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Hellboy 's heavyhanded mayhem could have used some comic relief

11:40 AM EST on Friday, April 2, 2004

BY MICHAEL JANUSONIS
Journal Arts Writer

*
Columbia Pictures
Based on a pop comic-book series, Hellboy tells the story of a red devilish character (Ron Perlman) who comes to our world from another dimension. Rupert Evans plays a FBI agent.


There are a whole lot of monsters unleashed in Hellboy, a film based on a pop comic-book series, whose intended audience seems to be all those people who thought they were too old for Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed.

Not that there aren't playful moments in Hellboy, despite a never-ending parade of slimy, bull-like monsters who crunch the bones of their victims. "I just killed Stinky," Hellboy claims after offing one of the monsters. But in two hours of overloaded mayhem, Hellboy sure could have used Shaggy and Scooby to lighten the load.

Writer-director Guillermo Del Toro of Blade II and the over-praised Spanish art-house film The Devil's Backbone, based his script on Mike Mignola's Dark Horse Comics series. It revolves around a red devilish character who escapes to our world through a portal from another dimension and is raised with love and kindness in a lab for paranormal research in Newark, N.J.

Besides Hellboy himself, who is played by Ron Perlman -- who was once the Beast on the TV series Beauty and the Beast -- there's Liz Sherman (Selma Blair) whom he loves and who can create blue fire when she's angry. There's also a Black Lagoonish-style merman creature called Abe Sapien (Doug Jones) who lives in a big fish tank. Think X-Men, only less benign, and you'll have some idea of what Hellboy is about.

Hellboy is brought out of some parallel dimension in 1944 on a Scottish island by Rasputin (Karel Roden), the mad monk who undermined Russia's Romanov dynasty in 1916, and who is now working for the Nazis. But Hellboy, who is just a baby Hellboy at the time, is rescued by Professor Broom (John Hurt). Broom raises him like a son . . . or at least as much of a son as one can have with a red body, a tail and horns on his head.

Soon, however, Rasputin makes his return, hell-bent on using Hellboy to destroy the world and enlists those bull-like, slithery creatures to do a lot of the dirty work from their lair in a subway tunnel.

The setup for all this is complex, but interesting. Yet because those bullish monsters keep replicating themselves, by the time Hellboy must fight what seems like the 30th one, the movie gets a little stale. There's an attempt to forge a sort of romance between Hellboy and Liz, as well as romantic tension. For Liz also has eyes for a handsome FBI agent who's on the case (Rupert Evans) and the jealous Hellboy thinks all may be lost.

Most of the film's emotional heft comes near the end. But by then, one has been overwhelmed by the rampaging special effects into numbness. Though many of the effects are stunning, they grow mechanical because for a long time there's no depth to the characters who are battling them.

**

Hellboy

Starring: Ron Perlman, John Hurt, Selma Blair, Rupert Evans, Jeffrey Tambor, Karel Roden, Brian Steele, Doug Jones.

Rated: PG-13, contains violence.

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