Not unpopular and not wrong. It was one of "The Firsts" that really influenced people.
I don't love Evangelion, but I don't hate it. I lump it with other media of that era like Matrix, Lain, Friends & Seinfeld, etc. They walked so others can run.
Yeah, I remember when I was younger my older brother thought that show was the shit, so like 25 years later, I decide to pick it up on a whim. Watch a couple episodes, and couldn't get into it. The older women of the series were extremely inappropriate towards the child protagonist, and I just couldn't get past it. I was like "Damn Japan, you just gonna go full Japan on this show, huh"
a girl, asuka, is in the hospital. shinji is visiting and shakes her while crying 'wake up wake up' this shaking makes her vest unzip...
shinji, who is incredibly mentally ill, traumatised, and depressed responds to this by whipping his dick out and jerking off
fun fact: the maker of the manga said he was uncomfortable with drawing a scene where shinji and another guy, kaworu kissed, but never said anything about this scene
Never seen the show, but from the post the comment is from, the contrast went from unconscious girl and blood on hands to unconscious girl and jizz on hands.
It's a story about a bunch of mentally ill people abusing each other. It's very crude and meant to show the worst parts of humanity and what trauma does to them.
I’ll never get why people have to ruin shit and constantly make up theories and interpretations that only exist inside their head.
It reminds me of when I was in school and a teacher would make up some bullshit about symbolism in a book and later you’d see something the author said where it’s like “uh no it’s just a shoe, nothing else”.
constantly make up theories and interpretations that only exist inside their head
If you're annoyed at people trying to make sense of their world, I've got bad news for you. Humans are meaning making machines. It's just what we do. You might as well be annoyed by eating and breathing.
Another point that people often miss is that the reason why there's symbolism in everything that children read in English class is because... the teacher chose it. If there wasn't a clear line of evidence suggesting that there's strong themes and heavy symbolism in a particular book, then the teacher obviously wouldn't have chosen it. If your job is to teach literacy, you're not going to pick The Cat in the Hat as a teaching example.
Eva isn't really a 'the curtains are blue for no reason' type of series, though. Part of the fun of it is interpretation and analysis. Like utena, if you just look at the surface, you miss a lot. That might not be your thing, and it's fine, but analysis doesn't ruin a story like that for people who enjoy doing it.
The thing with interpretation in class is that you're forced to do it for a grade. It makes it boring and annoying. I've read multiple longass analysis of utena that were highly entertaining because i chose to read them. like chipping away at a block of wood to carve a figure might be the height of tedium for one person, and an awesome saturday night for another.
That's the thing about symbolism. What you get from a piece of art is what you get from it. It doesn't matter if the creator intended it or not your interpretation is perfectly valid, whether others agree with you or not.
I think this is a big part of why people don't understand or don't like this sort of analysis - so often, its written not as "I like this because it reminds me of X which I value." but as, "The curtains were blue which is the author representing the sadness of the character as they are going through this event." or worse yet, "The curtains were blue which is the author representing the sadness of the character as they are going through this event. Write a paper agreeing with me on this." When objective, non-personal interpretation that enforces author's intent as the true meaning (while also ignoring author's intent) is often what is taught and what people are exposed to, its no wonder that people view the whole practice as nonsense.