Blu-ray Review: Hellboy II - The Golden Army

Part of: The Wild Blu Yonder

Hellboy II is a sequel that does exactly what sequels should do. It’s bigger, louder, more entertaining, and loads of fun. It’s in every way an improvement over the original, offering up a stunning array of visual effects along with character development worth watching. It’s hard not to enjoy Hellboy’s goofy sense of humor and large-scale action.

Hellboy does a lot with the title character, including building his non-conformist attitude, his “home” life, and his relationship with humans. Luke Gross plays the villain this time out, Prince Nuada. While he may be a typical movie sword-flinging, athletic bad guy who kills his father, there’s more to him. His attempts to help Hellboy see that the humans will never accept him, plus the ending dialogue are admirable to build more than a simple killer. While it may weaken his overall villain-cred, Nuada still gives Hellboy a run.

With the exception of the cringe-worthy (yet laugh-inducing) child Hellboy at the start, most of the technical wizardry on display here is staggering. Most importantly, much of the effects are traditional, using incredibly elaborate suits. The troll market scene is a stunning achievement in how far the art has come. CG is sparingly used, although the finale unfortunately becomes another CG-fest that weakens the film as a whole. It’s still impressively choreographed, but feels familiar and lifeless.

Despite the attempts at dramatically building Hellboy, there are countless laughs to go around. The scene of Hellboy and Abe Sapien drunkenly singing Barry Manilow’s "Can't Smile Without You" is an absolute classic. German newcomer Johann Krauss (voiced by Seth MacFarlane) is more of an alive spirit than a living being, but when he’s blasting Hellboy with lockers, a lighter side of the otherwise by-the-book character is allowed to come through. Also, one can’t forget the film’s best line, “I’m not a baby, I’m a tumor.”

Despite some minor shortcomings, director/writer Guillermo del Toro’s take on Hellboy deserves a few more sequels, assuming the quality holds up. It’s a summer-movie blast, loaded with everything you expect walking into it. It oozes quality, humor, and visuals from the early sequences to the finale.

The first Hellboy featured a stunning Blu-ray transfer, meaning this sequel has quite a bit to live up to. For the most part, it does. Colors are rich and bold. Details are incredible, especially on the Hellboy suit. Individual pores can be seen. Long shots perform equally as well. Where the transfer falters are the black levels. While they’re rich, deep, and create an amazing contrast, at times they’re too dark. Just before the adult Hellboy’s intro, they dilute the scene to the point where barely anything other than the blacks can get through. It tends to get better as the film moves, but these early scenes are shaky.

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Article Author: Matt Paprocki

Matt Paprocki is a 12-year movie and game critic. He currently freelances for Blu-ray review site DoBlu.com and video game site MultiPlayerGames.com.

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