Michael Nordine authorThere’s a good chance you know more about “Dragon Ball” than you think you do. Whether through memes or references to terms like “Super Saiyan,” “Kamehameha” and “It’s over 9,000,” the 38-year-old franchise has achieved global popularity even as it’s remained something of a niche outside its native Japan.
With 42 manga volumes, several animated series (including “Dragon Ball Z”), theme-park attractions, video games, an ill-fated live-action adaptation and billions of dollars in merchandising revenue, the series isn’t going anywhere soon.
For all that, feature-length animated films have been rare — the new “Dragon Ball Super: Super Hero” is only the fifth, whereas there have been 15 running an hour or less that were usually shown as double features.
And though “Super Hero” opening in more than 2,500 U.S. theaters makes it one of the franchise’s more ambitious incursions into the American market, the film is decidedly a fans-only proposition whose lore-related nuances will be lost on first-timers.
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