to know what you thought. Thanks for that

bit more of EoE into perspective, although like you said the ending is
pretty ambiguous. But that might have something to do w/ the fact that
I've only seen up to episode 17 [and both movies].
I'd say, personally, it has had little impact on Japan. Christianity (and religion in general) does not seem to play a very big role in Japan (unlike in <a href="http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/fac ... tml">South Korea</a>, where half the religious population is Christian). The most obvious impact of Western religion in Japan, to me, is providing "strange foreign" fodder for anime.UncleMilo wrote:However... I have been informed that Anno has a lot of negative views of Western Religion and the impact it has had on Japan.
It may also be something of a subliminal attack on Japanese society and <a href="http://www12.mainichi.co.jp/news/mdn/se ... prejudiced thinking</a>. Shinji, in a sense, could be an appeal to Japan as a nation, to open up and meld with the world, instead of maintaining a closed, inward focus.UncleMilo wrote:I believe that one of the messages you can get out of Evangelion is that mankind must get past the need of "god" figures... that we as a race of people must take responsability for our own actions and seek out our own answers.
Yeah... That's what NGE is about. I didn't see much of that taken into EOE, but that was Anno's religious edition of Evangelion. NGE, I feel is his social edition. From what I've heard, correct me if I'm wrong, Japanese society is all about being unified. A very hard thing for Japanese adolescence is simply growing up. Here in America we're encouraged to be individuals, find our own interest, do our own thing, etc. From what I've heard, Japan encourages contradictory themes, that they should grow-up unified and conform to society, yet at the same time they should develop their own sense of individuality.UncleMilo wrote:The central story, of course, is about Shinji finding his sense of self worth and value...