Netflix Castlevania: Night Creature, Tools and Humanity
I recently finished the last season of Netflix’s Caslevania series and one thing that was expanded much more were characters motives and justification. One of these characters that has significantly changed is a Forgemaster names Isaac.
Isaac was originally a Muslim slave who was abused by his former master which is why he developed such a distaste for humanity and is also why he became a Forgemaster. A Forgemaster is a person that is able to reanimate a corpse with a spirit of the dammed to create terrifying demonic creatures that are forced to do their creators bidding. These monsters are referred to as night creatures and have only been used for killing and destruction throughout the show.
During Isaacs journey across Europe, he has had various interactions with different characters, with some were friendly and defied his expectations while others ending in bloodshed. During this time Isaac is trying to evaluate his place in the world and whether he should continue his path of destruction on humanity or a new path of creation. At the end of season 3 Isaac liberates a town that has been taken over by a wizard that had used magic to enslave all the nearby towns residents to build his own town through forced labor. At the start of season 4 we see Isaac living in the town, taking time to rebuild and repairing the damage caused to it.
This is where some of the concepts of monsters we learned in @profmonster class as well as Mary Douglase’s book, Purity and Danger come in. As we know monsters can help be defined by boundaries and transgressions. When something is able to break those boundaries, we may perceive them as monstrous. While we can easily say that night creatures are monstrous because they break boundaries between things that are living and dead (similar to zombies or vampires) as well as moral boundaries such as killing and eating people, I specifically want to focus on transgressing boundaries what makes them not monstrous.
As I’ve said before night creatures have always been used as a means of destruction. As one of the night creatures describes themselves, “We kill, destroy and despoil it is our pleasure”. For the most part they are seen as tools of destruction and are believed to be bound by these rules of nature. Isaac challenges these ideas by having him and his night creatures clean and rebuild the city. He believes that an individual’s nature is fluid and they’re able to change how they act regardless of nature. “Your nature is fluid; you believe you are tools of destruction only because this is how your kind have always been used”.
This idea of a fluid nature breaks the boundary of what was initially thought to be a compulsory idea of night creatures. While night creatures are created from a reanimated corpse using a soul of the damned, they’ve only ever been used as tools before. Tools aren’t inherently evil; it depends on how they’re used. “You can use a hammer to build a house... or crack a skull”. This shows that night creatures are capable of not just destruction and death, but also creation and life, all they need is the right guidance from their Forgemaster.
Another boundary to explore is the concept of tools and humanity. As we just discussed, night creatures have mostly seen and used as tools, but they were also once people too. We learn earlier in season 3 that one of the night creatures was once a Greek philosopher that was persecuted and killed by the rising Christians in Athens who saw their philosophical questioning of Gods existence as a sin. During his conversation with Isaac, he’s offered a berry in which causes him to remember things about his past life that he wasn’t able to ever remember before. From this Isaac remarks about how their purpose in life can be more than just tools. “I can also choose in the end to recognize that you are not tools at all. for no tool would taste a berry and remember the time in its first life when it encountered them”.
This is another boundary that is explored as it’s questioning the humanity of night creatures and how close to humans they really are. This whole concept of purpose, tools can be compared to Aristotle’s idea of Telos where we study the true purpose of things and their end goals.
I think there’s a lot of other great examples of monsters throughout the show, but this was one of the few examples I wanted to cover. I’ve also attached video of the scenes I talked about.