Everywhere around the world, the children sleep. Unaware of danger lurking in the shadows. But tonight, a strange darkness floats in the wind. And the children, one by one, begin to disappear. It seems to be a supernatural force that feeds on their dreams. The evil queen, Badiyanu, and her loyal fairies assist in using the "Black Dream Hole" to swallow the earth. It is up to Sailor Moon and the Sailor Soldiers to prevent the approaching Darkness. (Source: ANN)
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This has to be my least favorite Sailor Moon movie out of the 3 that were dubbed. There were too many inaccurate things going on that I just couldn't just let it brush past me easily. Story: 7 It could have been creative and hilarious with its villains, instead it was just overall very poorly explained. I liked the fact that they kept the dream theme connection to the SuperS season, but it just makes the movie in general more confusing in a number of matters. One being Pluto's unexplained appearance. Art: 10 The art was very colorful, and rich. It's very obvious the movie was mostlycentered on Mini Moon or Chibi Moon with the young kids singing the theme, along with the candy and fairy looking villains. Sound 6: I overall always love the music of Sailor Moon, but the music in this movie was just fruity and overall childish. Asides from the transformation music, the rest of the songs were forgettable. Character: Again, this movie is obviously centered on Mini Moon, but while she is useful in the SuperS season, she's just a powerless princess in this movie. Sailor Moon, her team and Tuxedo Mask's appearance in this movie was to serve as the heroes that Chibi Moon wasn't being. I really expected Chibi Moon to be more of a help with the movie being centered on kids and dreams. As for her sudden new "friendship" with the movie's new character. With her constant interest in someone else in the SuperS season, getting a new crush out of nowhere in this movie just made me gag. His background wasn't explained well enough either. Enjoyment: 8 Although this movie had me laughing at it's villains and certain other moments. It definitely was my least favorite of the Sailor Moon movies. Overall: A nice movie for Sailor Moon fans.
Let me first admit that Chibi-Usa is my most disliked-character, so if you feel this review isn't exactly unbiased, I'm not going to argue. >X3 After BSSM S, which highlights Chibi-Usa's friendship with Tomoe Hotaru, there came BSSM SuperS which also focused on Chibi-Usa... in almost every episode. Thinking one couldn't possibly tire of this pink-haired loud-mouthed girl, here is an enitre movie dedicated to her. The story is weak compared to its two predecessors. The idea of fairies that kidnap children seems pretty contrived... in regards to forcing a plot that will center around Chibi-Usa. It introduces characters such as Peruru and Badiyanu who are hollowin character and mere plot-triggers. The art quality is superb. As the third movie with a large budget, animators can afford to try new and more complicated angles, which may bother some people as the shots can be considered a little too ambitious. The soundtrack is lacking when compared to the S or R movie. Badiyanu's persistent laughter is very irritating, moreso than what is usual for the Evil Villianess character-type. And she laughs so often you want to shoot yourself. The theme song "Morning Moon" is introduced and it is a light and fitting song, a great addition to the other movies' ending themes. There is virtually no Character Development. The story presents a conflict and the Sailor Senshi must resolve it. The end. The Enjoyment and Overall quality of this movie is average. Its delicious eye-candy but the plot fails to draw you in.
The best of the Sailor Moon movies to me, but also the one that feels the most reliant on having actually watched the series up to this point, since a lot of the things I found especially striking more stemmed from the nuances in the character writing here rather than the plot in itself. A ton of little themes continued on from the associated season, especially in regards to what it truly means to "grow up", all tied together with this clash between one's dreams for what an ideal existence is and the reality of those compromises that come with life. That dream sequence nearthe end was especially great because of that, combined with the overwhelming fairy tale imagery creating this utterly cloying atmosphere that perfectly played off the antagonists. The space lesbians also make a return here, so it's awesome based on that fact alone.
The Sailor Moon SuperS Movie had a very high standard to live up to: the R and S Movies were both excellent in their own rights and had an astonishingly amount of enjoyable plot, emotional stakes, and a generally high animation quality, with the movies themselves looking even prettier than the main series the majority of the time (which is again, an achievement in itself given how massively appealing the series visually is). Unfortunately, if that didn't give it away, Sailor Moon SuperS fails to set a new standard for the movies to follow, and I'm afraid it doesn't even achieve the previous standard. Themovie in my opinion is not that enjoyable at all; there are some elements to like, such as Queen Badiane's design (which oddly is reminiscent of the main villain in Stars), the fairies are a really cool element to the film, and the three o'clock fairy story is a nice touch. Unfortunately, it really does feel like the film spends most of its time dragging its feet. The Bonbon Babies, as a main example, are a fight scene that for all intents and purposes, is repeatedly twice in the same scene, totaling approximately 15 minutes, and as another, the Outer Senshi show up later with no real explanation. Chibiusa is a great character to get invested to, and despite it working well for the majority of the SuperS season proper, it really feels like it fails to mesh properly with the other elements the story brings together. In a way, it does feel that the story that's trying to be told here does need a stronger grounding in reality, as it seems to be a bit too exaggerated to even buy on suspension of disbelief. The reason I believe that the other films do not experience this problem is primarily that the other films have a stronger sense of anticipation and tension, with greater stakes at play (such as referencing Silver Millennium lore and Mamoru's past). The movie unfortunately borders on overexaggerated and downright silly at times as well. Even though the Sailor Moon SuperS movie was a very solid attempt, I can't say that it was personally enjoyable for me, which is a true shame. 4/10.