Subject: So I guess we have to talk about Evangelion.
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Posted on: 2019-07-13 05:42:00 UTC

(Maybe spoilers, but no details, because frankly the details are above the Board's rating!)

I finished the show and the rewrite of the end of the show.

Yay?

I don't really have that much to say, though, for the simple reason that I feel unqualified. The show turned into a psychology thesis, and I'm not familiar enough with Jungian or any other branch of psychology to comment in depth. To really do it justice, I think you'd have to be a serious student of psychology, religion, and philosophy, or at least get one of each to discuss it together.

I can say I wasn't impressed with the original ending, and I can see why the creator wanted to redo it. The themes are there, but they're told, not shown, with the subtlety of a sledgehammer. Worse, the last episode rehashes stuff the second-to-last already covered, so it was like a second hammer-blow of unsubtle delivery. It wasn't just odd, it was boring. Up to that point, the show is really good at conveying what's happening in the characters' heads without an actual play in a play, with a stage and everything. They seriously dropped the ball there.

On that score, The End of Evangelion is way better. It shows. Boy, does it ever show. To the point that it's equally unsubtle and maybe not better at telling the story.

Okay. So. There's a sub-theme about sex and sexuality throughout the anime. It hides in the usual sort of anime fanservice at first, so I didn't catch on right away. It gets more overt in later episodes, but still, when anything "adult" happens, it's off-camera (if not off-mic). There's some pretty strong imagery of penetration and pregnancy at one point, but it happens to one of the Evas, not a human character, so while it's weird as hell... no, I can't finish that sentence, it's just plain weird as hell. But I guess what I'm trying to say is that I think there's a point to it, and it's conveyed cleverly.

Well, take all those ideas and remove the requirement to be safe to air on TV. I still think there's probably a point to the sexual imagery, but it's so extraordinarily blatant that it was distracting. I can't even begin to figure out what the point might be. I'm still just reeling from it, and it's been like a week.

But, the big question is, is Neon Genesis Evangelion worth watching?

Yes. Absolutely yes. For the most part, it's smart, it's well done, and it made me care. I'm glad to have seen it, and I want to watch it again sooner than later to see if I can piece some things together now that I know more about what's going on.

Do be aware that it turns on a dime from what seems like a pretty straightforward story of post-apocalyptic coming of age with giant biomechs into a serious psych thesis with dreamlike, trippy, possibly disturbing, sometimes adult imagery. That's a thing, and I think most people probably need a bit more of a heads-up than "it gets totally weird." Knowing a bit about the specific direction it takes, I hope people who are interested in psychological stories will give it a shot.

~Neshomeh

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