Critics positively received "The Cruel Angel's Thesis". Axs. com's Terrance Pyror and Otaku Kart included the song in his lists of the best theme songs in the history of Japanese animation. Casey Baseel of Sora News and Ederlyn Peralta of Comic Book Resources described it as one of the most-iconic anime songs.
Singer Yoko Takahashi, who was already known for singing Japanese television themes, was contacted for the recording; at the time of the recording of "A Cruel Angel's Thesis", Takahashi had not seen the anime and was not given any information about it.
The 2003 version stayed on the chart for nine weeks. A remix done in 2009 was also successful; in June and July of that year, "A Cruel Angel's Thesis" became the most popular anisong of the period, appeared for fourteen weeks on the Oricon charts, and reached number twenty-two.
For "The Cruel Angel's Thesis", Gainax made a ninety-second opening video that was animated by Takeshi Honda and Shinya Hasegawa. The production took some time; it was still unfinished in July 1995, when the first two episodes were premiered at the company's second festival.
Neon Genesis EvangelionIt was written for the opening theme of the anime television series Neon Genesis Evangelion, and was released as a double-A-sided single with "Fly Me to the Moon", the show's closing theme, on October 25, 1995. "The Cruel Angel's Thesis" was also included on the series' soundtrack releases and on Takahashi's albums.
anime_irl on Twitter: "Skipping Cruel Angel's Thesis is a punishable war crime.
The song itself is so popular that it's been a consistent top song for karaoke in Japan since the show debuted. Meanwhile, the internet gains at least one piano cover by a fan each day. Knowing the context of the show, it does beg the question of how the song could reach and endure the popularity it has for so long.
But its deliberate subversion of anime conventions and audience expectations was what made it so popular. In Japan, Evangelion spawned countless anime tropes, and moreover provided a template for integrating stylish genre tropes with serious themes, high artistic aspirations, and deep characterization.
Its definitely OK, endings are just meant to be a wrap to every episode that way the show doesn't just abruptly end, if you like certain endings watch them, if you don't just skip them. Glad I could help.
The series deconstructs its casts' traumas while subjecting them to ever-escalating torment and investigating the pain that comes with human connection. It's also quite brutal, the violence isn't simple cartoon violence, it's bloody, visceral, and frightening.
Ya Boy Kongming! has been one of the season's nicer surprises, and the OP gets each episode off to an immaculate start.4 Cha-La Head-Cha-La (Dragon Ball Z)5 Again (Full Metal Alchemist: Brotherhood) ... 6 Dream Of Life (Bakuman) ... 7 Oath Sign (Fate/Zero) ... 8 Colors (Code Geass) ... 9 Moonlight Densetsu (Sailor Moon) ... 10 Fly High!! ... More items...•
"A Cruel Angel's Thesis" from Neon Genesis Evangelion, performed by Yoko Takahashi, is exemplary of one of the most popular types of anime openings: the upbeat pop song that nonetheless makes a perfect accompaniment to a dark, often depressing story.
The theme song to Hideaki Anno's classic anime Neon Genesis Evangelion fits the bill and now “Cruel Angel Thesis” tops a list in Japan of all-time anime theme songs over the past 30 years.
From the Evangelion Proposal page 11, it mentioned that: When choosing the pilot, the A10 nerve synchronization rate and the adaptivity to impact is the most important. It is found by Marduk Institute that, 14 years old mother-less teenager can establish the purest and stablest connection with EVA.
Netflix Censored Shinji and Kaworu's Relationship in New 'Evangelion' Dub, Fans Say. Netflix's new Neon Genesis Evangelion translations have some viewers confused, as they seem to suggest the relationship between Eva pilots Kaworu and Shinji is strictly platonic.
Even among such other great anime, Evangelion stands out as one of the best anime about the struggles of being 14. Shinji and Asuka have more reason than most teenagers to be angsty, but their feelings if not their circumstances should be relatable to anyone who is or remembers being that age.
Since this song's release in 1995, lyricist Neko Oikawa and composer Toshiyuki Omori would not collaborate for another 23 years. In 2018, the two came back together to create " Fighting Gold ", the eighth opening for the JoJo's Bizarre Adventure TV Anime.
Oikama took inspiration for the title from the manga A Cruel God Reigns.
She was orientated that the show was "difficult and philosphical". Oikama described it as: "older women", "mothers" and "14-year-old boys and girls", and decided to make it about the perspective of a mother when her child "leaves the nest".
"The Cruel Angel's Thesis" enjoyed long-lasting success and frequently appeared in popularity polls even decades after the first airing of Evangelion. It is considered as one of the best and most iconic theme songs of the otaku subculture, finding renewed popularity with the release of the Rebuild of Evangelion theatrical tetralogy. In 1996 and 1997, after the first broadcast of N…
During the production of Neon Genesis Evangelion, the show's director Hideaki Anno suggested using an existing piece of classical music as the series' opening theme. He first chose the Polovtsian Dances from the opera Prince Igor by Russian composer Aleksander Borodin. TV Tokyo rejected the proposal, judging such a piece unsuitable for the show; a classical composition from Prince Igor would have been, according to the producers, "unclear". Neon Genesis Evangelion pr…
Neko Oikawa was given the task of writing the lyrics; Ōtsuki instructed her to write something "philosophical" and to use complicated language. She focused on the key concepts of "mother", "boys and girls of fourteen" and "an adult woman". Oikawa, following the directives, completed the song in two hours, after having received few details of the anime and without having met Hidetos…
On October 25, 1995, "The Cruel Angel's Thesis" was released as a single in two versions: in the first one, with a cover price of ¥1,049, it was accompanied by a song by Takahashi entitled "Tsuki no meikyū" (月の迷宮, lit. ("Moon's labyrinth")); the second version, with a cover price of ¥961 yen, includes "Fly Me to the Moon" performed by Claire Littley, the show's closing theme song. The second version was reissued on March 26, 2003, for the release of the Renewal Edition of Neon …
In Japan, "A Cruel Angel's Thesis" gained popularity, remaining for years in the Oricon Karaoke Chart. The original version of the song was released as a single on October 25, 1995, and charted twenty-two times on the weekly Oricon charts, peaking at number twenty-seven. It was later re-released together with Claire's cover of "Fly Me to the Moon" and stayed on the chart for sixty-one weeks. In 1…
For "The Cruel Angel's Thesis", Gainax made a ninety-second opening video that was animated by Takeshi Honda and Shinya Hasegawa. The production took some time; it was still unfinished in July 1995, when the first two episodes were premiered at the company's second festival. The music video was completed in September of the same year, shortly before the anime premiered on TV Tokyo…
In 2015, Takahashi sang "The Cruel Angel's Thesis" at the Anime Expo in Los Angeles, California, and 2017 she performed it during Billboard Live in Tokyo, receiving a warm reception from the audience. On June 20, 2018, she performed the song during the Evangelion World Tour, which was organized to promote the song's re-release with restored and remastered audio along with "Tamashii no …