Sailor Moon SuperS: The Movie | |
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![]() Japanese theatrical release poster | |
Japanese |
美少女戦士セーラームーン |
Hepburn | Bishōjo Senshi Sērā Mūn Sūpāzu: Sērā Kyū Senshi Shūketsu! Burakku Dorīmu Hōru no Kiseki |
Directed by | Hiroki Shibata |
Screenplay by | Yōji Enokido |
Based on | Sailor Moon by Naoko Takeuchi |
Produced by |
|
Starring | |
Cinematography | Motoi Takahashi |
Edited by | Yasuhiro Yoshikawa |
Music by | Takanori Arisawa |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Toei Company |
Release dates |
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Running time | 62 minutes |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
Sailor Moon SuperS: The Movie[n 1] is a 1995 Japanese animated superhero fantasy film directed by Hiroki Shibata, written by Yōji Enokido, and based on the Sailor Moon manga series by Naoko Takeuchi. It takes its name from the fourth arc of the Sailor Moon anime, Sailor Moon SuperS, as Toei Company distributed it around the same time.
The film was released theatrically in Japan on December 23, 1995, accompanied by a 16-minute short film titled Sailor Moon SuperS Plus: Ami's First Love (美少女戦士セーラームーンSuperS外伝 亜美ちゃんの初恋, Bishōjo Senshi Sērā Mūn Sūpāzu Gaiden: Ami-chan no Hatsu-koi)[n 2]
Plot[]
Ami's First Love[]
Japanese theaters showed a 16-minute short before the Sailor Moon SuperS film, titled Ami's First Love (Ami-chan no Hatsukoi),[2] in which Ami Mizuno (Sailor Mercury) struggles to focus on her studying amidst various distractions including a pruritus-inducing love letter found in her school locker and a rival known as "Mercurius" who ties Ami's perfect score in mock high school entrance exams, and who Ami believes is either a female monster that makes her forget math and English or a handsome boy who looks like a young Albert Einstein. The short featured a new transformation sequence into her evolved Super form (Mercury Crystal Power Make Up!) and a greater water-based attack (Mercury Aqua Mirage) for Super Sailor Mercury.
Black Dream Hole[]
Somewhere in Europe, a young man named Poupelin (ププラン, Pupuran) plays a song on his flute to hypnotize children, following him into a mysterious ship before sailing off into the sky. In Tokyo, Usagi Tsukino, Chibiusa, and the other girls bake cookies together at Makoto Kino's apartment. Usagi ends up with cookies that look perfect but taste terrible; Chibiusa produces the reverse. Chibiusa sets out to give her cookies to Mamoru Chiba, but is stopped by a butterfly wing-shaped boy in strange white clothing standing outside the sweets shop. They befriend each other, and he causes some of the treats inside the shop window to dance by playing a tune on his flute before revealing himself as Perle (ペルル, Peruru). Meanwhile, Usagi visits Mamoru with her cookies, and they argue over his strong and close friendship with Chibiusa. They hear a report on the radio about the mass disappearance of children all over the world. Around the same time, Chibiusa gives her bag of cookies to Perle before going their separate ways.
That night, Chibiusa wakes up, and begins walking through the city. Diana wakes Usagi, who along with the other girls, follow Chibiusa, and the other children. They save Chibiusa, but get into a fight with Poupelin, and his "Bonbon Babies." Poupelin then hypnotizes the girls into seeing a Gingerbread House. In turn, Mamoru appears, and snaps the girls out of the spell. Queen Badiane (女王バディヤーヌ, Jo'ō Badiyānu) orders Poupelin and her other henchmen Banane (バナーヌ, Banānu) and Orangeat (オランジャ, Oranja) to hurry up. Perle says that he no longer believes in her, but she orders that Chibiusa be captured. The ship lands, along with two others, in Marzipan Castle. When the doors are opened, the children run out into the darkness, except for Chibiusa. Looking into the shadows, she witnesses "Dream Coffins," each containing a sleeping child. Badiane lifts her into the air, commenting on the power she senses from Chibiusa, and explains her purpose. In the castle's center, a massive Black Dream Hole is forming, gathering the magical "sugar energy" of the sleeping children. Eventually it will overtake Earth, and all humans will enter into Dream Coffins.
Meanwhile, Perle leads the other Sailor Guardians to a flying ship of his own. He tells them that Badiane promised that the children would be happy and safe in her world of dreams and where they can remain children indefinitely, but he thinks also of Chibiusa, his friend. As they reach the castle, they are attacked, and after crash-landing fight Poupelin, Banane, and Orangeat, as well as three sets of Bonbon Babies. Just when the situation seems hopeless, the girls are saved by Sailor Uranus, Sailor Neptune, and Sailor Pluto. With this advantage, they are able to break the flutes of the three fairies, changing them into small birds. Afterwards, the Guardians infiltrate the castle and confront Queen Badiane, who has drained enough dream energy from the children, including Chibiusa, to create the Black Dream Hole. The power drain is enough to force all the Sailor Soldiers except Usagi into a partial de-transformation, weakening them, without any clothing. Taking Chibiusa with her, Badiane enters the hole itself, and Usagi follows. Usagi then finds herself in Mamoru's apartment, carrying Chibiusa. Mamoru lays her on the bed, then wraps his arms around Usagi and tells her not to worry about anything, just to stay there with him. She asks him again who is more important, herself or Chibiusa; he eventually tells her that she is. Usagi lifts Chibiusa in her arms once again, and eventually realizes that this experience is all just a dream.
As Usagi tries to flee, Queen Badiane demands that she give back Chibiusa. When Usagi refuses, the dark Queen of Dreams assimilates herself into the black dream hole and attacks her with pure fire. Hearing her mental cry, the other seven Guardians send their power and strength to Usagi, awakening Chibiusa and allowing them to finally obliterate Queen Badiane with their combined Moon Gorgeous Meditation technique. After the battle, Marzipan Castle is destroyed, and with Perle's help, the six Super Sailor Guardians and three Outer Sailor Guardians escape. The airships, each carrying children, return to Earth.
Later, at a beach, Perle gives Chibiusa his glass flute, telling her that he is the fairy who protects children's dreams, and will always be with her, and Chibiusa kisses him goodbye on the cheek. As Perle flies away, the six Super Sailor Guardians and three Outer Sailor Guardians watch the sun rise.[3]
Cast[]
Ami's First Love[]
Character name | Japanese | English |
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Kurume Suuri/Mercurius | Nobuyuki Hiyama | Kyle McCarley |
Bonnone | Kazue Ikura | Colleen O'Shaughnessey |
Naru Osaka | Shino Kakinuma | Danielle Judovits |
Gurio Umino | Keiichi Nanba | Benjamin Diskin |
Instructor | Yasunori Masutani | TBA |
Teacher | Tomohisa Aso | TBA |
Production[]
Originally, Kunihiko Ikuhara envisaged that Sailor Uranus and Sailor Neptune were going to be the main characters in the SuperS film, and it was going to be independent of the main series. Sailor Neptune was going to be in a deep sleep at the end of the world, and Sailor Uranus would have had to steal the talismans from the Sailor Soldiers to revive her. However, both Ikuhara and producer Iriya Azuma left the series. Ikuhara's concepts were later used in Revolutionary Girl Utena.[4]
The film was produced with the same staff from the previous film, with Hiroki Shibata acting as a director, and Hisashi Kagawa in charge of character design and animation direction once again. SuperS writer Yōji Enokido wrote the script for the film. Original creator and mangaka, Naoko Takeuchi provided the character concept for the antagonist, based on Pied Piper of Hamelin.
Release[]
Japanese release[]
The film was released in Japanese theaters on December 23, 1995.
The Japanese Blu-ray collection of the three films was released on February 7, 2018, with this film titled Pretty Guardian Sailor Moon SuperS: The Nine Sailor Guardians Unite! Miracle of the Black Dream Hole.[1]
English release[]
The film was first released in North America on VHS by Pioneer Entertainment on August 31, 1999, in Japanese with English subtitles.[5] Pioneer later released the film to uncut bilingual DVD on August 15, 2000, alongside another VHS release containing an edited version of the English dub.[6] Pioneer re-released their DVD on January 6, 2004, under their "Geneon Signature Series" line.[7] The DVDs later fell out of print when Pioneer/Geneon lost the license to the film. The edited version was also shown on TV in Canada on YTV and in the US on Cartoon Network's Toonami block.
The English dub was produced in association with Optimum Productions in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and featured most of the original DIC Entertainment English cast reprising their roles. The edited version of the dub was censored for content and replaced the music with cues from the DIC version of the first two seasons of the anime, while retaining the insert song, Sanji no Yosei (The Three O'Clock Fairy). The uncut version of the dub was only seen on the bilingual DVD, featured no censorship, and all of the original Japanese music was left intact, with the exception of the DIC theme song being used. However, no DVD or VHS release contained the "Ami's First Love" short.
In 2014, the film (including the "Ami's First Love" short) was re-licensed for an updated English-language release in North America by Viz Media, who produced a new English dub of the film in association with Studiopolis in Los Angeles, California and plans to re-release it on DVD and Blu-ray.[8] The film, along with the Ami's First Love short, was released to North American theaters in association with Fathom Events for one-day showings nationwide, with dubbed screenings on August 4, 2018 and subtitled screenings on August 6, 2018.[9] It has also been licensed in Australia and New Zealand by Madman Entertainment.[10] The movie was then released on Blu-ray and DVD on February 12, 2019.[11]
See also[]
- Pied Piper of Hamelin
- Dream world (plot device)
Note[]
References[]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "初回生産限定「美少女戦士セーラームーン THE MOVIE Blu-ray 1993-1995」". Sailor Moon Official . 2017-07-11. Retrieved 2017-07-11.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ "Animerica Feature: The Sailor Moon Movies". Animerica. Viz Media. Archived from the original on April 7, 2004. Retrieved August 15, 2011.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ Doi, Hitoshi. "Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon SuperS". Archived from the original on 2006-09-02. Retrieved 2006-10-06.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ Interview with Kunihiko Ikuhara Archived 2012-07-15 at Archive.today
- ↑ "Sailor Moon SuperS [VHS]". 31 August 1999. Retrieved August 31, 2011.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ "Sailor Moon SuperS The Movie - Black Dream Hole [VHS] (2000)". 15 August 2000. Retrieved 2011-08-31.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ "Sailor Moon SuperS - the Movie". 6 January 2004.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ "Viz Licenses Original Sailor Moon Anime Franchise".
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ "Viz Media to Screen Sailor Moon S The Movie, Sailor Moon SuperS The Movie Films in N. American Theaters". Anime News Network. May 19, 2018. Retrieved August 4, 2018.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ "Madman Entertainment Acquires Sailor Moon Series and Sailor Moon Crystal".
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ "Sailor Moon Super S Blu-Ray/DVD". Right Stuf. Retrieved January 25, 2019.
{{cite web}}
:
External links[]
- Sailor Moon SuperS: The Movie
- Sailor Moon SuperS: The Movie at the Internet Movie Database
- Sailor Moon SuperS: The Movie at AllRovi
- Animerica review at the Wayback Machine (archived April 7, 2004)
Sailor Moon by Naoko Takeuchi ![]() | ||
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Media | Chapters • Codename: Sailor V • Musicals • Collectible card game • Live-action series • Unaired North American live-action adaptation | |
Anime | Sailor Moon (episodes (Season 1 • R • S • SuperS • Sailor Stars)) • Sailor Moon Crystal (episodes) | |
Films | Sailor Moon R • Sailor Moon S • Sailor Moon SuperS • Sailor Moon Eternal • Sailor Moon Cosmos | |
Video games | Sailor Moon (1993) • R • Panic in Nakayoshi World • S: Jōgai Rantō!? Shuyaku Sōdatsusen • S • Sailor Moon (arcade) • Another Story • SuperS: Shin Shuyaku Sōdatsusen • La Luna Splende • Drops | |
Soundtracks | "Moonlight Densetsu" • "Kaze mo Sora mo Kitto..." • "Moon Pride" • Super Moonies | |
Characters | Protagonists | Sailor Moon • Luna • Tuxedo Mask • Sailor Mercury • Sailor Mars • Sailor Jupiter • Sailor Venus • Chibiusa • Sailor Pluto • Sailor Uranus • Sailor Neptune • Sailor Saturn |
Antagonists | Dark Kingdom • Black Moon Clan • Death Busters • Dead Moon Circus • Shadow Galactica |
Toei Animation theatrical features (1990–1999) | ||
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1990 | Akuma-kun: Yōkoso Akuma Land e!! • Dragon Ball Z: The World's Strongest • Sally the Witch • Dragon Ball Z: The Tree of Might • Pink: Water Bandit, Rain Bandit • Utsunomiko: Tenjōhen | |
1991 | Dragon Ball Z: Lord Slug • Magical Taruruto • Dragon Ball Z: Cooler's Revenge • Dragon Quest: The Great Adventure of Dai • Magical Taruruto: Moero! Yuujou no Mahou Taisen | |
1992 | Dragon Ball Z: The Return of Cooler • Dragon Quest: Avan's Discilpes • Magical Taruruto: Suki Suki Hot Tako Yaki • Dragon Ball Z: Super Android 13! • Dragon Quest: Six Great Generals • Candy Candy the Movie • Goldfish Warning! • Rokudenashi Blues | |
1993 | Dr. Slump and Arale-chan: N-cha! Clear Skies Over Penguin Village • Dragon Ball Z: Broly – The Legendary Super Saiyan • Dr. Slump and Arale-chan: N-cha! From Penguin Village with Love • Dragon Ball Z: Bojack Unbound • Rokudenashi Blues 1993 • Sailor Moon R: The Movie • Tōi Umi kara Kita Coo | |
1994 | Dr. Slump and Arale-chan: Hoyoyo!! Follow the Rescued Shark... • Dragon Ball Z: Broly – Second Coming • Slam Dunk • Dr. Slump and Arale-chan: N-cha!! Excited Heart of Summer Vacation • Dragon Ball Z: Bio-Broly • Slam Dunk: Conquer the Nation, Hanamichi Sakuragi! • Go! Go! Ackman • Ghost Sweeper Mikami • Sailor Moon S: The Movie • Aoki Densetsu Shoot! | |
1995 | Dragon Ball Z: Fusion Reborn • Marmalade Boy • Slam Dunk: Shohoku's Greatest Challenge! • Dragon Ball Z: Wrath of the Dragon • Slam Dunk: Howling Basketman Spirit!! • Sailor Moon SuperS: The Movie | |
1996 | Dragon Ball: The Path to Power • Neighborhood Story • GeGeGe no Kitarō: The Great Sea Beast • Jigoku Sensei Nūbē • Kindaichi Shōnen no Jikenbo: Operazakan - Aratanaru Satsujin | |
1997 | Hana Yori Dango: The Movie • GeGeGe no Kitarō: Obake Nighter • Jigoku Sensei Nūbē: Gozen 0 toki Nūbē Shisu • Cutie Honey Flash • GeGeGe no Kitarō: Yokai Express! The Phantom Train • Jigoku Sensei Nūbē: Kyoufu no Natsu Yasumi! Asashi no Uni no Gensetsu | |
1998 | Galaxy Express 999: Eternal Fantasy | |
1999 | Digimon Adventure • Doctor Slump: Arale's Surprise Burn • Yu-Gi-Oh! • Kindaichi Shōnen no Jikenbo: Satsuriku no Deep Blue |
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