Netflix somehow managed to make a great TV show based on a video game

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Somehow, against all expectations and logic, the first Netflix original show derived from a video game is very, very good. More impressive: The show is based on the "Castlevania" game series, a long-dormant game franchise most well-known for being immensely difficult to play. Its story was secondary at best, and early games involved bizarre dialogue that was mistranslated from the original Japanese.

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The "Castlevania" show on Netflix, however, is both a rare example of how to successfully adapt a video game to film and it's a great show unto itself.

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Castlevania (Netflix)

Netflix

With writing from legendary author Warren Ellis, "Castlevania" manages to flesh out the world and characters of fictional 15th century Wallachia (modern day Romania) better than any "Castlevania" game ever has. The first season is an almost-too-short four episodes, and it spends much of that time setting up the world, its characters, and their motivations.

We don't meet Trevor Belmont, the over-confident protagonist, until more than 20 minutes into the first episode. He's not the focus, really - this is a show about Dracula, in case that wasn't clear already. But Dracula in "Castlevania" isn't just some bloodthirsty monster sneaking around at night.

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Does this guy look like a bloodthirsty monster to you?

Castlevania (Netflix)

Netflix

Sure, he lives forever and is sustained by human blood, but look at that furrowed brow!

He looks like a sympathetic, dashing gentleman if you ask me. And that's basically what the show sets up from the start. Aside from living alone, and living in a menacing building, and the fact that he immediately threatens his visitors, the man commonly known as "Dracula" is introduced as an intellectual loner at absolute worst.

Forget about the literal field of human bodies on pikes leading up to his house - this guy's a puppy dog.

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Castlevania (Netflix)

Netflix

A still from "Castlevania," or the visual representation of the history of video game adaptations?

He's a man of the sciences, even, and he finds love through his studies - a human who wants to be a doctor, who manages to overcome the terrifying landscape around Dracula's home, and requests his help in mastering the sciences. 

He grants her that help after some charming back and forth, and, well, things don't go too well from there. Such is the life of a vampire in 15th century Eastern Europe.

Castlevania (Netflix)

Netflix

In the short 30 minutes of the first episode of "Castlevania," you'll find much of what makes the rest of the first season so surprisingly great: Sharp writing, beautiful art, and a thoughtful criticism of human existence. As ever, Warren Ellis brings a level of societal criticism that makes a potentially shallow piece of entertainment into something deeper than it requires. He could've just written a show about a dude who kills vampires, with pithy dialogue, and that'd probably be pretty good as well. Instead, he spends lengths of time debating the reality of institutionalized religion.

It's this level of sophistication - mixed with a healthy bit of necessary humor and gratuitous hyper-violence - that makes "Castlevania" such a success.

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Castlevania (Netflix)

Netflix

This shot, of the sky literally raining blood, is one of the tamest "violent" images I could pull from the first episode.

I'm not a fan of the game series, and I'm not a major fan of anime/graphic novel-style TV shows (with a few exceptions). I am, however, a big fan of the new "Castlevania" series; that Netflix has already renewed the show for a second season with double the episode count tells me that I'm not alone in that sentiment.

You can see the entire first season, which comprises four episodes, on Netflix right now. Check out the trailer for the first season here:

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