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In the hospital scene, where Shinji stands alone in an empty corridor, contrasts of light and shadow were used, keeping the scene monochromatic, to represent Shinji's inner emptiness. [ 34 ] [ 35 ] Furthermore, the main staff used real brands in "The Beast" scenes to depict a realistic fictional world, [ 36 ] including a Mitsubishi Fuso truck ...
[182] [183] On December 23, 1998, of the same year, a Japanese Laserdisc box set called Shinseiki Evangelion gekijō-ban Box LD (新世紀エヴァンゲリオン劇場版BOX LD, "Neon Genesis Evangelion movie version Box LD") containing a version of Death & Rebirth called Death(true)² and both segments of The End of Evangelion was released.
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 ...
Evangelion key art. In 1997, Neon Genesis Evangelion wrapped up its story with one last film: The End of Evangelion. It was a fine film, and is widely beloved by fans, despite its… questionable ...
Rebuild of Evangelion, known in Japan and on Amazon Prime Video [84] as Evangelion: New Theatrical Edition (ヱヴァンゲリヲン新劇場版, Evangerion Shin Gekijōban), is a Japanese animated film series and a retelling of the original Neon Genesis Evangelion anime television series, produced by Studio Khara.
In a scene from the last episode of the animated series, an alternate reality is presented with a completely different story than in the previous installments, where Asuka is a normal middle school student and a childhood friend of Shinji Ikari, the Evangelion units never existed, and Asuka did not experience any childhood trauma regarding her ...
The final stage of the New Era Evangelion: The Movie project, a theatrical revival with the romanized title Revival of Evangelion was released on March 8, 1998, consisting of Death (True)² (a third, further edit of Death(True), with a few removed shots crucial to the plot edited back in) followed by a four-minute intermission and then the ...
Yahata Shoten's Evangelion Glossary also noted how Shinji is seen with a red pearl resembling an Angel's core in the same scene. [ 146 ] According to the official filmbooks of the series, the two versions of Shinji represent the psychoanalytic concepts of ego and super ego , which Sigmund Freud presented in his work The Ego and the Id .