The Red Ribbon Army from Goku's past has returned with two new androids to challenge him and his friends....
The Red Ribbon Army from Goku's past has returned with two new androids to challenge him and his friends....
The film's central conflict revolves around universal themes of heroism, personal growth, and teamwork against a generic evil organization, making its core narrative apolitical. Its resolution emphasizes individual responsibility and collective action without aligning with specific political ideologies.
Dragon Ball Super: Super Hero maintains the established character designs and narrative focus of the long-running Japanese franchise. It does not feature explicit DEI-driven casting changes or engage in critical portrayals of traditional identities, instead focusing on a classic hero-vs-villain action plot with positive framing of its protagonists.
Dragon Ball Super: Super Hero does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes within its narrative. Consequently, there is no portrayal to evaluate, resulting in an N/A rating for LGBTQ+ representation.
The film features female characters such as Pan, Bulma, Chi-Chi, Videl, and Android 18. However, none of these characters engage in or are depicted as victorious in direct physical combat against one or more male opponents through skill, strength, or martial arts. Android 18 participates in the final battle, but her contributions are not decisive physical victories against male opponents.
The film features established Dragon Ball characters who retain their canonical genders. New characters introduced in this installment do not constitute gender swaps, as they have no prior canonical gender to change from.
This animated film is an installment in an existing franchise. All returning characters maintain their established visual racial characteristics from prior canon. New characters introduced in the film are not considered for race swap analysis.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources