The Golden Age, Brought to You by PlayStation 2
Kentaro Miura’s Berserk is a brutal, operatic masterpiece—a saga of ambition, betrayal, and enough trauma to fill a psychiatrist’s entire career. So naturally, someone thought, “Let’s condense that sprawling epic into three CGI movies that look like cutscenes from a 2006 Xbox demo disc.”
Enter Berserk: The Golden Age Arc, a trilogy that takes one of the most beautifully drawn manga series ever and renders it with all the grace of a broken action figure trying to cry. Produced by Studio 4°C and distributed by Warner Bros. Japan, it’s a monument to artistic hubris and bad rendering. Think Lord of the Rings, if Frodo was motion-captured using a Roomba.
This trilogy was supposed to be the definitive adaptation of Berserk’s most beloved arc. Instead, it feels like someone tried to speedrun a Greek tragedy on a budget.
Guts, Griffith, and the Great Beige Adventure
The first film, The Egg of the King, introduces Guts—the man, the myth, the sword compensator. He’s a mercenary so grimdark he makes Batman look like a motivational speaker. Guts joins the Band of the Hawk after losing a duel to Griffith, an ethereal pretty boy whose main hobbies include winning wars, seducing royalty, and collecting red flags like Pokémon cards.
The film tries to sell their bond as a complex brotherhood fueled by ambition and homoerotic tension, but thanks to the animation, it looks more like two department store mannequins sword-fighting in slow motion. The emotion is gone, replaced by dead-eyed expressions and awkward lip flaps. When Nosferatu Zodd—basically a giant horned demon who lives for carnage—shows up, it’s less “terrifying omen” and more “DLC boss from Elden Ring on low settings.”
Still, it’s not all bad. The orchestral score is solid, the blood splatters are enthusiastic, and occasionally, the film remembers it’s supposed to be about existential despair instead of polygon physics.
The Battle for Doldrey: Or, How I Learned to Stop Caring and Love the Render Farm
By the second movie, The Battle for Doldrey, you start to feel Stockholm Syndrome setting in. You’ve accepted that every character looks like they were carved from melted candle wax, and you begin to root for the texture mapping to improve. It doesn’t.
Instead, we get an hour and a half of siege warfare rendered like a Total War mod someone forgot to finish. Casca, the lone female in a sea of testosterone and plot convenience, gets her moment to shine by leading troops into battle—and then promptly gets shoved back into the “emotional support trauma victim” role.
The movie’s supposed to explore Guts’ realization that he wants his own dream, separate from Griffith’s glowing sociopathy. But in this adaptation, it plays like a melodramatic HR dispute. “It’s not you, it’s me. Also, I’m going to wander off and kill people until I find purpose.”
When Guts leaves the Band of the Hawk, it should feel like emotional devastation. Instead, it feels like your favorite coworker just quit via email.
The Advent: Where the Budget Went to Die
Ah yes, The Advent—the film where the trilogy finally decides to embrace horror, nudity, and cosmic despair. Unfortunately, it also embraces motion sickness.
This is the big one, the climax of Miura’s masterpiece. Griffith’s downfall, the Eclipse, the birth of Femto—it should be mythic. It should be transcendent. It should make you cry, vomit, and question the nature of fate. Instead, it looks like a student film called Revenge of the JPEGs.
To be fair, the story itself is still gripping: Griffith, broken and mutilated, sacrifices his entire army—including his best friend—to achieve his dream. The Band of the Hawk is slaughtered in a blood orgy of demonic carnage, and Casca’s fate remains one of the most disturbing sequences in anime history. But here, that scene is rendered with all the sensitivity of a video game trailer designed by a teenage nihilist.
What should be a psychological breakdown becomes an overexposed digital slideshow. Guts’ anguish—losing his comrades, his love, his arm, his eye—is emotionally numbed by the stiff animation. You don’t weep for him. You just think, “Wow, those shaders took a while to render.”
The Voice Cast Deserved Hazard Pay
Let’s give credit where it’s due: the Japanese and English casts bring their A-game. Hiroaki Iwanaga and Marc Diraison do their best to inject emotion into what looks like a wax museum reenactment. Takahiro Sakurai and Kevin T. Collins manage to make Griffith’s manipulative charm glimmer even under the dead stare of his uncanny valley face. And Carrie Keranen’s Casca at least sounds human, even if she’s trapped in an animation that moves like it’s underwater.
The problem isn’t performance—it’s presentation. You could have Daniel Day-Lewis voicing Guts, and it still wouldn’t save the scene where his sword clips through an enemy like a glitch in Skyrim.
A Story Too Big for Its Render Budget
The Berserk manga is a sprawling epic of fate, ambition, and human suffering, drawn with such obsessive detail that Miura practically invented new ways to shade despair. Trying to cram all that into three movies was always a doomed mission, but The Golden Age Arc trilogy doesn’t even die honorably. It dies slowly, impaled on the sword of its own ambition.
Every thematic beat—the price of dreams, the corruption of innocence, the horror of destiny—is reduced to a plot bullet. There’s no breathing room. No time to feel the slow corrosion of Guts and Griffith’s bond. It’s like watching someone summarize War and Peace using a flipbook.
And while Studio 4°C’s hybrid of 2D and 3D animation was meant to push boundaries, it mostly pushes patience. Every action scene looks like it’s trying to hide the fact that no one’s touching the ground.
The “Memorial Edition”: Nostalgia with a Fresh Coat of Mediocrity
In 2022, a remastered “Memorial Edition” aired on TV, adding new scenes and “enhanced” visuals. This is like polishing a skeleton and calling it a comeback. The new footage does help with pacing, but it’s still the same Frankenstein’s monster of missed potential. It’s beautiful in concept, tragic in execution—much like Griffith’s entire career.
The Verdict: All Guts, No Glory
Berserk: The Golden Age Arc is the cinematic equivalent of a cursed sword: powerful source material, fatally flawed craftsmanship. The trilogy wants to honor Miura’s vision, but ends up embalming it.
Yes, the story is still there—the ambition, the friendship, the fall from grace—but the soul has been lost in translation, somewhere between cel-shading and corporate timetables. What remains is a hollow echo of greatness, echoing through empty digital plains.
If you’ve never read Berserk, this trilogy might impress you as a tragic fantasy with guts (literally). But if you have, it’s like attending a funeral where the slideshow keeps buffering.
Final Rating
2.5 broken swords out of 5.
A noble attempt drowned in polygons and poor pacing. Watch it if you’re curious, skip it if you love yourself. For true fans, it’s less The Golden Age and more The Bronze Participation Trophy.

