Graphic Novel Review: Hellboy - Darkness Calls by Mike Mignola & Duncan Fegredo and The Hellboy Companion
Published September 13, 2008
The newest trade paperback collection of Mike Mignola's Hellboy comes complete with a "Now A Major Motion Picture" sticker affixed to its cover, though one suspects that many fans of Hellboy II: The Golden Army coming to the comics for the first time will be more than a little disappointed. At this point in Mignola's storyline, it's been six years since the title character left the B.P.R.D., home to the movie's great supporting characters, so we only get a tiny glimpse of Liz Sherman and the rest of the gang in an epilogue. (For those who only know the characters from the flicks, the budding romance between pyrokinetic Liz and Hellboy is not a part of the comics' storyline.) Our hero's on his own in this book, fighting demons and undead warriors in snow-covered Russia.
Hellboy: Darkness Calls (Dark Horse) opens in Italy as a reptilian wizard named Igor Bromhead conjures up Hecate, the Queen of the Witches. Bromhead's act brings down personal disaster, but it also helps to kick start a "gathering of witches unlike none before in the history of the world." Said confab attempts to recruit Hellboy to be their king, and when our hero rudely refuses, the witches send him to Russia. There, he's forced to do battle with a skeletal army and the undying warrior Koshchei, who's been charged with taking one of Hellboy's eyes and bringing it to the one-orbed witch Baba Yaha. Extended fight mayhem ensues.
The eighth volume in the Hellboy series (not counting something like seven collections in the B.P.R.D. spin-off and sundry other offshoots), Darkness Calls isn't the book to choose if you're just getting into the comic book version of Mignola's fantasy world. When Bromhead, for instance, revives Hecate and reveals that the "triple goddess" has become part human, the revelation of her human part will get moviegoers going, "I thought I saw her die in the first flick. How'd her heart get into Hecate's body?" Unless you're the type of comics fan who doesn't particularly care how we get from fight scene to fight scene, the character details in Darkness Calls can be daunting.
- Graphic Novel Review: Hellboy - Darkness Calls by Mike Mignola & Duncan Fegredo and The Hellboy Companion
- Published: September 13, 2008
- Type: Review
- Section: Books
- Filed Under: Books: Comics and Graphic Novels, Books: Fantasy, Books: Horror, Review
- Writer: Bill Sherman
- Bill Sherman's BC Writer page
- Bill Sherman's personal site
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