Devil May Cry series from Netflix - Netflix’s ‘Devil May Cry’ Turns Dante’s Story Into Allegory For War On Terror, Complete With American Invasion Of Hell Set To Green Day’s ‘American Idiot’

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Netflix’s ‘Devil May Cry’ Turns Dante’s Story Into Allegory For War On Terror, Complete With American Invasion Of Hell Set To Green Day’s ‘American Idiot’


What do the band Green Day, the country of Iraq, and Capcom’s Devil May Cry action series all have in common?

If you’re a person with any sort of sense, you’ll know the answer is ‘absolutely nothing’ – but if you’re producer Adi Shankar, who in taking ‘bastardizing a given piece of source material with hamfisted political preaching’ to a new level has used Netflix’s Devil May Cry animated series as a vehicle to criticize America’s post-9/11 invasion of the Middle East.

Coming from the same mind responsible for Netflix’s previous Castlevania, Castlevania: Nocturne, and Captain Laserhawk: A Blood Dragon Remix, expectations for Dante’s latest small screen adventure were (understandably) extremely low ahead of its official release, sinking even further with each new detail revealed about its production, such as its featuring of contemporary, real-world pop-culture references in its script and its ignoring of the game series’ iconic soundtracks in favor of very entry level nu-metal picks.

And though preview materials left fans presuming that the worst they had to fear from Shankar’s latest was an unsurprising misunderstanding of the source material (as best demonstrated by his depiction of Dante as a try-hard, attention-seeking manchild rather than an aloof-but-quick-to-lock-in wisecracker), as the old adage goes, things can always get much worse.

As fans of the game know, the story of the Devil May Cry series revolves around an ongoing, seemingly eternal battle between the ‘good’ forces of the Human world and the ‘evil’ legions of Hell, which in this world is a genuinely supernatural realm akin to its depiction in the Christian religion and was borne from the absolute darkness that existed prior to the concept of ‘light’ coming into being.

As a result of these origins, the inhabitants of Hell are creatures of natural evil, existing solely to inflict pain and terror on humanity in order to take over their realm and establish themselves as the ruling class of all existence – and while some are capable of higher thought and even being able to develop genuine love for a human, such as Dante’s father Sparda, most demons are nothing more than beasts who care for nothing more than accomplishing their goals.

However, in Shankar and Netflix’s take on the series, Hell is instead depicted as a full-on separate universe à la DC or Marvel Comics, with its inhabitants being not demons, but rather “a related but separate evolutionary branch from Homo Sapiens.”

“They are natives of another universe, one that exists parallel to our own,” explains Dr. Fisher, the scientific director for the series’ mysterious DARKCOM group, to the US President and his Joint Chiefs of Staff of a mysterious “terrorist” group that laid waste to the Vatican just hours prior to the start of the first episode. “My current hypothesis is that one of our common ancestors found their way into this other universe where they adapted and became stronger, able to survive the more hostile environment there.”

Pressed by one of the government board’s members, “Just to be clear, the hostile environment you’re talking about is Hell,” Dr. Fisher pushes back, “Mythology exists to explain reality. Why do you think every culture on Earth tells the same stories about the Demons and the underworld?”

To this end, it is further revealed that rather than a world of fire, brimstone, and eternal pain, ‘Hell’ – or the Japanese ‘Makai’, as its inhabitants refer to it – is instead a planet whose surface has been absolutely ravaged by the plundering of the demons’ upper castes, in doing so practically leaving its lower-class, more human inhabitants to either die by starvation or by choking on polluted air.

Enter the series’ main antagonist, the White Rabbit, who has made it his mission to help those suffering in Makai to cross over to Earth in the hopes of escaping their torment and someday thriving, even if it means his forceful manipulations of the barrier between the two planes allows for the occasional ‘monstrous demon’ to cross over and wreak havoc.

This very on-the-nose ‘demons = refugees’ analogy is driven home even harder in Episode 5, Descent, when Lady, acting on orders to storm a local tenement building occupied by the White Rabbit’s forces and either arrest or kill any and all demons, is impeded in her efforts by the series’ rendition of the Cavaliere Angelo demon (which shouldn’t exist given the series’ established timeline, as it doesn’t seem as if Dante has even fought the original Nelo Angelo yet, but I digress).


Promptly finding herself on the ropes, Lady attempts to duck away and hide inside of a nearby apartment, begging with its scared occupants, a family of three, for help before reluctantly being allowed in.

After managing to evade a subsequent sweep of the apartment by Cavaliere Angelo and finding herself shocked that the family were not human but demon, Lady, under the influence of a hallucinogen lobbied at her by said enemy, begins to mistake her hosts for aggressive Hellspawn, prompting her to draw her gun on them under the assumption of self-defense.

With the tension rising between both parties by the second, Lady and the family’s mother and father proceed to have the following conversation:

Father: “Now you turn your gun on us? On our kids?”
Lady: “Your friends slaughtered my team”.
Father: “You think we’re with, with them?”
Mother: “She’s a sapien. Of course she thinks all demons are the same.”
Lady: If you’re not with the White Rabbit’s gang, why are you here?
Father: We…we needed a way out. He had one.
Lady: A way out of where?
Mother: Makai. You call it the demon realm, or hell. But it’s not hell. It’s worse. A desolate place barely suited for life. And that was before the warlords ravaged what few resources we had and turned the atmosphere toxic. Only the strongest Makaians can stand to breathe it. For those like us..
Father: The air itself is poison. Children rarely survive their first year. We couldn’t accept that fate.
[The White Rabbit] showed up with [a device to bridge the worlds] a year ago, offering passage to anyone who wanted. Dozens of families like us came.
Mother: We did it so our children could live. And live in a better world. Then we realized, there is no better world for us. Sapiens hate and fear our kind. We’ll never be able to mix openly amongst you.
Father: We have no choice but to stay here in hiding, doing whatever that lunatic tells us, and turning a blind eye to his…
Mother: The children who are orphans, he does tests on them, experiments.
Father: All we’re trying to do is survive. Like you.

And to really drive this ‘9th Grade AP US Politics’-level criticism of the Iraq War home, enter the series’ overarching villain, United States Vice President William Baines (as voiced by the late great Kevin Conroy in one of his final performances).


A deeply religious man whose utmost belief amounts to ‘Everything according to God’s plan’, Baines funds the ongoing research into and military actions against Hell under the belief that it is the United States’ duty to save the collective souls of humanity by waging “the final war against Hell itself.”


“Even I, for much of my life, could not comprehend his true plan,” the VP pontificates as his plan begins to come to fruition in the season finale. “God has never asked us to sit idly by and await his kingdom on Earth, but to build it ourselves.”

Ultimately getting his hands on the White Rabbit’s aforementioned device, Baines proceeds to rip open a tear between Earth and Hell.

And that’s when a squadron of fighter jets begin raining missiles onto Hell, kicking off a full-on montage set to the tune of Green Day’s American Idiot depicting the American military undertaking a ‘War on Freedom’-era invasion of the alternate universe.

“My fellow Americans, what I am about to tell you is going to sound shocking,” declares US President Hopper over footage of the Uroboros Corporation establishing a corporate foothold in Hell, rounding up its citizens, and mining its soil for natural resources. “Even unbelievable. But as your president, it is my duty not to conceal these hard truths, but to lay them before you so we may confront them together as a nation. The truth is, Hell is real. Demons are real.”

Just…see for yourself:

It's worse in motion. pic.twitter.com/7abSpwRTqU
— G-Warning (@GWarning89) April 3, 2025

All in all, however bad you thought Devil May Cry was going to be, it’s genuinely so much worse.

And please, dear video game developers, for the love of God: stop letting Adi Shankar handle your IPs.
 
Im glad theres very few defenders of this bomb in contrast with the Netflix Castlevania.

The big thing, I guess, is that DMC got a ton of cutscenes that show clearly the characters of the people on it, its not a story from a simple game where you need a japanese manual to know it, people were more willing to forgive Castlevania for shitting on the characters because of it, but for DMC you know them too well to get a pass, theres no one going "So you wanted the series to just be non stop action in the castle walking from point a to b?"
 
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GET REKT YOU SOULLESS STREET SHITTER!
 
Im glad theres very few defenders of this bomb in contrast with the Netflix Castlevania.

The big thing, I guess, is that DMC got a ton of cutscenes that show clearly the characters of the people on it, its not a story from a simple game where you need a japanese manual to know it, people were more willing to forgive Castlevania for shitting on the characters because of it, but for DMC you know them too well to get a pass, theres no one going "So you wanted the series to just be non stop action in the castle walking from point a to b?"
But why should there have been less defenders for this than Castlevania when that was a far greater perversion of the characters, lore, etc. than this? At least with this, and I take no pleasure saying this, the annoying Marvel-esque dialogue & humor fits better here than in Castlevania. A series that generally speaking was never known for having any humor or having characters run their mouths in general.
 
But why should there have been less defenders for this than Castlevania when that was a far greater perversion of the characters, lore, etc. than this?
Like I said, in general, "fans" who only played sotn (if they played) basically went "hur, but you wont have a faithful adaptation if all you do is move on the castle facing the same monsters for an entire season", as if the problem was that. They go with "its an adaptation" as if it means anything, the 2 Super Mario films are adaptations and totally different from eachother, as well the games. These people would defend Dragon Ball Evolution if it came today.

That or "the original characters were too simple, expanding is good", which it is, but only if done something useful with them. Who cares if, lets say, Isaac stops being one note if hes now an OC who only got the name in common with the original character? I will admit, the first season kinda worked, it did the "expand these one note guys whose personality was in a japanese manual" well enough, church bad and all were problems, but passable. But them from 2 onwards its a collection of OCs, no music from the games, the personality being botched, pretty much no monster from the games (I dont care if they look good, these are Apostles from Berserk, not Castlevania monsters) and them, no Castle and no Dracula.

For DMC really, its because the personality is at full display on the games, you only need to play DMC 3 to know all you need about Dante and his personality, botching it is much more noticeable. Sure theres also defenders for this shit, but again I think most people who like either series never really played the games
 
I hate to say it but reading transcripts of these interviews with Mr. Street Shitter actually make me a little MATI.

"I'm like a deep cut DMC fan."

"It's a new universe, but it is one constructed from a complete obsessive understanding of canon, right?"


And yet the series actively demonstrates he has no fucking idea what he's doing. The fact that he's this confident in his own genuine retardation is astounding but I guess you HAVE to have your head up your own ass to get the kind of position he does.

"It's to essentially take the full spectrum of knowledge and to build something that respects the past while unlocking new narrative possibilities."

HOW?! WHAT THE FUCK DO YOU MEAN? IT LITERALLY CONTRADICTS ESTABLISHED LORE! WHAT ARE YOU TALKING ABOUT?! And nobody who matters cares enough to tell him "Um, no retard you're wrong." fucking kill me, please.
 
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And season 2 is just as bad.

Now, people are going, "Maybe we were too harsh with DMC 2013 and the 2007 anime." No, just because a new product is worse, it doesnt mean older products magically become better.
 
I guess Warren Ellis probably was responsible for what worked about Castlevania, huh?

I've grown to hate this pajeet.
 
2007 anime
Hot take, the 2007 anime wasn't even bad people just hated it for not being what they expected. (Which I don't blame them, I would also expect a DMC anime to be constant action, naturally.)
And even then, any episode from the original anime blows everything the Netflix series does out of the water by sole reason of actually being accurate to the fucking lore instead of fanfiction bullshit.

I hate to say it, but even the DmC Reboot isn't as bad as the Netflix series, at least with the Reboot in my opinion it was retarded but in such a way I could find amusement in it. The Netflix series just makes me want to neck myself. It has 0 redeeming qualities. Okay, I do like Afterlife at the very least. But that's just my mid 2000s self talking. It's also not a very DMC sounding song admittedly so I don't entirely count it.
 
Hilariously, a concept about America waging war on Hell would make for a great game or at least a show. Demons deserve every bit of ruin that comes their direction.

But as for this anime, its an abortion. Made from a shitty premise, will continue on a shitty premise.
 
Hot take, the 2007 anime wasn't even bad people just hated it for not being what they expected. (Which I don't blame them, I would also expect a DMC anime to be constant action, naturally.)
It is boring.

Now, one thing I enjoyed a lot was the episode with the demon brothers that show a much better "not all demons are evil" compared to Shankar's shitshow.

The demon is still a slave to their nature, their sense of honor, even when it is pointless, the guy chooses to fight Dante because that is what demons do, and after his brother fights to avenge him, even though, as Dante points out, it is illogical.
 
Capcom making DMC5 and fucking over the jeet's fanfiction is one of the smarter things they've done.
 
But why should there have been less defenders for this than Castlevania when that was a far greater perversion of the characters, lore, etc. than this? At least with this, and I take no pleasure saying this, the annoying Marvel-esque dialogue & humor fits better here than in Castlevania. A series that generally speaking was never known for having any humor or having characters run their mouths in general.
With Castlevania at least Konami has the common sense to Bat Embargo the shitter from touching Simon Belmont.
 
Now, one thing I enjoyed a lot was the episode with the demon brothers that show a much better "not all demons are evil" compared to Shankar's shitshow.
You got some 6 good demons, of which 2 are artificial, and 2 are inspired by Sparda. The only other is the guy also from the anime that becomes good for the same reason as Sparda: love.

According to some people this is just the same as having hundreds of brown people with horns (because if the demons looked like this no one woul identify with them)

Death_Scissors_DMC5_Artbook_Render.webp
 
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