Of course he does! He just hopes he finishes Q first.

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Polker11 wrote:Back on the topic of episode 11's relativity
I never really liked that episode to be honest but the whole abortion imagery is probably there for some obscure reason (one of many Anno only knows the answer to) you could say is some messed up way that Asuka would rather have been aborted introducing the whole concept of Asuka shitty childhood or it could just back up the "Angels are children" theory. Another thing about episode 7 is (and I could be extremely wrong) that they never show who sabotaged (oh god I'm blanking) Jet-Alone(?) or who at last minute shut it down or in ep 11 when it is never revealed who cut the power source, Gendo did say that it was a human that did it, not an angel.
Bagheera wrote:I admit that'd make for some decent fanfic. Messy, but I can see how it'd work.
I don't. IMO the problem here is that you're thinking of Kaworu as a human, and expecting him to bond with Shinji as such. But he isn't a human. He's an angel, and his bonding with Shinji isn't one of friendship -- it's an attack (whether or not he intends it to be such is a matter of debate, but there's no denying what it is). It's supposed to slip past Shinji's defenses like they're not even there, and the slow buildup you describe doesn't fit with what Kaworu is.
Kaworu isn't some good friend who betrays the hero. Rather, he's the final enemy that's meant to break him. When you look at the episode in that context I think it's a lot easier to take at face value.
SawItAtAge10 wrote:This is an interesting position to take in the sense that almost every Angel's "character arc" is literally the span of one episode: they arrive, make an attack, and are destroyed in an Eva battle. The fact that Tarbis showed up as human in the form of Kaworu is part of the attack itself. Shinji's conversations with him are the attacks. The final attack is in line with every other angel's death: at the hands of an Eva (usually Unit 01).
Also, after Zereul (arguably the most aggressive up to that point), the Angels' tactics had shifted from physical brutality to psychological invasion. What's more invasive than human interaction?
In that sense, Shinji relinquishes part of his personal A.T. field through is communication with Kaworu who acts as sort of moth piece that vocalizes the motivations of the Angels themselves.
Thus, Kaworu kind of comes and goes just as much as an other angel in the series (with the exceptions of Lilith and Adam of course).
The fact that he comes as a human has many other foreshadowing/symbolic implications as well...
Shoujo Kakumei Asuka wrote:I agree with SEELE always winning even though their plans didn't seem that great. I honestly think that Eva was meant to mostly be about the characters, and that they almost didn't think many of the overall events were that important. That's why we're still piecing everything together 20 years after the fact. This is why SEELE was presented as something almost all-powerful within the series. They were presented as this ominous, oppressive force that further weighed down upon the already depressed and stressed-out characters within the show.
LordThaeon wrote:Objectively, the biggest weak spot of NGE is SEELE themselves.
The series consists of this organization making mostly idiotic and avoidable decisions that only hamper their plans and yet, they still end up "winning" and accomplishing their goal.
They only stand as antagonists because the plot wants them to succeed and their pathetic/selfish motivations are wrapped in pseudo-philosophy and unfounded self-righteousness.
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