Japanese inbetweener who contributed to both the original Dragon Ball series and Dragon Ball Z television animation. His work supported the motion fluidity of the franchise across both eras.
Mineto Shibawaki worked as an inbetweener on Dragon Ball and Dragon Ball Z, handling the transitional frames that connected key animation poses. This unglamorous but essential role required both technical precision and speed, as television animation production operated under constant deadline pressure. Shibawaki's work maintained the visual flow of action sequences and character movement across multiple episodes of both series.
Though limited documentation remains of his specific episode contributions beyond his Dragon Ball Z theatrical film work on The World's Strongest, his presence across both television series demonstrates sustained professional engagement with the franchise during a critical period of its production.
Inbetweeners like Shibawaki formed the backbone of anime production, performing repetitive but critical work that allowed key animators to focus on establishing character poses and action choreography. The inbetween department faced relentless scheduling demands, particularly on a weekly television series like Dragon Ball. Shibawaki's contributions to both the original series and Z, including the theatrical film The World's Strongest, represent the sustained technical commitment required to maintain animation quality across the franchise's expansion.
Mineto Shibawaki에 대해 더 알고 싶으신가요? Fandom의 드래곤볼 위키에 커뮤니티 노트가 담긴 전용 페이지가 있습니다.
Fandom에서 보기이 콘텐츠는 드래곤볼 애니메이션 시리즈, 만화, 공식 자료를 바탕으로 Daddy Jim Headquarters가 직접 작성한 글입니다. 해당하는 경우 에피소드 및 챕터 출처를 표기하였습니다.
이 사이트의 캐릭터 및 장면 이미지는 스크린샷이나 라이선스 이미지가 아닌 Daddy Jim Headquarters의 오리지널 아트워크입니다. 공식 커버 아트는 편집 해설 목적으로 세 가지 유형의 페이지에만 사용됩니다.
Daddy Jim Headquarters는 13개 언어로 이 백과사전을 관리하고 있습니다. 오류, 번역 문제 또는 이상한 점을 발견하시면 알려주세요.