Netflix’s Dracula Season 2 Theory: How The Vampire Could Return – Screen Rant

Netflixs Dracula was mostly well-received by audiences for its reliance on horror techniques and its charming portrayal of Count Dracula himself. Although season 1 seemed to mark a definitive end to the vampires story, there are a few ways showrunners Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss could bring the Count back in a second season.

Each episode of Dracula is a chapter in the vampires journey from Transylvania to England. Very few characters are present consistently throughout the series. Instead, Count Dracula (Claes Bang), and Agatha Van Helsing (Dolly Wells) and her descendants are the common line through episodes that mostly introduce completely new settings and characters. Although there are no firm plans for season two, this opens up future episodes to the possibility of time skips or drastic changes of scenery.

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Season one, episode three, The Dark Compass sees Dracula operating in modern-day London. He is eventually tracked down and defeated by Zoe Van Helsing (Dolly Wells) with the spiritual guidance of Agatha. He drinks Zoes blood, which is poisonous to him due to Zoes terminal cancer. As the series comes to a close, audiences watch them seemingly die together.

Assuming the Count really did die in that final scene, there is nothing stopping the showrunners from making a second season that focuses on the enigmatic vampires origins. After all, Agatha Van Helsing died in episode two, Blood Vessel, but the show found a creative way to both keep Dolly Wells excellent character acting in Zoe and bring Agatha back. While season one delves into the vampires demise, his origins provide an interesting mystery for season two. Although the undead are understood as a natural part of the world in Dracula, the count himself is portrayed as unique. Audiences know how he created vampires, his brides, but a second season would allow the showrunners to explore who created Dracula.

According to Dracula himself, drinking Zoes blood will kill him. But earlier in that scene, Van Helsing proves hes been wrong before about what can harm him. He avoids crosses not because they actually hold physical power but because of a powerful fear. Up until the moment Van Helsing pulls a heavy curtain off the wall, pouring sunlight onto an unharmed Dracula, he is certain that sunlight would kill him. There is no reason he couldnt be wrong again. After all, Dracula is the most powerful undead creature around; he is the precedent-setter. Perhaps blood cant kill, not him anyway. He is the one that sets the rules of the beast and he has said many times, blood is lives. Not singular, plural.

Dracula fears the cross because he is terrified of death and cannot understand someones willingness to voluntarily sacrifice their life for others. However, Dracula himself makes a sacrifice. In drinking Zoes blood, he commits an act of mercy, or maybe even love, but also submits himself to death. Analyzing the symbolism behind the cross further, Jesus did not merely sacrifice himself and die forever. He also came back. If Draculas storyline follows through on the analogy, Dracula allowing himself die would be the key to his being reborn. Only in submitting to death would he truly conquer it. A second season of Dracula could explore what the vampire does with this power. Is he a changed man, no longer the villain but one who does good, or has he eschewed all vulnerability and is now more powerful than ever?

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Shannon Lewis is a features and news writer on Screen Rant. She has experience in editorial working as the deputy editor for Specialty Food, an online and print magazine, curating its news section and social media. She has worked as a freelance writer since 2017, writing articles, features, and profiles in a wide range of topics, from business and tech to pop culture and media. Previously, she has also worked as a ghost writer for a fiction manuscript, and co-founded arts-and-literature magazine, Octarine.Hailing from Queretaro, Mexico, she is a graduate of the University of East Anglia's English Literature with Creative Writing program. An avid reader and fan of writing, she leverages her love of literature to dissect movies in her favorite genres, including horror, rom-coms, and superhero movies. Her focus is on the cross-section between story, cultural background, and character development. When she isn't busy reading everything ever published under the mantle of Image Comics, you might find her writing fiction, rock climbing, or putting together a horror anthology with friends.

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Netflix's Dracula Season 2 Theory: How The Vampire Could Return - Screen Rant

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