Sailor Moon S the Movie: Hearts in Ice
As Usagi and her friends enjoy Christmas vacation, an unusual and fierce snowstorm hits town... The evil Snow Queen Kaguya has returned to claim Earth as her own. Crucial to Queen Kaguya's plan is a magical crystal from outer space, approaching Earth disguised as a comet. Once she gets hold of the crystal, she will have the power to suck away all life energy and cover the Earth in ice. Will Sailor Moon find the crystal before Queen Kaguya? Will her powers be enough to save the Earth from permanent winter? All hope lies with the Legendary Ultimate Scout Power!
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- Cast:
- Kotono Mitsuishi , Aya Hisakawa , Michie Tomizawa , Emi Shinohara , Rica Fukami , Kae Araki , Megumi Ogata
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Reviews
To me, this movie is perfection.
One of my all time favorites.
Good movie, but best of all time? Hardly . . .
Good movie but grossly overrated
A comet is approaching Earth; a snowy ice queen is going to turn it into her new kingdom in the name of beauty. She sends her minions to the planet below and a local scientist sees the plot unfold. He sets out to find the object without thinking about the consequences and pays the price for it. As is typical to Sailor Moon, this will be a major plot point.I want to give props to the opening that follows, because it shows the characters doing what they do best – they have a life outside of what is going on outside of the movie's adventure. This is an aspect lost on so many anime series and movies when characters get caught up in drama or world affairs; they neglect their personal lives and otherwise fail to continue their former life when all is said and done. Sailor Moon has always been a bit different because their super hero lives and normal lives are not only different, but their super hero guises help to preserve their lives as well as the life of everyone else around the planet.That said, this is the dubbed version of the Japanese movie; the plot is otherwise the same outside of a few translation differences which involve changed names, nuances for the American culture, and a few odd placed jokes. This is typical in translations and well known in the Sailor Moon fandom; it simply can't be avoided. The movie is also typical of drama that unfolds on American primetime television of the era (the movie was made around the same time) and in early 2000. All characters have ups and downs in their life and the movie plays heavily with this before the main plot kicks in.In a nutshell the snowy icequeen intends to turn the world into her own kingdom. Her minions wreak havoc in downtown Tokyo and the Sailor Scouts are there to put an end to it. In the meantime the scientist also mentioned from the beginning, has gotten caught up with Serena's cat; so the Sailor Scouts are suddenly involved in their personal lives as well. The scientist also is involved in a sideplot involving his love life and a scientist that is about to perform a mission in space; the comet towards Earth directly affects the mission. The movie plays heavily on the plot, as well as drama that unfolds as a side effect; characters have their own interactions as well.The voice acting is typical of dubbed animation; it is above average as has transpired to previous Sailor Moon dubs; this was dubbed later in the life of the series and the effects show. Returning fans after a decade will appreciate this, those just now viewing the entire series will notice the effects. The animation looks to be pulled directly from the series showing at the same time (Sailor Moon S); but unlike the syndicated series, this takes no shortcuts in animation; the same frame count for animation appears to be there, as well as the same quality throughout. Characters also seem to have more nuances in their movements, body language, gestures and facial expressions; they needless to say have lots of personality going on here. Just about every scene shown has some kind of fluid, if not choppy animation – this is still better than the actual series which often employs single frame shots with movement coming from say, only the mouth. The movie also uses lots of camera angles combined with animation movement; special effects are animated and wonderfully done in a time when computer animation was largely unheard of. The style of camera movement and animation is not typically found in any animation without some kind of special effects or animation using computer graphics. Background art is above the original series and typically graces only movies; similar in appearance to that found in a graphics novel, the play on light and undertones helps the foreground animation stand out with exceptionally clean lines. In a word; it's good animation and art for the time.Are the voices, music, and sound effects good? They are a combination of the original Japanese, with American additives transplanted with varying affects; for the most part it could have very well been the American equivalent that I grew up with had it not been delayed nearly a decade before dubbing the rest of the series.I recommend the movie for Sailor Moon fans; it will give you your fix; but for causal anime fans it may be a bit of a loose cannon. This movie fits entirely into the magical girl genre of anime with nods to more aggressive shows such as Dragonball Z; fans of either genre will want to follow suite.Originally posted to Orion Age (http://www.orionphysics.com/? p=6649).
I loved this movie, both in English and Japanese. I have some positive and negative feed back thought.Positive Feed Back: the story was heart warming, despite that it is a movie about ice and snow. I really felt Luna's pain and I wanted her to find love, but not with who she was crushing on. I also adored Usagi (Serena)'s speech at the huge fight scene. Sailor Moon always has great empowering speeches about life and love. Sometimes, when I want to cry happy tears or write a great scenes for one of my novels, I watch just that segment. Negative Feed Back: Luna's choice in relationship was disturbing to me. Even though I wanted Luna to fall in love and I felt for her, I still didn't like her crush. I felt it was wrong considering that she is a cat and not a human, and her crush was a human. She even kisses him. Very, very wrong.
Not as good as Sailor Moon R, but I still like it a lot! This review contains spoilers, so you may not want to read the rest of this review until you have watched the movie. An evil queen wants to freeze the Earth, and it's up to Sailor Moon and the Sailor Scouts to save the day! Very good plot, especially scince Luna is in love with an astronomer that saved her from getting run over by a car. Near the end of the movie, I was thinking that the evil queen was nuts, and a few minutes later, Sailor Moon actually told her she was nuts! Yikes! Maybe I'm a psychic like Raye. Yeah right! It would be cool though! I like this movie a lot! It is SO COOL when Luna is turned human for a few minutes, but then she turns into a cat again after she shows Kakedo her feelings for him. WATCH!
The second Sailor Moon movie, Sailor Moon S(or Super) was good, but not as good as Sailor Moon SuperS: The movie. This movie is unique in the sense that the plot is not revolved over a Sailor soldier, but over the cat, Luna.Pros: *A relatively good plot *The outer soldiers (minus Saturn, who was not in the movie) *The battle scenes *The opening *Some funny scenesCons: *Sailor Saturn was not in the movie! *It should have been more focused on the outer soldiers