
Last Friday, I’ve deicided to watch Hellboy II: The Golden Army, after watching the preview on TV. Oh well, I’m so into this kind of fantasy and science fiction movie. The kind of weird stuff and freaking things. That’s why I’m such a freak. LoL!

I’m happy with Hellboy II more than the first one. I’m telling you, this is a must watch movie. It’s all about “Is the human race worth saving?â€.
It’s very different from other superhero movie, such as Spiderman, Hulk, Batman, or maybe X-Men. In this entire movie, the human race look up upon superhero, they become like a celebrity, the kids will follow their action and dream to become like them. But not, Hellboy. It’s kinda sad just because he has the look of the devil, and red monkey, the human race do not really appreaciate what he did to the world. If you think carefully, this movie actually reflects to the real world issue. We as human, we never feel satisfication all the time; we hardly want to say “thank you†although it is only a little help. Not only that, human even freak out with the other Sapien. Hellboy seem to be confuse in this movie, he confuse if the human race ever say “thank youâ€, and look up upon him since he save them from evil. Does an ungrateful, greedy world deserve their efforts? Given a choice between heroism and happiness, between saving the world and saving ones beloved, will self-interest always win out?
And congratulation Hellboy, Liz Sherman is pregnant. Abe Sapien is crying atlast (Abe first mention that he does not have the tears). I love this 2 character too, Liz as the fire lady, and Abe as the thinker and problem solver. He is damn smart!



There are more character added into this movie, such as Prince Nuada, and his twin Princess Nuala, The Angel Of Death, The Chamberlain, Johann Krauss The German Psychic, Mr. Wink The Giant cave troll, and King Balor The Elf King.
I’m not going to write all the review here, but I’ve found a good review if want to know the rest of the story and synopsis. It’s a good review - below.
Tags: abe sapien, and King Balor The Elf King, hellboy, hellboy 2, Johann Krauss The German Psychic, liz sherman, Movie, Mr. Wink The Giant cave troll, Prince Nuada, Princess Nuala, The Angel Of Death, The ChamberlainIronically, it’s Christmas Eve as Hellboy II opens in a prologue set in 1955, when Hellboy was but a little Hell-BOY (as opposed to the current fully-grown Hell-MAN) living with his adopted father Prof. Bruttenholm (John Hurt) at an army base. The season is a reminder that salvation has already come to mankind—though Hellboy, like many kids at Christmas, isn’t thinking about the Savior, but about that other fellow who comes at that time of year. And when he asks Bruttenholm to tell him a story before bed, the professor cracks open a big old book and reads a mythic tale of primeval paradise lost—but it doesn’t bear much resemblance to the early chapters of Genesis.
In the beginning, the tale goes, men, elves and other supernatural creatures coexisted peacefully on earth. But man was “created with a hole in his heart,” and in his “infinite greed” sought to overrun the earth. This led to war between men and faeryfolk, and to the creation of the unstoppable Golden Army—a force so terrible that the wise Woodland King decided it must never be used, and struck a treaty with man to share the earth, with cities for men and forests for creatures of faery.
Meanwhile, untold millennia later in the real world, it turns out that creatures of magic have gotten the short end of the stick, having kept their end of the treaty while humans blithely did as they pleased. The aged Woodland King accepts this with passive resignation, reasoning that it is their nature to keep the treaty just as it is man’s nature to break it.
However, exiled Prince Nuada (Luke Goss, One Night With the King) isn’t content to fade away while man bulldozes forests to build shopping malls. Nuada wants total war, Golden Army–style—and he’s willing to kill his own kind to get things started. The main hitch: His twin sister Princess Nuala (Anna Walton, Vampire Diary) flees with of the three pieces of the magical crown needed to control the Golden Army.
That’s the setup to an ever-escalating battery of showdowns including a bloody coup in faeryland, attacks by swarms of disturbingly feral fairies, a melee in an underground troll market, a sprawling combat with an enormous vegetative forest god in the shadow of the Brooklyn Bridge, and of course a climactic confrontation with Nuada and the Golden Army.
First and foremost, Hellboy II is a riot of creature and set design as well as outsize action set pieces. What makes this stuff work especially well is Del Toro’s penchant for props and prosthetics rather than overreliance on computer graphics.
The troll market is like Diagon Alley crossed with the Mos Eisley Cantina, but bigger and more convincing than either. A disturbing figure called the “Angel of Death” strikingly echoes a couple of the more startling images from Del Toro’s Pan’s Labyrinth while also offering a dark take on the six-winged, many-eyed angels of Isaiah and Revelation. The climactic battle, set in an enormous chamber of giant clockwork gears, is compared by stunt coordinator Brad Allan to Chaplin’s Modern Times and Jackie Chan. However, I was reminded of the climactic clock-tower battle in Miyazaki’s The Castle of Cagliostro as well as the “killing floor” duel at the climax of William Gibson’s short story Johnny Mnemonic.
At the same time, Del Toro never reduces the characters to mere action figures. Not that character development is high on the movie’s priorities, but the personalities and relationships remain at the fore: Hellboy’s hard-boiled, blue-collar nonchalance and stoic apprehension about his relationship with Liz; Liz’s wounded caution and anxiety over the secret she has not told Hellboy; Abe’s diffidence, intellectual curiosity and unexpected affinity for fellow empath Nuala.
As with Peter and MJ in the Spider-Man movies, romance in Hellboy II is a driving force rather than a side dish, and impacts the action as well as creating its own set pieces. There’s a hilariously offbeat Manilow Moment reminiscent of the goofy 1970s musical interludes from the latter two Spider-Man movies—and, when the end credits reprise the song, it seems to suggest that really this is what it’s all about.
Then again, the sort of bond celebrated in the song can have good or bad implications. In fact, the lyrics could just as well describe the dangerous mystic connection between Nuala and Nuada as the emotions of the lovers. Then, too, there’s the question whether love conflicts or competes with duty and heroism, or reaffirms them. The Spider-Man movies struggled with the first possibility before embracing the second. The Hellboy franchise hasn’t gotten there yet.
Most recent comic-book movies involve a love story; Hellboy II ups the ante by adding a pregnancy—a theme Del Toro playfully drives home by including a gigantic, swollen stone fertility goddess, which plays an unexpected role in one of the early set pieces. There’s also a strange bit of set design in the Brooklyn Bridge street sequence, which repeatedly depicts, on one side the street, a lit-up storefront church cross, and on the other a marquee with what seems to be a cryptic code phrase for one of the most objectionable slang terms for female anatomy.
In the original Hellboy, the villains were adversaries like demons, Nazis, gods of chaos, assassins and necromancers—characters understood to be evil more or less by nature or by definition, like orcs, vampires or witches. Hellboy II shifts from this kind of mythic good-vs-evil storytelling to something more like classical mythology, with variously flawed characters on all sides.
Except for an occasional cross or rosary, the vestigial Christian influence from Hellboy is virtually gone here. In its place is something a lot like a work of pagan imagination, at times partially reminiscent of the worlds of Japanese animation master Hayao Miyazaki, with his ambiguous antagonists and animistic spirit-creatures.
This isn’t simply a bad thing. Good-vs-evil storytelling aptly reflects the black-and-white world of spiritual warfare, but conflicts in the visible world are seldom so clear-cut. Even Nazis aren’t really pure evil like demons, though movies and comic books might treat them as such. Most people who do bad or even horrible things are more like the denizens of the troll market than typical movie monsters—more interested in going about their business than making life miserable for other people.
Del Toro has fleshed out the villainy of the villains. What he still hasn’t fleshed out is the heroism of the heroes—their humanity, yes, but not their heroism. Two films into the Hellboy franchise, what is still missing is redemption—a crucial theme, as Roger Ebert noted this week on his blog.
I believe Hellboy and his allies are tough and fearless enough to fight and win and save the day. I don’t yet know—and I’m not sure they know—what they fight for, what they believe in, what in their world is worth saving.
Here’s hoping Hellboy III finds some answers.



































Jul 24, 2008 at 17:50:47
Hellboy is dependably fun; for sure that director has an amazing imagination, reminded me a lot of his work in Pan’s Labyrinth