Neon Genesis Evangelion 12
Posted: February 27, 2011 Filed under: Neon Genesis Evangelion 4 Comments »Yoshiyuki Sadamoto – Viz – 2011 – 12+ volumes
Let’s see if I can connect the last several reviews I’ve done: So, Neon Genesis Evangelion is referenced/parodied in Genkaku Picasso. Genkaku Picasso is drawn by Usamaru Furuya, who has recently had his adaptation of Osamu Dezai’s No Longer Human licensed by Vertical. No Longer Human is central to the plot of the first Book Girl and the Suicidal Mime novel. How about that? Three unrelated works connected together. Though I think using Evangelion in that game is cheating. For more connections, how about the fact that, not counting reprints, Oh My Goddess and Evangelion are probably the two longest-running (time-wise) manga in English, and both are edited by Carl Gustav Horn?
Anyway, I’ve never read any other volumes of Evangelion, and I’ve only seen half of the anime series. This is incredible, given my otaku roots go back to 1998, when Evangelion was still something you watched lest you be ejected from the internet. It just wasn’t much my thing. Despite this, I know the characters and plot better than series I actually did watch back then, so I wasn’t completely lost when I picked this up.
Admittedly, I was a little lost, but it was pretty easy to pick up. NERV appears to be under attack by a rival agency, and most of the volume is spent trying to locate Shinji, convincing him to fight in the Eva unit, and also watching Asuka fight in her Eva unit despite being sick/injured. There are some really great character-to-character scenes amid all this action too, including a heart-to-heart between Gendo and Shinji that is later interrupted by Misato telling Shinji to do things for the exact opposite reason as Gendo. Gendo’s a great character as far as villains go, and his openly brutal psychological abuse is really something to behold. I liked him here, if only because I wanted to see just how bad his “motivation” was going to get.
The Gendo/Shinji/Misato scene is a good one, even without knowing much of the context for it, but the true highlight of the book for me was the wonderful scene between Misato and Shinji later, as Shinji is boarding his Eva unit. I was unsure whether or not Shinji really knew what Misato was doing, and I loved that after all that she did, Shinji’s Eva was surrounded by bakelite (?!) and was completely inoperable. Even though it was out of context for me, that scene was still extremely powerful.
I also like the art in this series quite a bit. I can’t comment on the character designs at this point since they are too iconic for me to really… critique, but I like Sadamoto’s linework and the background details he includes. There’s something very sterile about all the scenes in NERV (I’ll freely admit that this might not be NERV, I assume it is), and the detail isn’t very intricate, which goes with the idea that NERV is a military facility. The action scenes are very dynamic, and I was surprised by how clear and dynamic everything was. The fight scene with Asuka was another favorite part of the volume for me, and that was largely because the art was so good.
How close is the plot of the manga to the anime? How far is it from the end? I have no idea, honestly, but I did like what I read here. Do I like it enough to go back and read the rest? Mmm, probably not, especially after giving the anime a try, but I am happy that I read this volume, and I think fans of the series that have been waiting for this will be pleased. It’s a good one, even from a non-fan perspective.
This was a review copy provided by Viz.
Connie, you should definitely check out the first 11 volumes, too. The Eva story was originally Sadamoto’s and this manga is his artistic vision. There are many similarities to the anime version, but I find that the way Sadamoto develops his characters creates a stronger connection with me than the anime ever did (even though it is still a great anime).
Thanks! From what I had read, it sounded like it was only meant to be an adaptation of the anime, but that’s good news if it’s the story as Sadamoto intended. I’ve stumbled across the volumes at work a few times in the past couple years, I’ll have to snag them next time I see them.
-How close is the plot of the manga to the anime? How far is it from the end? -
Similar, but with noticeable differences. As to the ending? Hard to say, as the Manga’s not finished, though I would think it’s relatively near.
Eva might have been my first manga I ever bought. I still can’t believe it’s still not finished. I find it a hard series to read because it comes out so infrequently and I have no clue what happened in the volume that came the previous year or whenever and I have a hard time remembering if something happened in the anime or did in happen in the manga timeline and the line between the two starts to blur. The whole franchise has had so many spin off manga and alternate time line movies that I have hard time reading/watching one medium of it without the others giving me some static.
I just know that my copy of 12 will go unread for a long time because I can’t find the energy to go back through the previous books to get a gist of what’s going on.