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Attack on Titan Wiki

This article is about the novelization of the first live-action movie. For other uses of this name, see Attack on Titan (Disambiguation).


Eren protects Armin and Mikasa-60px This article is incomplete.
Please feel free to edit this article to add missing information and complete it.
Specifically, it needs full summary and expansion of novel and movie differences.

Shōsetsu Eiga Attack on Titan (小説 映画 進撃の巨人 ATTACK ON TITAN Shōsetsu Eiga Shingeki no Kyojin ATTACK ON TITAN?, lit. Attack on Titan: Film Novel) is a novelization written by Touji Asakura of Attack on Titan, The Movie: Part 1, the first live-action adaptation of the Attack on Titan manga. It was given an English release by Vertical on November 22, 2016 in a compilation novel titled Attack on Titan: End of the World that combined Shōsetsu Eiga Attack on Titan and Shōsetsu Eiga Attack on Titan: End of the World.

Plot[]

More than a hundred years ago, most of humanity was devoured by Titans that suddenly appeared, and civilization collapsed. In order to prevent the Titans from invading, the survivors of this Titan War built three giant walls, secured their living space inside, and maintained peace. However, just because the Walls remained intact for 100 years, there is no guarantee that they will not be destroyed today.[1]

Summary[]

The chapters' English titles are taken from the English compilation release.

Prologue[]

プロローグ (Purorōgu)

I. Limbo[]

辺獄 (Hengoku)

II. The Gates of Hell[]

地獄の門 (Jigoku no Mon)

III. City of Dis[]

ディーテの市 (Dīte no Ichi)

IV. The Late Repentant[]

遅悔者 (Chikaisha)

V. Cocytus[]

コキュートス (Kokyūtosu)

VI. Giudecca[]

ジュデッカ (Judekka)

Novel and Movie Differences[]

  • Armin keeps his wind-up timer for himself at his workplace rather than giving it to a child as he does in the film.
  • The Survey Corps is an already established organization at the time of the breaching of the First Wall, whereas in the movie the Survey Corps was in development at the time of the Wall's breaching. Instead, in the novel, there is news of a "Citizen Survey Party" which is set to embark beyond the Walls.
  • Eren, Mikasa, and Armin investigate the Wall because Eren believes he had seen a hole appear midway up the Wall before quickly closing. In the movie, the three approach the Wall out of curiosity.
  • Souda strongly advises against Eren joining the Survey Party and going beyond the Walls. In the movie, he is the one to inform Eren of the newly forming Survey Corps and seems to support his desire to see the outside world.
  • Mikasa is caught by a Titan when she tries to rescue a young girl and seemingly injures her leg in the chaos. In the movie, she rescues an infant and does not appear to suffer any injury.
  • Kubal's speech is to the new recruits of the Survey Corps is much more lengthy than his speech in the film, detailing previous attempts to retake the First Wall as well as the briefing on the upcoming mission. Rather than introducing the recruits to vertical maneuvering equipment, Hange instead gives precise details for the plan to seal the breach in the First Wall, with her VME introduction being given at an earlier time.
  • Armin is much more skeptical of the operation than he is in the movie, noting the type of fuel used for the vehicles which should be unavailable after the fall of the First Wall District's agricultural areas.
  • Eren and Armin find Souda in the mess hall before the mission, where he is serving soup to the recruits. In the movie, Souda is instead sitting outside in a drunken stupor.
  • When Yunohira stops the convoy in the novel, they find some cows and a line of freshly severed heads, which Armin finds highly suspicious. In the film, the severed heads are absent.
  • Eren and Hiana's encounter with an infant-like Titan is absent in the novel.
  • Sannagi does not throw the Titan that kills Yunohira in the novel.
  • Captain Shikishima introduces himself to the recruits upon their arrival in Omotemachi before Mikasa arrives. In the film, the two are silent as the recruits see them, and they maneuver away from the scene without a word.

References[]

Navigation[]

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