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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Previously read 2008-02-29 ( )Finally got hold of this after it being on order for months. Thoroughly enjoyable. At times Mignola’s writing reads poetically, with a smooth easy rhythm. I found the beginning pages a little confusing as the narration seemed to switch. Once Hellboy became the sole narrator (not a phrase I thought I’d ever write!) the story flowed. There is a degree of the abstract within the artwork. Faces and backgrounds not clearly defined. Instead there is an emphasis on shadow and light; dark backgrounds throwing the glorious bright red of Hellboy almost off the page at times. It is artwork that works well within the nature of the story. Summary: This movie is an adaptation from the graphic novel by Mike Mignolia. It is during the end of World War II when the Nazis out of desperation attempt to use black magic to help their dying cause. It is during the last ritual using black magic that Hellboy comes into this world as a baby Hellboy. He grows to adulthood and fights evil along with other weird creatures. I'm very glad to say that I liked this a lot. Even the art, which up until now I thought I would totally hate, was pretty cool. The characters were cool and original, the bad guy was really evil and evil looking and his masters are cthulhu-like monsters. What more could you ask for? I can't say it's as good as -Top 10- or -Transmetropolitan- but I'll definitely be reading the next couple graphic novels. Mike Mignola's first collection of his Hellboy series, Seed of Destruction sets the tone and feel for the rest of the series. With a story and art by Mike Mignola and a script by John Byrne, Seed of Destruction introduces us to Hellboy, a demon brought over to our dimension by Rasputin in an effort by the Nazis to gain supernatural help during WWII. Hellboy is brought to our dimension as a young child, hence the name that sticks, and when we are introduced to him as an adult, Hellboy is working for the Bureau of Paranormal Research and Defense, or BPRD, where he investigates supernatural phenomena. Truth be told, I don't think there was too much to this story, but it was a well-crafted introduction to the mythos and characters of Hellboy.
The book is an action-adventure, not out of place compared to so many other comics with outrageous-looking heroes and mystical events, but the sense of being part of something bigger sets it apart.
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