Disenchantment, Matt Groening's new animated series that hits Netflix on Friday, August 17th, does for our mythical past what Futurama did for our imagined future, but it does so in a manner so closely reminiscent of that other show's wryly cynical sci-fi hi-jinks that it could have just as easily been called Pastarama, if that didn't sound quite so much like a seasonal promotion at Olive Garden.
Make no mistake — it looks great. The world of the medieval kingdom of Dreamland, where we lay our scene, is richly realized: The cliffside castle towers over the bustling medieval town, the woods are gloomy and tangled, the mountains loom ominously, periodically backlit by bolts of lightning. Ogres and witches haunt the dark places of this world, while candy-making elves frolic in the sunlit glades.
The backgrounds are lush with detail (and easter-egg jokes), the animation is fluid, and the character designs are ... familiarly Groeningian, let's say: googly eyes, overbites, etc. The voice work is consistently strong, featuring familiar names from the Groeningaverse (Billy West, Tress MacNeille, John DiMaggio and the great Maurice LaMarche) alongside newcomers like Broad City's Abbi Jacobson as the tough, hard-drinking princess Bean, Eric Andre as her personal pointy-tailed demon Luci and Nat Faxon as the soulful, smitten elf Elfo.
Disenchantment's status as a Netflix series colors its content and tone in small but perceptible ways. Episodes clock in at varying lengths and often end on cliffhangers engineered to encourage binge-watching. They contain stronger language and more graphic, if literally cartoony, gore than might make it past a broadcast network's standards-and-practices department, even today. Where both The Simpsons and Futurama share a jaundiced assessment of humanity, Disenchantment's take is, notably, even more caustic. With its depiction of a world ruled by ignorance, where death is swift and frequent, coupled with the utter lack of the kind of tenderheartedness that The Simpsons, especially, traffics in, Disenchantment often comes off as blithely mean, even cruel, to its characters.