Review: Castlevania: Nocturne Season One
Overview
‘Castlevania: Nocturne’ follows the vampire-whipping exploits of Richter Belmont, who is a descendant of the Belmont clan from the original ‘Castlevania’ series. The show is set smack dab in the middle of a vamped-up version of the French Revolution, where the ruling class has partnered with a cabal of sexy vampires in an attempt to defend the status quo from rebellious local poor people. The peasants have been organizing themselves to protest over-taxation and having their blood drained like, all the time. Aiding the nobility is pretty much every institution treasured by the Ancien Régime, bolstered by a helpful army of undead chimeric creatures that come in all shapes and sizes, from lamia to Goro.
Standing in their way is Richter and his ka-tet, who have been drawn together to vanquish an entity known as the Vampire Messiah that threatens to conquer first Europe, and then the world. The crew of hunters makes their base at the home of magical mother/daughter team Tera and Maria Renard, and is rounded out by Annette, a former slave with serious matter manipulation powers, and Edouard, who is a great singer and is also just a really good guy.
Also in the mix is Olrox, an extra sexy vampire who plays it close to the vest. He also has Quetzalcoatl powers, commitment issues, and totally killed Ritcher’s mom in front of him when he was a child.
Our Take
The plot of ‘Nocturne’ is partially based on two Castlevania games – Rondo of Blood (1993) and Symphony of the Night (1997). It is also a sequel to the Netflix series Castlevania, which ran from 2017 to 2021. That first series was helmed by prolific writer/sex pest/British guy Warren Ellis, whose illustrious and tawdry career ran from 1986 to 2021.
The Castlevania franchise also got its start in 1986, which was a hell of a year for video games. In addition to Castlevania, ‘86 was the year of Legend of Zelda, Metroid, and Dragon Quest, and countless other legacy properties. For a lot of people, that was the year that the home gaming experience went from fumbling fingers poking buttons to feeling the first psychic merging with intuitive controls that then led to the current Cronenbergian new flesh nightmare-verse that we all love and struggle to exist in today. That first Castlevania game has spawned many sequels, but Symphony of Blood is a straight-up masterpiece of horror gaming, which means that any animated show based on it better be really fucking good.
So with all of that in mind… ‘Castlevania Nocturne’ is really fucking good. Great vampire stories are not just thrilling tales of lusty death bites, but allegories seeking to explore the fissures that appear in any society where some people have a lot and others have a little. It’s a show that can absolutely be appreciated on the most basic level of human enjoyment – as a stand alone series chock-a-block with cool-looking mayhem. Suitably scary night creatures populate this version of France – (human corpses grafted together with demon souls from hell) You can never have too many arms when you’re a night creature – if you’re called upon to ferry a row boat full of corpses to the night creature making machine, you’re going to want to have a fucking ton of arms. It’s a show where busty babes conjure dream tigers to battle even bustier babes with electric fire hair, and a crazy hot drawing of a dude comes so close to showing his dick one time that you spill hot coffee on your phone and legs (based on a true story). But you know what else is hot as fuck? Examining historical context with the purpose of illuminating modern day social issues through a post-colonial lens!!
"There are also other characters that come and go (also owned by the Warner Bros. Discovery conglomerate media company)."
Huh. Is that just referring to other characters from the show itself, or is this implying that the new season is going to have cameos from other WBD IPs