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IMDbPro

Shôjo kakumei Utena: Adolescence mokushiroku

  • 1999
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
1.9K
YOUR RATING
Shôjo kakumei Utena: Adolescence mokushiroku (1999)
Utena Tenjou disguises herself as a boy for the Ohtori Academy, however she encounters trouble due to a ring which shows she's skilled duelist. As well as this, the vice president of the school challenges her to a duel
Play trailer2:03
1 Video
86 Photos
AnimeHand-Drawn AnimationShōjoActionAdventureAnimationComedyDramaFantasyRomance

Utena Tenjou, a mysterious transfer student, gets drawn into duels at Ohtori Academy to win the hand of the Rose Bride and the power to bring on a revolution in this retelling of the surreal... Read allUtena Tenjou, a mysterious transfer student, gets drawn into duels at Ohtori Academy to win the hand of the Rose Bride and the power to bring on a revolution in this retelling of the surrealist Shoujo classic.Utena Tenjou, a mysterious transfer student, gets drawn into duels at Ohtori Academy to win the hand of the Rose Bride and the power to bring on a revolution in this retelling of the surrealist Shoujo classic.

  • Directors
    • Kunihiko Ikuhara
    • Shingo Kaneko
    • Katsushi Sakurabi
  • Writers
    • Yôji Enokido
    • Kunihiko Ikuhara
    • Shin'ya Hasegawa
  • Stars
    • Tomoko Kawakami
    • Yuriko Fuchizaki
    • Leah Applebaum
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    1.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Kunihiko Ikuhara
      • Shingo Kaneko
      • Katsushi Sakurabi
    • Writers
      • Yôji Enokido
      • Kunihiko Ikuhara
      • Shin'ya Hasegawa
    • Stars
      • Tomoko Kawakami
      • Yuriko Fuchizaki
      • Leah Applebaum
    • 33User reviews
    • 12Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:03
    Official Trailer

    Photos86

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    Top cast30

    Edit
    Tomoko Kawakami
    Tomoko Kawakami
    • Utena Tenjou
    • (voice)
    Yuriko Fuchizaki
    • Anthy Himemiya
    • (voice)
    Leah Applebaum
    Leah Applebaum
    • Nanami
    • (English version)
    • (voice)
    Sharon Becker
    • Anthy Himemiya
    • (English version)
    • (voice)
    James Carter Cathcart
    James Carter Cathcart
    • Miki Kaoru
    • (English version)
    • (voice)
    • (as Jimmy Zoppi)
    Crispin Freeman
    Crispin Freeman
    • Touga Kiryuu
    • (English version)
    • (voice)
    • …
    Emiko Fuku
    • Operator
    • (voice)
    Amanda Goodman
    Amanda Goodman
    • Juri Arisugawa
    • (English version)
    • (voice)
    • (as Mandy Bonhomme)
    • …
    Masaya Hashimoto
    • Man A
    • (voice)
    Aya Hisakawa
    Aya Hisakawa
    • Miki Kaoru
    • (voice)
    Chieko Honda
    Chieko Honda
    • Kozue Kaoru
    • (voice)
    Kunihiko Ikuhara
    • Art Teacher
    • (voice)
    Yuka Imai
    • Wakaba Shinohara
    • (voice)
    Maria Kawamura
    • Shadow Girl E-Ko
    • (voice)
    Takehito Koyasu
    Takehito Koyasu
    • Touga Kiryuu
    • (voice)
    Takeshi Kusao
    Takeshi Kusao
    • Kyoichi Saionji
    • (voice)
    Satomi Kôrogi
    Satomi Kôrogi
    • Shadow Girl F-Ko
    • (voice)
    Rachael Lillis
    Rachael Lillis
    • Utena Tenju
    • (English version)
    • (voice)
    • Directors
      • Kunihiko Ikuhara
      • Shingo Kaneko
      • Katsushi Sakurabi
    • Writers
      • Yôji Enokido
      • Kunihiko Ikuhara
      • Shin'ya Hasegawa
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews33

    7.21.9K
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    Featured reviews

    10junecleavage8

    Think of the movie as the more overt companion piece to the TV show

    I recently re-watched this movie, having first watched the entire series + the movie 10 years ago. Revolutionary Girl Utena is truly one of a kind. The series is sweet, funny, fierce and surprisingly deep. Every character is conflicted and flawed and struggling to overcome their "demons," the things that scare each character and hold them back from becoming confident, fully-fledged adults. In the series, every character gets their turn to "shine" and then, in turn, to confront their "darkness." Revolutionary Girl Utena will probably go down in history as one of the queerest --if not *the queerest*-- anime out there... with just about every main character having some underlying relationship that's gay, just plain complicated ... or involves a problem/hang-up over the love of a sibling. Pretty daring for early 1990s. Everyone has a dark, not-so-veiled secret... and you love them all both in spite of -- and because of it -- anyway! The movie compresses what was 39 episodes in TV into 90-odd minutes... and so it necessarily takes shortcuts. Think of the movie as the more overt companion piece to the TV show. Dynamics that were more subtext in the TV show become main-text here. And at the same time, the movie revels in abstraction... with stories that were more drawn out and linear in the TV show being reduced to something more symbolic here. The show's rose-heavy Louis XIV France design, insistent, Gothic music and the shadow-puppet Greek Chorus are perhaps never so lovely (and cohesively) powerful as they are here in the movie. The Utena movie is a love letter to those who fan-girl/boy the original series, for sure. And there's plenty for someone new to the Utena world who's willing to hold its wounded and aching heart till it finds its noble reason for being.... and just go with it.
    10himitsu

    Out-and-out brilliance

    In an alternate universe retelling of the Shoujo Kakumei Utena story, this movie blows the already great TV series out of the water. Tenjou Utena is new to Ohtori Academy, having recently broken up with Kiryuu Touga. Upon arriving, she sees him again, and meets Himemiya Anthy, also known as the Rose Bride. Utena is forced into a duel with Saionji Kyouichi for the possession of the Rose Bride. She is bewildered by the events taking place in the academy, but starts to figure out what life is all about and where it doesn't happen. The plot is fresh while still holding on to certain elements of the original storyline from the TV series. The characters, while many have done 180s with their personalities, are still as captivating as ever. The music, supplied once again by the wonderful J.A Seaser, is just as good as anything in the TV series, if not better. Finally, the animation is more beautiful than words can describe. If nothing else, watch this movie for the animation. Many people, Utena fans and not, don't give this movie a fair shake, claiming a number of things they don't like about it which were exactly what they liked about the TV series. Though it is much easier to understand the movie if you've seen the series in full, the movie is still a masterpiece to behold in any right.
    10jmiguel_83

    David Lynch in anime.

    Utena is a title that goes beyond an institute within the grades that put your consideration in this particular film, which I mean, There is a part where Utena took the sword chest of Anthy in the first duel; states that Utena frees Anthy from the yoke of previous sexual Winner,Saijonji.

    All the characters in the film have problems related to sexuality, own adolescence: Utena has enormous emotional vacuum, which makes it sometimes confuse your feelings; Anthy feels guilty for the death of God, his brother, Akio, the degree of left manipulate and to a certain extent abuse it; Touga was a child raped by a man, Juri is a lesbian girl, repressed by society, Saionji is an inappropriate social Miki and Kozue face incestuous a problem, stemming from a possessive love; Shiori is a girl who woke up pretty soon their sexuality, and it is quite early, not to mention being by the death of his Prince and know that it is desired by another woman ... Akio is a man incomplete from the point of view inside, and looking to fill this vacuum with sex ...

    Has no filler, the animation is fine, the aesthetics is surprising: the poses shadow of girls, until the color of hair and eyes of Utena have a meaning ... the movie is a journey of opium, is full of symbolism and what you suggest for "real" is not always so. Adding insult to injury is the most confusing climax scene in the entire history of anime (!). It is described as a metaphor for one must leave the comfortable but at the same time confusing world of adolescence (Represented by the school Ohtori).
    8General_Changs_eyepatch

    It was a mistake to think you're the only one who could turn into a car--now I'm a car too!

    Consider yourself warned that this movie operates on the assumption that viewers are familiar with the TV series. If you aren't already aware of the relationships between the characters (as I'm not) you're outta luck, because very little of it is explained here. And from what I've heard, things are a bit murky even then.

    What makes this movie great is that it really doesn't matter. Utena is a visual smorgasborg--the backgrounds alone warrant it a high rating, impossibly lush and frequently reminiscent of art nouveau. The characters are equally wonderfully drawn. Visually, it's brilliant; the floating castle that seems to constantly rearrange itself is an astonishing feat of fantastical architecture. All in all I'd have to say this is the most gorgeous animation I've ever seen.

    As for the plot...I've seen this three times now and still don't entirely get it. I have some vague theories about what's going on and why, but without the series' background I can't verify anything. The movie operates on a very surreal, symbolic level--and it's full of the eccentricities of anime, as well (not that that's a bad thing, just different--a giant car wash machine that rises out of a field of roses figures prominently in a later scene). If you go into this expecting cut-and-dry western cinema (doubtful, as by and large I expect only anime junkies would even hear of it), you're up the creek without a paddle. Even granted the contextual uncertainty, though, there is clearly a resolution. What it means is certainly debatable, but the point is that there IS a narrative here discernible in the end, if that actually matters. In this case, I don't think it does. The movie exists in its own world and can't be expected to always adhere to our rules.

    Utena is awe-inspiring in its visual beauty and imagination. As a would-be fantasy writer myself I found my mind spinning off on dozens of tangents after watching it. And for one work of art to inspire another to create is perhaps the highest recommendation there is.
    8ackey

    If you have seen the series...

    I'm a big fan of the series and watched the movie when I had seen most of the episodes. Basically, they tried to put in most of the meaning and ideas of the series into the movie. But they changed some major points - so much that a person who has never seen the series will see a very different move than a die hard fan. Unfortunately, there are many "shout outs" to episodes which are randomly scattered in the movie and make no sense.

    The movie's style is similar to the series, but it does many things just for their aesthetic value. That and the randomness of certain things makes it a very strange movie to watch. It feels more akin to a work of art than a movie (think Titanic of the Matrix). Every time I have watched it I have enjoyed it more and come away more emotionally moved.

    If this is your first exposure to Utena, just accept that some things won't make sense. If you are familiar with the television series, pretend that the movie takes place in a different universe.

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Central Park Media released two editions in North America: a standard edition in a clear DVD case and a Special Edition in a clear pink case with a bonus DVD with extra Central Park Media trailers.
    • Quotes

      [Akio checks on a seemingly unconscious, unclothed Anthy]

      Akio Ohtori: Uh... You weren't asleep?

      [backs away]

      Akio Ohtori: How long? How long have you been awake? Have you never been asleep? Were you only PRETENDING?

      Anthy Himemiya: [sits up] Don't worry. You are my Prince, dear Brother. You can do with me as you please.

      Akio Ohtori: [yelling] Don't talk like that!... I'm not like THAT!

    • Connections
      Featured in Revolutionary Girl Utena: The Movie - Behind the Scenes with Kunihiko Ikuhara (2001)
    • Soundtracks
      Fiancé ni Naritai
      Performed by 'Mitsuhiro Oikawa'

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    FAQ15

    • How long is Revolutionary Girl Utena: The Movie?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 14, 1999 (Japan)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Official site
      • Official Site (us)
    • Languages
      • English
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • Utena - Apocalypse d'adolescence
    • Production companies
      • J.C. Staff
      • King Records
      • Movic
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • ¥120,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 25 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
      • D-Cinema 96kHz 5.1
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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