Revolutionary Girl Utena.

Kunihiko Ikuhara was the co-creator, director, and chief creative force behind Revolutionary Girl Utena, which aired in Japan in 1997. Before that, he directed several seasons and feature films of Sailor Moon. In a 2000 interview, Ikuhara revealed that Utena grew out of a rejected Sailor Moon movie idea. His concept centered on Uranus and Neptune, a black Pegasus, and a climactic chase to a place called “The End of the World.” When the producer left the project, Ikuhara stepped away too. But that one phrase stayed with him, later becoming a core element of Utena.

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Sailor Moon S

It wasn’t until 2000 that Kunihiko Ikuhara publicly revealed just how deeply Sailor Moon had influenced the creative direction of Revolutionary Girl Utena. In an online interview, he described an abandoned plot for the Sailor Moon SuperS movie that reads like a prototype for Utena's surrealism and emotional stakes. “Sailor Neptune was going to be in a 1000-year sleep at a place called ‘The End of the World,’” he explained, “and Sailor Uranus was needed to steal the talisman from the Sailor Scouts… The climax of the story would've been the rodeo scene between Sailor Moon on white Pegasus and Sailor Uranus on Black Pegasus.” It was bold, strange, and operatic, with the kind of narrative ambition that Utena would later fully realize.

Collage style image featuring official art work from the Revolutionary Girl Utena anime series of Utena and Anthy hugging one another, as well as two illustrations from the Utena manga behind them
Image Created by Anna Williams

That movie never got made. When the producer walked away from Sailor Moon, Ikuhara left too. But as he put it, “I had an attraction to the idea of ‘The End of the World,’” and the concept did not die with the project. Instead, it evolved into something more abstract and daring, becoming Utena’s enigmatic and dreamlike setting with the same name. You can almost trace a direct line from Sailor Uranus galloping toward a mythic fate to Utena Tenjou raising her sword in a duel for revolution. What Ikuhara abandoned in one magical girl series became the emotional and symbolic heart of another.

Two Magical Girls, Two Very Different Stories

Why Utena Still Matters

Sailor Moon and Revolutionary Girl Utena might seem similar on the surface, but they head in very different directions. Sailor Moon is all about friendship, teamwork, and fighting evil with love and sparkles. It’s fun, emotional, and easy to follow, which helped make it a global hit. Utena takes some of those same magical girl ideas and flips them inside out. It’s weirder, darker, and far more symbolic, asking deeper questions about identity, gender, and power. You can feel Ikuhara using the tools he learned on Sailor Moon, but pushing them further to create something much more personal and experimental.

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If you’ve never seen Revolutionary Girl Utena, it’s still a must-watch for anime fans, even if you’re not into Sailor Moon or shōjo stories. What Kunihiko Ikuhara created after leaving Sailor Moon was something entirely different, with a more surreal tone, layered symbolism, and a willingness to challenge expectations. Like Cowboy Bebop and Serial Experiments Lain, Utena was part of a wave of late 90s anime that redefined what television animation could be. It remains bold, strange, and unforgettable, and stands as one of the clearest examples of a creator taking full control of their vision.

Revolutionary Girl Utena

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Revolutionary Girl Utena
Release Date
1997 - 1997
Directors
Kunihiko Ikuhara

WHERE TO WATCH

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