Neon Genesis Evangelion The End Of Evangelion -1997- -
The reaction was visceral. Hate mail was sent. Death threats were levied against Anno. The otaku culture, which Anno himself was a part of, turned on him. In a masterful act of artistic defiance—and catharsis—Anno co-wrote The End of Evangelion with Kazuya Tsurumaki. The tagline said it all: "So, anyone who is interested in the continuation of the TV series, come and see it. But those who are not interested had better not come."
More than two decades after its theatrical release, Neon Genesis Evangelion: The End of Evangelion -1997- remains a titanic enigma in the world of animation and cinema. It is not merely a film; it is a cultural reset, a psychological scar, and the definitive final word on one of the most controversial television series ever produced. For fans who were left bewildered by the original TV ending (episodes 25 and 26), The End of Evangelion offered something equally shocking: a visceral, terrifying, and beautiful apocalypse that asked, "What if Instrumentality was a nightmare?" neon genesis evangelion the end of evangelion -1997-
Whether you see it as a masterpiece of psychoanalysis or a spiteful act of artistic destruction, one fact remains: In 1997, Hideaki Anno ended the world. And we have never stopped watching it burn. Neon Genesis Evangelion The End of Evangelion -1997- , Hideaki Anno, Third Impact, Instrumentality, Asuka vs Mass Production EVAs, Kimochi Warui, anime deconstruction. The reaction was visceral