In the process of a girl growing into a woman, she has read romance novels and shoujo manga more or less. Girls comics enlighten the imagination of ignorant and ignorant girls about love. Girls fantasize about becoming the heroine in comics and meeting the destined Prince Charming at a romantic moment. From the 1980s to the 1990s, shoujo manga was in full bloom, and these shojo manga and the animations adapted from them enriched the childhoods of thousands of teenage girls, and were also important reading books that shaped young people's view of love.
When I saw the animation of "Girls' Revolution" on TV when I was young, I was immediately attracted by the slender and slender characters drawn by photo background removing Chiho Chito. Characters in European-style military uniforms, romantic rose totems, implicit symbols, gorgeous and ritualistic scenes, deep and obscure dialogues... These features are what distinguishes "Girls Revolution" from other girl animations features. resize_(1) Image source: "Girl Revolution" But also because of too many hidden symbols and metaphors in its plot, "Girl Revolution" was a sullen work at the time. However, over time, the plot of "Girls' Revolution" has gradually begun to be discussed by the public and has become one of the classics of teenage comics.
I re-watched the animation "Girls Revolution" after 10 years or so, only to find that this work is a cross-generation drama, and it contains many avant-garde concepts and praises for feminism. "Girls Revolution" (Japanese: Girls Revolution ウテナ) is a team led by animation producer Kunihiko Ikuhara, the original script and setting produced by BE-PAPAS, and Chiho Saito as the original plan and character design. The animation plot of "Girls Revolution" tells the story of the heroine Otina in the sky, who was rescued by a prince when she was a child. The prince left a ring with a rose totem and promised to meet her in the future. Odina looks forward to that day, and because she loves the prince too much, she decides to become the prince herself. Odina, who always appeared in a men's uniform and fitted shorts at school, was al