Geralt of Sanctuary

Netflix's Dracula is fun and fun, but can it outperform fate 2?

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As one of the bride of the Count, the BBC / Netflix mini series Dracula it is charming, fun, and fun – until it gets its whole life. The reason for this, is not the vampire bite, but rather the directors Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss bite more than they are willing to chew on the first three articles, such as Sherlock, play as three independent movies.

(Vol. Note: this contains the young robbers of the first season of Dracula)

While the first two episodes follow the plot of Bram Stoker's novel, Moffat and Gatiss twist the books by adding a nun: Agatha Van Helsing, who is now on her toes with the vampire keeper. The sex change (revealed about 20 minutes after the audience should have seen it themselves) doesn't sound like a stab at the hands Dollar and Em actor Dolly Wells. There is a play on Wood & # 39; Van Helsing compliments Claes Bang of Read Dracula, which comes out in the middle of a wild idea depending on how hungry you are.

Dracula & # 39;the first two episodes are filled with scenes that fall flat on the scene of Moffat's plot: dialogue that reads like a true chess game between a warrior hero and a man of equal intelligence. The series is at its best when Wells and Bang's conversations revolve around each other. Near the climax of Episode 1, "The Beast Rules & # 39; & # 39 ;, Sister Agatha opens the door for Dracula, who has realized that she cannot enter the space without an invitation. no of sex or. (However, Moffat's tendency toward hypocritical self-expression is also revealed. I've been keeping an eye out for me while Dracula and Van Helsing continue their breakup with the actual game of chess.)

Dracula and Sister Agatha Van Helsing went toe to toe.
Image: Netflix

After giving two episodes of moody season frenzy, Moffat and Gatiss put a big twist on the beginning of the finale: Dracula comes out of his box, which has fallen into the ocean with him inside it at the end of episode 2, "A Bloody Vine," and goes to the ocean. Soon you're surrounded by helicopters. Meanwhile, he was underwater for 123 years, and Van Helsing's great-grandson Zoe (also played by Dolly Wells) was preparing for his arrival as a scientist employed by the mysterious Jonathan Harker Foundation.

The building itself is not bad. In fact, arresting Dracula at a modern medical facility specifically designed to hold a vampire is to bring him back to the happy state of the Gothic palace where his victims were imprisoned. As we know from Sherlock, Moffat and Gatiss have been able to make excellent contemporary translations of early British literature. However Dracula, the writers completely rejected the tone and style that made the previous two episodes so compelling; instead they used the required motto.

The third episode, "Black Campus" is all over the place in terms of structure and tone. After being knocked off the beach, Dracula escapes from the cell, but is re-arrested. Zoe provides information to discredit the Harker Foundation, and then Dracula calls a lawyer (named Renfield, naturally, played by Mark Gatiss) who lets him be released on the basis that the foundation has no legal right to bind him to his will. The first half of the episode sounds like a police procedure with vampire hunters. Again, that's not an unpleasant idea, but in the context of the rest of the show it shows you are nowhere.

Dracula squeezes Jonathan Harker's face.
Image: Netflix

Then there is Lucy Westenra, the immoral striker who will be Dracula's bride. Critics have argued that Lucy's portrayal of this novel is a commendable face of Victoria's sexual oppression, but the Netflix series doesn't do anything to revitalize the character without turning her into a girl of a favorite group. Moffat and Gatiss chastise him in vain; After Dracula was killed, he was sent back to the cremation and the beams came out. She was redeemed only through the eyes of a boy who said she loved him, without showing clearly and firmly that he didn't care. It is a depiction of bad sex, and the addition of the voice of young women, though not surprising Moffat's history of writing women.

The series concludes with the final showdown between Van Helsing and Dracula. Zoe drank Dracula's blood, hugged her and let her talk to Sister Agatha. Yes it's quiet, but it's definitely a relief – Zoe is mostly a watery version of Agatha anyway. Zoe-as-Agatha pulls the curtains to reveal the arrival. Sunshine pours in and Dracula does, too it is not explosion or melting into dust. Agatha then describes her vision, which repeats itself as a visionary idea: Dracula is just a coward who fears death. His “laws” are not mere rituals, but they are driven by fear and shame.

This, it turns out, is a point Moffat and Gatiss want to make. They published the document in one of the book's most powerful villains, saying that his horrible behavior – exposing corpses in the dark – was not a strategy to trample down his victims, but being overly compelled meant protecting him from the sun that would reveal his deep shame. It's definitely true here about things that scare us because they're covered in darkness, and there was an argument for the sunlight shining on them (and maybe our deep shame.) But he died in the final five minutes of the episode, feeling half-baked. The scene ends with a picture punut – Dracula comes out of the shadows until he is warm and sunny – but that moment is never found.

It's fun
Image: Netflix

While "Rules of the Giant" and "Bloody Blood" are great fun, "The Dark Campus" doesn't have a theme. Its shape and tone are impossible to follow and its gender politics is chaotic. I would recommend that you watch the first two episodes and turn off your TV before the start of episode three, if it weren't for the last scene in the series: Agatha and Dracula having sex during the day after drinking Zoe's cancerous blood, killing them both. (Zoe has cancer, which is an important plot point that she doesn't care about at all.) The wall-to-wall bonuses end in a lyrical way, the kind of high-end chick that made the first two episodes so much fun.

The latter wraps up Dracula's arc with a fine bow, if ultimately unsatisfactory for the bow, but it seems like season two has never been released. Even before the series was released, Mark Gatiss told RadioTimes, "It's very difficult to kill a vampire. Do you know what I mean? All they do is wake up."

How Season 2 works is unclear, especially as the two main characters die in each others arms. Will we get the first one, which shows how difficult it has been for Dracula? Will Dracula and Van Helsing meet again next time, resurrected by the Harker Foundation? Certainly Gatiss and Moffat have indicated that they are willing to play around with time-limits, but I hope they will raise the tone for Campy if Netflix orders another season.

Dracula is now streaming on Netflix.

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