Culture I’ve Never Watched Anything as Transformative as ‘Sailor Moon’ - The show is about friendship, yes, and also liberation that does not match the world’s expectations of femininity.

I’ve Never Watched Anything as Transformative as ‘Sailor Moon’
The show is about friendship, yes, and also liberation that does not match the world’s expectations of femininity.
1702823345914.png

By Venita Blackburn
Published Dec. 12, 2023Updated Dec. 15, 2023

The first lesbian relationship I saw portrayed on-screen was in “Sailor Moon.” Uranus and Neptune were two characters who seemed undeniably in love. The show is Japanese anime, though, and I could only watch the English-dubbed version that called them “cousins.” The titular Sailor Moon and the other Sailor Scouts are celestial superheroes sent across time to protect Earth from nefarious forces. In the human world, they take on the appearance of ordinary girls, but can transform into their fighting selves via personal totems. Sailor Moon often has a compact mirror and shouts, “Moon Prism Power, Makeup!” before transforming during battle and declaring, “In the name of the moon, I’ll punish you!” Swoon.

“Sailor Moon” aired early on weekday mornings when I was in middle school, around 1995. I was a bookish tomboy in Compton, Calif., a working-class suburb full of Black and brown people, where superheroes looked more like gangsta rappers than anime characters. I went to Sunday school every week in stockings and Mary Janes and thought of femininity as a chore rather than a good time. I loved women but hated the imagined woman I was supposed to one day swell into, makeup and perfume and nail polish and gold jewelry signaling my arrival wherever I went like bells on a cat. In this vision, I worked and maintained a household and didn’t expect much acknowledgment for the effort — and certainly no fun.

I grew up watching horror movies with my mother in the ’80s because she didn’t care about ratings systems and liked what she liked and wanted someone to watch with her, which explains a lot about me. I also watched cartoons freely, without being minded. Animation was a safe place. I controlled the VHS tapes, and my family would scatter whenever the opening of “The Little Mermaid” boomed into the house. In the world of cartoons, I was alone and unobserved. I think queer artists recognize this medium as a place of solace and fantasy — a secret world running parallel to the one in which L.G.B.T.Q. humans and people of color are targeted by book bans that want to annihilate both us and evidence of our existence.

Comics have always been a place for dreaming, for silliness, for the disregard of rules that apply to anything from physics to the patriarchy. Yes, the medium can also be used to perpetuate dangerous and demeaning ideas, but the nature of the form makes room for fantasies both malicious and divine. The queer experience thus finds a home in animated worlds. Queer art can be a propagandist of possibility in a universe not always in favor of queer existence, and that is lifesaving. The queerness of “Sailor Moon” isn’t really about Sailor Moon, a.k.a. “champion kicker of ass in a Japanese schoolgirl skirt and tiara,” though. The world of “Sailor Moon” is interested in transformation, in upsetting expectations of presentation and value related to girlhood, masculinity, strength and gender roles. The show is about friendship, yes, and also liberation that does not match the world’s expectations of femininity. The series includes actual trans characters and a lesbian couple with superpowers, in case there is any doubt.
Anime in the ’90s and 2000s had its hyperviolent giant-mechanical-suit boy culture down. Representation of my personal identity was not prioritized broadly speaking, but the iconic status of “Sailor Moon” within the queer community was no accident. Although the more direct Sapphic references were edited out of the English version, censorship couldn’t erase the show’s queer sensibility for me. I remember the scene with Uranus and Neptune. Neptune is stretched out on a chaise longue, asleep by their pool, and Uranus leans over and wakes her up, whining that she’s not paying attention to her: “It’s not fair, you know. You just go into your own world and leave me behind.” Cousins, my ass. The show does not let up on the attraction the girls have for Uranus, even though they aren’t supposed to be attracted now that it’s clear she’s a woman. Years later, in a Best Buy circa 2005, I found DVDs of the show’s uncut Japanese version with subtitles, which confirmed what I’d known all along: They were lovers! I also discovered the existence of the Sailor Star Lights — who possessed the earthly bodies of boys but fought as girls and underlined the show’s gender queerness in the fifth and final season. (That season didn’t air with the others in the ’90s.) I felt vindication followed immediately by the depression of a closeted queer holding onto fictional characters as a promise for something other than every predetermined choice of girlhood. But I also discovered I could be more than one thing in one body: I could be masculine and feminine, powerful and clumsy; I could have vices and gifts, and not one trait would have to be the defining quality. I could be liberated.

The secret message of “Sailor Moon” might be that queerness is not just sexual (fight me); queerness is also existing under duress, where one’s instinct toward self-determination is a kind of spiritual expanse that grows from deep within the body and psyche then cascades out into an eventual shape unlike most others. Hulu has been streaming the show since 2014, broadening access to these inspirational figures. In “Sailor Moon,” the concept of transformation is about light, magic and power hidden in the ordinariness of living. There is nothing queerer than that (except maybe actual gay sex).


Venita Blackburn is the author of “How to Wrestle a Girl,” “Black Jesus and Other Superheroes” and the forthcoming novel “Dead in Long Beach, California.” She is an associate professor of fiction at California State University, Fresno.

A version of this article appears in print on , Page 16 of the Sunday Magazine with the headline: ‘Sailor Moon’. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

(+)
Source : https://www.nytimes.com/2023/12/12/magazine/sailor-moon.html
 
That's hilarious to me. In Chris's quest to stay straight, he went trans. Personally I find that reason alone not to watch Sailor Moon
I once read a bogus claim that a lot of people that grew up watching Sailor Moon eventually became gay, lesbian or whatever else within the LGTV+ spectrum.

Honestly, I don't doubt it either. I watched and enjoyed it as a guilty pleasure away from everybody else's sights, because it was so freaking girly that it often made me wonder why I was even watching it. Besides, it is incredibly formulaic save for a few interesting moments here and there.
 
I once read a bogus claim that a lot of people that grew up watching Sailor Moon eventually became gay, lesbian or whatever else within the LGTV+ spectrum.

Honestly, I don't doubt it either. I watched and enjoyed it as a guilty pleasure away from everybody else's sights, because it was so freaking girly that it often made me wonder why I was even watching it. Besides, it is incredibly formulaic save for a few interesting moments here and there.
Really the formulaic recipe is a big reason why I don't want to see it. There's so much anime now with less filler and more impact that watching a show like Sailor Moon just isn't appealing. The article reads like nostalgia bait without remembering the boring shit
 
Anything. Literally any show, movie, video game, etc.

Faggots/dykes/troons/pooners/pedos and all their enablers: OMG GUYZ THIS IS TOTES QUEER REPRESENTATION! Whatever humanity leaves behind, I hope tapestries depicting these people being burned alive and beheaded and stretched out on fucking racks are among the artifacts.
Sometimes I wonder if exceptional faggotry is how homophobia and transphobia happened in the first place.

The only reason to claim it is because it's famous.
Duh. The identity weirdos only project their personal blah-blah onto it when it's popular.

It's why they don't whinge about "representation" in properties that aren't in their spotlight. There isn't money and victimhood in it.
 
The only thing about this show I found interesting was the tabletop RPG, which included some very clever rules so Tuxedo Mask could set up a target for the Sailor Scouts, having a big impact on the fights while still letting the girls put them down. It really came across as a game for children that allowed older players to help out without dominating the game. I was impressed by that.
 
Really the formulaic recipe is a big reason why I don't want to see it.
You're looking at Sailor Moon after all the later magical girls shows came and went over the decades. While it was entirely different story when it was created as Sailor Moon completely reshape the genre and co-creating what will become that formulaic recipe back in the 90ies.
 
You're looking at Sailor Moon after all the later magical girls shows came and went over the decades. While it was entirely different story when it was created as Sailor Moon completely reshape the genre and co-creating what will become that formulaic recipe back in the 90ies.
And that's the thing. It's a product of its time. I don't blame someone that grew up with it, I'd have to stop loving Yu-Gi-Oh if that was the case. But trying to push it on a new generation is a hard sell.
 
And that's the thing. It's a product of its time. I don't blame someone that grew up with it, I'd have to stop loving Yu-Gi-Oh if that was the case. But trying to push it on a new generation is a hard sell.
Thank the Jap fans and the corporations for continuing to push it. When the creator Naoko Takeuchi had wanted and tried to do other manga after finishing Sailor Moon back in the late 90ies.
 
Thank the Jap fans and the corporations for continuing to push it. When the creator Naoko Takeuchi had wanted and tried to do other manga after finishing Sailor Moon back in the late 90ies.
That's the sad part. The creativity is gone because it got big. Big otakus still sing its praises even when looking back, objectively, the anime adaption leaves MUCH to be desired just on pacing. It's kind of a double edged sword, the author is rich, but she's stuck with one property forever
 
Sailor Moon often needs to be rescued by her boyfriend. When the boyfriend needs rescuing, no one rises to the occasion to become "the man",
I've never been into Sailor Moon, but wasn't Tuxedo Mask's shtick throwing a rose and giving moral support rather than fighting?
Did he have any powers, actually?
 
If this is your reaction to Sailor Moon, I'd hate to see how you'd react to Pretty Cure.

Also, Sailor Moon was literally written as a superheroine comic about a crybaby that somehow saves the day. Its also important to remember that the series was written during the 80s when things weren't so shit in comparison to today. Everything in that series was written by Takeuchi and proofread by editors by the publishing company to make sure she doesn't go out of line. Something that major comic companies have seem to forgotten how to do.

A misc fun fact. Takeuchi is married to Togashi. Yes, that guy who made Yu Yu Hakusho and Hunter x Hunter. Who is more or less the IRL equivalent of the Trash Man.

I've never been into Sailor Moon, but wasn't Tuxedo Mask's shtick throwing a rose and giving moral support rather than fighting?
Did he have any powers, actually?
Occasionally he saved their ass. By being a distraction. His powers are pretty much disappearing and hiding the fact that he is the guy Usagi is crazy for.
 
I really hate trannies and gender faggots sperging over sailor moon. The main series focus is a monogamous heterosexual relationship that produces a single child. The sailor starlights were never supposed to be trannies, they were originally women that only dress like men to find their princess. Most of the other tranny and faggot representation comes from villians and a lot of it was added randomly in the anime. Uranus and neptune, the main lesbian couple, are borderline sociopaths. It's a big series, but like 95% of the focus is on hetero relationships and friendship, then like maybe 5% gay stuff, but we all know the cult of slaanesh latches onto that shit and doesn't let go.

I've never been into Sailor Moon, but wasn't Tuxedo Mask's shtick throwing a rose and giving moral support rather than fighting?
Did he have any powers, actually?
He does but they are pretty weak. He mostly functions as moral support for the main cast.

I still find sailor moon quite enjoyable. It's very funny and relatable.

Thank the Jap fans and the corporations for continuing to push it. When the creator Naoko Takeuchi had wanted and tried to do other manga after finishing Sailor Moon back in the late 90ies.
Well, to be fair, her other series sucked. One is about cockroaches that turn into cute girls... even sailor v, the precursor to sailor moon, wasn't very good.
 
I also watched cartoons freely, without being minded. Animation was a safe place. ... In the world of cartoons, I was alone and unobserved. I think queer artists recognize this medium as a place of solace and fantasy
The queer experience thus finds a home in animated worlds.
I hate these faggots so much, taking innocent family-friendly movies about magical, fantastical worlds and characters in animation and then going on about how "qweer" they totally were and that cartoons turned them gay. They're more open than ever before about how they're using cartoons to brainwash children into being gay because they're still upset at their hetero parents for giving them life.

If Sailor Moon turned children gay from the word "go", we'd have seen evidence of that back in the '90s. Anyone who sobs about how "validating" children's cartoons were at showing they were gay were never gay, they just want to feel special about their daddy issues.
 
Back