There are three reasons for the exclusivity:
Here is your exclusive, deep-cut breakdown of the madness, the myth, and the masterpiece. neon genesis evangelion the end of evangelion 1997 exclusive
, intended to reflect the relationship between a creator and their audience. There are three reasons for the exclusivity: Here
If you were in a theater in July 1997, this was the moment your jaw hit the floor. Set to a sweeping, grand orchestral score that contrasts violently with the gore on screen, Asuka’s last stand is a masterclass in editing and choreography. It is the high point of traditional cel-animation in anime, a moment of triumph that curdles into horror, leaving the audience breathless. Set to a sweeping, grand orchestral score that
Behind them, the Moon—the Black Moon of Lilith—was gone, leaving only the wreckage of a world that had tried to evolve and failed. Or perhaps, it had succeeded in the most painful way possible: by giving them a second chance to be lonely.
presents the film as a unified 90-minute feature. Credits for the entire movie run halfway through—after the "Air" segment—over a red, spinning CG Helix, with "THANATOS ~ If I Can't Be Yours" playing in full. The "Episodic" Video Format Video Edition (originally found on Japanese Laserdiscs and VHS tapes like Genesis 0:13
Witness the definitive conclusion to Hideaki Anno’s legendary saga. The End of Evangelion remains one of the most provocative and visually stunning achievements in anime history, serving as an alternative—and far more visceral—finale to the original television series.