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Hellboy

  • 2004
  • PG-13
  • 2h 2m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
361K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
2,013
128
John Hurt, Ron Perlman, Selma Blair, Ladislav Beran, Doug Jones, Karel Roden, Brian Steele, and Rupert Evans in Hellboy (2004)
Trailer for Hellboy
Play trailer0:16
11 Videos
99+ Photos
Dark FantasySteampunkSuperheroActionAdventureFantasyHorrorSci-Fi

A demon raised from infancy after being conjured by and rescued from the Nazis, grows up to become a defender against the forces of darkness.A demon raised from infancy after being conjured by and rescued from the Nazis, grows up to become a defender against the forces of darkness.A demon raised from infancy after being conjured by and rescued from the Nazis, grows up to become a defender against the forces of darkness.

  • Director
    • Guillermo del Toro
  • Writers
    • Guillermo del Toro
    • Peter Briggs
    • Mike Mignola
  • Stars
    • Ron Perlman
    • Doug Jones
    • Selma Blair
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    361K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    2,013
    128
    • Director
      • Guillermo del Toro
    • Writers
      • Guillermo del Toro
      • Peter Briggs
      • Mike Mignola
    • Stars
      • Ron Perlman
      • Doug Jones
      • Selma Blair
    • 750User reviews
    • 119Critic reviews
    • 72Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 23 nominations total

    Videos11

    Hellboy
    Trailer 0:16
    Hellboy
    Hellboy
    Trailer 1:01
    Hellboy
    Hellboy
    Trailer 1:01
    Hellboy
    IMDb's Most Anticipated Movies of 2019
    Clip 3:44
    IMDb's Most Anticipated Movies of 2019
    4 Most Anticipated Reboots at NY Comic Con
    Clip 3:11
    4 Most Anticipated Reboots at NY Comic Con
    Hellboy Scene: Tunnel Chase
    Clip 0:58
    Hellboy Scene: Tunnel Chase
    Hellboy Scene: Subway Freefall Fight
    Clip 0:56
    Hellboy Scene: Subway Freefall Fight

    Photos288

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    Top cast53

    Edit
    Ron Perlman
    Ron Perlman
    • Hellboy
    Doug Jones
    Doug Jones
    • Abe Sapien
    Selma Blair
    Selma Blair
    • Liz Sherman
    John Hurt
    John Hurt
    • Trevor "Broom" Bruttenholm
    Rupert Evans
    Rupert Evans
    • John Myers
    Karel Roden
    Karel Roden
    • Grigori Rasputin
    Jeffrey Tambor
    Jeffrey Tambor
    • Tom Manning
    Brian Steele
    Brian Steele
    • Sammael
    Ladislav Beran
    Ladislav Beran
    • Karl Ruprecht Kroenen
    Biddy Hodson
    Biddy Hodson
    • Ilsa Haupstein
    • (as Bridget Hodson)
    Corey Johnson
    Corey Johnson
    • Agent Clay
    Kevin Trainor
    Kevin Trainor
    • Young "Broom"
    Brian Caspe
    Brian Caspe
    • Agent Lime
    James Babson
    James Babson
    • Agent Moss
    Stephen Fisher
    Stephen Fisher
    • Agent Quarry
    Garth Cooper
    • Agent Stone
    Angus MacInnes
    Angus MacInnes
    • Sgt. Whitman
    Jim Howick
    Jim Howick
    • Cpl. Matlin
    • Director
      • Guillermo del Toro
    • Writers
      • Guillermo del Toro
      • Peter Briggs
      • Mike Mignola
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews750

    6.9361.4K
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    Featured reviews

    0U

    Good

    I've been slowly making my way through Guillermo del Toro's catalogue of movies and this is my first time watching Hell Boy. If you're a Del Toro fan, then this one won't disappoint. He's such a superior director - he adds artistry to this action film through his use of shot making, pacing and colour. At times, the dialogue attempts to be a bit too cute and the love story adds little to the plot, but overall, it's a fun movie that doesn't try to overextend itself.
    ametaphysicalshark

    Great entertainment delivered in a visually stylish package

    Guillermo Del Toro's "Hellboy" is really the sort of comic book adaptation that should be commonplace- a film that feels every bit like a comic book in its energy, style, and visual feel, but is entirely worthy on a cinematic level as well.

    Sadly, "Hellboy" doesn't really have much of a plot, at least for half of its running time. Its first hour is Hellboy fighting squids and the mandatory character introductions, and its second hour feels pretty rushed as a result, having to introduce and resolve the bulk of the film's story. Thankfully, however, "Hellboy" avoids the comic book-to-film cliché of basing the first film of any given franchise on the 'superhero origin story' (not that Hellboy is much of a superhero, he's really just a smartass with a gun, except he's from hell), instead keeping all that to a short and dazzling pre-credits sequence. Other than the somewhat rushed and oddly-placed plot aspects, Del Toro's screenplay is fairly impressive, providing plenty of nods towards the comics and a good amount of wit and humor, also echoing the nature of Mike Mignola's work.

    The most impressive aspects of "Hellboy" are Del Toro's direction and Guillermo Navarro's photography. Del Toro was always a superb director in terms of visuals, although I've had issues with several of his scripts. His most accomplished film to date in this regard would probably be the superb "The Devil's Backbone", but "Hellboy" shows that he has a surprising knack for directing action in a fluid manner without resorting to the cheap method of quick cutting. Also notable in terms of Del Toro's work here is how he subtly manages to pay homage to the memorable artwork of the comics, for example the overhead shots of Hellboy.

    The CGI effects are quite good considering the film's relatively modest budget, and thankfully they don't form the basis for much of this film. The cast are all solid if not fantastic, although Ron Perlman is probably the best actor I can think of to play Hellboy. The final shot is beautiful and perfectly in keeping with the pulp poetry of not only this film but also the comics it is based on.

    8/10
    8Quinoa1984

    Guillermo Del-Toro's exciting, fun tribute to the flamboyantly cool powers of comic books

    Hellboy is self-conscious, perhaps, but in the best ways possible. Actually, it's more due to writer/director Toro being very aware of what makes up the conventional bits to every sense character-wise to the world of a comic-book, but also what can be entertaining as well, than it is just to having it being a Hellboy movie where the comic-book Hellboy already exists IN this world (guy sees the Hellboy comic, looks up, it's Hellboy!). We get the tough-as-nails, dryly witty, and possibly ticking-time-bomb hero in Hellboy, a deadly serious villain in Rasputin (yes, Rasputin, with a blonde Nazi as his evil side-kick no less), the young apprentice to the hero (Ruper Evans as John Meyers), the hero's love interest (Liz Sherman played by Selma Blair), the father figure (John Hurt's Professor), and the reluctant 'boss' (Jeffrey Tambor), not to mention the plucky side mutant in Abraham (Doug Jones) AND a magnificent creature in that hard-ass slug. They're all there, bright as day (or dark, depending on point of view), and it all works wonderfully due to Toro running with it all head on. It's not done in a way that's meant to pander to the audience, either, but just to have fun with the conventions, to see what makes them all crackle and pop under big-time special effects. It's not quite a guilty pleasure because Toro is also a smart craftsman.

    And craftsman just as much as director, he crafts this world where the creatures (which were and still are Toro's forte) are fierce and radically charged, whether they're crucial to the picture like Rasputin's rabid, rapidly hatching slug-monsters that can only be killed one or two ways, or if it's just a minor creature like the zombie Russian corpse that leads a little of the way when Hellboy and his crew are in the main hideout of the villains ("I was better off dead!"). Toro is sensitive to the characters alongside this, and makes them all pretty believable- and I say pretty cause it's all a little simple, yet effective, in the main thrust of Hellboy's emotional core being about Liz and if she may or may not go for John over him- and doesn't dumb it down too much or contrive the relationships for the audience. It's a good balance, because there is A LOT of action in Hellboy, in fact probably at least a 60% allotment to either Hellboy fighting the monsters after him (usually in the subway, or in the Russian castle), or with the possibly un-dead assassin in the mask and leather who marks as one of the fiercest forces in comic book movies.

    So, fan-boys rejoice, because Hellboy should, and hopefully will, have everything one looks for in a brawny, high-octane entertainment where humor isn't confused with cheesiness (Perlman is too well focused as a possible anti-hero to get into any of that, as he makes that hugely built red lug a very real being), and the action isn't over-done with a tongue-in-cheek. Not that Toro doesn't flirt with having goofy things in his picture, like a moment where Hellboy has to save a box of kittens from the grasp of the slug-monster. But they're earned moments among a very tightly constructed story where human evils in history and the bizarre in what is in the facts (Hitler into the occult, Rasputin's very long death) into a comfortably understood framework of comic-book clichés that never get too old when done right. Bottom line, can't wait for number 2!
    7ghoulieguru

    Hell of a Movie!

    Alright, so seeing as how I'm comment #430, I don't imagine that anyone is going to read my review, or that anyone will be encouraged to watch Hellboy because of anything that I'll say. There are others who have written short novels on IMDb about what a great movie this is, so there's no point in me doing more of the same.

    Suffice it to say that this movie is beautifully shot, well acted (with the exception of the kid who plays the FBI agent) and directed by masterful Guillermo Del Toro with style and grace. It's not for everyone, and those who are fans of the comic will probably enjoy it more than your average moviegoer. But if you like movies like The Crow or Darkman, this one is right down your dark little alley.
    7rbverhoef

    Entertaining comic book movie

    When you are watching a comic book movie you have to take certain things for granted. The superpowers, strange villains, things like that. They are there in a non-existing world; saying they are implausible is true but not relevant. What a comic book movie needs is a nice story that is set in its own world (although real existing places can be there too), an entertaining superhero played by an actor who is able to really create the character, spectacular visual effects that fit the action but most of all it needs to breath the right mood. 'Spider-Man 2' did a perfect job, 'X2', 'Blade II' and now 'Hellboy' come very close. The difference is that 'Hellboy' is the first from what will probably become a series.

    The superhero in 'Hellboy' is, of course, Hellboy (Ron Perlman). How he arrives on earth has something to do with Nazis, around 1944, which we see in the first ten minutes of the movie. Let us say he is just here, present day, on the good side, with a professor named Bruttenholm (John Hurt) as his father figure; he was there when Hellboy came from hell. The villains are the same Nazis, you learn why they are still alive, and a lot of monsters they have created. We also meet a love interest for Hellboy named Liz (Selma Blair) and his new partner, Agent Myers (Rupert Evans).

    So Hellboy will fight the Nazis and the monsters, but there is more. His father figure is close to death and the love interest, who sets on fire when she is excited, is not really interested. What makes this movie entertaining, besides the right mood we constantly feel, is the dry humor Ron Perlman brings to the character. Hellboy is supposed to be a secret for the outer world although rumors of his existence are there. When Agent Myers goes for a walk wit Liz Hellboy gets jealous and follows them over rooftops where he encounters a nine year old boy. The boy recognizes Hellboy and the scenes that follow the encounter are close to brilliant.

    There are other very fine moments. At one point a character asks why photographs of UFO's, aliens or Hellboy are always blurry, not very sharp. We see the truth in this question although ironically in a comic book world the question is very out of place; Hellboy does exist. May be this is not the best comic book movie, but entertaining it is. Compare it to another 2004 movie like 'Spider-Man 2' this one seems flawed although we can see the same amount of fun the characters have. Compare it to the dark and brutal 2004 comic book movie 'The Punisher' and this one is terrific, feels like a comic book the entire time, has an interesting hero with humor. That everything around it is pretty silly we just have to take for granted.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Doug Jones' (Abe Sapien's) voice was dubbed by David Hyde Pierce, but Pierce refused a credit because he felt that Abe was entirely Doug's creation, and did not wish to detract from his performance.
    • Goofs
      On the Bridge scene under the graveyard, Tom Manning is thrown and slides under the door just before it closes. However Hellboy also slides under later in the scene when the door should have already been closed.
    • Quotes

      John Myers: My uncle used to say that we like people for their qualities but we love them for their defects.

    • Crazy credits
      Under the "Special Thanks To" - Erik Irastorza who was born during our shoot.
    • Alternate versions
      The Hellboy 3-disc director's cut DVD is ten minutes longer. (132 minute director's cut versus 122 minute regular version). Restores a few deleted/extended scenes back into the movie.
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert: The Ladykillers/Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed/Hellboy/Ned Kelly/Dogville (2004)
    • Soundtracks
      Heart Attack and Vine
      Written and Performed by Tom Waits

      Courtesy of Elektra Entertainment Group

      By Arrangement with Warner Strategic Marketing

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    FAQ30

    • How long is Hellboy?Powered by Alexa
    • What is 'Hellboy' about?
    • Is "Hellboy" based on a book?
    • Why is the Right Hand of Doom suddenly on Hellboy's left hand in Kroenen's lair?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 2, 2004 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Sony Pictures (United States)
    • Languages
      • English
      • Russian
      • German
      • Latin
    • Also known as
      • Hellboy 1
    • Filming locations
      • Barrandov Studios, Prague, Czech Republic(Studio)
    • Production companies
      • Revolution Studios
      • Lawrence Gordon Productions
      • Dark Horse Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $66,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $59,623,958
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $23,172,440
      • Apr 4, 2004
    • Gross worldwide
      • $99,378,985
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 2 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
      • Dolby Atmos
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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