Saturday, January 25, 2014

Dracula Season (or series?) finale Review



Lady Jayne, and Grayson 
Dracula came full circle in a couple of ways last night on its season or series finale.  The first was the series opened as Alexander Grayson/Dracula (Jonathan Rhys-Meyers) tested his "wireless electricity" machine, and the first season ended with the same test but decidedly different results.  This time the demonstration ended in disaster as the machine blew up leaving death and destruction in its wake. 

The second was with Lady Jayne Weatherby (Victoria Smurfit), the huntress.  The season's ongoing storyline put them in an love-hate relationship; always breaking up, and getting together.  They were a good match with their secrets. Jane hiding that she was a huntress, and Grayson that he was Dracula.  But as the season ended the jig was up, Jayne and her band of hunters had figured out Dracula was back, and more than likely he was none other than Alexander Grayson. 

She arrived at his warehouse to find the disaster in progress; the fire burning out of control, bodies everywhere.  Their final confrontation came in an incredible fight scene ending with Jane begging that he kill her instead of turn her.  In an act of compassion, he obliged.

You know who wasn't so full of compassion? Abraham Van Helsing (Thomas Krestchmann).  The last few episodes he's gone straight off the rails.  He's kidnapped Browning's (Ben Miles)  children, and using Dracula's blood turned them into vampires.  In the finale, he lured Browning to his hideout, and let the kids feed on him, and in so doing kill their own father.  As if that wasn't enough bloodshed for a doctor, he killed Renfield (Nonso Anozie)  by wounding him in the stomach.  The last time we see him he's on the floor bleeding to death.  He also destroyed his lab, including Grayson's daytime serum.

Jonathan (Oliver Jackson-Cohen) ended the season by losing everything.  He lost Mina when he slept with Lucy, maybe lost his job when he betrayed Grayson by working with his enemies.  To complete his humiliation he suffered guilt over the fact he's killed Lord Davenport (Robert Bathurst).  But Grayson knows about that, and would use it for blackmail material.  The episode's final scene hints of a partnership between him, and Van Helsing.

Lucy (Katie McGrath) meanwhile is a loose thread.  She doesn't know what she is, or that she needs blood to live.  She ended up killing her own mother by feeding on her.  This was one of the episode's weak points; no confrontation between her and Grayson or scene where he explains what she is.  I haven't read the book in ages but I think she doesn't survive long as a vampire.

The Mina/Ilona  (Jessica DeGouw) story is another one.  Mina of course ended up in Grayson's arms, his explanation that it was mere coincidence she looked exactly like "someone he loved" didn't wash, especially when they were hinting it something more.   It was one of the weaknesses of the entire season. 

It deserves a second season, with a couple new writers to tighten up the writing.

Musings on a second season of Dracula:

-They'll take Jonathan's character in the bitter, angry direction hinted at in Dracula: The Un-dead

-There will be some kind of past-life or familial  connection between Ilona and Mina.

- Renfield will live; it's impossible to imagine any version of the story of Dracula without him. He'll also develop a story of his own.

-Van Helsing will turn into the second season's "big bad."

-Mina will eventually figure out the key to the "day serum."

-Needing a doctor on his side, Grayson will eventually tell Mina what/ who he really is.


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