Puella Magi Madoka Magica Part Iii - Rebellion ... Apr 2026
It is soon revealed that this is not a reborn universe, but a —a Witch’s barrier. But the Witch isn't a monster of despair. It is Homura herself, who has partially transformed into a "half-Witch" (a being neither human nor demon). The "Nightmares" are artificial constructs designed to keep her soul gem from fully darkening. The Villain of the Piece: Kyubey’s Masterstroke Where the original series portrayed Kyubey as a cold, utilitarian alien, Rebellion turns him into a true antagonist. The Incubators, unable to access Madoka’s new god-form (the Law of Cycles), create an experiment: they isolate Homura’s Soul Gem and allow it to hatch into a unique Witch barrier. Their goal is to observe the "Law of Cycles" entering the barrier, capture it, and thus bring Madoka back under the laws of causality, restarting the Witch system.
She becomes —a being of "Love" that the Incubators cannot compute. She rewrites the universe not for the greater good, but for the single, selfish wish of one girl: “I want to see Madoka smile again.” The New World: A Beautiful Lie The film ends in the most unsettling way possible. Madoka is alive, living a normal life, with human parents. She has no memory of being a goddess. She is happy. The rest of the cast are also alive, but under Homura’s silent, omnipotent control. Kyubey is enslaved, forced to clean up the curses of humanity. Homura sits on a throne of thorns, wearing a black evening gown, gazing at a sleeping Madoka.
Spoiler Warning: This article discusses major plot twists and the ending of Rebellion . Puella Magi Madoka Magica Part III - Rebellion ...
Puella Magi Madoka Magica Part III: Rebellion is currently available on Blu-ray and streaming on Amazon Prime (select regions) and Shout! Factory TV. Rated: Not for children. Contains: body horror, existential dread, and the most terrifying protagonist in anime history.
Rebellion is not a happy film. It is a perfect tragedy. And as fans wait for a fourth film ( Walpurgisnacht Rising ), we are left with one chilling question: It is soon revealed that this is not
It transforms Madoka Magica from a story about growing up (accepting loss) into a story about trauma (refusing to accept loss). Homura doesn’t want a better world; she wants her friend back, consequences be damned. In doing so, she becomes the very thing she once fought: a being who sacrifices the autonomy of others for her own vision of happiness.
It was a perfect ending. So, naturally, the 2013 sequel film, Rebellion , took that perfection, dissected it, and asked the terrifying question: What if salvation felt like a cage? Rebellion opens in a world that looks like a nostalgic fever dream. Mitakihara City is intact, Homura Akemi is a cheerful transfer student, and the Holy Quintet (Madoka, Sayaka, Mami, and Kyoko) fight "Nightmares"—fuzzy, whimsical monsters—instead of Witches. The animation, courtesy of Studio SHAFT, is more lavish than ever. The color palette is warmer, the musical numbers are jazzy, and everything feels… wrong . The "Nightmares" are artificial constructs designed to keep
Homura’s Soul Gem shatters—not from despair, but from a love so intense it transcends the system’s rules. She declares: "If someone tells me that holding onto a hope is a sin, then I’ll do it as many times as I need to. I don’t care. I’ll sin again and again forever."
The genius of the film’s first hour is its slow, creeping unease. Homura, the audience’s anchor of cynicism, begins to notice the glitches. A classroom clock repeats the same minute. A street leads to an endless void. The characters’ memories are fuzzy, and the city’s layout is a constant contradiction.