Many other settings have been drastically changed, and in the end, the whole plot has changed.
The remake of EVA is many times thicker than Z Gundam, the picture is stronger, and the plot is stronger.
In general, the emotional descriptions are now more straightforward than before (although they are more subtle than many animations). The feelings of the TV version are very subtle and difficult to grasp, and behind all the love and hate there is a bleak loneliness as the basis.
Now, it's clear that Ikari likes Limbo, Limbo likes Ikari, and then Asuka loves Ikari unrequitedly.
That relationship then set the tone for the tragedy that followed. In order to make Ikari and his father reconciled, Ling Bo prepared a dinner party that he cooked himself, but was arranged as the test driver of Unit 3. Asuka clarified the relationship between Lingbo and Ikari, hoping to fulfill them, and on the important dinner day, replace Lingbo to test Unit 3.
Anyone who has seen the TV version knows what happened to the third unit... Asuka may have started to swear, or started to pray. As a result, the ending of Unit 3 did not change because of Asuka's prayers.
Compared with Toji, Asuka's death made Ikari even more mad, and made him decide not to drive EVA again. Then, naturally, the strongest tenth Apostle came. Lingbo knew that Ikari was determined not to drive the EVA anymore, and fought with his life to fight the tenth apostle, and was swallowed up. In order to save Ling Bo, Ikari boarded the EVA again, and the bottom force exploded, causing the first machine to wake up. The third shock came, and all mankind was ready to suffer... In the
TV version, desperate loneliness is the eternal tone, then There is no real love in it. It's just that the hedgehogs get close to each other to keep warm, and if they get too close, they will hurt each other. In the current version, it seems that love really exists, and the three protagonists are all hurt because of love, from the desolation before to the tragedy now.
Is the theme of EVA going to change? In order to adapt to the changing times?
The TV version expresses the loneliness and despair of modern people in the context of the Great Depression in 1995.
now what? What does the new theatrical version want to express?
It turned out that the remake was just to cheat money. It seems that in addition to cheating money, there will still be some breakthroughs.
No wonder it's called "broken".
Next, what does Q (Quikening) mean?
From the next one, it should be completely deviated from the TV version, right?
View more about Evangelion: 2.0 You Can (Not) Advance reviews