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In 1993, the Evangelion proposal presented the angels, including names and appearances. [Note 1] The most important angels are Adam and Lilith. The first Angel is named Adam, just as the biblical Adam is the first man created by God. [20] The second Angel is called Lilith, a reference to the Jewish folklore in which Lilith is the first wife of ...
During the making of Neon Genesis Evangelion, the production staff decided to set the work on a battle between gods and humans. [6] [7] In one early draft, which was published about two years before airing, Gainax included enemies named Apostolos (アポストロ, aposutoro), which they conceived as ancient relics scattered all over the globe and left in hibernation by a species called "First ...
Neon Genesis Evangelion (Japanese: 新世紀エヴァンゲリオン, Hepburn: Shinseiki Evangerion, lit. ' New Century Evangelion ' in Japanese and lit. ' New Beginning Gospel ' in Greek), also known as Evangelion or Eva, is a Japanese mecha anime television series produced by Gainax, animated by Tatsunoko, and directed by Hideaki Anno.
Neon Genesis Evangelion also known simply as Evangelion or Eva, is a Japanese mecha anime television series produced by Gainax and animated by Tatsunoko, [45] directed by Hideaki Anno and broadcast on TV Tokyo from October 1995 to March 1996.
The Windows version of the game, titled Neon Genesis Evangelion: Eva and Good Friends - The Stripping Instrumentality Project! is a port of the PlayStation and Sega Saturn versions, with pornographic "strip mahjong" elements added in. This involves characters taking off items of clothing as the player progresses through the mahjong levels.
A feature film was created as a complementary, alternate ending to the original episodes 25 and 26 and released in three stages: first as a preview (Neon Genesis Evangelion: Death & Rebirth), then as the completed alternate ending (The End of Evangelion), then finally as a theatrical revival combining the two into one presentation (Revival of ...
In 1993, Gainax wrote a presentation document for Neon Genesis Evangelion entitled New Century Evangelion (tentative name) Proposal (新世紀エヴァンゲリオン (仮) 企画書, Shinseiki Evangelion (kari) kikakusho), containing the initial synopsis of "The Day Tokyo-3 Stood Still". [1] [2] The Proposal document was then published in 1994.
The Evangelion: 1.0 video game [270] and Evangelion: 1.11 Blu-ray and DVD release [271] [272] were also successful, with Evangelion: 1.11 selling 49,000 copies in its first week, breaking the record previously set by Christopher Nolan's The Dark Knight, making it the single best-selling debuting Blu-Ray in Japanese history. [273]