In
Japanese With English and Chinese Subtitles
Genre: Anime
Director: Hideaki Anno
Cast (Voice): Megumi Ogata, Megumi Hayashibara,
Kotono Mitsuishi, Yuriko Yamaguchi, Fumihiko Tachiki, Motomu
Kiyokawa, Tomokazu Seki, Tetsuya Iwanaga, Jyunko Iwao
Runtime: 1 hr 38 mins
Released By: Cathay-Keris Films & InnoForm
Media
Rating: NC-16 (Some Nudity)
Official Website: www.evangelion.co.jp
Opening
Day: 13 March 2008
Synopsis:
Shinji Ikari, a 14 year old boy, is the main protagonist in
this series. Marked by an introspective personality and pronounced
in his fear of interacting with others, Shinji is an embodiment
of the contemporary post-modern individual characterized as
being over stressed from near-constant exposure to the information
age. There then are the two heroines situated in his close
proximity. White and red, stasis and flux---the contrasting
personalities and mood that Rei Ayanami and Asuka radiate
are representative symbols that many people immediate associate
with the Eva franchise. The character designs produced by
Yoshiyuki Sadamoto (author of the comic book adaptation of
the same series) has had a profound impact on character designs
in subsequent animation series that have followed Evangelion.
The Point (Short Review):
There
are two main reasons for folks who are already familiar with
the extremely well known Japanese animation (previously available
in Dvds and Vcds format) to catch this tale again in the cinema.
The first reason would be for the wonder of editing that made
the whole story more streamline and with packs a stronger
focus in story telling. The second reason would be that watching
the reanimated animation on a big screen with superior theatrical
sound system makes a whole lot of differences. For those who
are not familiar with Evangelion, there isn’t a better
jumping pad to get acquainted with this extremely popular
franchise than catching this movie.
Disclaimer:
This
Reviewer did watch the anime series once back in the 2002
but found the ending too bizarre and confusing that he left
his Vcd series at one dark corner to rot. While he couldn’t
gasp the reason for Evangelion’s popularity, he is well
aware that this is not your usual Japanese big robots vs alien
invaders type of anime and packs with lots of philosophical
musing that likely requires repeated viewing to fully appreciate
this series. After watching the first series, he did not venture
to the following movies that tried to retell the whole finale
mess properly. Evangelion 1.0 You Are (Not) Alone marks the
first time returning back to the world of Evangelion and Angels.
The
Rant (Long review):
It’s
likely that you probably heard of the animation Evangelion
and even more likely to wonder why is it being reviewed in
Moviexclusive as a movie review. The simple reason would be
that the popular 1995 - 1996 anime TV series is joining the
ranks of other iconic sci-fi movies such as Star Wars and
Blade Runner in getting the Redux treatment. Not only that,
the ambitious folks behind the whole TV series is planning
big and will be releasing the series theatrically in four
parts.
The
next question would probably be; is the reworks worth watching
again?
The
answer would be a Yes.
The
first thing that stood out was re editing for this story which
was almost magical. Basically, most of the sequences, events,
monsters and even the framing of a scene were exactly the
same as the source material (although it was reported that
everything’s been reanimated for the movie) but yet
with skillful editing, the story had a more streamline flow
and emotions among characters pack a stronger punch than it’s
predecessor; creating an almost different story from the original
source.
To
appreciate what the reediting had done for Evangelion, one
would just have to look at the first battle between Shinji’s
unit 1 and the first (or third if you are a Evangelion fanatic)
Angel. The battle was actually told in two separate parts
in the second episode of the Anime and in this movie version,
it had been re-edited into one whole action sequence. Comparing
both the TV series and movie, the movie was more effective
as managed to contain the tension and pacing that the first
half had build and unleash the shock / horror immediately
for the revelation of the second half without giving it too
much time and space for the pressure to fade away.
In
this manner, it does not let the audience’s mind to
wander too far and help focus on the dilemma and woes of the
lead character (Shinji Ikari). Which in turn build a stronger
case for viewers to sympathies what Shinji was going through
and his constant self questioning that could come across as
overbearing whining session in the Tv series.
Another
great aspect of condensing the first 6 episodes (20 minutes
worth of material each, an estimate total of 120 mins) into
a 98 mins movie was removal of those unnecessary padded moments
that Anime are often guilty of. That means no more unnecessary
humor such as Misato Katsuragi complaining about her wreck
car after picking Shinji up or confusing bits such as Unit
01 giving Shinji unexpected protection when there wasn’t
anyone operating it.
The
next important factors of catching this Re-Animated movie
in a cinema (specially for the fans) would be because this
enormous robots vs. monsters slug fest requires a gigantic
screen and superior sound system (that most of us couldn’t
afford at our own home) to tell the story properly.
Coming
from the angle of watching Evangelion previously on Vcd format,
the reanimation of Evangelion looks impressive on the big
screen. The big screen pictures look more vibrant and more
spectacular. Particularly the scene where Unit 01 reanimated
it’s broken arm during it’s first battle. That
scene in the Tv Series left very little impact while the movie
made a credible point on how painful it should have felt.
The
heat of the giant monsters’ battle also felt more real
while seated in a theatre. The surround sound of missiles
flying around, crushing of buildings and even school kids
chatting noisy at the backgrounds could be picked up in this
new version of Evangelion. As again, it helps to bring the
audience closer to the respective characters’ situation
and events that were going on. Without a doubt, there’s
no better way to appreciate all these gigantic robot/monster
slug fest than a big screen with big sounds.
Bottom
line, what was good in the series had been carefully and lovingly
made better for the big screen treatment. Better pacing and
better visual/audio effects create an unexpected buzz and
interest for Evangelion that even I couldn’t foresee.
I for one, am excited to see what the other installments have
in store for the youngsters piloting these big gigantic robots
(particularly how the story will be retold in the later movies)
and I hope that I am not Alone in getting swept by all these
excitements.
Movie Rating:
(Best Re-Dux treatment for Anime so far)
Review by Richard Lim Jr
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