quarta-feira, 25 de outubro de 2017

Neon Genesis Evangelion (Série - Anime)

Primeiro série de anime que realmente vi, ajudou bastante estar em viagem ao Japão na época e sentir o clima do país retratado. Como é um dos "cânones" do Anime, resolvi inaugurar com ele.

Por outro lado, é ficção científica e com "robôs gigantes", não sendo exatamente a introdução ideal para quem nunca viu um anime :P

Mas vale ver, com certeza. Dublado em inglês e legendado em português.

https://drive.google.com/open?id=0BzQcU0lDkwbWc2hYQWhMZkZqTzQ

NEON GENESIS EVANGELION



Neon Genesis Evangelion[1] (Japanese: 新世紀エヴァンゲリオン Hepburn: Shinseiki Evangerion, literally "The Gospel of the New Century") is a Japanese science-fiction anime television series produced by Gainax and Tatsunoko Production and directed by Hideaki Anno. It was broadcast on TV Tokyo from October 1995 to March 1996. The original Japanese cast includes Megumi Ogata as Shinji Ikari, Megumi Hayashibara as Rei Ayanami, and Yūko Miyamura as Asuka Langley Soryu. The music was composed by Shirō Sagisu.

Evangelion is an apocalyptic anime, set in a futuristic Tokyo fifteen years after a worldwide cataclysm. The story centers on Shinji, a teenage boy who is recruited by his father into the shadowy organization Nerv to pilot a giant bio-machine mecha called Evangelion in combat against monstrous beings known as Angels. The series explores the experiences and emotions of Evangelion pilots and members of Nerv as they attempt to prevent another catastrophe.[2] It features religious symbolism throughout the series, including themes and imagery derived from Kabbalah, Christianity, and Judaism.

Neon Genesis Evangelion gained widespread critical acclaim as well as controversy.[3] Regarded as a critique and deconstruction of the mecha genre, the series has become a cultural icon and influenced an artistic and technical revival of the anime industry. Subsequent film, manga, home video and other products in the Evangelion franchise have achieved record sales in Japan and strong sales in overseas markets, and by 2007 gross revenues had reached over 150 billion yen. The 1997 film The End of Evangelion, made by the original team of the series, serves as a complementary ending to the series.

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