So I watched End of Evangelion yesterday and I have to ask, why do people like this movie? Or this series?
I am actually curious, because I found both pretty bad. I watched it with someone who has seen the whole series and all the movies multiple times and someone who has never seen anything about it, and all three of us concluded afterwards that it was "like someone had taken bad LSD while reading a bunch of Sigmund Freud books."
It got huge in Japan first, then developed a popular (or cult?) following in America.
NGE was the first anime that really got people, on a large scale, to look deeper into it. It was one of the first (if not the first?) anime deconstructions of a genre, to the point that the genre shifts from traditional mecha (young male protagonist pilots a robot to save the world) abruptly to a full-on psychology series where the audience is left asking a -lot- of questions if they don't look deeper into the series and really explore the characters. It was done professionally and in such a way that sucked people in and kept them thinking about it.
Probably one of the biggest factors for its success in Japan is the overwhelming apocalyptic feel. Not only is the world post-apocalyptic in the beginning, they are facing an imminent apocalypse in which there is such a thing as an 'apocalypse of the mind'. According to scholars on the subject, the Japanese are more receptive to that sort of thing (and are more into the moment-of-apocalypse rather than the averting-the-apocalypse that the West is more appreciative of), maybe being related to the firebombing and nuclear bombing of Japan at the end of World War II. Because it was done so well and in such a way that prompted deeper thought, in addition to being original, Japanese philosophers and psychologists actually studied NGE.
Its success in Japan can also be somewhat attributed to the financial conditions of the industry at the time and there was a sort of a dry spell in the wake of Akira, which was eventually filled by Ghost in the Shell and Neon Genesis Evangelion. It's success made it exportable to America, which made it a Big Deal, and a lot of people watched it because it was one of the only things around, even if they perhaps were not otherwise interested in the subject. Most of the American fans stuck around for the same reason it was such a success in Japan.
GAINAX earned a reputation for its crazy/bullshit/just-what-is-going-on/trolling endings off of NGE, with its legendary budget-missing anime ending and Anno's screw-you-for-making-me-do-this movie End of Evangelion. Fans of GAINAX's signature later work (FLCL, TTGL, P&SwG) sometimes feel obligated to watch what started it all.
That's a bit more of an objective look into why people like NGE, or why a lot of people watch NGE (and then may end up liking it).
I've had my eye on Code Geass. Anyone see it? Care to reccomment it? How are the giant robots? Lots of whining kids around? Which one should I start with if I do?
Thanks in advance
I've seen it. Yes, I recommend it. The giant robots are somewhat smaller than other giant robots. There is giant robots and then essentially magic (Geass), and both play important, core parts but there is a greater story beyond them that is most important (See: the manga doesn't even have giant robots). The robots that do feature initially are almost all standard-issue. Later in the series a lot of R&D and resource acquisition has been done such that there are much more unique mecha around. There are a couple of whining kids, and they are usually the ones that the fans don't care for, but they largely have side roles (some people have a couple issues with Suzaku, but nothing enough to make the series unentertaining).
What do you mean "which one"? If you're talking about R1 or R2, then R1, because they are the same series and R1 is the first season. If you're talking about the new set of OVAs "Akito the Exiled", then I have no idea because I haven't seen it yet and only one has been released. You'll lose a lot of you don't watch Lelouch of the Rebellion, though, so watch that.
Code Geass is in my top five favorites, swapping between second and third usually. It has the best ending of any series, anime or live action, regardless of genre, in my opinion. It was absolutely fulfilling.