Evangelion Reviewed In LA Times 339
peter_gzowski writes "Neon Genesis Evangelion, perhaps the greatest anime series ever, has been reviewed in the LA Times. This coincides with the release of the box set of the entire series (not including the movies, which come out on DVD in the fall). Hooray for mainstream credibility!" Best series if I can somehow overlook the final eps of the original series.
The last eps are the BEST! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
Just another Prisoner reference :) (Score:4, Interesting)
Evagelion's bombastic, sarcastic use of theme music in some scenes (Worthy is the Lamb, the Ode to Joy) is another place where The Prisoner's influence (especially that of "Fall Out") is apparent. (The Prisoner came well before Kubrik's Clockwork Orange, let alone Reservoir Dogs.) More generally, both shows took a popular genre of TV action serial and subverted it into a statement about the human condition, full of weirdness, symbolism, and angst. HIDEAKI Anno [gainax.co.jp] probably owes Patrick McGoohan a beer for that one.
For those out of the know: The Prisoner is not Prisoner: Cell Block H [imdb.com] . The Prisoner is a British TV show from the 1960s. ITV is a UK commercial TV channel. The Prisoner is a one-hour show with 17 episodes. The Prisoner is the Greatest TV Show of All Time, Ever. (So far, at least. :) )
Granted (Score:2)
Re:The last eps are the BEST! (Score:2)
At any rate I don't think Evangelion holds a candle to the likes of Cowboy Bebop.
SW
Re:The last eps are the BEST! (Score:2)
My favorite quote: "The tragedy of NERV is it's people". Pretty much sums up the whole series.
Re:last episode (Score:2, Interesting)
Actually, I really liked the change in Rei's voice. That voice is much closer to the rest of Megumi Hayashibara [tcp.com]'s roles. If you've heard her as Ranma Saotome, Faye Valentine, etc. it's as though she's flashing a "Hi! This really is me." Amazing.
Whoa! Hermos is THAT GUY? (Score:2, Funny)
how many dvds total now (Score:4, Funny)
Re:how many dvds total now (Score:1)
Re:how many dvds total now (Score:1)
Re:how many dvds total now (Score:2)
Uh yeh... (Score:2)
You could also just go on that "internet" thing.
Bubblegum Crisis is better (Score:2)
my two cents worth
Re:how many dvds total now (Score:5, Insightful)
The boxset is cheaper and has the "remastered" volume 1 (no overlays among other things). Reviews and whatnot are available on animeondvd.com [animeondvd.com]. Best price is around $95 plus S&H if you can still get the preorder price. BestPrices [bestprices.com], DVDPlanet [dvdplanet.com], Amazon [amazon.com] (if you use their Share the Love program with coupons), etc. can nail you a good deal. It's a really good value for anime DVDs considering most are around $20-$22 each via preordering and normally retail around $30. So this post isn't totally karma whoring, personally I think, Evangelion, while not necessarily the best anime, is something every anime fan has to watch just to keep up with the times. It's like not watching the Star Wars trilogy for anime fans. You don't have to agree that it's the best anime out there (rumor has it that the director also thought it was not good in the end), and I can bet that most would agree it is definitely not the most fun at times, but it's intriguing just because it has influenced the perception of anime in so many people's minds.
Re:how many dvds total now (Score:2, Informative)
Re:dub or sub (Score:2)
What most anime fans complain about is the accuracy of the subtitles nowadays and whether or not the subtitles were taken from the original Japanese script or the dub English script. AFAIK, Eva's subtitles are fairly accurate and are based on the original Japanese dialogue. I don't know enough Japanese to verify what is said, but I think there would have been more complaining if it was a "dubtitle" script.
In more recent anime DVD releases (not Eva but recent releases from Bandai, Pioneer, and Right Stuf amongst others), even signs and other characters (you know those random "Boom!", "Zoom!", "Bang!"-type words that express actions/feelings) are only translated via a removable subtitle track, so there is even less touching of the video. There are usually 2 subtitle tracks. One that just has the signs for the dub viewers, and another that has both the signs and the translated Japanese dialogue.
I really like DVDs more than past VHS and laserdisc releases just because not only do you get better video and audio, it's a format that allows subtitles and dubs to coexist eliminating tension amongst dub versus sub buyers. It really is helpful to foreign film buyers as well. I hope any future format will keep if not build upon DVD's features in this area.
Evangelion (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Evangelion (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Evangelion (Score:1)
Re:Evangelion (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Evangelion (Score:1)
Offtopic (Score:3, Funny)
I always said that you would have to be high to get Lain. My friend tried it...he still could not understand it.
I should befriend a Mushroom junkie and see if it takes a little more =/
You might also like (Score:2)
Oh, and I would have to say that my vote for best anime series ever would be Cowboy Bebop. Also not a good-guy wins type show.
Lain explanation (kind of OT... but hey!) (Score:2, Interesting)
The experiment (the program) got stolen (or hacked) by a group called "Knights" who played with Lain.
Near the end, Lain found out that she was in fact a program (as with the girl at the beginning who commited suicide, and the professor dude). Lain is just one of many AI "agents" in the artificial world that "got smart"... (This is why the "knights" are interested in her...)
Once she found out that she is an AI, she becomes a "god", kind of like "the matrix", and she can do wierd shit.
There are wierd parts thrown in to trick you, like Lain's sister. (She got "erased" and "replaced" by a dumb AI because she started to know too much). Also, the fact that people from the outside knew how to get in the Lain world "matrix style".
The key phrase in the series was "The real world and the computer (navi) world" are really the same. This means that Lain's world (you would think "real world") is really the computer world. Also, notice that the artists draw the real real world (non-Lain world) in MUCH more detail than the Lain world.
Re:Evangelion (Score:2, Insightful)
This is kind of the problem with 'high-concept' animation. Lain is very disorienting and has anything but a happy dynamic between the characters. Really, you just don't get to know the characters in Lain (not even Lain herself). This is a different kind of disorientation you receive from watching Evangelion. Evangelion is, on several levels, going out of its way to depress its viewership. You get to the end of the 26 episodes and all you can feel is loss and alienation. Hideaki Anno wrote this after years of depression, reportedly, and it shows. But a failure to make us feel good about ourselves is what makes this kind of unsatisfying. And many viewers are discontent with the somewhat arrogant 'high-concept' response of that as a successfully delivered message. It's not that they refuse to 'get it,' they just don't all believe getting slapped in the face by the artist is a good way to spend your money.
That Evangelion's conclusion fails to thrill and entertain is probably not its biggest detractor. By far what turns people off about this is the absolutely abhorrent characters put in charge of saving the world in Evangelion. While most of them on the surface have decent 'hero' facades, they are all deeply broken on the inside. Shinji mortally despises his father. Misato is permanently emotionally scarred from the trauma of surviving the Second Impact. Shinji's father is cruel and unfeeling towards his only son. The other two pilots do not reach out emotionally to anyone. Everyone else is part of some paranoid agenda to destroy the world.
The plot progression is one where the awesomely scripted robot action decays to the low-level corrosion of the character types in the series. The transition happens about halfway through the series, and it is jarring. "Hey! Where'd the cool robot fights go?" And all this in a series where the ultimate message is one of futility and failure? The ending is just plain gratuitous to these points, especially after the release of the final films (I felt worse after watching them than after watching the 'normal' endings). I hate to spoil the ending for anybody, but you won't feel any better watching it than watching all of Terry Gilliam's 'Brazil,' for comparison.
I don't argue that anime needs to have a happy ending to be engrossing and acceptable to the mainstream. It's just that calling Evangelion the 'greatest anime ever made' both oversells Evangelion and undersells the remainder of the Anime industry.
Try these, if you think I'm lying. Cowboy Bebop [animefu.org] delivers a gritty and dark message, but it's plenty fun for all involved. Metropolis [theblackmoon.com], the 'Brazil' of the anime world (although the source greatly predates Gilliam's work) also wanders into the brittle realm of the cheerless mechanization of life. But it's better than Evangelion at doing it. People who declare Anno's work the pinnacle of Anime really do need to watch more Anime. Odds are, all they've watched is Evangelion. It would be particularly enlightening to them, if they get the opportunity, to check out what Anno's been [gainax.co.jp] doing [gainax.co.jp] since [gainax.co.jp] Evangelion.
Re:Evangelion (Score:2, Interesting)
Also, there seems to be a strange conception that happy endings are the only kind allowed. Is the American mind really so brainwashed? Maybe some more foreign films are needed in this country... One good start for Anime fans is Jin-Roh, which toured the US in theatrical release, no less, and is an immensely powerful animated feature.
Asuka And Shinji (Score:1)
My thanks to my anime club pres for the plush Shinji to torture.
I don't remember if it's at the end of the regular series or in the movies, but the one redeeming part of the whole show for me is Asuka's looks and attitude when fighting the white Evas alone.
Re:Asuka And Shinji (Score:1)
Comment removed (Score:3, Informative)
Engrish (Score:2, Funny)
Even the stuff on engrish.com [engrish.com] makes more sense then that
Frightening (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re:Frightening (Score:1)
Re:Frightening (Score:2)
Eva deals directly with religious symbolism. Even mild religious references are a no-no for Cartoon Network. Screening rights would not be cheap, Anyone big enough to afford it wouldn't want to play it.
Besides ADV is more than happy to sell yet another set to people.
Re:Frightening (Score:2, Informative)
Still, you'll find here in Australia that a lot more people know what NGE is than in many other parts of the world. Mind you, SBS is clearly our best TV station, showing everything from South Park to freaky cult movies presented by the legendary Des Mangan. And that's just on the one night.
Unfortunately they passed on screening Serial Experiments Lain...
Engrish? (Score:1)
PS: this might be posted twice since the submit button looks a hell of a lot like the preview button
Psychic??? (Score:2, Interesting)
Did i miss this(i have the adv dvds)? or did the reviewer add this?
Re:Psychic??? (Score:2)
Re:Psychotic more like it (Score:2)
The child pilots (Shinji, Asuka, Toji, etc) were children who had been born after the Hall of Souls had become emptied. Ritsuko references this in the room-o-clones scene after Kaji's death: it's a bit of early Christian myth about a room of souls for those that have not yet been born. This was also given as the explanation - if anyone else tried to pilot an Eva, two souls in one body would somehow conflict.
As for Rei, she's not entirely human, for reasons explained explicitly in the plot.
You might be thinking of the ability to create an AT field. Kaoru claimed that all humans had one, and that rare people could extend it outside their own bodies - Rei can, but Shinji and Asuka are fairly normal.
I may be the only person ever that hated it (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I may be the only person ever that hated it (Score:2, Funny)
Re:I may be the only person ever that hated it (Score:2)
Re:I may be the only person ever that hated it (Score:2, Interesting)
Except for that one scene in the opening where esca and another caped melf are fighting and their capes are blowing in the wind...in completely opposite directions
I love Escaflowne (hell, I bought the VHS box set after seeing the entire series fansubbed), but that bit in the opening always made me laugh.
I'll just wait (Score:1)
Evangelion Transcends Typical Anime (Score:4, Insightful)
Mountain, heavy are the mountains
But that changes, with the passage of time
Sky, blue sky, what your eyes can't see, what your eyes can see
The sun, one, only one
Water, it is agreeable, Commander Ikari
Flowers, so many the same, so many without purpose
Sky, sky of red, red the color, the color I hate
Liquid flows, it drips, ripples, and pours
Blood, scent of blood, woman who does not bleed
From the red soil the humans come
Humans made by man and woman
City, a human creation
Eva, a human creation as well
What are humans?
Are they creations of God?
Humans, that which is created by humans
This is that which is mine
My life, my heart
I am a vessel for my thoughts
The entry plug, the throne of the soul
Who is this? This is me
Who am I? What am I? What am I? What am I?
I am I.
This object that is, is myself
That which forms me
This is the self that can be seen, and yet this is not like that which is myself
A strange feeling
My body feels as if it is melting
I can no longer see myself
My form, my shape fades from view
Awareness dawns of someone who is not me
Who is here? There? Beyond me, here
Shinji
This person I know, Major Katsuragi
Dr. Akagi
People, my classmates
The pilot of Unit Two
Commander Ikari
Who are you? Who are you? Who are you?
my sig (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
hahahah (Score:2)
Last two eps... (Score:2)
Re:Last two eps... (Score:2, Interesting)
Am I the only one who remembers the old Gainax lore ? This kind of activity is completely typical of them... a prime example of revenge on the fans from back in the old day.
Revenge on the fans is the standard reaction of Gainax (I guess Anno in particular) when the more artful work of theirs is treated to a lukewarm reception by the otaku. The best example of this action/reaction was the release of Honneamisu no Tsubasa followed by Toppu wo Nerae! Gunbuster!. Gainax released one of the truly all-time great animated films, but apparently the public reaction was underwhelming to the folk at Gainax. The logical conclusion: give the otaku another great product, this time wrapped in anime cliches and stupidity... anime that, more or less, talks down to the fans.
Another example of the wierd relationship Gainax has with the anime otaku is truly bizarre Otaku no Bideo, where Gainax presents a looose animated history of itself ("Giant X" in the video) which is interspersed with live action "portrait of otaku": interviews with people acting out some standard otaku stereotypes. There's the tape collecting/trading otaku, the fake-guns military otaku, the prOn otaku, and several others. For the Americans, there's the westerner who's given up everything back home to move to Japan, the mecca of animation (or at least anime). All of them seem rather psychotic.
Despite all of this, Gainax clearly ranks themselves amongst the otaku. They are, in fact, such great lovers of animation that they have based their lives around trying to actually create animation. Sometimes, they aim for innovative and thoughtful animation that tries to transcend the current state of the industry. Odd how they'd be mildly vengeful when their art is poorly received by fandom.
Artists... yeesh.
Evangelion is about trying to find a way to cope with the painful reality of the world... to find some kind of meaining in one's futile life to make living worth while... a deeply personal story.
The "second ending for Evangelion" is just an immediate application of revenge on the fans. Fans get what they want... and hopefully feel somewhat stupid when they do get it.
My own review of Neon Genesis Evangelion (Score:2)
There is so many different ways of trying to explain NGE. Is it Foucault's Pendulum with mechas? Is it the Red Chamber Dream with Hebrew cosmology instead of Buddhist? Or is it just a heap of anime cliches? I still don't know, and I am a pretty dedicated Eva-no-Otaku. But I tried to explain it here:
Why I love Neon Genesis Evangelion [everything2.com]
It's a remarkable sucess (Score:2)
It turns out a great success. There aren't much discussion on the contraversial religion elements in it but instead the film was being appraised for the creativeness.
People nowaday has higher tolerance to imaginative stories based on derived interpretation of popular religions, it seems.
Re:It's a remarkable sucess (Score:4, Interesting)
I wasn't particularly bothered by the Christian themes presented in Evangelion. I considered it as an alegory of the Garden of Eden.
And the Lord said, Behold, the man is become as one of us, to know good and evil: and now, lest he put forth his hand, and take also of the tree of life, and eat, and live for ever: Therefore the Lord God sent him forth from the garden of Eden, to till the ground from whence he was taken. So he drove out the man; and he placed at the east of the garden of Eden Cherubims, and a flaming sword which turned every way, to keep the way of the tree of life. KJV Gen 3: 22-24
I always supposed that tampering with Adam was part of humanity's effort to acchieve instrumentality, which I understood to be an immortal group mind. The Angels, of which Adam was only one, were the Cherubims, set to protect the garden of Eden, "lest he [mankind] put forth his hand, and take also of the tree of life, and eat, and live for ever"
The only objectionable theme I found was that humanity defeated the angels. However, the symbolism of this is not clear. I have considered three interpretations and cannot decide which, if any, is correct.
1. Man is more powerful than the servants of God. It is his destiny to suceed at achieving eternal life by his own power.
2. God, having been created by man, may also be destroyed by man. Thus, his servants are ineffectual.
3. Man thinks that he is greater than God, an so names his enemies 'angels' so that he can affirm his own superiority. He is deluded and ireverent.
The first two, obviously, are critical of Christianity, the third is critical of man. Which of these, if any, was intended, I don't know.
Re:It's a remarkable sucess (Score:4, Interesting)
The series portrayed NERV (the organization behind the Evas) as a puppet for a council of planners called SEELE - a group of old men who had a hand in the original discovery of Adam, attempting to save their own skins. According to the script, they used technology pioneered by Dr. Katsuragi (Misato's father) to force Adam to revert in time to an embryonic form, allowing them to restrain him - however, the energy produced triggered the melting of the ice caps. (No debates about embryos and life please, that's another topic for another time.)
Thus, the Evas were created to prevent the Angels (sent by God) from coming into contact with Adam before they could complete the ritual and trigger the "good" type of complementation. In the first episode containing Asuka, Kaji is carrying around a cryogenic container holding Adam - it stays with Gendo Ikari after that.
As for the ending... in the original series ending, the "good" ending is assumed to occur, and the final two episodes trace what happens to Shinji as he merges with the souls of his cloest friends. (The ritual that triggers this is left undisclosed.) I thought it was a great ending - however, it left a lot of questions unanswered, and many fans complained. So, Gainax dragged Anno back, and released the movie End of Evangelion, which presents a different ending. In EoE, the ritual and creation of the group being is very explicitly shown, along with the freeing of all souls on earth - however, at the last minute, Shinji (inside EVA-01) rejects the new life form, and it all falls apart. The movie doesn't say what happens to the souls of humanity explicitly - they're shown coasting back to earth, and most people figure their bodies will reform.
(The whole idea of the ending was that the so-called AT field was the intangible, inpenetrable barrier of the soul, keeping us in human shape; if our AT fields were somehow countered, the human body would break apart into base elements - which Eva calls LCL - and the soul float free.)
Personally, I don't see a need to interpret it in terms of my religious beliefs, just because it has symbols and imagery from it. I just enjoy the series for what it is, and for the philosophical issues it presents
Re:It's a remarkable sucess (Score:2)
MEGA Spoiler ahoy... shame there's no LJ-Cutalike.
There's one problem with this; you're assuming that after Shinji rejects the hive-mind one-critter one-soul aspect, that all the bodies will 'eventually reform'. We don't have any proof of that; if anything, we have proof to the contrary.
We see the 'sea' of LCL lapping at the shores... and Shinji. And Asuka, of all people. Remember, Rei warned Shinji that he had to be able to picture himself alone in order to get what he wanted, and he couldn't do that. And in those last two minutes he rolls over, strangles her, whines, and that's the end of the movie.
Looks to me like Shinji, as usual screwed up and pretty much doomed humanity in the process.
Boy, did I feel lousy after staying up all night to catch an early showing of the movie at Katsucon 2. Nothing like wandering around in an alienated daze in a dealer's room...
Anyway, I've got big philosophical contentions with the whole one-soul merging thing... I don't likes it, it denies us what really makes us human. Regardless of whether humanity is self destructive or not, we've got the right to live as we've always lived without some old guys in SOUND-ONLY monoliths deciding we're better off completely losing our sense of self because this will supposedly make things waiwai better... but that's another topic, I guess.
NOT the best anime series of 1996 (Score:2)
The last two episodes just confused the heck out of me, to say the least.
The best anime series for calendar year 1996 was Tenkuu no Escaflowne (known in the West as The Vision of Escaflowne), which had WAY better animation, superior storytelling and of course the excellent musical score by Yoko Kanno, a legend in Japan for her work on music for anime series.
Re:NOT the best anime series of 1996 (Score:2)
The real message (Score:4, Interesting)
Slowly, surely, inevitably...
anime, because of its stories and quality...
overtakes the U.S. animation companies...
and leaves them behind.
The Metropolis review, the popularity of Toonami, the 20 feet of DVDs at Suncoast and now this. It's no longer a question of 'if.'
Toonami's popularity was described as "out-of-nowhere." Isn't it funny how executives always describe genuine quality-driven popularity as "out of nowhere?" Of course, the two shows that built Toonami: Dragonball Z and Sailor Moon, weren't exactly "out of nowhere," but we can't actually expect the cynics to do any work now can we?
That an animated series can generate so much substantive discussion should just about wrap it for the "animation is for kids" crowd.
The real message to the animation industry:
better wake up.
Re:The real message (Score:2)
(I'll proceed under the assumption that this isn't a troll.)
Funny that Dexter and PPG (two HEAVILY anime-influenced series) were mentioned.
Irrelevant, since one is prime time and one isn't. Nevertheless, Toonami was the #1 rated block of programming on the network at several points from 1998 - 2001.
The fact is, if anime were making that much money, you'd see it more in a broader medium.
One word: Pokemon. Movies, books, television (network and cable), video games, home video. If they could figure out how to do it, I'm sure there would be a Pokemon radio show.
there's some chicken and egg stuff
lol Been to Suncoast lately?
animators that know animation isn't just for kids
See, the animation industry here is just now figuring this out. It's been this way in Japan for decades. This is why anime actually employs writers while McCulture employs formulas.
Anyone that can say with a straight face that anime's popularity isn't conclusive is either being intellectually dishonest or is ignorant of the facts.
Re:The real message (Score:2)
But there is one element that is driving a wedge between the McCulture conference room and the quality of anime: DVD.
Original subtitled DVDs outsell dubs, often. Having an uncut, subtitled DVD of any anime series is a must, and the production companies know it. The good news is that most of these companies (Pioneer in particular), because of their past successes, can insist on this despite the NA distributors reluctance. The result is that both markets are being served at half-price. Add the internet, and you have a range of mechanisms by which original anime becomes competitive with its own adaptation, and in most cases, it wins.
Pretty soon, the competition will become too expensive, and distributors will start adapting series closer to the original.
expect the cross-blanding of American and Japanese styles to continue at full speed.
I think with Disney occupied with defensive licensing and trying to shoehorn their tired, worn out characters into more and more dubious products, 500 small anime companies are going to start producing even better series and probably take about a third of the market share in the next 10-15 years.
This is the reality: distinct styling has no advantage in a global marketplace
If that were true, anime would never have gotten to this point.
Re:The real message (Score:2)
There were, at one point, two MILLION web pages containting the word anime. Toonami was the #1 rated block of programming on the #1 cable network for numerous periods between 1998 and 2001. The Sailor Moon S movie (dub, VHS) was NUMBER ONE on Amazon.com's hot videos list in the Summer of 2000. Then there's Pokemon... That's just a sample. ^^
But without a mechanism for exhibiting the material, I suspect that there will always be a divide between collectors and mass-market consumers, and a corresponding impact on acceptance and public discourse.
Anime may never become a mass market product, but not for the standard reasoning. There is no mass market. Anime will grow in popularity by building its own market rather than trying to "break into" the "mainstream."
Companies that pursue the fictional mass market usually find themselves out of business unless they are selling detergent.
The shockwaves of the success of Toonami are *still* being felt across both cable and network television, and there are network executives that would sell half their company to recreate something similar to when Sailor Moon and DBZ anchored the glory days of afternoon television.
Those two shows built a ratings powerhouse that absolutely annihilated the rest of afternoon cable television, and scared the daylights out of the networks, and did it without a single frame of new programming. (Sailor Moon had already been in syndication for two years)
Pokemon, CCS, the Suncoast DVD display, Adult Swim , etc. were all made possible in part by these older successes.
Stop Dissing 25 & 26 (Score:2)
Re:Stop Dissing 25 & 26 (Score:2)
I liked Gasaraki much better (Score:2)
Evangelion had a slow start, but just kept getting better, until it had me rivited near the end... until the final two episodes. Yes, I understand them. Yes, I "get it". No, I didn't find them to be very good.
Gasaraki, at least, got to finish its story, and it is very similar in certain ways -- most notably the "click your heels three times and think of home to defeat the bad guys" ending many giant mecha animes seem to have. Still, far more satisfying than the interminable idiocy of the final Evangelion.
"Congratulations! Congratulations!"
Gasaraki stinks on ice (Score:2)
Clustermindfuck (Score:2, Funny)
Also... to those not aquainted with the world of Ultra-CMF (see title of this post) viewing: if The Matrix is a 0 on the CMF scale, and Eva is 100 (and it is)... then Ghost in the Shell is roughly a 93, Serial Experiments: Lain scores about an 85, and Akira scores a good 25. EVERY GEEK SHOULD WATCH THESE.
Though, I'll offer a word of warning: once you have viewed the above titles, your opinion of the bulk of Hollywood movies will go down the shitter. Personally, I find myself watching The Matrix and other movies that I had previously found to be "profound" and thinking to myself how blatently obvious they are.
As for the rest of the world of anime, I generally stay away from ~99% of it, as it is underbudget, retarded crap. Of course, if it's something you're in to collecting as a hobby (as CmdrTaco is), then that's your own thing.
Why Evangelion is Good - spoiler warnings... (Score:2)
Eva is unique and important as an anime because it completely deconstructs the "giant robot" genre, in which the typical story line is that a boy pilots/commands the giant robot built by his scientist father (who usually dies) against evil monsters or other giant robots. While Giant Robo celebrates this genre, Evangelion attacks it.
Plot Summary:
Essentially Shinji Ikari, a 14 year old introvert, is more or less blackmailed into piloting a robotic monster created by his father. He endures great suffering, all for the purpose of saving the world, or at least that's what he thinks.
Instead of his father being the friendly scientist, Gendo Ikari is a complete rat-bastard who inflicts suffering on the Evangelion pilots for the purpose of making them more mallable to further his plan. Shinji's guardian, Misato, is a good woman, but she's also a dysfunctional alcoholic. His fellow pilots Rei and Asuka are both, like him, emotional cripples in their own way. The show is a 26 episode train wreck that doesn't let up.
Along the way Shinji:
1. is forced to cripple one of his friends.
2. learns that the girl he loves, and who dies for him, is a clone of his mother.
3. learns his mother's soul is trapped in the robot he pilots.
4. watchs his fellow pilots become crippled, get psychically raped, and die.
4. is forced to kill the only person who has ever shown him true unconditional kindness.
And instead of saving the world, he's set up to be the key player in bringing all of humanity to a new stage of evolutionary development in the manner of Arthur C. Clarke's "Children's End".
If you want a summary of each episode, most of them can all be described as "Shinji has a bad day in the entry plug." (entry plug: the removable "cockpit" of an evangelion)
The first four episodes are a very good beginning and an example of what happens later on. It gets a bit better, but at episode 18 it gets dark and never ever lets up again.
I'm with Taco (Score:2)
Especially if you exclude the "additional" final espisode made because the real final episode was just a wonderful montage of imagery and narration. My friend and I watched each episode with growing anticipation. With the last episode, we just scratched our heads. WTH?
The action packed, everbody dies, final-final episode made more sense, but was still disatisfying. Best anime of all time? Sorry--there are too many others that are far better.
Besides, *everyone* knows the greatest anime series of all time is Macross
No your not (Score:2)
Eva was good but... (Score:2)
If you like Eva, you must check these titles out.
A fun summary of Evangelion (Score:2)
Ending (Score:2)
However...
It is NOT a cooler ending than the ending of 'Brazil'.
And this is because the point Evangelion makes is much less interesting than the point Brazil makes. It's NOT that hard to use art to cut away a person's foundations- you just make them identify and then put the protagonist through a lot. It's much more interesting to give a sharp twist, not to the viewer's self-worth, but to their view of reality and the value of sanity, which of course is the brilliance of the every-bit-as-shattering ending of Brazil.
EVA != Evangelion (Score:2)
This should be a pointer towards Adam, the first Angel, which the EVAs originated from.
Like the most other things (Seele = soul, etcetc) this is a germanism.
The Evangelion in NGE refers to something like
"The book of the new Beginning", which makes more sense after all.
Re:EVA != Evangelion (Score:2, Informative)
So, we put it all together, and we get the real meaning of the title: "Gospel for a New Century"
Final episodes (Score:2)
There's nothing wrong with the last couple episodes the same way there's nothing wrong with some other foreign film you've watched and didn't quite "get" but it did look pretty.
Nice review (Score:2)
Anno DOES NOT hate the fans (Score:2)
This is simply not true.
This is a horribly old rumor, and there is no backing to it whatsoever. Id like to kill it right now.
Anno does not hate the fans! He never has!
Actually, the man just got married. I hate to think what his kids will be like *shudder*
Mainstream (Score:2)
Darn! It went mainstream! Now I'm gonna have to search for something non-trendy again..
Time to come clean (Score:2)
Am I the only one who finds anime a bit stupid and very repetitious?
I'll admit I got a charge out of Akira w-a-a-y back in the day, but everything I've watched since is... well, almost exactly like everything else. A lot of perky teens (or brooding adults), shiny robots, spiky hair and "deer-in-the-headlight" vacuous stares.
If I wanted to watch the same cartoon over and over again, I'd watch "Scooby Doo", which at least has a talking dog hyped up on some derivative of canibus.
I look at my video shelf with it's Akira, Ghost in the Shell, and other anime titles (whatever happened to the term "japanimation"?), and I realize I am so over the fad. I just can't be bothered anymore.
T(H)GSB [slashdot.org]
Her name is Asuka, not "another pilot", baka! (Score:2)
(Side note - somebody do a Music Video for Evangelion to the tune of "Three Libras" by A Perfect Circle)
Karma burning for the sake of anti-EVA. (Score:2)
Evangelion sucks. Really.
At the beginning it was a great mecha-action show with excellent characterization.
Then they destroy everything. Viewers are made to
"hate" the characters they've gotten to know.
The characters don't develop, they regress.
A load of B.S. philosophy that was obviously intended to maliciously bash western religion was made the center point of the show. None of it makes much sense any way you put it.
Then, in typical Gainax fasion, they save money with low-budget crap (such as elevator rides and still frames), using "tricks" to make it seem "artistic."
And the only good thing about "End of Evangelion"
is that it is a nice thing to show before another movie. It is so crappy and depressing that it will always make the movie shown after seem 1000 times better.
If you want a GOOD "artistic" anime with philosophical themes, then I suggest Lain.
It is much better, lets you know what to expect at Episode 1, and actually makes much more sense.
Re:a lame question but (Score:5, Informative)
Re:a lame question but (Score:1)
Speaking of character development, I just want to say that Shinji is the only protagonist that i actually want to strangle.
Also, am I the only one who found the english language visual edits jarring and disruptive? It was enough to make me forsake the rest of the DVD series and go buy the Second impact box set from Gainax
Re:best anime series is Maison Ikkoku (Score:1)
Re:No! Not another slahdot editor down? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Why God, Why? (Score:2, Informative)
Did you finish the series? If so, then you should know that they are not 'gigantic robots'. BTW, I have never heard anyone referring Asuka and Rei as Shinji's 'friends'.
Re:Why all nerds should watch this. (Score:2)
Re:Why all nerds should watch this. (Score:2)
Ummm...If big robots fighting each other is all you got out of Eva, you really weren't paying attention. While it's not the most intellectual thing I've ever experience, its certainly a few IQ points above american telvision.
Re:Why all nerds should watch this. (Score:2)
On a side note, I HATE it when people make comparisons of anime -> american tv. "Anime is this, american is this" etc. That's foolish. Anime is not any one thing, neither is american tv. Some anime like Cowboy bebop isn't very "animeish" (ie, what one typically things of as anime artistic style (big eyes, flashing fight backgrounds, etc etc)). Some anime is giant robotcs, some is rpgish, some is comedy, some is drama, some is romance, some is porn...ok, there's not ONE common thing other than that they are all animation, and all from japan. American TV is equally diverse. If you want an intellectual TV show, try Law & Order as one example. There are PLENTY of others (such as non-entertainment tv).
thanks
Re:Why all nerds should watch this. (Score:2)
Big robots? Maybe you should watch it again, there are no robots in the show.
Re:Why all nerds should watch this. (Score:2)
Ok, so they are angels, or cloned angels which wear armor and seem to have very many electrical components (the pods, human-angel interface, etc.) Not to mention they run on batteries (again, it's not totally clear, but batteries seem necessary). So no, they're not robots in the PUREST sense, but I think the definition fits. Besides, I didn't want it to be a spoiler.
Re:Why all nerds should watch this. (Score:2)
Just because it isn't weighed down by the personality quirks of real actors doesn't make the story any less compelling
No it doesn't, but you could also say "just because real people movies aren't weighed down by the personality quirks of artists doesn't make the story .... etc." Besides, I even said I really enjoyed Eva...my point wasn't to insult anime as a form.
Yeah, not nearly as intellectual as red pills and blue pills.
I wouldn't call the Matrix particularly intellectual either...most of TV and hollywood isn't about intellect it's about action and entertainment. Again, I'm _not_ saying this as a bad thing, just that calling a show that much of the plot revolves around giant 'robots' fighting angels intellectual isn't exactly right :P
Re:"Best series if I can overlook the final eps" (Score:2)
- A.P.
Re:I have to disagree with this (Score:2)
>>> at (infact I had made a sampler CD of fansubbed
>>> anime episodes that covered a wide range of
>>> shows) are Kanon, Mahororomatic, Noir, Love
>>> Hina, Onegai Teacher, Nadesico, Tiny Snow Fairy
>>> Sugar, Final Fantasy Unlimited, Read or Die
>>> (OVA series, not a TV show), and Lupin III.
> However, they all meet the requirement for not
> being eligable for a sampler CD/DVD, and that is
> they are licensed over here.
Nadesico and LH are licenced over here, BTW, as are ROD and some, but not all, of the Lupin movies, although Lupin TV's still unlicenced. And Noir... well... ADV has Noir, but they're still not admitting it, so... well... =P
Yeh okay. (Score:2)
Re:Ending is extremely Taoist (Score:2)
Re:So... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Good? Really? (Score:2)
Re:Disciples (Score:2)