| «- back to shows Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon is one of the most popular Magical Girl anime of all time. It began its run in 1992, and on February 8, 1997, the series finally came to an end with episode #200. Each year's series has a slightly different name. The first season is called simply "Sailor Moon". This was followed by "Sailor Moon R" (The R standing for "Romance") , next came "Sailor Moon S", in which the S was for "Super" (Usagi gets her Super Sailor Moon transformation), The next season was "Sailor Moon SS", (SS= SuperS, the first few episodes of this series used a 'Sailor Moon SS' logo in the opening animation, but this was later changed to a 'Sailor Moon SuperS' logo. In SS, both Usagi and Chibi-Usa get Super Sailor transformations). Finally there is Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon, Sailor Stars, which is usually just called 'Sailor Stars'.
Years later, in our present, the former members of the Moon Kingdom are once again reunited to fight Beryl, who has regained her strength, and attempts to take over the world. Not only do they fight Beryl, but a host of other villians as well, including the siblings Ail and Ann (characters that appear in the anime only, Naoko Takeuchi did not create them), the evil Wiseman, professor Tomoe, the Witches 5, Zirconia and the amazon trio and quartet, Nephrenia (also sometimes spelled Neherenia), and Galaxia/Chaos.
The Sailor Moon manga was written and drawn by a young woman named Naoko Takeuchi. The serialized installments of the manga ran in the larger 'phonebook' type girls manga called 'Nakayoshi'. Kodansha publishes the manga compilations into tankoubon volumes.
Sailor Moon was released in an English dubbed version in North America in the fall of 1995 by DIC. The storyline remained basically the same, but character names were changed, and the dialog was changed a lot. New music was created as well. The series received exceptional ratings in Canada, and has gained much popularity over there. In the US, a combination of factors led to a lukewarm performance in the highly competitive syndication market. Personally, I kinda liked the North American Sailor Moon. I watched it every day and taped all of the episodes. However I tend to treat it as a novelty, and my real Sailor Moon appreciation is for the original Japanese version. In 1997, the Sailor Moon manga was released in North America as one of 4 manga titles in a manga compilation called the Mixxzine. In 2000, Pioneer began releasing the Sailor Moon movies on DVD and new dubbed episodes of Sailor Moon S began airing on Cartoon Network.
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