014 series was titled Dragon Ball Z Kai: The Final Chapters by Toei Europe and Funimation,[7] and had initially only been earmarked for broadcast outside of Japan.[8] The home media releases of The Final Chapters contain a Japanese audio track for all episodes, including those that were never broadcast in Japan.[9]
The first Blu-ray and DVD compilation was released in Japan on September 18, 2009.[10][11] Individual volumes and Blu-ray box sets were released monthly.[12] France was the first country to release all 167 episodes on Blu-ray and DVD.[13] 59ce067264
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