Puella Magi Madoka Magica the Movie: Rebellion

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Revision as of 23:31, 9 July 2023 by Ilikecomputers (talk | contribs) (move trope)

All spoilers from the original Puella Magi Madoka Magica will be unmarked on this page. Spoilers specific to the film will be marked. Please do not read ahead if you haven't seen the show. It is very easy to spoil the show, as almost every episode reveals a crucial piece of new information.

WARNING! There are unmarked Spoilers ahead. Beware.


Puella Magi Madoka Magica the Movie: Rebellion is Shaft's 2013 movie sequel to Puella Magi Madoka Magica. It follows Puella Magi Madoka Magica the Movie: Beginnings and Puella Magi Madoka Magica The Movie: Eternal, two compilation films that re-edit the events of the series into feature films. Rebellion tells an original story, directly continuing after the original series. It was nominated for the Japan Academy Film Prize for Animation of the Year in 2014, but faced tough competition from Studio Ghibli, ultimately losing to The Wind Rises--the exact opposite film to Rebellion.

Fourteen year old Madoka Kaname was an Ordinary High School Student. Now she's a Magical Girl, attending school, hanging out with her other magical girl friends. When the night comes, she and her friends--Homura Akemi, Sayaka Miki, Mami Tomoe, and Kyoko Sakura-- team up to fight Nightmares, creatures born from, well, nightmares. Things are seemingly idyllic in this existence.

Except, wait a minute. Didn't the magical girls fight witches, not nightmares? Even after Madoka Ascended to A Higher Plane of Existence, the magical girls fought wraiths, not nightmares. Didn't half of them die in the original series? Why is Mami back? What is going on?

Well, things are far more than they look on the surface, for Homura quickly discovers she cannot leave the city of Mitakihara, and that it hides a far more sinister secret than it lets on. For you see, there's a lot going on in this "Mitakihara" the girls just don't know about.


Remember to change the link at File:Bullet vs bullet Rebellion.png

Tropes used in Puella Magi Madoka Magica the Movie: Rebellion include:


  • Art Shift: During the bus sequence as Homura and Kyoto tries to get out of Mitakihara, the art style shifts massively. Backgrounds become much emptier, with less detail. Scenes are generally darker. This helps contribute to a feeling that something is wrong.
  • Cerebus Syndrome: The first 30 minutes are pretty slow paced and revolve around simple magical girls who wake up, go to school, and save the world. Then, the revelation that their "Mitakihara" city isn't what it seems sends the movie promptly back to the territory of episode 8 from the original show.
  • De-Power: In the ending, this happens to Madoka as the laws of reality gets rewritten. Again.
  • Gainax Ending: The barrier trapping Homura's Soul Gem is seemingly shattered, and she's about to be taken away by Madoka, who Ascended to A Higher Plane of Existence in the series. However, Homura wants to be with Madoka more than anything, and Madoka residing on another plane of existence, as you might imagine, does not make it easy for them to be together. A normal person will let themselves get pulled away, but we're talking about the girl who relived existence several times to save Madoka. Thus, Homura straight up pulls Law of Cycles Madoka out of the sky, enslaves the entire Incubator species, and rewrites the laws of existence to ensure she and Madoka will be together. She says she's neither a Magical Girl or Witch, instead calling herself a "demon". Several questions are left unanswered, the biggest being whether the Law of Cycles will continue or not. The scene after the credits don't help either, depicting Homura falling off a cliff with a beaten up Kyubey.
    • Things make a bit of sense if you think about it for a bit. Homura's motivation from the original series is to save Madoka. In the penultimate timeline, she was never able to do it. Even though Madoka isn't a witch, her sacrifice means Madoka cannot be with Homura. Thus, when given a chance to save Madoka again and give every magical girl another chance, Homura took it. This is why Homura pulled Madoka out of the sky and rewrote the laws of reality so they will all be transfer students. A proportion of the happy ending from the series is kept; no new magical girls can be formed as the Incubators are under Homura's control, so over time no new witches can be formed. Homura never did anything to alter Madoka's ability to prevent the transformation of witches with her "own hands" (subtitled version). If a magical girl is transforming into a witch, Madoka can touch them to stop the transformation and let them disappear. The difference is she must do it from the physical world, instead from another plane of existence.
  • Masquerade: One is put up to conceal the true nature of Mitakihara city. This isn't the same Mitakihara city as the series.
  • The Movie: This is the last part of a trilogy[1]. The first two films were a retelling of the original series, and this one is a continuation of the story.
  • New Transfer Student: In the original series, Homura is one. In the end of the movie, Madoka is one.
  • Opening Monologue: Homura gives one about magical girls and how their end will inevitably be claimed by the Law of Cycles.
  • Post Modernism: Some sequences blur the line between Clip Art Animation and Anime animation. Hard. And there's many of them.
  • Produce Pelting: The clara dolls pelt Homura after she steals Madoka's powers.
  • Sexy Backless Outfit: Homura's devil outfit. While in general her outfit is stripperific, the no back is practical considering the wings (which themselves look impractical). Although the fact she is biologically likely to be 13-14 probably (and hopefully) undermines any fan service appeal. Having gone through many time lines and the amount of struggle she was put through might give a case she is mentally older than her biological age would suggest.
  • Shoot the Bullet: Mami and Homura, can't hit each other during their fight just before halfway into the film. The reason for this is quite simple: their bullets kept hitting other bullets.
  • Trilogy Creep: Originally, we only have Beginnings, Eternal, and Rebellion. Now we're getting Puella Magi Madoka Magica the Movie -Walpurgisnacht: Rising- to clear up that Gainax Ending.
  • Weird Moon: At the very end of the film, after the credits, the moon shown is sliced cleanly in half.
  1. It was a trilogy until a sequel to this film was announced