Dragon Ball Super - Broly !!top!! Jun 2026

Welcome to the canon, Broly. We’re glad you’re finally home.

The movie was a global phenomenon, earning over worldwide. It is widely considered by fans and critics to be the best-animated and most cohesive film in the entire Dragon Ball catalog. dragon ball super - broly

Directed by Tatsuya Nagamine and written directly by Toriyama himself, the film retcons the previous Dragon Ball Z movies— Broly: The Legendary Super Saiyan (1993), Broly: Second Coming (1994), and Bio-Broly (1994)—and replaces them with a narrative that seamlessly fits into the timeline following the Dragon Ball Super anime series (post-Tournament of Power). But this is not merely a retelling. It is a cinematographic event that redefines Saiyan history, delivers the most visually stunning fight sequence in franchise history, and leaves the door wide open for the future. Welcome to the canon, Broly

The film’s greatest triumph is its narrative restructuring of Broly’s origins. Instead of a baby who hated Goku’s crying, this Broly is a victim of a tyrannical and paranoid Saiyan hierarchy. Exiled by King Vegeta out of fear that his immense power might threaten the throne, the infant Broly is stranded on the desolate planet Vampa with his father, Paragus. This foundational change is critical. The original Broly’s madness was inexplicable; the new Broly’s trauma is earned. Growing up in a hellish wasteland, fighting for survival against giant creatures, and being emotionally manipulated by a father who sees him only as a tool for revenge, Broly becomes a feral, lonely soul. He is not evil; he is a weapon forged by abuse and isolation. When he finally explodes in rage, it is not due to a petty grudge but the cumulative pressure of a lifetime of pain and the loss of his only friend, the sentient dragon-like creature, Bah. This narrative choice elevates him from a force of nature to a character, making his suffering the film’s emotional core. It is widely considered by fans and critics

If you are a lapsed fan who gave up on Dragon Ball after GT , this is the film that brings you back. If you are a new fan, it serves as a perfect entry point—summarizing the history of the Saiyans while delivering a self-contained tragedy.

The score, composed by Norihito Sumitomo, is a significant departure from the usual Dragon Ball synth-rock. Sumitomo blends heavy metal chugging with orchestral choirs and Celtic folk elements. Broly’s theme, “Broly Rages,” starts with a slow, mournful cello (representing his trauma) before erupting into a frantic, violent guitar solo (representing his rage).

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