Perfect Blue (Japanese: パーフェクトブルー, Pāfekuto Burū) is a 1997 Japanese adult animated psychological thriller film directed by Satoshi Kon in his feature-length directorial debut.[1] Adapted from Yoshikazu Takeuchi's 1991 novel Perfect Blue: Complete Metamorphosis, the story centers on Mima Kirigoe (voiced by Junko Iwao), a young pop idol who disbands her group CHAM! to pursue an acting career, only to face intense fan backlash, a violent stalker, and a fracturing sense of reality as murders plague her professional circle.[2][3]Produced by Madhouse and Rex Entertainment with a screenplay by Sadayuki Murai, Perfect Blue blends elements of horror, mystery, and media satire, exploring themes of identity, celebrity culture, and the male gaze through innovative animation techniques that blur the lines between dreams, media, and waking life. The film premiered at the 1997 Fantasia International Film Festival and received a wide theatrical release in Japan on February 28, 1998, before expanding internationally, including a U.S. release in 1999.[4]Upon release, Perfect Blue garnered widespread critical acclaim for its psychological depth and visual style, earning an 84% Tomatometer score on Rotten Tomatoes based on 55 reviews, with critics praising its compelling mystery and theatrical visuals.[5] It has since achieved cult status and exerted significant influence on Western cinema, notably inspiring Darren Aronofsky's Requiem for a Dream (2000), as acknowledged by the director, through shared motifs of hallucinatory descent and body horror.[6] The film's exploration of fame's psychological toll has also drawn comparisons to Aronofsky's Black Swan (2010), though he has denied direct inspiration, highlighting Perfect Blue's enduring impact on the thriller genre.[7]
Narrative Elements
Plot
Mima Kirigoe, a 21-year-old pop idol and member of the girl group CHAM!, announces her departure from the group during their final concert to pursue a career in acting, a decision that shocks her fans and draws immediate backlash.[8] Supported by her manager Rumi Hidaka and talent agency president Tadokoro, Mima relocates to Tokyo and secures her first major role as a character named Mima Kirigoe in the crime thriller TV series Double Bound, where her character is a psychology student stalked by a murderer.[9] The role requires her to perform in intense scenes, including a simulated rape, which further alienates her idol fanbase and intensifies her feelings of vulnerability.[10]As Mima adapts to her new life, she participates in a provocative nude photoshoot for the magazine PHAGE, directed by photographer Seiji Murano, which is published despite her initial reservations and leads to widespread media attention.[8] Shortly after, she receives anonymous threatening faxes from an obsessive fan, and discovers an unauthorized website called "Mima's Room," which features detailed diary entries written in her voice, chronicling her daily life with eerie accuracy and portraying her as still an innocent idol.[9] The site, created by a stalker known as "Me-Mania" (real name Uchida), blurs the lines between Mima's public image and private reality, causing her to question her memories and experiences.[10] Mima begins experiencing hallucinations of her former "idol" self, dressed in her CHAM! outfit, who berates her for abandoning her pure image and follows her persistently.[8]The psychological strain escalates when Mima's empty apartment is broken into, with the intruder rearranging her belongings but leaving no trace.[9] During the filming of the rape scene for Double Bound, the set is compromised by a fan who films and leaks the footage online, heightening Mima's paranoia.[10] Later, in a pivotal assault, Me-Mania breaks into her apartment again, attempts to rape her while ranting about her "impure" transformation, and Mima defends herself by striking him with a hammer, leaving him unconscious and believing she has killed him.[8] Covered in blood, she disposes of her clothes but wakes up later with no memory of the incident, further distorting her sense of reality.[9]Murders begin plaguing those around Mima: scriptwriter Takao Shibuya has his eyes gouged out with an ice pick, photographer Murano is stabbed repeatedly with an ice pick, including in the eye, in his studio, and Tadokoro has his eyes gouged out with an ice pick.[10][11] Mima finds incriminating evidence, such as bloody clothes in her possession, leading her to suspect she may be responsible during blackouts, while the police question her involvement.[8]Rumi, increasingly protective and obsessive, helps cover up traces but her behavior grows erratic, mirroring Mima's idol persona in conversations.[9]The narrative culminates in a climactic confrontation revealing Rumi as the true antagonist; suffering from dissociative identity disorder, she has been impersonating Mima online via "Mima's Room," committing the murders to eliminate those "corrupting" Mima's image, and viewing herself as the authentic idol version of Mima.[10] Disguised as Mima, Rumi attacks the real Mima at the Double Bound studio with an ice pick, forcing a chase through a blurring, rain-soaked environment where Mima struggles to distinguish hallucination from reality.[8] Mima escapes to a hospital, where Rumi pursues her in a final altercation; Rumi impales herself on glass and falls into traffic, but Mima pulls her to safety just before a truck strikes.[9]In the resolution, Rumi is institutionalized, catatonic and trapped in her delusion as the idol Mima.[10] Mima visits her, gently touching her hand and affirming her own identity by saying, "I'm Mima Kirigoe," before leaving to continue her acting career.[8] Glancing at her reflection in the hospital window, Mima smiles confidently, declaring, "That's right, I'm the real thing," as the boundaries of her psyche stabilize.[9]
Themes and Motifs
Perfect Blue delves into the psychological fragmentation of its protagonist, Mima Kirigoe, as she navigates the transition from pop idol to actress, manifesting in symptoms of dissociative identity disorder (DID). This condition is portrayed through Mima's experiences of amnesia, depersonalization, derealization, identity crises, and shifts in identity, with 37 instances identified across the narrative, underscoring the toll of external pressures on her psyche.[12] These elements highlight how the idol industry's demands exacerbate her internal conflict, leading to a splintered sense of self where her public persona clashes with her authentic identity.[12]Central to the film's exploration is the male gaze, which objectifies Mima and critiques the gendered exploitation inherent in entertainment. Mima's body and image serve male fans and producers, reducing her to a doll-like figure whose autonomy is eroded by voyeuristic consumption, as seen in scenes where her performances are framed to emphasize subjugation.[13] This motif extends to a broader commentary on gender roles, where Mima's journey subverts expectations by reclaiming agency, ultimately dismantling the structures that enforce her passivity.[13]The tension between performance and reality permeates the narrative, reinforced by motifs of mirrors and doubles that symbolize Mima's fractured perception. Mirrors frequently depict her confronting alternate versions of herself, blurring the boundaries between authentic existence and fabricated roles imposed by fame. Rumi, as Mima's former manager and shadow self, embodies this duality, representing the repressed idol identity that haunts and mirrors Mima's evolving persona.[14]Media manipulation further amplifies this theme, with websites and broadcasts distorting Mima's image, illustrating how public scrutiny warps personal reality into a controllable illusion.[14]The film offers a pointed critique of Japanese idol culture, exposing its dehumanizing effects and the commodification of performers. Idols like Mima are treated as communal property by obsessive fans, fostering an environment where fame erodes individuality and enforces rigid gender norms of purity and accessibility.[13] This cultural pressure contributes to psychological unraveling, as seen in both Mima and Rumi's declines, highlighting the systemic abuses that prioritize image over human welfare.[12]Stylistically, Perfect Blue employs unreliable narration and dream sequences to disorient viewers, mirroring Mima's dissociation and challenging perceptions of truth. These techniques create ambiguity, with focalization shifts that withhold or reveal information selectively, enhancing the motif of perceptual instability. Color symbolism, particularly pervasive blue tones, evokes dissociation and melancholy, aligning with Mima's emotional descent and the "blue" psychological state induced by her ordeals.[14][15]
Cast and Characters
Voice Cast
The voice cast of Perfect Blue features prominent Japanese voice actors who brought emotional depth to the film's psychological thriller elements. The primary roles were filled by talents experienced in anime and music, contributing to the narrative's exploration of identity and fame.
Junko Iwao provided the voice for the protagonist Mima Kirigoe, marking a significant early role in her voice acting career following her background as a pop singer and former member of the idol group Saint Four.[16] Her performance captured Mima's transition from an innocent idol persona to a more vulnerable and intense state, drawing on her own prior experience in the music industry.[17]Rica Matsumoto voiced Rumi Hidaka, showcasing her versatility in dramatic roles after establishing herself through stage work and a wide range of anime characters, including high-profile leads in long-running series.[18] Matsumoto's delivery emphasized Rumi's complex emotional layers, contributing to the character's pivotal presence in the story's tension.[17]Supporting actors like Shinpachi Tsuji as the menacing Tadokoro and Masaaki Okura as the obsessive Uchida added intensity through their portrayals of antagonistic figures, enhancing the film's suspenseful atmosphere.[19] The ensemble's collective efforts, under director Satoshi Kon's guidance, aligned vocal nuances with the animation to blur reality and delusion effectively.[17]
Character Analysis
Mima Kirigoe serves as the protagonist whose internal conflict embodies the psychological toll of transitioning from a pop idol to an actress, symbolizing the loss of innocence and the painful adaptation to more mature, objectifying roles in the entertainment industry.[20] Her evolving persona manifests through hallucinations of a doppelgänger representing her former innocent self, which taunts her and blurs the boundaries between reality and performance, driving the narrative's central tension around identity fragmentation.[21] This psychological profile highlights Mima's vulnerability to external pressures, as her relationships with industry figures exacerbate her self-doubt, positioning her as the focal point for exploring the dehumanizing effects of fame.[14]Rumi Hidaka, Mima's devoted manager and former idol herself, functions as both a supportive alter ego and the story's primary antagonist, her obsession rooted in repressed fanaticism toward Mima's idol persona leading to acts of identity theft and violence.[20] Psychologically, Rumi represents a fractured psyche unable to cope with the industry's exploitation, projecting her unfulfilled desires onto Mima by impersonating her and committing murders to preserve the "pure" image she idolizes.[21] Her relationship with Mima evolves from protective mentorship to delusional possession, intensifying the thriller elements as Rumi's breakdown mirrors and amplifies Mima's own mental unraveling, critiquing the toxic dynamics of dependency in celebritymanagement.[22]The stalker, known as Me-Mania (real name Mamoru Uchida), exemplifies delusional fanaticism through his violent escalation, critiquing the entitlement of obsessive fans who refuse to accept a performer's personal evolution.[21] His psychological profile reveals a profound disconnect from reality, viewing Mima's career shift as a betrayal that justifies stalking, murder attempts, and an assault, all fueled by his fabricated online diary that invades her privacy.[20] In narrative terms, Uchida's actions heighten the suspense by externalizing Mima's internal fears, his one-sided "relationship" with her underscoring the dangers of parasocial obsession in idol culture.[14]Supporting characters like the members of Mima's former group CHAM! illustrate commercial exploitation within the idol system, where young women are marketed as commodified symbols of innocence to voracious audiences, pressuring Mima to abandon her authentic growth for profit-driven personas.[20] Similarly, figures such as producer Tadokoro and TV director Sei Doi demonstrate professional detachment, prioritizing ratings and career advancement over Mima's well-being by lobbying for her involvement in explicit scenes like a simulated rape, thereby enabling the industry's predatory structures.[21] These dynamics collectively amplify the tension by surrounding Mima with enablers who perpetuate her psychological isolation, reinforcing the film's examination of systemic complicity in personal destruction.[22]
Production Process
Development
Perfect Blue originated as an adaptation of Yoshikazu Takeuchi's 1991 novel Perfect Blue: Complete Metamorphosis, which features a pop idol navigating career pressures amid stalking and horror elements. The project initially aimed for a live-action video production, but after that plan collapsed, it transitioned to animation under Studio Madhouse. This shift allowed for significant revisions, including the condensation of multiple subplots from the novel—such as extraneous character arcs—and an amplification of psychological depth to heighten the thriller tension, transforming the source material's pulpy horror into a more introspective exploration of identity and perception.[23][24]Satoshi Kon, leveraging his background as a manga artist and illustrator from works like Kaikisen, joined as director for his feature debut and collaborated with screenwriter Sadayuki Murai on extensive screenplay overhauls. Kon, who had not read the full novel, focused on emphasizing thriller dynamics by introducing innovative narrative devices, such as a film-within-a-film structure and deliberate blurring of reality with hallucination, elements absent in Takeuchi's original. These changes drew from Kon's prior experience in subjective storytelling, notably his segment in the anthology Memories (1995), to create layered ambiguity around the protagonist Mima's psyche.[23][25]Studio Madhouse, known for its adult-oriented animations, took on production responsibilities, securing primary funding from Rex Entertainment to support the project's pivot to a theatrical feature rather than a shorter OVA format. Kon contributed early storyboard sketches, helping visualize the complex visual motifs during pre-production. The scripting phase spanned 1995 to 1996, during which the team navigated key challenges like adapting the novel's explicit content—including graphic sexual violence and murders—while ensuring feasibility within animation constraints, toning down some elements for broader appeal without diluting the psychological intensity.[26][23][27]
Animation and Direction
Satoshi Kon's directorial approach in Perfect Blue emphasized psychological disorientation through innovative visual techniques, including rapid jump cuts and subjective camera angles that immerse viewers in the protagonist Mima's paranoia and fractured sense of reality. These elements, such as seamless transitions between dream sequences and waking life, create ambiguity about what is real, mirroring Mima's identity crisis as she shifts from idol to actress. Kon drew on his background as a manga artist to storyboard densely layered scenes, using graphic matches and imaginative wipes to blur boundaries between internal and external worlds, heightening the film's thriller tension.[25][28][29]The animation was produced by Studio Madhouse using traditional hand-drawn cel techniques, with production spanning 1996 to 1997 and incorporating some digital cleanup for efficiency. This method allowed for fluid, realistic character movements in everyday scenes, contrasting with more stylized, surreal depictions of hallucinations and media simulations that posed significant challenges for the animators in maintaining visual coherence amid shifting realities. Detailed backgrounds, such as Mima's cluttered apartment and the idol stage, enhanced the film's atmospheric depth, supporting Kon's vision of a hyper-real yet unstable world.[30][31]Masahiro Ikumi composed the original score, blending electronic synths with orchestral elements to underscore the narrative's escalating unease, featuring dissonant strings and clattering percussion that evoke psychic disintegration and obsessive tension. Tracks like "Nightmare" use haunting piano suffocated by synthetic dissonance to parallel Mima's unraveling psyche, while sound design incorporates layered effects—such as echoing voices and distorted ambient noises—to amplify moments of identity blurring, like the overlap between Mima's real and virtual selves. Ikumi's music, released as a soundtrack album, integrates seamlessly with the visuals to heighten the film's paranoid atmosphere.[32][33]Editing, handled by Harutoshi Ogata, employed quick, disorienting cuts to further amplify narrative ambiguity, with match cuts linking disparate scenes to confuse temporal and spatial logic, such as transitioning from a violent hallucination to Mima's reflection in a mirror. This post-production approach, completed in mid-1997 ahead of the film's Japanese release, refined Kon's storyboards into a taut 81-minute runtime, ensuring the psychological thriller's relentless pace without resolving uncertainties prematurely.[28][29]
Release and Distribution
Initial Release
Perfect Blue premiered internationally at the Fantasia International Film Festival in Montreal, Canada, on August 5, 1997, marking the debut of director Satoshi Kon's psychological thriller. In Japan, the film received a limited theatrical release on the same date, distributed by Rex Entertainment, with screenings confined primarily to select Tokyo theaters due to its mature content involving graphic violence, nudity, and themes of stalking and identity crisis. The restricted rollout reflected the film's R-rating equivalent in Japan, limiting accessibility amid concerns over its intense adult-oriented narrative that diverged from mainstream anime fare. The general nationwide release followed on February 28, 1998, allowing broader exposure while maintaining a focus on urban centers.[34][5][35]Marketing strategies emphasized the thriller aspects through promotional trailers that showcased suspenseful sequences and psychological tension, deliberately avoiding associations with lighthearted idol culture to position it as a serious genre piece. Internationally, early festival screenings included a presentation at the 1997 Sitges Film Festival in Spain, where it featured in the Anima't animation section, helping to build buzz ahead of wider distribution.[36][37]Distribution faced challenges from the film's explicit content, leading to censorship considerations and strict age ratings in various markets; for instance, scenes of violence and sexual assault prompted adult-only classifications and minor edits in some regions to comply with local standards. Early accolades included the Best Animated Film award at the 1998 Fantasporto International Film Festival in Portugal, recognizing its technical and narrative achievements shortly after its Japanese debut. These honors contributed to its growing reputation on the global festival circuit.[38][39][30]
Home Media and International Availability
Following its theatrical release, Perfect Blue was first made available on home video in Japan through a DVD edition produced by Madhouse in late 1998.[40]In the United States, Manga Entertainment issued a DVD version in May 2000, featuring an English dub track alongside the original Japanese audio and English subtitles.[41]The film's transition to high-definition formats began with a Japanese Blu-ray release in 2008, limited edition, which included enhanced audio options.[42] A standard Japanese Blu-ray followed in subsequent years, with the 20th anniversary edition in 2017 offering improved visuals from remastered elements.[43]For international markets, Anime Limited released a Region B Blu-ray and DVD combo in the United Kingdom in October 2013, distributed through partnerships with local retailers and including reversible artwork.[44]In the U.S., Shout! Factory launched a 20th Anniversary Remastered Edition on Blu-ray in March 2019, featuring the restored film in 1080p alongside bonus materials such as interviews and trailers.[45]Streaming accessibility expanded in the late 2010s, with Perfect Blue available on Netflix in select regions including parts of North America and Asia as of 2025, with both English subtitles and dubs where licensed.[46][47]European distribution evolved with Optimum Releasing handling a DVD edition in 2004 for the UK market, followed by later Blu-ray upgrades.[48]A 4K restoration of the film received a limited theatrical re-release in the United States starting October 3, 2025, distributed by GKIDS, grossing approximately $1.8 million domestically by late October 2025.[49][50]GKIDS announced a three-disc 4K UHD Collector's Edition for the U.S., scheduled for release on December 23, 2025, including the remastered film, director's lectures, and art cards.[51]
Critical Reception and Legacy
Contemporary Reviews
Upon its release in Japan in February 1998, Perfect Blue garnered a mixed reception from critics, who praised its innovative psychological thriller elements while noting its intense portrayal of idol culture and mental unraveling as potentially overwhelming for mainstream audiences.[52] The film earned acclaim at international festivals shortly after its premiere, winning Best Asian Film at the 1997 Fantasia International Film Festival in Montreal and Best Film - Animation at the 1998 Fantasporto International Film Festival in Portugal, highlighting its suspenseful narrative and animation style as breakthroughs in anime.[35] Japanese audiences expressed shock at the film's depiction of an idol's exploitation and identity crisis, contributing to its initial niche appeal amid the era's burgeoning J-pop industry.[52]In the United States, following its limited theatrical release in October 1999, Perfect Blue received generally favorable reviews from critics, who lauded its Hitchcockian tension and blurring of reality but critiqued some underdeveloped aspects. Stephen Holden of The New York Times described it as "a very interesting play on levels and perceptions of reality," appreciating its sophisticated psychological depth despite its graphic content including violence and nudity.[53] Dennis Harvey in Variety called it "a bold attempt to bring psychological thriller tropes to anime," though he found the tension middling and characters underdeveloped, ultimately viewing it as an ambitious but uneven debut for director Satoshi Kon.[54] An aggregate of 17 reviews on Metacritic yielded a score of 67 out of 100, with 65% positive, emphasizing its effective suspense and comparison to classic thrillers.[55]The film's explicit scenes, particularly involving sexual violence and the exploitation of female idols, sparked controversy among some reviewers and audiences in the late 1990s, with accusations that it reinforced misogynistic tropes in its critique of the entertainment industry, though others defended it as a sharp commentary on parasocial relationships and objectification.[56] Early audience reactions at festivals included reports of discomfort leading to walkouts due to the graphic content, contrasting with a growing cult following by 2000 through word-of-mouth and home video releases.[55] On IMDb, user ratings from the period averaged around 7.8 out of 10, reflecting appreciation for its mind-bending plot among thriller enthusiasts.[57]
Cultural Impact and Influence
Perfect Blue has exerted a profound influence on subsequent anime and live-action films, particularly in exploring themes of identity, reality, and psychological fragmentation. Satoshi Kon's own follow-up work, Paprika (2006), builds directly on the motifs introduced in Perfect Blue, such as blurred boundaries between dreams and waking life, which Kon intentionally emphasized as a central element after the debut film's reception.[58] This thematic continuity helped establish Kon as an auteur whose psychological thrillers reshaped anime storytelling. Beyond anime, Darren Aronofsky's Black Swan (2010) draws clear parallels in its depiction of an artist's descent into madness amid performance pressure, with visual and narrative echoes of Mima's ordeal; although Aronofsky has denied direct inspiration, his prior acquisition of rights to adapt a Perfect Blue scene for Requiem for a Dream (2000) underscores his familiarity with the film.[59][60]In academic circles, Perfect Blue has been analyzed as a critique of otaku culture and the dangers of obsessive fandom, portraying fans not merely as enthusiasts but as potential threats through cyberstalking and identity invasion. A 2014 study examines the film's negative representation of fans, linking Mima's stalker to broader anxieties about fan-idol dynamics in Japanese pop culture, which prefigured real-world idol scandals involving harassment and privacy breaches.[61] These analyses, extending into the mid-2010s, connect the narrative to societal issues like the exploitation of idols, as seen in documented cases of cyberbullying and stalking in the entertainment industry.[62]The film's reach into popular culture is evident in its parodies and viral recreations, reflecting its enduring resonance. In the early 2000s, elements of Perfect Blue's psychological horror appeared in broader media satire, though specific parodies like those in animated series highlighted its influence on depictions of fame's dark side. By the 2020s, TikTok trends surged with user-generated content recreating Mima's emotional breakdown scenes, including cosplay edits and fan analyses that amassed millions of views, amplifying discussions on mental health and celebrity obsession among younger audiences.[63]Perfect Blue's recent legacy includes commemorative events and its relevance to contemporary idol narratives, particularly in K-pop. In 2023, the film marked its 25th anniversary with retrospective screenings organized by Anime Expo Cinema Nights and GKIDS, which drew significant audiences. A 2018 U.S. re-release had grossed $420,881 at the box office.[64] In 2025, GKIDS released a 4K restoration for U.S. theaters on October 3, opening in 505 theaters with $800,233 and achieving a domestic total gross of approximately $2.86 million as of November 7, 2025.[65] Amid 2020s conversations on mental health in the entertainment industry, the film's portrayal of idol exploitation has informed critiques of K-pop's high-pressure environment, where artists face similar issues of identity loss and fan harassment, as highlighted in cultural analyses tying Perfect Blue to real scandals and advocacy for performer well-being.[66][67]
Adaptations and Related Works
Source Material
Perfect Blue: Complete Metamorphosis (Pāfekuto Burū: Kanzen Hentai) is a psychological horror novel written by Yoshikazu Takeuchi and first published in Japanese in 1991.[68]Takeuchi, a Japanese author and self-described superfan of pop idols who has written fan guides, drew on his fascination with idol culture to explore themes of obsessive fandom and psychological suspense in the story.[69]The novel was released by Kadokawa Shoten and received its first full English-language translation in 2018 from Seven Seas Entertainment under their Airship imprint.[70]Unlike the film adaptation, the novel emphasizes horror-thriller elements through more explicit portrayals of fan interactions, including detailed accounts of stalking via letters and phone calls from the obsessive fan's perspective.[71]Key plot divergences include the protagonist Mima Kirigoe being depicted as a solo pop idol whose image change centers on releasing a risqué photobook, rather than leaving an idol group to take on a TV drama role.[69]The novel places less emphasis on acting projects like a television series and instead highlights the immediate backlash from fans to the photobook, leading to an alternate ending with a supernatural twist that contrasts the film's focus on identity confusion and psychological ambiguity.[69][71]
Derivative Media
The novel Perfect Blue: Complete Metamorphosis has a sequel anthology titled Perfect Blue: Awaken from a Dream, published in Japan in 1995 by Plaza (re-edited in 2002 by Shufu to Seikatsu Sha) and in English by Seven Seas Entertainment on April 24, 2018, featuring three short stories about idols facing stalking and psychological threats, expanding on themes from the original work.[72]A live-action film adaptation of the sequel novel, titled Perfect Blue: Yume Nara Samete and directed by Toshiki Satō, was released in Japan on August 24, 2002.The film's original soundtrack was released on February 18, 1998, by Pony Canyon, compiling score tracks by Masahiro Ikumi and insert songs including "Angel of Love," performed by MISA with Shimizu Mie and Furukawa Emiko.[73]Merchandise based on the film includes storyboard art books such as the Satoshi Kon Storyboard Collection: Perfect Blue, published in 2015 by Tokuma Shoten, containing Kon's complete storyboards, character designs, background art, and staff interviews.[74]Figures of protagonist Mima Kirigoe have been produced, including the more recent POP UP PARADE non-scale figure by Good Smile Company in 2024, standing approximately 13 cm tall and depicting Mima in her idol attire.[75]In the 2020s, apparel tie-ins emerged, including the SEVESKIG collaboration collection for the film's 25th anniversary in spring 2023, featuring T-shirts and outerwear printed with key scenes.[76]Unofficial fan works, such as fiction stories on platforms like Archive of Our Own, extend the narrative through community-created content exploring character backstories and alternate endings.[77]