Revue Starlight The Movie – It’s time to aim for your next stage
“All the world’s a stage,
And all the men and women merely players;
They have their exits and their entrances;
And one man in his time plays many parts.”

A movie that at first hand has no reason to exist, but, at the end of Rondo Rondo Rondo, thanks to Nana we get to see everyone as corpses on the floor, showcasing how the audience moves on from the cast when the show is over, leaving them as action figures, nothing but toys to entertain the audience. This audience yearns for more of these toys, for one final performance, leading to this film's existence.

But this time around, being the Top Star doesn’t matter anymore.
It’s time to move on from the past and take our first steps into adulthood
The stage that once brought everyone together no longer exists. The spotlight that gave them purpose is gone. Graduation is soon approaching, Starlight is over now, everyone has to go their own way, yet most arent ready to do so. That is the wound this movie opens up.

After being what some could call a "plain" protagonist in the main series, we finally get to take a look at Karen’s life growing up, her values, her loneliness, her optimism and insecurities. Someone who doesn't want to be left behind, who believed in eternal curtain calls, and who tied her entire sense of self to that single shining stage. For Karen, the stage wasn’t just a performance. It was home. It was where she could always find Hikari, even when she left her side, where everyone was together.
But now that it's all over, Karen is stuck, perhaps the most out of everyone in the Seisho Academy, with graduation soon approaching, and Hikari leaving her side once again, unsure of how to step forward when everything she’s known has come to an end.

And it’s only through facing that fear, through stepping into the unknown without a script, that Karen is finally able to grow. Not as a stage girl. Not as the "protagonist" But as herself, a human being.

Nana, being the one that couldn't let go of the past the most out of everyone, has a different role this time around. She's no longer the girl looping time in hopes of preserving a perfect moment. She’s someone who’s already walked through the pain of letting go.

And because of that, she becomes the quiet backbone of the entire movie, the one who supports everyone else in doing the same.
“The train will go to the next station without fail. What about the Stage? What about us?”

She doesn’t steal the spotlight. She doesn’t need to. Instead, she passes it to others, gently guiding them through a transition she knows all too well. It’s a kind of love that doesn’t ask to be seen, only to be understood. Trying to help everyone else move forward.

Let's talk a bit about the other characters now
Starting with the Revue of Malice, even though Kaoruko leads the dialogue and action, Futaba holds the true emotional control, protecting Kaoruko out of love, not ambition. When Futaba gives Kaoruko her motorcycle, it’s a plea for her to take care of herself. The stage and music blend traditional and modern elements, reflecting their evolving relationship and the balance of past and future.

Next, the Revue of Competition between Mahiru and Hikari shows a different dynamic. Mahiru dominates the stage, reflecting her borderline mental illness to the extreme, asking Hikari to be there for Karen, while Hikari’s hesitant participation reveals her fear of confrontation, an unexpected horror sequence with dissonant music capture Mahiru’s fragile mental state perfectly, pushing Hikari to break down, to admit that she's scared, a coward that ran away.

Next we have the Revue of Hunting. It perfectly embodies the complex relationship between Junna and Nana.
Junna, who has always symbolized the future full of uncertainty and struggle, and Nana, who has always represented the safety and comfort of the past, her twin swords symbolize her divided nature and desire for control, while Junna’s bow represents her distant, unreachable goals, no matter how strong her aim is, so, when Nana breaks Junna’s bow and hands her a sword, a very powerful gesture.

It's time to stop parroting others lines, it's time to seize her own goals, using others to strengthen herself, but without losing her own way.
“I will struggle and writhe until I devour the leading role. Student Council President from the 99th Generation, Hoshimi Junna.”

Even if their futures will not be next to eachother, their friendship remains through time, the bond tying them will not be cut no matter what.

The penultimate revue, the Revue of Souls, finally brings together Claudine and Maya, diving deep into what their rivalry truly means, putting Maya and Claudine as the roles of God and Satan, role of Maya as God and Claudine as Satan, laid bare without subtlety. Unlike others, these two seem bound only to the stage, with no other option for them, Maya even declaring there is no “regular” Maya, only the stage girl. Maya must keep winning, while Claudine refuses to lose, a battle between flames that fall together, burning for all eternity.

The last revue, "The Final Lines", is the ultimate confrontation between Hikari and Karen,a follow-up to the confrontation seen at the very beginning of the film, we get a fourth-wall break, and then... Karen dies, in order to be reborn.
Everything led to this moment, this act of being reborn (named Super Star Spectacle) very cleverly shows the transition between going from a student, and becoming an adult, showcasing Karen's growth.

The girls chase for legacy, love, for tomorrow to come, happiness, kinship, for strength, for the stage.
But.. what about Karen?
Karen pursues the stage for Hikari, it's a fate she was roped into.
With Karen's death and rebirth, we get to say goodbye to the Stage Girl, turn to ashes and be reborn from them, we get to meet the Aijo Karen that the audience has been longing to see.

There’s no applause at the end. No encores. Just the sound of footsteps, walking into something new, going to a new stage, and saying goodbye to our school life, cutting our uniforms and letting the wind take them somewhere else.
Because this was never a tragedy.
It’s just the end of one act
And the start of the next.
You too can go find it, your next stage, your next role.
Today, right now, at this time, the stage continues.

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