Dragon Ball Z Kai

Dragon Ball Kai, (ドラゴンボール改「カイ」, Doragon Boru Kai, lit. Dragon Ball Revised) retitled Dragon Ball Z Kai for international audiences is a high-definition remastered recut of Dragon Ball Z, done for its 20th Anniversary. It features remastered as well as re-traced footage adjusted for 16:9 widescreen television, re-recorded vocal performances from the surviving/available members of the original cast, re-edited sound effects and a new opening and closing. Produced by Toei Animation, the series was broadcast in Japan on Fuji TV from April 5, 2009 to March 27, 2011, and later continued with the final story arc from April 6, 2014 to June 28, 2015 on Dragon Ball Z Kai: The Final Chapters.

Kai attempts to stick closer to Akira Toriyama's original manga, cutting most of the filler scenes and episodes from the original TV series, making the story flow somewhat faster and cutting down the 291 episodes of the original down to 167.

Dubbing History
Dragon Ball Z Kai was dubbed by FUNimation Entertainment at Christopher Sabat's OkraTron 5000 Dubbing Studio. In contrast with the original Dragon Ball Z dub, their dub of Kai was largely faithful with less alterations to the script than their adaptation of Z. Less liberty is taken with the script, and episode titles are mostly literal translations of their original Japanese versions. Terminology such as "Kamehameha" and "Kaio-ken" are pronounced correctly while certain character attacks retain their untranslated titles (i.e. "Makankōsappō" instead of Special Beam Cannon, "Kienzan" instead of Destructo Disc, etc.). The cast for Kai was mostly the same as Z except for a few re-casts for various reasons. For example, cast members such as Stephanie Nadolny (Gohan) and Tiffany Vollmer (Bulma) had just recently left FUNimation, thus necessitating recasts.

The dub still features Kenji Yamamoto's musical score, however it was later changed to Shunsuke Kikkuichi's cues (following Japan's example) after it was revealed scores by Yamamoto were plagiarized. Censorship for the show was done when aired on Nicktoons to fit the intended audience, and occasionally contains different verbiage than the home release, which is entirely unedited. Edits were usually digitally editing out blood. The Toonzai kids block on The CW also aired Funimation's English dub of Kai. Their broadcast contained most of the edits of the Nicktoons version, as well as extra editing to fit the stricter broadcast standards. The broadcast has been notorious for it's questionable editing practices such as erasing Shenron from the opening credits in some episodes, colorizing Mr. Popo blue, changing halos into shining spheres, adding sparkles to Chiaotzu's fatal explosion, drawing an eye over Gohan's swollen face, and replacing dialogue considered objectionable with sound-a-like voices. The uncut version of the series would later air on Adult Swim's Toonami block.

Another Ocean Dub?
On Episode 26 of radio show and podcast "Voice Print with Trevor Devall", Kirby Morrow (Ocean Studios' Goku from episodes 175-291 of Z) revealed that a Canadian dub of Dragon Ball Z Kai was in the works. He did not mention the name of the company behind the production, however, he stated that casting had already begun with him having already been ruled out for the role of Goku. According to Morrow, the television version of the FUNimation dub for Kai was only slated to be distributed in America, therefore, the new dub being produced in Canada was being created to serve the Canadian and European markets in a fashion similar to the Westwood dub of Dragon Ball Z episodes 123-291 (though FUNimation's dub of Kai would end up airing in Europe instead). On Episode 28 of the same show, Paul Dobson confirmed that Ocean Studios was, in fact, the company behind the Canadian production of Kai. Dobson also stated that "there's been word of re-casting and there's been word of holding onto members of the cast as the way that they were." In addition, Christopher Sabat and Sean Schemmel had previously hinted at a Canadian re-versioning of the series.

As of 2017, the current official status of this dub is unknown. Since 2013, several actors from Ocean have suggested that the entire Cell and Saiyan/Frieza arcs have already been dubbed, and a theme song for the dub has leaked online. As such, some have speculated that legal issues or lack of interest from broadcasters may be preventing the dub from being released to the public.

Ocean
The only voices confirmed so far for the long-awaited Ocean Dub.

Other Voices

 * James Beach
 * Trevor Devall

Music

 * Opening : "Dragon Soul"
 * Vocals: Vic Mignogna
 * Musical Direction: Brina Palencia


 * Ending 1: "Yeah! Break! Care! Break!"
 * Musical Direction: Brina Palencia
 * Vocals: Jerry Jewell

Video Releases
* This new release is for revisions to the soundtrack due to the aforementioned plagiarism incident with the original score.