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At times the film uses surrealism to create a bizarre confusion in viewers' minds. The twist at the end is just fantastic, Only by then the audience would realised what has happened (No one is sane remember?) It's a psychological thriller master piece from Japan. Show Less Show More Super Reviewer Aug 23, 2011 Manga film from the 90s, i know because the girl is confused by the internet, this and the whole pop idol concept doesnt fully pull it along, but the film does get trippy when she and we are not sure whats reality and whats in her head, it has a entertaining style and very poppy and some violence and nudity when its needed. entertaing and worthy of a watch. Show Less Show More Super Reviewer See All Audience reviews Movie & TV guides View All Play Daily Tomato Movie Trivia Awards Tour Discover What to Watch Rotten Tomatoes Podcasts Close video See Details See Details Help About Rotten Tomatoes What's the Tomatometer®? Critic Submission Licensing Advertise With Us Careers Join The Newsletter Get the freshest reviews, news, and more delivered right to your inbox! Join The Newsletter Join The Newsletter Follow Us Copyright © Fandango. All rights reserved.In total, the series' discography includes twenty-one full studio, live, compilation and soundtrack albums and six CD singles. The series' opening theme is "A Cruel Angel's Thesis", performed by Yoko Takahashi. It ranked on two TV Asahi polls, reaching 55th for best anime theme songs of all time, and eighteenth for best anime theme songs of the 1990s. [115][116] Fifteen years after its release, the theme won JASRAC's annual award for the royalties it continues to generate from its usage in pachinko, pachislo, karaoke and other venues. [117] The ending theme of the series is "Fly Me to the Moon", arranged and sung by Claire Littley and various other singers from the main vocal cast. [118] Video games[edit] See also: List of Neon Genesis Evangelion video games Several video games based on the series have been developed, ranging from RPG and adventure games to mahjong and card games. The series has also spawned visual novels, two of which inspired the romance and comedy-focused manga series Angelic Days and Shinji Ikari Raising Project. Releases[edit] Japan[edit] Cover for the Blu-ray box set in Japan The original home video releases in Japan included VHS and Laserdisc sets using a release structured around "Genesis 0:(volume number)", with each of the first twelve releases containing two episodes each. Each of the episodes received minor changes and episodes from the twenty-first to the twenty-fourth were extended with new scenes. "Genesis 0:13" and "Genesis 0:14" contained the original and the alternate versions of the last two episodes first presented in Neon Genesis Evangelion: The End of Evangelion. A fifteenth and final release for Laserdisc, entitled "Genesis 0:X", contained the broadcast versions of the episodes from the twenty-first to the twenty-fourth and was a special mail-in offer for fans who purchased all fourteen discs.
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