Reviewed by: Charity Bishop
CONTRIBUTOR
Moral Rating: | Extremely Offensive |
Moviemaking Quality: |
|
Primary Audience: | Adults |
Genre: | Superhero Action Suspense Horror Remake IMAX |
Length: | 2 hr. |
Year of Release: | 2019 |
USA Release: |
April 12, 2019 (wide—3,303 theaters) DVD: July 23, 2019 |
What is the FINAL JUDGMENT? and WHAT do you need to know about it? Answer
What is ETERNAL LIFE? Answer
What is ETERNAL DEATH? Answer
HELL: Fact or Fiction—Is it an actual place? Answer
Why was Hell made? Answer
Is there anyone in Hell today? Answer
Will there literally be a burning fire in Hell? Answer
What should you be willing to do to stay out of Hell? Answer
How can a God of love send anybody to Hell? Answer
About God’s love and an answer to the questions: What is the true nature of God’s love? Is it biblically accurate to say, “God hates the SIN, but loves the SINNER”?
What if I don’t believe in Hell? Answer
THE GOOD NEWS—How to be saved from Hell. Answer
What are DEMONS? Answer
Who is SATAN, the enemy of God and all people? Answer
What is a DEVIL?
Is Satan a real person that influences our world today? Is he affecting you? Answer
What is the Occult? Answer
THE OCCULT—What does the Bible say about it? Answer
Sorceress and sorcery
Dark magic
What is DEATH? and WHY does it exist? Answer in the Bible
What is the FINAL JUDGMENT? and WHAT do you need to know about it? Answer
What is ETERNAL LIFE? Answer
What is ETERNAL DEATH? Answer
Featuring |
David Harbour … Hellboy Ian McShane … Professor Bruttenholm Milla Jovovich … Nimue the Blood Queen Penelope Mitchell … Ganeida Sasha Lane … Alice Monaghan Daniel Dae Kim … Ben Daimio Thomas Haden Church … Lobster Johnson Sophie Okonedo … Lady Hatton Kristina Klebe … Leni Riefenstahl Brian Gleeson … See all » |
Director |
Neil Marshall |
Producer |
Summit Entertainment Millennium Films See all » |
Distributor |
Hellboy movies:
• “Hellboy” (2004)
• “Hellboy II: The Golden Army” (2008)
• “Hellboy” (2019)
Director del Toro’s earlier Hellboy movies were somewhat charming and funny action movies that didn’t take themselves too seriously. This remake is more faithful to the dark tone of the comic books, but leaves out the humor, irony, and heart.
Centuries ago, King Arthur showed up with his pal Merlin in tow to a meeting with the Blood Queen, the sorceress Nimue (Milla Jovovich), only to betray her, cut her into pieces, and scatter the parts across the world so she could never resurrect herself and make a place for evil to rule. Turns out this wasn’t such a hot plan after all, because hundreds of years later, a plot unfolds to collect all her pieces, sew them back on, and let the Blood Queen wreak bloody vengeance upon the world.
The only one who could possibly stop her is Hellboy (David Harbour), a demon-spawn raised to do “the right thing” by his eccentric adopted father, Professor Bloom (Ian McShane). But Hellboy is a little busy right now, since he’s gone to Mexico to collect an old friend who went rogue after a demon-hunting mission, only to find he has gone native. And then he traipses off to hunt down and kill three giants who have recently emerged in England, only to face betrayal, disappointment, and stumble upon the Nimue plot.
Now he has a limited amount of time to thwart her and save the day, before she washes the whole world in blood and brings about a new empire built on the old one’s bones.
Problem is, Hellboy doesn’t know if she is actually worth killing, since he feels kind of… well, sorry for her.
If the movie had focused more on Hellboy’s sense of alienation, not knowing where he belongs, and longing to fit into humanity without being persecuted or scaring people, it might make for a more resonating story; instead, the filmmakers came up with paper-thin characters (none of them really have motivations or personalities beyond the broad strokes) to flesh out a story built primarily around grotesque images, scenes, and almost-constant gore, from the opening in which we see Nimue hacked apart to the gallons of blood that flow later. And that doesn’t even touch on a disturbing scene in which Hellboy confronts a child-eating witch.
I thought the earlier Hellboy movies were a bit fun—they were less about the occult than they used it as a way to explain Hellboy’s existence, but here, we bathe in darkness and evil.
We learn that Hellboy’s parents were a witch and a demon who gave birth to him in Hell; that Nimue is a powerful sorceress; about a witch who eats babies and small children (and looks terrible, walking backwards on all fours like a crab, and demanding one of Hellboy’s eyes as a sacrifice, after kissing him with her hairy tongue); we hear about séances, and his friend Alice (Sasha Lane) is a psychic.
He faces down countless demons and monsters, all of them hideous and some of them with the heads and partial bodies of animals (including a vicious, profanity-spewing tusk-faced demon boar).
It is… a lot. And what the main problem is, is there’s no goodness or light to combat it. There’s only Hellboy. And when he touches certain magical objects, like the famous sword Excalibur, he sees visions of himself ruling in Hell and slaughtering the masses.
This opens the door for interesting conversations about whether people are born bad (fated) or choose evil, and if Hellboy can overcome his own evil roots to become good, and “earn” a chance at salvation.
About the fall of mankind to worldwide depravity
But what you will probably remember the most is how gross this film is.
It has a good cast, but Barbour is mostly wasted in the cynical lead; the other Hellboy loved kittens and candy bars and was a likable grouch. This one has no redeeming character traits that made me root for him. It all falls kind of flat, and despite the copious amounts of action scenes, swearing, and almost constant violence, it feels longer than its two hours.
Some of the plot twists make no sense, and are just there to pad the running time or to lead into a battle sequence. I felt bored, disgusted, and wanted it to be over twenty minutes before it finally drew to its conclusion.
If you will remember, the original films had a terrific host of minor characters who weren’t as authentic to the comic books as this film is, but they were all likable, from the water creature who loved to read to Hellboy’s fire-starting girlfriend, Liz. There’s none of that warmth, lovableness, or fun to be found in this dark movie, which loves to wallow in the dreck and fling entrails at the screen. Skip it.
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