The Video Craze
My name is beau and i like dumb jokes and trash

michigrim:

Neon Genesis Evangelion Episode 22 “Don’t Be (Director’s Cut)” (1996) Produced by Gainax

The use of Dolls as a motif in this episode is rather interesting

Mamoru Oshii in the script for Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence described the psychology for the fear of dolls thusly

[It’s] the uncertainty that perhaps something that appears to be alive actually isn’t and the uncertainty that on the other hand something that doesn’t appear to be alive actually is. If you want to know what makes dolls so unnerving it’s because they are modeled after humans. In other words they are man created in their own image. [It] creates the fear that the human phenomenon is fundamentally devoid of meaning and purpose…that humanity can be reduced to simple mechanical parts.

In the context of the story the use of the motif of dolls reflects the fear of being replaced. To be cast aside in favor of something new. Broken mechanical parts swapped out for newer ones that last longer and work harder.

Asuka as a character values her skills as a pilot because they give her a sense of self worth through others dependence on her. She takes pride in her competitive spirit and in her high synch ratios. She loves the fact that others depend on her to defend them against the Angels. However, she is dependent on others for her sense of self worth despite her personality. After all, human beings are social creatures and we depend on each other for both social, physical, and mental needs in different ways. You simply can’t live a healthy life “on your own”.  Without the ability to pilot the EVA, she is cast aside like a broken doll or broken parts in a machine by the power structure of NERV and SEELE which soon finds a new “toy” to replace her with in their game now that she no longer has any value to them.


As a side note the language that Gendo uses when discussing the pilots is rather interesting, in the subtitles pilots are rarely if ever referred to by their names, the exception being Rei. Even Rei outright states that if she dies she can simply be replaced. When Shinji shows up he’s referred to as “the spare”. The pilots are simply interchangeable parts in the command structure, kicked out when no longer useful and replaced.

1,040 notes, Source: michigrim, Reblogged from ancientevangelions
  1. escaflownes reblogged this from qmisato
  2. callmeaxely reblogged this from michigrim
  3. sarkos reblogged this from ancientevangelions
  4. flannelsandjeans reblogged this from jadewinter
  5. l-alien-nation-l reblogged this from blueshelly01
  6. madkid3 reblogged this from ancientevangelions
  7. ask-asuka-x-shinji reblogged this from ancientevangelions
  8. helloworldimnoturguy reblogged this from ancientevangelions
  9. professor-kouzou reblogged this from blueshelly01
  10. professor-kouzou said: Above all Asuka wants someone to love her entirely, romantically. Kaji or Shinji, someone valuable to make her feel alive. And Shinji turns out to be irreplacable, as does Asuka and Rei 2. Ultimately their uniqueness and influence rises above just their ability as parts, and that self love so u can love others is the theme of Eva.
  11. musicallucy3 reblogged this from blueshelly01
  12. sailorvig reblogged this from blueshelly01
  13. minamcgarden reblogged this from blueshelly01
  14. masturbates-to-comatose-girls reblogged this from blueshelly01
  15. whatever-i-am-in-wonderland reblogged this from blueshelly01
  16. michigrim posted this