The film is the "real" physical ending, taking place concurrently with the TV’s psychological ending. It is unflinchingly brutal, featuring violence, sexual trauma, and existential despair that makes the TV series look tame. The film is split into two halves: Episode 25: Air and Episode 26: Sincerely Yours .
Most mecha anime of the 80s and 90s featured heroes who loved piloting robots. Shinji hates it. The film punishes the viewer who came to see "cool fights." Asuka’s glorious battle ends in brutal dismemberment. Shinji’s momentary relief becomes immediate despair. Anno is asking the otaku: Why are you here? Are you escaping real life by watching anime? The film is an intervention.
The orange tang of LCL represents the primordial soup—the loss of self. The film drags you into that soup, dissolves your preconceptions about narrative structure, and then spits you back out onto the beach. You are left with the taste of salt, the echo of Komm, süsser Tod, and the lingering discomfort of Asuka’s final judgment.
Simultaneously, the JSSDF (Japan Strategic Self-Defense Force) attacks NERV HQ on orders from SEELE, the secret cabal controlling humanity's destiny. They slaughter the NERV staff in a hail of gunfire. Asuka, awakening from her psychic coma after realizing her mother’s soul lives within Unit-02, unleashes a legendary rampage. She single-handedly destroys the entire fleet of mass-production Evangelion units—until they turn the tables. In one of the most gruesome scenes ever animated, the fake EVAs grow copies of the Lance of Longinus and devour Unit-02 alive. Asuka screams, "I'll kill you! I'll kill you all!" before being impaled.