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6 Jan 2003

starting a revolution

Fridae's resident anime fan and Sailor Moon wannabe, Alvin Tan, reviews Revolutionary Girl Utena: The Movie and argues why no self-respecting lesbian should give this manga movie a miss.

There's a new pin-up girl on the lesbian film festival circuit and her name is Utena.

Anthy, the quintessential femme and the tomboyish Utena (right)
Since its screening at the 26th San Francisco Gay and Lesbian Film Festival, Revolutionary Girl Utena (RGU) has generated quite a buzz for its ground breaking portrayal of an intense relationship between two girls - the gender bending Utena and her female partner Anthy.

Based on a popular Japanese television series, RGU is a labor of love from award winning director Kunihiko Ikuhara and popular female comic artist Chiho Saito. With its beautiful animation, dreamlike imagery and surreal score, RGU is a mind-warping and gender-bending treat that questions and subverts traditional gender roles for adolescent girls.

The action in RGU takes place at the Ohtori Academy, a sprawling baroque private school, run by a mysterious organization referred to as the Ends of the World. This organization is in turn controlled by the Student Council, an elite group of the academy's best students and leaders. The members of the Student Council carry out duels in a secret fighting ground, the Rose Arena, in the hopes of winning the Rose Bride Anthy and obtaining the "power to revolutionize the world".

As a new transfer, the tomboyish Utena, disappointed by the failures of her own "prince" (read: boyfriend), decided that she wants to become a prince herself and so duels for Anthy not because she wants the revolutionary power but because she is angry about the way the other duelists treat Anthy when they won her hand. Dressed in boys' attire, Utena is the typical butch lesbian who wears her hair cropped short, speaks with a distinctly boyish manner and uses the masculine pronoun boku when referring to herself.

On the other hand, Anthy is the quintessential femme whose duty is to look drop-dead gorgeous, tend to the campus rose-garden and serve the needs (sexual or otherwise) of whoever wins her hand through the duels. The sister of the academy's acting chairman (and heartthrob), Akio Ohtori, Anthy finds herself drawn to Utena because of the latter's nobility and sincerity.
As the dreamlike events unfold, both Utena and Anthy develop feelings for each other and come to the realization that they will never escape the bonds of their pasts and the demands of their gender unless they escape the academy's oppressive atmosphere. The plot comes together in a thrilling 15-minute climax where Utena turns into a car that Anthy drives through many obstacles to eventually reach the outside world.

Anthy, the quintessential femme and the tomboyish Utena (right)
Despite the logic-defying ending and the rather unrealistic anime renditions (read: no human girls can be that thin except maybe for Ally McBeal's Calista Flockhart), RGU stands out from other anime movies with its unflinching portrayal of same-sex love between girls and its daring use of lesbian protagonists.

RGU thus signals a breakthrough in anime where female characters reject their male loves and instead turn to each other. According to the Shoujo Kakumei Utena Home Page, the movie serves as a mirror for Japanese society by reflecting the dissatisfaction Japanese girls and women have with their subordinate position in contemporary Japanese society.

Self-consciously produced from within a discourse that is concerned with feminine desires and female resistance to their social positioning, Utena's revolution takes on symbolic meaning as it addresses wider issues such as the feminist uprisings of the 1970s and the legitimization of same-sex love between women.

By putting forth the romantic notion of revolution as being capable of fundamentally changing the world through the erasure of gender and sexual categories, RGU offers lesbian love as an escape from dependence on men and by association on the society that privileges men. And because of this, Revolutionary Girl Utena truly lives up to the claim of its title.

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