froganna.blogg.se

Anime moments 1.0
Anime moments 1.0






Not that there's no epic combat: The opening defense of Paris is as bombastic as the franchise has ever got, while Asuka's enraged raid into the gates of hell is kinetic, animalistic, and tragic. The narrative is massive and dense, although the underlying story is now less about the engineered Evangelion versus the semi-organic angels and more about how humanity faces the apocalypse (a recurrent theme across all iterations of Neon Genesis). Anno seems to know it, and almost playfully goads the audience with a long but lightning-paced "previously" intro and no title card until over an hour in.

anime moments 1.0

The continuity – stripped down as it has been for Rebuild – is still almost impossibly convoluted. Asuka is an angry nihilist plagued by her own shielded humanity Ayanami (Hayashibara/Amanda Winn Lee) is an imitation of herself, her memories and identity wiped away and Shinji is trapped within his PTSD and guilt about his failures, and the carnage he has wrought in his victories.

#ANIME MOMENTS 1.0 SERIES#

Or, as series grump and cult favorite Asuka (Miyamura/Tiffany Grant) puts it, he doesn't want to live, but he can't bring himself to die.Įach of the Evangelion pilots has been broken by the war, trapped in perpetual teenhood, and haunted by their lost childhoods. In this film (confusingly, the only part of Rebuild that is also under the Shin banner), the core is anime's greatest embodiment of angst, Shinji Ikari (voiced by Ogata in the original Japanese language version and Spike Spencer in the U.S. They're dubbed apostles in the Japanese version – not a mistranslation, but a deliberate choice by series creator Hideaki Anno.Īnno's decisions are core to the series due to his constant revisiting of the story: first as the original 26-episode anime, then the manga (published first but really an adaptation of the in-progress anime), then the three-part Revival of Evangelion series, and now the four-part Rebuild of Evangelion, which culminates in the monumental Evangelion: 3.0+1.0 Thrice Upon a Time.Īnno's not simply rehashing but revisiting and revising, much as he has done with the rest of what has been dubbed the Shin Japan Heroes Universe, involving contemporary retellings of several of the key figures in Japanese pop culture: the greatest monster for Shin Godzilla, the greatest hero in Shin Ultraman, and the greatest bug-helmeted motorcycle-riding Nazi-smasher for Shin Kamen Rider. After all, such ruminations seem inevitable when the biblical second coming is really an invasion by giant monsters called angels.

anime moments 1.0

It provides some of the best robot-on-robot action sequences of truly epic scale, but it also explores questions of destiny, predetermination, inherited trauma, and societal existential threats.

anime moments 1.0

In the long history of mecha anime – the Japanese genre of giant robots smashing and crashing into each other – the Neon Genesis Evangelion franchise fills a remarkable and unique position.






Anime moments 1.0