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See also: Hell

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"God created Hell. If God created Hell. If God is perfect, then causing Lucifer to go to Hell is his plan. The wisdom of Hell and its night creatures is God's wisdom."
Sala in "I Have a Scheme"

Hell appears in the Castlevania animated series in a more palpable form than it does in the game series, making it clear that this realm indeed exists in this universe, although likely in a different dimension or another metaphysical world, but which nonetheless can be reached from the real world if the proper means are employed.

Plot[]

After Vlad Dracula threatened the people of Targoviste in 1475, telling them he was going to destroy the city after one year had passed in revenge for the unjust execution of his wife, Lisa, using this time to assemble an army of creatures of the night - he at one point also stated that these warriors would be gathered "from the guts of Hell itself".[1] Dracula then proceeded to make full use of the advanced technologies his castle counted with –both scientific and supernatural– to build his army of night creatures with the help of his Forgemasters, who summoned souls from Hell. As stated by Varney, only "Human hands can reach into Hell."

Besides souls of the dead ending up in Hell as punishment, another possible method mentioned in the series to reach Hell from the real world would be by traveling through the Infinite Corridor, which, as Saint Germain pointed out, is a "route to many other worlds, and it's certainly possible that one of them is Hell." Nonetheless, he also mentioned that the corridor was nothing more than a system of doors that could lead to other lands, separated from this world's space and time. As such, it's implied that in this universe, Hell is just another realm, only different than ours, and that the creatures we would call "demons" are simply its natural inhabitants.

At the end of the ninth episode of the third season, "The Harvest", Vlad and Lisa can be briefly seen finally reunited and holding each other in Hell - in a place that has taken the form of Lisa's burned house in Lupu, the same place where the events that marked the beginning of Vlad's eventual fall from grace took place.

Gallery[]

Artworks[]

Trivia[]

  • Certain places of Hell in the animated series are very similar to specific locations depicted in Dante Alighieri's narrative poem the Divine Comedy, notably a ravine overhanging a blood river crossing a forest of corpses (reminiscent of the Seventh Circle) and an ice river where bodies of damned are imprisoned (reminiscent of the Ninth Circle).
  • According to Adam Deats, co-director of the show, the Hell depicted in the series is a reflection of the people in it, reminding them of their supposed crimes. Lisa's burned house in Hell could thus symbolize a connection to her life.[2]

References[]

  1. "One year! It will take me one year to summon an army from the guts of Hell itself!" - Dracula in "Witchbottle".
  2. Adam Deats confirmed that the ruins of the house where Vlad and Lisa are shown in Hell is a copy of Lisa's burned house in Lupu and can symbolize the connection to her life.

See also[]

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