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
 
Its just cute and fun. That's all
Matter of fact, some people are so fucking woke, they manage to see "problematic" stuff in fucking Sailor Moon. Impossible beauty standards, male gaze, creepy men, toxic relationships, you get it.
The biggest issue with any cartoon nowadays is that adults want to read too much into the most minuscule of details in order to validate their confirmation biased opinion. As previous posters such as @Yuuichirou Kumada have stated, the same Sailor Moon being promoted in the OP's article as LGBTetc friendly also has other aspects that would easily be seen as problematic or triggering by these same people if they chose to be more critical of the franchise.

it is for children
Maybe I'm wrong, but I've been told a number of serialized Asian stories/manga have adult themes and they are more laid back about non-gratuitous nudity -- topics that would never be accepted in a cartoon airing in the US and other parts of the world at that time. This is why Uranus/Neptune being lesbian lovers was deemphasized, other same-sex relationships were rewritten, and blood/gore along with obvious signs of nudity were flat out removed..

It also didn't help that the the US version was released during a time when excessive cartoon violence was frowned upon and every cartoon in that period ended with a moral of the day presented in the cheesiest or campiest manner possible.

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?
I believe Takeuchi wanted the Sailor guardians to be the main heroes and not be upstaged by male characters. I can't speak for the manga (Tuxedo Mask's stronger powers there notwithstanding), but I imagine this may be why his cartoon version was relgated to pep talks and distracting enemies long enough for the Sailor guardians to finish them off.

1. She'd have known that Uranus and Neptune were NOT role models. They were edgy mcedgertons who existed solely to forever be proven to be asshole idiots that were wrong and Serena and her kinder, gentler ways was right and always got their shit kicked in.
From what I recall, Uranus and Neputne were so obsessed with their mission to find the pure heart talismans that they didn't care at all about anyone or anything else happening around them. Worse, they wanted to kill Hotaru/Sailor Saturn when it turned out the latter ended up being the only one powerful enough to save Earth from Pharaoh 90 and the Death Busters. It wasn't until they chose to fight Sailor Moon in a Sailor death match that they finally realized the latter was their messiah. Upon that realization, they simply walked away from the battle without offering much of an apology for doubting her.

Why none of that was implemented in the original anime, I have no idea - Though I did read that some of the showrunners didn't like him too much. Especially the absolute faggot Kunihiko Ikuhara.
Matter of fact, the original anime was a mish-mash of ideas where Naoko Takeuchi herself was kinda "shafted" to the sidelines. Partly because they had to make do with a weekly schedule while the manga was published only once a month. That is why we had the strange pairings, the monster-of-the-week format, the personality changes, the hints at romance that go nowhere (just look at my namesake, for example), the extra spotlight on the Outer Senshi and the Sailor Starlights, etc.
Any time something is based on a written work, there's almost always going to be changes - some minor, some drastic, and some that are all out head-scratching. I recall talk that the cartoon outpaced the manga to the point the former had many filler episodes because the producers had to wait for Takeuchi's next manga arc to be completed and released before they could follow along and excerpt from it. Just like the cheesy morals of the day, the cartoon had the same formulaic format of any other 80s/90s cartoon that was further hamstrung by the TV network limitations and restrictions at that time.

TL; DR - This seems like little more than the article's author publicly sperging about why they love Sailor Moon to the point they'd by showered with TMI ratings if they posted it here.
 
Last edited:
  • Informative
Reactions: BirdUp
All I’m going to say is that they are still normies that watch Sailor Moon writing these “articles” like this, because if they dare touch this:

IMG_8081.jpegIMG_8082.jpeg

I will blow a fuse.
 
  • Like
Reactions: BirdUp
Madoka is the second most basic bitch magical girl series. Of course trannies love it.
Yeah, but if I recall, Madoka’s famous rival (who was a popular character on the anime by these same groups that loved her character) was on record committing suicide through a gun in the head. Though, if I recall, that was done in a dream sequence.

Plus, there’s this:


I don’t ever recall Sailor Moon going this far with death. Of course, it has been a while since I’ve last seen it.
 
Magical girl animes are pretty common, there are even sub genres to them with things like Madoka Magica that deconstruct the genre in a non preachy way.
 
Yeah, but if I recall, Madoka’s famous rival (who was a popular character on the anime by these same groups that loved her character) was on record committing suicide through a gun in the head. Though, if I recall, that was done in a dream sequence.

Plus, there’s this:


I don’t ever recall Sailor Moon going this far with death. Of course, it has been a while since I’ve last seen it.
By basic bitch, I meant popularity. That thing that looked like a Digimon was all over the place back in the day. Think it was supposed to be Madoka's mascot.
 
Reminder that the series core narrative is about a teen hero wetting really hard over a male masked hero/savior. But Just ignore that and focus on a late addition side characters. lol
 
Back