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The cast of Neon Genesis Evangelion as depicted on the Japanese "Genesis" (volume) 14 laserdisc and VHS cover. The withdrawn and mysterious pilot of Evangelion Unit-00, Rei Ayanami, is a clone made from the salvaged remains of Yui and is plagued by a sense of negative self-worth stemming from the realization that she is an expendable asset. [16]
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.
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 ...
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]
The End of Evangelion [a] is a 1997 Japanese anime apocalyptic science fiction film written by Hideaki Anno, directed by Anno and Kazuya Tsurumaki, and animated by Gainax and Production I.G. It serves as an alternate ending to the television series Neon Genesis Evangelion , which aired from 1995 to 1996 and whose final two episodes were ...
The film opened in second place at the Japanese box office, just behind the opening of 101 Dalmatians. [3] Between March and October 1997, Death and Rebirth earned a distributor rental income of ¥1.1 billion . [ 4 ]
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 ...