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Neon Genesis Evangelion has scored highly in popularity polls. In 1996, the series won first place in the "Best Loved Series" category of the Anime Grand Prix, a reader-polled award series published in Animage magazine. [189] The show was again awarded this prize in 1997 by a large margin. [190]
Evangelion is an apocalyptic [1] anime in the mecha genre. It centers on a teenage boy recruited by a paramilitary organization named NERV to control a giant cyborg called an Evangelion to fight monstrous beings known as Angels. The show takes place largely in a futuristic Tokyo years after a worldwide catastrophe. Parts of the series also ...
Groundwork of Evangelion: 1.0 You Are (Not) Alone [157] covers the first Rebuild film. Two volumes cover Groundwork Of Evangelion You Can (Not) Advance 2.0, the second Rebuild film. [158] Neon Genesis Evangelion RPG: The NERV White Paper: A 158-page card-based RPG book released on April 20, 1996
Neon Genesis Evangelion (Japanese: 新世紀エヴァンゲリオン, Hepburn: Shin Seiki Evangelion) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Yoshiyuki Sadamoto and published by Kadokawa Shoten. It began in Monthly Shōnen Ace in December 1994 and later moved to Young Ace, finishing in June 2013. It consists of 14 volumes, each ...
The film opened in second place at the Japanese box office, just behind the opening of 101 Dalmatians. [27] Between March and October 1997, Death and Rebirth earned a distributor rental income of ¥1.1 billion. [28] The feature had a total gross of ¥1.87 billion. [29] Chris Beveridge from Mania gave it an overall "A−" score. [30]
Evangelion 2.0 was broadcast on Nippon TV on August 26, 2011 under the name Evangelion 2.02. [32] [33] Simultaneously, the TV edition was played in 5 Japanese theaters; [34] the TV broadcast of 2.0 received higher ratings than did 1.0. [35] At the end of the broadcast, a trailer for Evangelion 3.0 was included, with an official release date of ...
Rei Ayanami's English-language voice actor Amanda Winn Lee wrote the script for The End of Evangelion 's English subtitles and dubbed adaptations, and produced and directed the dub. [205] While most of the voice actors reprised their roles in ADV's English adaptation of the series, several supporting roles were recast as their original actors ...
On July 26, 2005, Manga Entertainment released Death & Rebirth and The End of Evangelion together in the United States as a two-disc set. The English production made similar creative changes in the dubbing of the film as had been made to The End of Evangelion.