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Fire at Will!'s Review

Created Nov 16, 2008 09:52AM PST • Edited Nov 16, 2008 10:27AM PST

  1. Quality
  2. Very Good 3.5

    A new, brasher take on superheroes begins with Big Red. Guillermo Del Toro masterminds a film chock-full of sardonic humour, Lovecraftian horror and those old movie favs the Nazis.

  3. Very Good 3.5

    Ron Perlman is great through the prosthetics as the moody, easy-goin’ Hellboy, whilst able support comes from Doug Jones/David Hyde Pierce, Selma Blair, Jeffrey Tambour and John Hurt.

  4. Male Stars Very Good 3.5

    Ron Perlman plays Hellboy, and the anthropomorphic demon is probably one of the most entertaining superheroes around. Perlman manages to get across a great performance through his prosthetics and make-up, and this only serves to accentuate the quality of his performance, like a modern day Lon Chaney. Rupert Evans can probably be considered the second lead actor, his Agent Myers the audience’s onscreen representative, playing bemused and confused quite well for a first-time actor.

  5. Female Stars Good 3.0

    Selma Blair plays Liz, a pyrokinetic love interest to Hellboy, and as her character is mostly shut away and sheltered for most of the film, her performance is reflective. I almost wish she had been allowed to be more creative with her performance, as the character appears completely staid at times, but the actress is still miles better than many others that would take the role.

  6. Female Costars Very Good 3.5

    There were none to speak of, but I’m going to raise the score accordingly.

  7. Male Costars Very Good 3.5

    Doug Jones plays and David Hyde Pierce (Niles from “Fraiser”) act and voice Abe Sapien respectively, the bizarre man-fish a witty comic foil to Hellboy’s brash character. John Hurt takes the stock father figure/benevolent old man/advisor role here, and the British actor does it with some class as well as humour. Jeffrey Tambour is the FBI spokesman who wants the department shut, and the American actor is comedically perfect here, as his stuffy and pompous attitude completely wilts in Hellboy’s presence.

  8. Very Good 3.5

    Guillermo Del Toro gets to showcase a little of his love for all things monster, and he directs a film that’s part comedy, part supernatural horror and part romance with able hands. The music is anonymous, normal movie fare, but visually it is stunning.

  9. Direction Really Great 4.5

    The newly announced director of the “Hobbit” films presents a small hint at the visual genius he possesses with “Hellboy”, as well as his handle on humour and mythology. Hellboy is a sympathetic, unconventional superhero, and so the viewer is able to have more of a laugh than most comic-book films (cough DARK KNIGHT cough) allow. Fight scenes and dramatic scenes are handled with balanced skill, and Del Toro followed this up with “Pan’s Labyrinth”, another fantasy-based superhit. What this director can do wrong, I don’t know!

  10. Play Very Good 3.5

    Some classic lines are heard, mostly from Hellboy, but there is a lot of exposition to deliver in this movie, and fortunately most of it is easy to deal with.

  11. Music Barely OK 2.0

    This was totally standard action movie fare, and as such, it’s simply backing for the images, nothing more stirring or memorable to be heard.

  12. Visuals Great 4.0

    From Hellboy himself (a mastery of acting from Perlman and a whole body prosthetic!), and onto the clockwork Nazi, the film visually depicts supernatural creatures in a strangely tangible way, and the special effects are good for 2004 (which is bizarre to say only four years later).

  13. Content
  14. Tame 1.5

    Surprisingly disgusting in places, the film really only has the horror and violence to boast.

  15. Sex Innocent 1.0
  16. Violence Fierce 2.5

    Hellboy beats the stuffing out of many disgusting-looking things throughout, but there are particularly disturbing images such as the clockwork Nazi’s real appearance that make the film a little unsuitable for younger/easily freaked viewers.

  17. Rudeness Polite 1.0
  18. Fantasy 5.0

    Complete fantasy throughout. Sure, the Nazis were interested in the paranormal, and yeah, there are probably some elements of law enforcement that study a bit of parapsychology. But when your hero is a massive red demon from Hell – well, then you know where you stand.

  19. Circumstantial Fantasy 5.0
  20. Biological Fantasy 5.0
  21. Physical Fantasy 5.0

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