Evangelion Shin GekijÅban: Jo (otherwise known as Rebuild of Evangelion) Review
Evangelion Shin GekijÅban: Jo premiered in Japan recently and one of our readers -Rodney – has seen it! Here’s what Rodney had to say:
I saw it last night in Osaka, and I’ve gotta say, it seem pretty frickin’ good. No spoilers, not that that’s really a possibility in this case.
I remember being appalled by the first two movies that attempted to cram a series into 4 hours, and that certainly wasn’t the case here. It’s like the most self-indulgent aspects of the series have been edited by someone that has a clue, while at the same time weaknesses that I didn’t even really realize were present in the series have been addressed. The characters seem more believable, more human. The city actually seems populated by people. The narrative flows more, and is more coherent. And the added effects are (generally, with one notable exception in my opinion) pretty well done and serve the story/mood well. Oh, and best of all the annoyingly tedious pervy moments that stopped me from being able to recommend this film to people who aren’t used to excusing that from anime have been drastically reduced! I mean the famous scenes seemed to still be there, but a lack of lingering focus make them a much better fit with the story and less a hands-down-trousers-for-otaku type of thing.
So all in all, pretty damn well done really. Good to see a cool story with incredible design getting a well-deserved makeover. I’ve gone from being a cynic to a believer. Fingers crossed for the other two…


yo,
so thats awesome you saw it in osaka, but you dont seem to realize what makes this cartoon stand out.
i can’t wait to see this new film to enjoy the coolness and flow to the movie, as well as the noted changes to atmosphere that you mentioned…
as a fan, i can’t wait to see anything else portrayed in the development in the characters, and time space in the eva story.
but even the former two films, as flawed as they were by cramming so much stream of consciousness in, to the point that they are hard to watch….
they are some of the most amazing films ever made.
and the tv series operates in a reflective way. it begins not as much a traditional story as much as a traditional way of story telling. then it totally pulls out from underneath you in the way that, yeah anyone watching the last couple of episodes are like, “i would just love to see someone get their ass kicked awesomely by unit 01 and all other evas…”
but the extent of their psycho analysis is uncharted by anime.
and thats f-ing awesome.