Hellboy: Sword of Storms
The Cartoon Network is airing an animated Hellboy movie called “Hellboy: Sword of Storms” this Saturday at 6:30pm. I’d heard about the series at the local comic book convention last year, but it’d dropped off my radar until seeing it in a magazine this week.
Because it’s 2006, you can find an online production diary for the series in blog format. I haven’t read it yet, part of my stay-completely-unspoiled policy (which is cleverly disguised as having no free time at all).
My knee-jerk impression based on nothing other than the pictures on that blog: it looks like a more standard animation style than trying to do an exact duplicate of Mike Mignola’s style. That could be good or bad; The Amazing Screw-on Head was clearly made by people who were huge fans of the comic book and ended up being a slavish reproduction. It was neat to see my favorite comic book in motion on a major network, or even the Sci-Fi Channel, but at the same time it felt like there was nothing there I hadn’t already seen. And I haven’t seen or heard anything about the continuation of that series, so I’m assuming it didn’t make a huge impression.
Hellboy (apparently it’s intended to be a series) looks like it’s going for a more easily-animated style, and the synopsis of Sword of Storms sounds like it’s faithful to the comics while leaving plenty of room to be an ongoing action-heavy series. If you want to grab the anime market, start your story in Japan: good idea.
At this point, I’m expecting to have the same reaction as I did to the movie: good effort, nice to see the characters in motion, but on the whole basically forgettable. I’m open to being pleasantly surprised, though.









October 26th, 2006 11:48 pm
…which reminds me that you should really read George R.R. Martin’s “Storm of Swords.” I think you’d dig it. Along with the rest of the “Song of Ice and Fire” series.
October 29th, 2006 7:10 pm
I’ve heard of those books, but always equated them with the “Wheel of Time” series, which I hate. Maybe that was unfair, and I should check them out. It’s going to be a while before I get back into fantasy/sci-fi again though, especially considering how slowly I read.
October 31st, 2006 2:51 pm
A closer comparison would be the “Dune” series…or at least the original Frank Herbert installment. Lots of intrigue, double-dealing, assasinations. Characters meeting unsavory ends. Martin draws a lot of his inspiration from the War of the Roses, transplanting events from historic England to his own “magical realm of fantasy.”
Anyway, we got loanin’ copies at the house.