Old Hellsing vs. New Hellsing: Which One is Better?

Greetings ladies and germs!  It’s that time again, not just for a post, but for a long overdue discussion post.  For this week, this post will be taking two shows and seeing which one is the Ultimate.  Noting the pun I just made, in honor of the release of the last two episodes of Hellsing Ultimate, this week I will be taking a look at Hellsing and Hellsing Ultimate and seeing which one is better.

First Up: Hellsing Ultimate


So first in this duel is Hellsing Ultimate.  Now seeing that I recently reviewed this OVA series, I’ve done a simple copy and paste from the post:
“Hellsing Ultimate takes place in modern day England.  The Hellsing Organization, a secret program run by the Queen of England to kill monsters-particularly vampires-, has been dealing with a series of bizarre vampire attacks.  In one of these attacks, Hellsing’s top agent Alucard-who happens to be a vampire and is also one of the most bad-ass characters in anime-kills a police woman named Seras Victoria and turns her into a vampire.  Seras finds all of this new arrangement very difficult to adjust to.  She even refuses to drink blood.  Yet despite this issue, the cases start to become worse.  But everything comes to a head when Hellsing discovers that a secret Nazi organization known as Millennium is responsible for the attacks.  Hellsing also finds out that these attacks are in preparation for an all out attack on London.”
Not very original, I know.  But I don’t think I could’ve put it better myself.

What Hellsing Ultimate Does Have

First of all, Hellsing Ultimate almost, if not exactly, follows the original manga.  This is a huge advantage and element that sets it apart from the original series.  This was possible was because the manga had been completed well in advance.  Granted, there is some scrambling and uncalled for cliffhangers that may upset some of the loyal manga followers.  For instance, one bit of scrambling of the story involves a flashback of Alucard’s past.  In this particular seen, Alucard dreams of his encounter with Professor Hellsing.  After being impaled and on the verge of death, Alucard wakes up to find himself crying.  In the OVA, we see this in the beginning of the second episode.  In the manga, however, this doesn’t happen until well into the fourth volume.  Now in cliffhangers, the biggest one involves the one fans have been dying to see resolved.  In the end of episode eight, Alucard is stabbed with one of Anderson’s blades, and then cuts off when Alucard and his familiars catch fire.  The manga ended this scene a little differently.  Though this scene was in the eighth volume of the manga, it added more to it; it went on to show the tragic past of Vlad the Impaler.  After this, the volume ends with Seras calling out Alucard’s name.  So in conclusion, the OVA series may follow the manga to a tee, but it does tweak the story in some spots.  Oh, and I know I gave away a huge spoiler in my cliffhanger example, but don’t worry, you’ll see this in the ninth episode.

What Hellsing Ultimate Doesn’t Have

I’ve obviously given a lot of praise to the show in just about everything.  But there is one thing that Hellsing Ultimate doesn’t have.  Limits.  As I’ve stated in my review, there is no telling what you will see in this show.  Among the worst things I have seen is in Seras’s past.  And for those who have either read the manga or have seen that much of Hellsing Ultimate, you know exactly what I’m talking about.  Yeah, that pretty much sums it up for the cons.

Next Up: Hellsing


And now, let’s take a trip back to the early 2000’s.  In sum,  Hellsing follows a very similar plot to that of the manga.  However, after the seventh episode of this thirteen-episode series, it goes in a completely different direction.  The Hellsing Organization stumbles upon a number of cases where vampires implanted with microchips are terrorizing England.  Hellsing delves further into the case to find that a vampire named Incognito is responsible.  And although he claims to have a master, this master is never revealed in the series.  Soon, the Hellsing Organization becomes intangled in an all-out battle between humans and monsters.  Despite the big difference in plot, the one thing that does remain the same is Seras’s struggle of being a vampire.

What Hellsing Doesn’t Have

Now I know I’m starting off with the bad things about the show first, but there are some things that are seriously wrong.  At a reviewer’s stand point, this show gets about a three and a half star rating.  There is one good thing saving it, but I’ll get to that in a minute.  Anyways, the biggest issue with the original Hellsing is animation.  I watched through the entire series and thought, “Did the animators really try?”  Frankly not, considering the stiff movements and poor character design seen throughout.  Seriously, I’ve seen 80’s animes that were animated better!  And I say that because when looking at an anime that came out of the 80’s, you’ve got to keep in mind that animation techniques were not as fine-tuned as they are now.  So it’s going to look a little bad anyway.  But Hellsing is from the early 2000’s.  By then, animation should be more fluid and more vivid.  The work done on Hellsing is not excusable!  Part of this may have to do with the fact that the anime was done before the manga was even finished- at the time the anime was made, only the third volume of the manga had been completed.  Another factor may be demand.  This was probably done in a hurry to satisfy a demand from fans.  Now I have no legitimate proof of this, it’s only a theory.  Still, Hellsing shows no effort whatsoever in animation.

What Hellsing Does Have

Despite what I’ve said about Hellsing thus far, the one thing saving it from this blogger, believe it or not, is the story.  Despite what little the manga provided for the plot, the creators of the show took what they had and ran with it.  And it worked!  Despite the poor animation, the plot kept me hooked.  And even though the microchips implanted in make-shift vampires was not the main point of Hirano’s original story, what the creators did with it was pretty impressive.  So my kudos!
Also, the one thing that the original series had that Ultimate didn’t have was a very important detail to the entire story: how Integra met Alucard.  In the OVA, Integra makes it to the chamber where Alucard is held.  If you’ve seen Hellsing, you know how the story goes: uncle shoots Integra, blood goes everywhere, and just before the uncle can make the kill, Alucard wakes up after drinking Integra’s splattered blood.  Now right here in the OVA, we watch Alucard reawaken, but from there it cuts off and continues with the rest of the series.  It comes back later to show Integra about to shoot her uncle, asking Alucard his name.  Yeah, major downer.
However, in the original anime, we see the full fight between Alucard and Integra’s uncle.  Also, one twist that the series adds that manga didn’t have was that Alucard didn’t recognize Integra as his master at first.  It was only until Integra put her foot down that Alucard began to recognize her.  In the manga, this is automatic.  I liked that this twist was added because it made the situation all the more interesting.

And for a better idea between the animation styles between the two shows, check out these videos of my favorite Hellsing moment:

Alucard vs. Luke Valentine (Hellsing- in Japanese) Don't worry, there are subtitles!

The Winner?

Hellsing Ultimate


I have to admit, when you look at the two series, it’s pretty obvious which is better.  Most of this has to do with the fact that Hellsing Ultimate was created after the manga was completed.  Another is the fact that Ultimate was animated way better than the original series.  However, I also have to admit, the orginal series actually had a good story, despite the fact that it didn’t follow the manga entirely.  In fact, it could’ve called for a second season- mostly because I didn’t like how it ended.  However, one big lesson that the creators of the anime should’ve learned is that they should’ve waited until the manga was completed or at least at a decent point to actually start a series.  It’s also a trap that I’m afraid that Attack on Titan may fall into- not to disappoint any AOT fans.
Well, I think that ends this week’s discussion post.  So what do you think? Do you think that Hellsing Ultimate is the Ultimate?  Or do you think that the original is better despite the fact that it doesn’t follow the manga?  And what about Hellsing’s plot?  Speak up people!  I call these discussion posts for a reason.  I want to hear what you have to say.  You can leave your comments below.  And with that, I’m off!  Stay tuned for more because next week I’ll be doing Character of the Month.

-Hanime on Anime

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