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'''Neon Genesis Evangelion''' is a 26 episode anime that ran on Japanese television from Dec. 4, 1995 to March 27, 1996.  It involves a 14 year old boy, [[Shinji Ikari]], summoned by his long-absent father, [[Gendo Ikari]], to pilot a bio-mechanical being know as an [[Evangelion]] or Eva.  His task is to battle mysterious beings know as [[Angels]], who, it is somehow known, are due to begin their attacks soon.  But behind-the-scenes events may, in the long run, affect his fate, and the fate of the world, more than the fight against the angels.
'''Neon Genesis Evangelion''' is a 26 episode anime that ran on Japanese television from Dec. 4, 1995 to March 27, 1996.  It involves a 14 year old boy, [[Shinji Ikari]], summoned by his long-absent father, [[Gendo Ikari]], to pilot a bio-mechanical being know as an [[Evangelion]] or Eva.  His task is to battle mysterious beings know as [[Angels]], who, it is somehow known, are due to begin their attacks soon.  But behind-the-scenes events may, in the long run, affect his fate, and the fate of the world, more than the fight against the angels.


Subsequent to the end of the television series, there were two Evangelion movies:  ''[[Neon Genesis Evangelion:  Death & Rebirth]]'', and ''[[Neon Genesis Evangelion:  The End of Evangelion]]''.  ''Death and Rebirth'' starts as a compilation of footage from the series, (not a condensation, but instead catagorized by the character).  The remainder is part of the first half of ''End of Evangelion''.  Originally, they were to be one long movie, but deadline problems forced them into releasing it as two movies.  The most recent Japanese video release of the first movie includes only the compilation footage, "Death", as all of Rebirth is included in ''The End of Evangelion''.  ''The End of Evangelion'' is a retelling of and an expansion upon the events in the last two episodes of the TV series.  EOE clarifies the meaning of the abstract ending seen on TV, (see below), ''[[The Endings|without changing it significantly]]''.  Note:  as you can see, that statement has a link.  This is because this is still controversial in certain quarters.  It is the belief of nearly every member here that the endings are concurrent, but follow the link to see the arguments on both sides.  (When we get that section up.)
Subsequent to the end of the television series, there were two Evangelion movies:  ''[[Neon Genesis Evangelion:  Death & Rebirth]]'', and ''[[Neon Genesis Evangelion:  The End of Evangelion]]''.  ''Death and Rebirth'' starts as a compilation of footage from the series, (not a condensation, but instead categorized by the character).  The remainder is part of the first half of ''End of Evangelion''.  Originally, they were to be one long movie, but deadline problems forced them into releasing it as two movies.  The most recent Japanese video release of the first movie includes only the compilation footage, "Death", as all of Rebirth is included in ''The End of Evangelion''.  ''The End of Evangelion'' is a retelling of and an expansion upon the events in the last two episodes of the TV series.  EOE clarifies the meaning of the abstract ending seen on TV, (see below), ''[[The Endings|without changing it significantly]]''.  Note:  as you can see, that statement has a link.  This is because this is still controversial in certain quarters.  It is the belief of nearly every member here that the endings are concurrent, but follow the link to see the arguments on both sides.  (When we get that section up.)


==Creators==
==Creators==

Revision as of 22:15, 29 July 2007

General Information

Neon Genesis Evangelion is a 26 episode anime that ran on Japanese television from Dec. 4, 1995 to March 27, 1996. It involves a 14 year old boy, Shinji Ikari, summoned by his long-absent father, Gendo Ikari, to pilot a bio-mechanical being know as an Evangelion or Eva. His task is to battle mysterious beings know as Angels, who, it is somehow known, are due to begin their attacks soon. But behind-the-scenes events may, in the long run, affect his fate, and the fate of the world, more than the fight against the angels.

Subsequent to the end of the television series, there were two Evangelion movies: Neon Genesis Evangelion: Death & Rebirth, and Neon Genesis Evangelion: The End of Evangelion. Death and Rebirth starts as a compilation of footage from the series, (not a condensation, but instead categorized by the character). The remainder is part of the first half of End of Evangelion. Originally, they were to be one long movie, but deadline problems forced them into releasing it as two movies. The most recent Japanese video release of the first movie includes only the compilation footage, "Death", as all of Rebirth is included in The End of Evangelion. The End of Evangelion is a retelling of and an expansion upon the events in the last two episodes of the TV series. EOE clarifies the meaning of the abstract ending seen on TV, (see below), without changing it significantly. Note: as you can see, that statement has a link. This is because this is still controversial in certain quarters. It is the belief of nearly every member here that the endings are concurrent, but follow the link to see the arguments on both sides. (When we get that section up.)

Creators

Evangelion was written and directed by Hideaki Anno, with Character Design by Yoshiyuki Sadamoto, and Mechanical Design by Anno and Ikuto Yamashita. Space precludes our listing all of the co-writers and co-directors who worked on the individual episodes. Besides, Evangelion is Anno's baby; he is ultimately responsible for the course and outcome of the show. The music was composed by Shiro Sagisu.

Problems That Affected of Quality and Outcome of Evangelion

If you have seen Evangelion, you have probably notice that after a while, each episode seems to be cheaper than the one before it. There are a couple of reasons for this. It was too ambitious for its budget to begin with, so after some beautiful material towards the beginning, they had to increasingly cut corners, (reused footage of the Bridge Bunnies at their consoles, ect.) Then came episodes 18-20. Evangelion was broadcast in prime time; in fact it came on right after the Ninja Turtles. If produced today, it would be broadcast after midnight. The network and the sponsors were not prepared for anything as violent as eps. 18-19, and then the obvious off-screen sex in ep. 20 was the last straw. The budget was cut further, resulting in all of the infamous pauses you see in eps. 22-24. The network rejected the script for ep. 25 altogether, (the first half of End of Evangelion is based upon the rejected script). This ultimately resulted in Anno presenting us with the abstract or "inner" version of the ending that we all know and (some of us) love from eps. 25-26.

Note on the name Neon Genesis Evangelion

The actual Japanese title is Shin Seiki Evangelion, a hybrid Japanese-Greek title which means "Gospel of the New Century". The title Neon Genesis Evangelion is all Greek, and means "Gospel of the New Genesis". However, this is not a case of the English-language distributors messing with the translation. Neon Genesis Evangelion is the official English title, chosen by the series' Japanese creators.