Jojo-s Bizarre Adventure -2012- -dub- Episode 1 -
Seitz does not play Dio as a cackling monster—not yet. Instead, he gives him a cold, articulate rage. Lines like “I will have everything that man has… I will have the Joestar fortune, their status… and their son will kneel before me” land with chilling precision. The dub script replaces some of the Japanese original’s melodrama with a sharper, more predatory cadence. When Dio kicks Danny the dog, Seitz’s delivery is almost bored: “Get rid of it.” That banality of evil is far more unsettling than theatrical villainy.
Essential viewing for fans of gothic horror, tragic brotherhoods, and punches thrown across class lines. JoJo-s Bizarre Adventure -2012- -Dub- Episode 1
The handles this period setting with deliberate theatricality. Voice actors Johnny Yong Bosch (young Joseph, later) and Patrick Seitz (Dio) are absent here—instead, we hear David Vincent as the narrator and Kirk Thornton as the elder George Joestar. Thornton gives George a weary, paternal softness—a man of principle but terrible intuition. This contrast sets up the tragedy: kindness without wisdom is as dangerous as cruelty. 2. Dio Brando: The Dub’s Amplification of Contempt Dio’s first appearance is a masterclass in visual storytelling: a rain-soaked boy in rags, staring at the Joestar mansion with burning eyes. But the English dub elevates his interiority through Patrick Seitz’s performance . Seitz does not play Dio as a cackling monster—not yet
The dub emphasizes Jonathan’s more than the sub, framing him as a tragic hero aware of his own naivety but refusing to change. When he says, “I believe there is good in everyone, even you, Dio,” Bosch delivers it with trembling sincerity, making the audience feel the coming heartbreak. 4. The Fistfight and the Shift from Talk to Violence The episode’s climax—Jonathan punching Dio after years of psychological torment—is the true turning point. Until then, the conflict was social: whispers, sabotage, stolen kisses (Erina). But the moment Jonathan’s fist connects, the series announces its DNA: problems are solved through physical confrontation . The dub script replaces some of the Japanese
The episode’s final shot—the mask grinning, blood dripping—is a promise. And the dub’s restrained, theatrical voice acting ensures that promise feels like a curse spoken aloud, not just subtitled.

