The list of my favorite anime episodes so far:
This post will only have moderate spoilers, nothing that would ruin
anyone's viewing of the series.
My all-time favorite anime episode is...
Neon Genesis
Evangelion episode 22: “Don't Be”.
“After the television broadcast finished, I became worse and worse, and went to see a doctor. I even seriously contemplated death. It's like I was empty, with no meaning to my existence. Without the slightest exaggeration, I had put everything I had into Evangelion. Really. After that finished I realized that there was nothing left inside of me. … In order to determine whether or not I really wanted to die, I went up to the rooftop of this building (the GAINAX building) and stuck my foot out, waiting to lose my balance and fall forward. I did it to personally determine whether I wanted to live or die, thinking, if I really want to die, I should die here, and if I don't want to die, I'll step back. Well, it didn't lead to my death, and so I'm here.”
Hideaki Anno, 1996.
I'm going to say something very weird now.
Evangelion means something to
me. It's not my favorite anime just because I like it a lot – it's
my favorite anime because it's one of the few works of fiction that
has, to some extent, affected me on a personal level. I don't want to
downplay this because of some misbegotten sense of embarrassment. The
truth is that I've never found anything quite as inspiring.
I want you to read the quote by the show's director I provided again;
read it and think about it. How does it make you feel? That's not a
rhetorical question. I would genuinely like to know, so feel free to
answer me. Does it amuse you? Do you find it pathetic? Does it strike
you as melodramatic or angsty or “emo?” Personally, I find it
disturbing and sad.
Evangelion
tends to be called melodramatic or angsty or emo fairly frequently,
and there's few viewpoints I find more exasperating. Nothing about it
is affected or trivial; it deals with real issues in a striking and
relateable way. It's an exploration of loneliness and mental illness
by a lonely, mentally ill man. I think Evangelion
is well-crafted even in its most superficial aspects, but its
greatest triumph is its emotional relevance. I could go on forever
about the sincerity of Evangelion's
content, the idealistic underpinnings of its message and how
self-expression is one of the foundations of art, but that's not
really the point. The point is this: Anno poured every bit of how
awful he felt into the story he was telling, and nowhere does it pay
off as much as in episode 22.
“Don't Be” is all about feeling awful. Asuka starts out the
episode feeling down in the dumps, and finishes it up in a state of
devastation. It represents a climax and turning point in her
character arc, which can pretty accurately be summed up in one word –
failure. Over the preceding episodes, we've already seen Asuka
withdraw and lash out due the withering effect her successive
failures have had on her fragile ego. By episode 22, it's very
obvious that she's nearing a breaking point, that her ability to
function – not just as an Eva pilot, but as a human being – is
getting stretched thin. We expect her to be pushed over the edge...
but we don't expect her to be so utterly traumatized that she would
later attempt suicide.
This episode makes Asuka. It provides a context for basically
everything she's done up until this point and enables everything that
came for her later on. (Though it's important to keep in mind “Don't
Be” didn't create something from nothing. It's only the top of the
pyramid, built on top of a strong foundation of characterization and
foreshadowing.) A lot of people who don't like her suddenly find
themselves liking her after this episode. Me, I already liked her
plenty, and “Don't Be” effectively made her my favorite anime
character ever. The revelations about her backstory are both
heart-breaking and illuminating, and I would have a hard time
respecting someone that doesn't feel even the slightest bit of
sympathy towards her afterward.
The first half of the episode has so many great scenes – the
flashbacks, the interaction in the kitchen, the awkward stand-off in
the elevator, the breakdown in the bathroom – but it's the angel
attack in the second half that elevates it beyond “great.” The
experimental style of the mind rape sequence does an incredible job
at visually depicting an alien being dissecting the fractured and
chaotic mind of what is really just a scared little girl. Symbolic
imagery and text are used to great effect here. (According to rumor,
the crayon drawings that appear here were drawn by actual abused
children.) The quick, overwhelming cuts flashing on the screen
viscerally demonstrate the barrage of unpleasant thoughts and
memories on Asuka. Asuka's confrontation with her doll-self is
flat-out creepy. The viewer quite literally gets to peek into a
mental breakdown from the inside. Can you imagine how dull and
meaningless these scenes would have been if they had been handled
without “pretension?”
The best part is that even with such a direct method of character
exploration, the show doesn't forsake subtlety. The episode makes a
great many points about Asuka's personality, but it does so without
spelling things out too overtly. Take, for instance, the scene where
she struggles against an amorphous flow of faceless people with her
own features, literally “getting lost in the crowd.” There's also
the repeated “This isn't really me!” scene, which the English dub
painfully messed up by failing to include the voice actors of the
show's other female characters, muddling up the point about Asuka's
anxiety over personal identity as a result. At every point, Asuka is
confronted with her fears, and oddly enough, the prospect of Shinji
being in her thoughts is one of the things that makes her most
distraught.
There are people who find the use of Handel's Messiah
inappropriate and inadvertently funny. Popular culture seems to use
the piece for comedic effect relatively often, so I suppose I can
understand the notion. On my part though, I never felt that way at
all. This whole sequence, to me, is... well, disturbing and sad.
Evangelion is a tragedy, after all. I can't think of another
anime episode that does “disturbing and sad” this well. There's a
reason for that.
1 comments:
Good article - I quite liked this episode too.
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