Hellboy II: The Golden Army, 12A

Get ready to rumble with the tooth fairies

News in pictures
News in pictures
On Facebook
Arts & Ents blogs

From London to Barcelona: Lee Webster explains how moving abroad boosted his creativity

Sometimes moving overseas can help lubricate a person's creativity helping to boost something that w...

RIP Whitney Houston

Michael Jackson. Amy Winehouse. Now Whitney Houston. When the biggest names precede ‘has died’ I alw...

Something for the weekend in London: February 17-19

To some, February is the month of lurrrve, to others it's the month of rain, snow and flu, but for u...

A strange thing about comic-book films: the higher the stakes, the more lightweight the result. In The Dark Knight, it's only about the Joker stealing piles of money and being a pain in Gotham's municipal arse, resulting in a lumbering cogitation on good and evil – Dostoevsky in a rubber jumpsuit, no less. By contrast, in the last Fantastic Four film, Rise of the Silver Surfer, the Earth is about to be devoured by an interplanetary scavenger, while in Hellboy II: The Golden Army, humanity is menaced by an avenging legion from the dawn of time, and in both cases – well, I think the appropriate word is "romp".

Personally, I'll take the romp option every time, especially if a director such as Guillermo del Toro is at the helm: the Mexican prodigy has an instinctive understanding of the craziness, telegraphic frenzy and dense visual clutter that often characterise the great American comics.

And he relishes the childlike pleasure that can give these comics their special edge. I'm not being condescending if I use the word "childlike". The Dark Knight bends over backwards to insist that it's terribly serious and adult: it smacks of the earnestness with which some people insist on using the term "graphic novel". Del Toro, on the other hand, is strictly a "comics" guy. He knows that what we love in superhero comics is often the simple stuff: good-zaps-evil storylines, big baroque monsters, jazzed-up colour, a dash of fairy tale.

Based on Mike Mignola's comic series, the Hellboy movies are also childlike in the sense that their characters essentially are children. That point is made in the opening sequence, where we meet the film's hero as a boy, a weird-eyed, buck-toothed, enthusiastic all-American kid – except for his horns, red skin and huge stone fist – being told a bedtime story by his adoptive dad (John Hurt).

Years later, the adult Hellboy (Ron Perlman) is a hulking, cigar-chewing galoot working for the Bureau for Paranormal Research and Defence, an agency battling alien menaces. The BPRD resembles a school for gifted misfits: chief agent Tom Manning (an inimitably flustered Jeffrey Tambor) is its headteacher, fish-like alien Abe Sapien (rubber-limbed Doug Jones) the resident swot, and Hellboy's girlfriend, Liz (Selma Blair), the punkish, pyrokinetic head girl. And when a new agent, Johann Krauss, arrives from Germany – a wisp of ectoplasmic smoke in an antique diving suit – he's fundamentally a pushy prefect.

As a school story The Golden Army makes lighter work of the whole business of growing pains than the Harry Potter series. A bewildered Hellboy lunkishly moons around after his spats with Liz, and what makes it touching is the dazed gaucheness of his double-takes: what you can see of Perlman through the crimson make-up suggests a gentle bullish innocence.

The story, by Del Toro and Mignola, feels almost like an afterthought. A high-kicking, sword-wielding elf warrior (Luke Goss, not half as creepy as when he was in the pop duo Bros) is after the crown that will enable him to overthrow humanity. But that's just the hook for a series of extraordinary action sequences, executed with Del Toro's usual depth of design imagination, and punctuated with goofy, sweet-natured comedy routines: Hellboy gets beaten up by a wall of lockers, Hellboy and Abe get drunkenly maudlin to a Barry Manilow song.

As for the spectacle, you won't feel short-changed. First, Hellboy's team face a battalion of nasty little creatures called Tooth Fairies, so called because they eat teeth: a sequence in which CGI completely justifies its existence in its ability to conjure up swirling, swarming multiplicity. Even better is the battle with a giant tulip-headed forest god, whose spurts of green blood burgeon into explosions of lush vegetation. As for the Golden Army itself, these clanking automata are realised with a 3D intricacy that suggests The Transformers, but on an artisanal, almost Fabergé level.

Lovers of old -fashioned latex will also get a kick from Del Toro's character designs, which have the same nightmarish quality as his Pan's Labyrinth: among them, an antiquarian with a cathedral for a head, and an Angel of Death with wings full of eyes, authentically smacking of Gustave Doré eeriness.

The film's substance, undeniably, is in the design and the staging. The dialogue is thin and some of the humour wheezes: the jokes about Krauss's heel-clicking Teutonic fussiness ("Over und out!") are as clunky as his diving suit. But the film's exuberance, and the sense that it's all one big gimmick-packed action toy, give Hellboy II: The Golden Army a refreshing cinematic purity: what you see is what you get, without any spuriously sombre subtexts wheeled in to reassure adults that it's OK to be watching this.

Right now, Del Toro makes this sort of film better than anyone. Indifferent as I am to Tolkien, The Golden Army even makes me eager to see his forthcoming version of The Hobbit. It should be really something – if he can keep Barry Manilow out of it.



'Hellboy II: The Golden Army' is on general release from Wednesday

Independent Comment
blog comments powered by Disqus
Career Services

Day In a Page

So long Sarkozy: Inside the tiny town that will topple the French president

Inside the tiny town that will topple Sarkozy

The tiny town of Donzy is France's political weathervane finds John Lichfield.
A class act: Claire Foy on criticism, tumours and embarrassing sex scenes

Claire Foy: Criticism, tumours and embarrassing sex scenes

Her luminous good looks made the actress the star of Little Dorrit and Upstairs Downstairs
A new leaf: Mark Hix sings the praises of spinach

A new leaf: Mark Hix sings the praises of spinach

Spinach is the versatile superfood that will keep you strong and healthy throughout the winter months.
Hollywood ate my novel: Novelists reveal what it’s like to have their book turned into a movie

Hollywood ate my novel

Novelists reveal what it’s like to have their book turned into a movie
How you can force companies to behave themselves

How you can force companies to behave themselves

Buying even a single share in a firm gives you the right to question its practices
Lost in the landscape: Wilderness and wildlife in Australia’s Top End

Wilderness and wildlife in Australia’s Top End

This sparsely populated region is home to creatures that are both fantastic and formidable
48 Hours: Marrakech

48 Hours: Marrakech

From the ancient medina to the Palmeraie, Morocco's Rose City offers a warm escape from the cold of winter.
Bear with Bern for Swiss skiing

Bear with Bern for Swiss skiing

Stephen Wood arrives at the gateway to the Bernese Oberland with plenty of respect for the slopes and the city's ursine inhabitants.
Dawn of the age of wireless medicine

Dawn of the age of wireless medicine

New technology means doctors will soon be able to regulate and monitor drug intake remotely – as long as patients remember to swallow their chips
Pete Doherty: I was a bit unhinged

Pete Doherty: I was a bit unhinged

Former Libertine talks frankly and exclusively about Kate Moss, Amy Winehouse, his baby daughter and why he paints with his own blood
Brown makes £1m since leaving No 10 (but Blair's still the leading earner)

Brown makes £1m since leaving No 10...

... but Blair's still the leading earner
The West Bank's Bobby Sands

The West Bank's Bobby Sands

Khader Adnan's two-month hunger strike has made him a hero among Palestinians outraged by Israel's policy of arbitrary detention
Hey, You've got to hide your drug away

Hey, You've got to hide your drug away

Paul McCartney has given up smoking dope. Simon Usborne charts a career of highs and lows
The 50 Best lights

The 50 Best cheap eats

The top spots for breakfast, lunch and dinner
MI5 helped US in fruitless search for Charlie Chaplin's Communist past

Investigating Charlie Chaplin

MI5 helped US in fruitless search for star's Communist past