I love Damian Clark as Cell. The Lat American dub is alright, but Cell, unlike Freezer who has a unique voice, shares his voice actor with at least 5 more characters, among them, Cooler. The only thing I do absolutely love about Lat Cell is his first form with that voice... It gave me a funny feeling when I was a kid. Just Kidding, of course. Damian made the three forms voices more unique, giving a proper sense of perfection to it.
Also, Turles and Bardock are better in english than in Latin America or Japan. There, I said it.
edited 11th Feb '17 10:26:42 AM by Tomodachi
To win, you need to adapt, and to adapt, you need to be able to laugh away all the restraints. Everything holding you back.Here's the timeline Toei released for the FT Saga.
It's in Japanese, but I'm sure there's translations out there.
![]()
Latin America's 90s kids grew up on DB, Saint Seiya, Sailor Moon, Captain Tsubasa, Slam Dunk and the like.
For some insane reason, though, anime never endured on tv even though it's always been popular.
himitsu keisatsu seifu chokuzoku kokka hoanbu na no da himitsu keisatsu yami ni magireru supai katsudou torishimariI would believe that if it weren't for the fact that they weren't even airing much cheaper licenses. In this regard, the USA had a much better selection. Yeah, a lot of it was overly violent garbage, but Latin America didn't even get that even though the teens of the era were totally into it.
It reached a point where we would've welcomed Mad Bull 34.
himitsu keisatsu seifu chokuzoku kokka hoanbu na no da himitsu keisatsu yami ni magireru supai katsudou torishimariPersonally, I think that the Banana line has it beat.
Gets double points because they say through the back of the head and she clearly shoots his torso (the scene itself makes no goddamn sense whatsoever).
himitsu keisatsu seifu chokuzoku kokka hoanbu na no da himitsu keisatsu yami ni magireru supai katsudou torishimari

To be fair, Norio!Cell has two Evil Laughs: an Evil Guffaw that works quite well, and an Evil Chuckle that doesn't.
De Romanīs, lingua Latina gloriosa non fuī.