I didn't watch the first part and couldn't find the source, but I probably knew what happened before, so I just watched the second part directly.
First of all, the production is really exquisite. The hairs on the werewolf are quite three-dimensional. I think it is an animation worth watching.
In terms of plot, it is actually a family movie, but when I watched it, I was still thinking about two issues very seriously.
The first one is the conflict between the old generation and the new generation of educational concepts. After reading the short reviews, I found that many people can feel it. Grandpa Dracula firmly believed that his cute little grandson was a vampire, so he took him to the vampire summer camp to experience "life". Who knew that the harsh training at that time had been transformed into a gentle and loving training method. Dracula was disappointed, and finally brought him with him. His little grandson climbed a dangerous tower (now banned), just because he learned to fly here, Dracula believed that his little grandson could learn to fly in the same way, and finally Of course it's screwed up, Dracula's baby girl is determined to take her little grandson to live in the human world.
The plot needs the escalation of conflict to develop. Obviously, the conflict between the education of the two generations is obvious here, and there is another conflict, that is, the conflict of races.
On one side is the monster world represented by a vampire nest, and on the other side is the ordinary human world. Due to various reasons, monsters and humans mixed together, fell in love and got married (you can see it in the part where the human son-in-law came home). Well that's it, Dracula also accepts that his son-in-law is a person, but, in his subconscious, there is still a gap between human beings, and it is understandable why he is so eager to prove that his grandson is a man Vampires not humans. As his daughter Mephis said to him - you just let those humans into your hotel, not your heart.
Memphis once mentioned "he is what he should be" (probably can't remember what that means). Why can't the little grandson use his own identity to protect friends and family? In the end, the little grandson really turned into a vampire. To tell the truth, I am disappointed, and finally fell into a cliché.
Oh yes, the little grandson is called Dennis!
Finished thinking
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