Neon Genesis Evangelion: Death & Rebirth
Titre original : Shin seiki Evangelion Gekijô-ban: Shito shinsei
NOTE IMDb
7,2/10
16 k
MA NOTE
Un récapitulatif des 24 premiers épisodes de Neon Genesis Evangelion, suivi d'une suite de 30 minutes de l'intrigue qui formera plus tard le premier tiers de The End of Evangelion.Un récapitulatif des 24 premiers épisodes de Neon Genesis Evangelion, suivi d'une suite de 30 minutes de l'intrigue qui formera plus tard le premier tiers de The End of Evangelion.Un récapitulatif des 24 premiers épisodes de Neon Genesis Evangelion, suivi d'une suite de 30 minutes de l'intrigue qui formera plus tard le premier tiers de The End of Evangelion.
- Récompenses
- 1 victoire au total
Megumi Ogata
- Shinji Ikari
- (voix)
Miki Nagasawa
- Maya Ibuki
- (voix)
Hiro Yûki
- Makoto Hyûga
- (voix)
Junko Iwao
- Hikari Horaki
- (voix)
Mugihito
- Keel Lorentz
- (voix)
Katsumi Suzuki
- SEELE
- (voix)
Avis à la une
The Evangelion series itself may well be a true masterpiece, a rare example of a popular work that transcends its commercial origins and enters the realm of great art. Unfortunately, this film fails to really do it justice as it consists primarily of material already seen in either the television series or the film End of Evangelion. Additionally, they redubbed many of the voices for the English version, and the new voices often fall quite short of the old ones (even if they didn't necessarily live up to the Japanese ones to begin with). Touji's lines, in particular, fall spectacularly flat. On the positive side, it does introduce some new and hard to get footage interspersed with some nice musical numbers from Bach and Pachelbel.
"Death and Rebirth" is a well-done recap of the Evangelion franchise, focusing on Shinji, Rei, Asuka, and Kaworu attending a rehearsal of Pachebel's "Kanon in D-dur." The movie is split into two halves, with the first half, "Death," being essentially a recap. The recaps are well-done, with new footage and narration added to make the events clearer. The story is retelling from various personal perspectives, with the classical music used to great effect, lending it an elegance that the series often lacks. The recaps cherry-pick key moments from the series and remove unnecessary padding, making it easier to connect the dots in the story and giving "Death" a greater intensity and urgency compared to the series. This highlights the greatness that people often talk about when discussing Evangelion. Despite its flaws, "Death and Rebirth" is a must-watch for fans of the Evangelion franchise.
"Evangelion - Death & Rebirth" is, obviously, a film of two parts. "Death" is a futile attempt to stuff the content of the first 24 episodes of the "Evangelion" TV series into a running time of just under an hour. It succeeds in getting the very bare-bones of the plot in, but leaves out all of the subtler moments, the moments of psychological drama, and the fully-realized character developments that helped to make the TV series so popular to begin with. The few minutes of animation made help fill up this immense loss fails miserably.
But it does its job. And its job is to promote "The End of Evangelion". It is virtually impossible to watch "EoE" without some significant background knowledge of the TV series, and that is exactly what "Death" does.
"Rebirth" is, essentially, the first few minutes of "EoE", there for the sole purpose of whetting the appetites of audiences all over Japan for the initial release of "EoE". But since "EoE" has since been released, what's the point of keeping "Rebirth" around, anyway?
As far as promotional packages go, this is one brilliant piece of marketing. But viewers expecting to be thoroughly blown away by "Evangelion" are best off watching the TV series and then "EoE" (all in one sitting is NOT recommended, due to the sheer length of it all). "Death & Rebirth" has served its purpose, and now is no longer needed.
But it does its job. And its job is to promote "The End of Evangelion". It is virtually impossible to watch "EoE" without some significant background knowledge of the TV series, and that is exactly what "Death" does.
"Rebirth" is, essentially, the first few minutes of "EoE", there for the sole purpose of whetting the appetites of audiences all over Japan for the initial release of "EoE". But since "EoE" has since been released, what's the point of keeping "Rebirth" around, anyway?
As far as promotional packages go, this is one brilliant piece of marketing. But viewers expecting to be thoroughly blown away by "Evangelion" are best off watching the TV series and then "EoE" (all in one sitting is NOT recommended, due to the sheer length of it all). "Death & Rebirth" has served its purpose, and now is no longer needed.
If you're going to see the series and the End of Evangelion, you're wasting your time here. This DVD contains a short overview of the series, followed by the first bit of The End of Evangelion. If you don't want to sit through the series (shame on you), you'll want to see the first half of this before watching the End of Evangelion, but otherwise it's not really worth the money.
I would like to preface this review by saying that I absolutely love the original series of NGE. It has aged astonishingly well, and I think it's truly timeless.
However, this film occupies a bit of a strange spot in the franchise.
About an hour is recapping the series, and the final half-hour is a "sneak-peek" at the next film in the franchise, "End of Evangelion" (which I have not seen at the time of writing).
This begs the question - if your intent is to follow the storyline of the franchise from start to finish, what point does this film play? You could watch the series and (I'm assuming) go straight to End of Evangelion and you wouldn't have missed anything. It's a bit like having a "previously on evangelion" segment, then a half-hour trailer for something you're probably going to watch afterwards anyway.
I will admit, the recapping of the series did make me view some of the themes in a different light by juxtaposing scenes I didn't connect thematically before, so it's got that going for it. But it hasn't got a lot else I'd recommend it for other than that, or for revising the story so far if you haven't seen the series in a while.
It's not bad. There's just not much reason for it existing.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesDeath and Rebirth is divided into 2 segments. Death consists of clips from the main series while Rebirth is the first half hour of The End of Evangelion.
- Citations
Misato Katsuragi: Shinji, this is your home now.
- Crédits fousAfter the credits for "Death", there is a short scene of Shinji walking silently out of the recital room with his cello followed by a loud slamming sound as the Japanese text "zoku-geki" ("the movie continues") appears on the screen. A four-and-a-half-minute intermission follows, preceding the "Rebirth" segment.
- Versions alternativesA line of dialogue was added in the English version near the end of the film, during a shot showing a soldier firing a flamethrower into a room. Between the two bursts of flame, a soldier's voice can be heard saying "Hit 'em again!"
- ConnexionsEdited into Revival of Evangelion (1998)
- Bandes originalesSuite for Unaccompanied Cello No. 1 in G-major
Composed by Johann Sebastian Bach
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- How long is Neon Genesis Evangelion: Death & Rebirth?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Evangelion: Death (True)²
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Montant brut mondial
- 15 877 $US
- Durée1 heure 41 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.90 : 1
- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was Neon Genesis Evangelion: Death & Rebirth (1997) officially released in India in English?
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