This is a static copy of In the Rose Garden, which existed as the center of the western Utena fandom for years. Enjoy. :)
On a different thread someone posted the following link:
http://www.broomstick.org/utena/mikage.html
Has anyone ever noticed these?
http://www.ohtori.nu/gallery/maison/UtenaAnthy40.jpg
http://ocw.mit.edu/NR/rdonlyres/Global/ … gelo_1.jpg
Last edited by brian (11-04-2006 07:20:49 PM)
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OMG that is such an awesome comparison, between the two.
Very good brian..
I have learned something new..
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Wow. It appears Kunihiko Ikuhara did his homework.
...
Mikage as a ho. ROFL.
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Mikage as a whore is funny, but Utena as God and Anthy as Adam? Anthy struck me more as Eve throughout most of the series, and Lilith at the end.
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It's the visual comparsion that matters. In the Sistine Chapel roof, God is giving life to Adam. If you look the scene in the series symbolically, you could say that Utena is giving life to Anthy. At the very least I'm certain that Ikuhara wanted to give a similar visual sensation as Michelangelo did.
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...I can't believe I never noticed that. o_o Good job! Wonderful explanation, too, Lightice.
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Oh wow. I think subconsciously, I at least noticed that, because I remember watching that part and getting that kind of feel of the moment. Wonderful comparision.
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I hate myself for never noticing this, but something always did nag me about that shot. I do believe that motif pops up again in art in suspiciously significant places...I'd have to do my homework.
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ShatteredMirror wrote:
Mikage as a whore is funny, but Utena as God and Anthy as Adam? Anthy struck me more as Eve throughout most of the series, and Lilith at the end.
I never really understood what qualified Anthy as an Eve/Lillith archetype, given the loose parallels: First woman, tempted/becomes indulgent, spurned/banned from paradise. I don't see her as that kind of figure because the central characters around her don't really fit, I mean you could have Akio as the tempter and Utena as the redeemer, but who plays Adam and where does Dios come in? How is she banned from paradise through indulgence? She denies society her brother and is punished for it by being impaled, a bit different a story. And unlike those unlucky ladies of biblical/talmudic lore, Anthy is saved in the end.
My view on Anthy is more New Testament/Buddhist (it seems like a strange mixture, but it isn't really) I always felt that Akio was the Satanic figure, Utena was a sort of Christ figure, and Anthy was more like Judas (Et tu Brute?) or one of the damned. Akio represents all temptation, even tempting Utena, a theme that can be related to Satan tempting Jesus in the desert or Buddha facing the monster that is the darker self or illusion. Utena becomes the vessel for change (her name does mean calyx or however you spell it) and is sacrificed in the end to redeem/save/lift the veil of illusion of all those around her, something Christ does, and also the Buddhist key to enlightenment as well. Anthy is under illusion, soiled, and a character that betrays the savior but is eventually redeemed by the mercy of that savior/the Christ figure. Though Judas did hang himself, one can estimate, according to the story, that he was saved, being that Jesus sacrificed himself in place of all our sins, something that Utena does that releases Anthy from all illusion and control. Recall as well that while Jesus was on the cross, he had a doubtful hour, in which he cried out, "Lord, why have you betrayed me?" I think this is very similar to Utena's doubt before she is killed, "I guess I couldn't be a prince after all." Both he and Utena have seemed to misunderstand for a moment the magnitude of their sacrifice, and what they have achieved.
Just as a footnote: I am not Catholic. That's an endless debate for another thread. I'm comparing it to Utena as one story/mythology to another.
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Rebel Prince wrote:
Recall as well that while Jesus was on the cross, he had a doubtful hour, in which he cried out, "Lord, why have you betrayed me?" I think this is very similar to Utena's doubt before she is killed, "I guess I couldn't be a prince after all." Both he and Utena have seemed to misunderstand for a moment the magnitude of their sacrifice, and what they have achieved.
My god, I never noticed this and my mind is blown. I love this series.
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brian wrote:
On a different thread someone posted the following link:
http://www.broomstick.org/utena/mikage.html
Has anyone ever noticed these?
http://www.ohtori.nu/gallery/maison/UtenaAnthy40.jpg
http://ocw.mit.edu/NR/rdonlyres/Global/ … gelo_1.jpg
OMG!!!!!!!! that kinda explains the extreme christian themes mixed with sexual uncertainty, love, it explains the show. Those last two images explain a lot. The show is genius!
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I saw Anthy as Eve because she was punished for one moment of putting her own desires (saving Dios from himself/eating the apple) ahead of what was her duty (standing aside and letting him do his thing, even if it killed him/remaining ignorant of the reality of good and evil).
As for Lilith, she was expelled from Paradise because she refused to step into the role that she'd been cast. And... that's not really Anthy. I don't know why I typed Lilith as well, I was kind of asleep at the time. But Utena is definitely a Christ figure. Right down to crucifixation. With swords.
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I actually did notice that when I saw the pic in the gallery. It was an immediate connection for me. I'm still unsure on who plays what roles (Utena = God, Anthy = Adam/Eve) since I don't remember most of the background of the story. Still, that's a very interesting concept to go into, and I was stunned when I first noticed the resemblance of the scene.
The Jesus/Judas/Satan analysis is great, too. I never thought of that...
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Cue me repeatedly cutting and pasting six year old links and trying to figure out why they don't work no matter how I try to adjust them. Ha.
I think the strongest connective tissue of that era of anime greats was that the production people knew the power of allusion Eva, Nadesico, Utena, and Escaflowne all appropriate mise en scene, framing, costuming or cuts from other works without drawing attention to them or turning it into clear pastiche or parody because on some level, if you're at all familiar, it resonates. And, if it doesn't resonate, it's still good framing or solid arrangement.
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