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Bob's Comics Reviews
<HTML> <HEAD><TITLE>Bob's Comics Reviews</TITLE></HEAD> <BODY BGCOLOR="#D0D0FF"> <table width="100%"> <td width="385"> <A HREF="bob.shtml"><IMG Align=Top SRC="illo/bob.png" height="71" width="374" ALT="Bob's Comics Reviews"></a> </td><td><font size="5">August 2004 </font></td> <td> <MAP NAME="BobTable"> <AREA COORDS="0,0,37,36" HREF="bob42.html"> <AREA COORDS="38,0,74,36" HREF="bob44.html"> </MAP> <IMG SRC="illo/bob-arrows.gif" border=0 height="36" width="74" USEMAP="#BobTable" alt="Arrows"> </td> <td width=30%> <p><A HREF="default.html"><img src="home.gif" align=right border=0 alt="Home"></A> </td></tr></table> <P><table width="100%" border="0" cellspacing="0"> <tr bgcolor="#606090"><td width="20"></td><td><font size="5" color="#F0F0FF"> Mike Mignola : <B>Hellboy</B> </font></td></tr> <tr bgcolor="#606090"><td height="5" colspan="2"></td></tr> <tr><td height="10"></td></tr> </table> <img align="left" src="illo/hellboy.gif" title="Hellboy and friend" alt="Hellboy and friend"> For once, the movies get it right: Guillermo del Toro's film pretty much captures the character and atmosphere of the comic. <p>At the end of World War Two, a desperate team of Nazis, led by the Russian mystic Rasputin (an aristocratic clique tried hard to kill him in 1916, but apparently didn't try hard enough) hopes to summon a demon from Hell. They succeed, but he's merely an infant demon, and he falls into the hands of kindly GIs, who name him Hellboy. <p>Hellboy is raised by the government, and becomes the chief weapon against a wide array of paranormal threats. Many of these relate to Rasputin's ongoing project: unleash the <i>ogdru jahad</i>, the Seven Beasts who (with a heavy nod to H.P. Lovecraft) plan to destroy humanity and replace them with monsters. Hellboy was a key part in this plan, and demons and witches keep trying to talk him back into it. "Get stuffed!" is his eloquent response. <p>Mignola has a sprightly stylized line, which works surprisingly well for drawing tentacled apparitions of great evil; and his colorist, Dave Stewart, chooses darkish but saturated colors that complement them well. As a balance to the frequent horrors, there are restful displays of ancient statuary. <p>There are five TPBs out and I read them all at once-- which I don't really recommend; it brings out a certain repetititveness in the material. Hellboy meets some supernatural horror, it taunts him for not following his destiny, and he beats it up. I think the best volumes are the first (<i>Seed of Destruction</i>) and the fourth, <i>The Right Hand of Doom</i>, which features one of the best done of the stories, "Box Full of Evil", and the funniest, "Pancakes". <p> <table width="100%" border="0" cellspacing="0"> <tr bgcolor="#606090"><td width="20"></td><td><font size="5" color="#F0F0FF"><a name="2"> Eddie Campbell : <B>Bacchus</B> </a></font></td></tr> <tr bgcolor="#606090"><td height="5" colspan="2"></td></tr> <tr><td height="10"></td></tr> </table> <img align="right" src="illo/bacchus.gif" title="Bacchus, Greek god somewhat past his prime" alt="Bacchus, Greek god somewhat past his prime">Truth in advertising: this comic is indeed about Bacchus, the god of wine, still alive after 4000 years but much the worse for wear. <p>The series is best when Campbell takes the opportunity to retell old myths-- which he also extends over the next thousand years or so, telling how most of the gods of Olympus were murdered in their dotage by a nonentity-- a grandson of Argus the Hundred-Eyed, with only twenty eyes-- leaving the rest to make their way as best they could in a changing world. Theseus, for instance, has become a crime boss, while Bacchus mostly wanders about looking for free drinks (wine only, please). <p>It's a good deal more scattershot when it follows Bacchus around the modern world-- doing the Greek Islands, listening to pointless stories in English pubs, getting tossed in jail. You never know quite where this comic is going to go-- something I appreciate in comics-- though you can generally count on things going awry for everyone involved, from Greek gods to ambitious mortals to idle bystanders. <p>Campbell has a loose, sketchy line which sometimes serves him beautifully, sometimes remains a little too sketchy. (On some books he's assisted by other artists.) <p>Of the books I've read, I'd recommend book 1, <i>Immortality Isn't Forever</i>, which introduces Bacchus and his age-old quarrel with "Joe" Theseus and tells the story of the overthrow of Olympus; book 5, <i>Earth, Water, Air & Fire</i>, where the gods get caught up in a gang war; and book 3, <i>Doing the islands with Bacchus</i>, typical of the quieter books, where Bacchus wanders old haunts and tells some whoppers. <HR> <p><center><A HREF="default.html"><img src="home.gif" border=0 alt="back to Metaverse"</A></center> </BODY> </HTML>