
3Below: Tales of Arcadia
2018 • Animation, Comedy, Family, Sci-Fi & Fantasy • TV-Y7
After crash-landing on Earth, two royal teen aliens on the run struggle to blend in with humans as they evade intergalactic bounty hunters.
Why you should read the novel
While the TV series 3Below: Tales of Arcadia offers a captivating animated experience, delving into the creative minds behind the story through companion novels or related works by Guillermo del Toro can offer a richer understanding. Del Toro's books, such as Trollhunters, present intricate worldbuilding and character development, inviting readers to explore Arcadia's universe at their own pace. The prose in these works encourages deeper emotional connections and introspection, providing a different but fulfilling adventure beyond the screen.
Adaptation differences
Unlike many adaptations, 3Below: Tales of Arcadia is an original narrative conceived for television and does not have a one-to-one novel as its source. However, it shares its universe with Trollhunters, which has a novel by Guillermo del Toro and Daniel Kraus. The TV adaptation expands this universe with entirely new characters, such as Aja and Krel, distinct from those in the Trollhunters book, enabling fresh stories and perspectives that are not available in the companion novels.
The animated series leans into visual storytelling, dazzling with extraterrestrial action sequences and blending genres that may be more limited in a book format. Many of the show's comedic beats and pulse-pounding moments arise from its vibrant animation and voice acting, offering a sensory experience that differs from the novel's contemplative prose and imagined visuals.
While the novel Trollhunters provides intricate inner thoughts and backgrounds of its central characters, the 3Below series shifts focus to the fish-out-of-water story of alien royalty. Their struggles to fit into human society are portrayed through visual gags and cultural mishaps, emphasizing the show’s lighthearted tone, while the book's narrative is more introspective and grounded in the personal fears and growth of its original protagonists.
The adaptation also introduces unique side characters and plotlines tailored for serialized television, giving the world of Arcadia broader scope and variety. This expansion means viewers receive more episodic adventures, whereas readers of the Trollhunters novel get a more focused, linear and literary exploration, set firmly from a child’s point of view in the original tale.
3Below: Tales of Arcadia inspired from
No direct source novel; original story
by Guillermo del Toro, Rodrigo Blaas, Marc Guggenheim, Dan Hageman, Kevin Hageman