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B.P.R.D., Vol. 13: 1947 [Paperback]

Mike Mignola , Joshua Dysart , Dave Stewart , Fabio Moon , Gabriel Ba
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Book Description

July 20, 2010
Kicking off with a trainload of Nazi officers drained of blood, the Bureau for Paranormal Research and Defense learns that there are things far more ancient and dangerous than they could have imagined in this direct sequel to B.P.R.D.: 1946. Broom enlists an already damaged crew to lead an investigation that may be doomed before it can begin, climaxing in a witches' Sabbath, a vampire massacre, and an exorcism.

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B.P.R.D., Vol. 13: 1947 + B.P.R.D., Vol. 14: King of Fear + B.P.R.D., Vol. 12: War on Frogs
Price for all three: $43.15

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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

Whereas?1946, the last B.P.R.D. origin story, published in 2008, was a self-contained and complete story arc, this volume feels more like the beginning of what promises to be a year-by-year chronological tracing of both the organization’s early days and Hellboy’s childhood. The focus is on a group of grizzled soldiers knocking about post-Nazi Germany, squaring off against vampires and other ghastly terrors. Back home, a wee Hellboy just wants to play catch with his adoptive father, Professor Bruttenholm. Twin-brother artists Bá and Moon swap scenes back and forth, and both prove ideally suited to envision Mignola’s playful occult-horror universe. --Ian Chipman

Product Details

  • Paperback: 160 pages
  • Publisher: Dark Horse; First Edition edition (July 20, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1595824782
  • ISBN-13: 978-1595824783
  • Product Dimensions: 7 x 0.4 x 10 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #737,899 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Mike Mignola is best known as the multiple award-winning creator, writer, and artist of "B.P.R.D." and "Hellboy", but has fostered several other projects like "The Amazing Screw-On Head" and "Baltimore" with Christopher Golden. Although he began working as a professional cartoonist in the early 1980s, drawing 'a little bit of everything for just about everybody' - including characters like Batman and Wolverine - he was also a production designer on the Disney film "Atlantis: The Lost Empire". Mignola also acted as a visual consultant to Guillermo del Toro on "Blade 2" and the film versions of Hellboy, which were broadly adapted by del Toro from the original comic series. Mike Mignola currently lives in southern California with his wife, daughter, and cat.

Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The Regular Joes vs. The Forces of Darkness August 23, 2010
Format:Paperback
I was sold on "B.P.R.D.1947" from the very start, when I first heard the premise. Before the time when the time when the government had a slew of "Enhanced Talent" agents to throw at the forces of darkness, they had to do with average Joes. Pulled from the aftermath of World War II, these agents were not hulking red monsters who could shrug off a spear through the chest or amphibious gentlemen who could swim under the deepest waters; They were just fragile human beings who knew the horrors of war but were still not prepared to fight a battle against vampire countesses with zombie butlers, or giant snake women who fill the sky. And these you aren't going to find happy endings here. As someone who has played more than my fair share of Call of Cthulhu, I know from experience that regular humans tend not to survive when standing against creatures from our collective nightmares.

I am happy to say that Mike Mignola and his crew did not disappoint. "B.P.R.D. 1947" delivers a grand old adventure story set in the Hellboy universe, and even goes so far as to add some threat back to the monsters lurking in the corners. Those things that go bump in the night bump even harder when they are facing off against ordinary humans.

The action starts after the conclusion of B.P.R.D. 1946, when Trevor Bruttenholm is in charge of the fledgling Bureau for Paranormal Research and Defense and is being faced with a bizarre case. Prisoners of war, specifically captured Nazi soldiers, are being torn to pieces across Europe. Many are willing to turn a blind eye to this, but Professor Bruttenholm insists on assembling a team of agents to investigate. Four men are plucked from the roster into active service; Normandy-survivor Jacob Stegner, Bomb-expert Frank Russell, Jungle warefare specialist Gabriel Ruiz, and Simon Anders, a merchant marine who spent twenty-four days in a lifeboat drifting in the South Pacific not knowing if he would live or die. All of them carry some scars from the war, and all of them selected further active service rather than to retire to civilian life.

Bruttenholm sends them to France to follow-up on his only clue. A vampire named Baron Konig once hosted a party in a chateau in 1771, which was attended by a poet named De Grigny who wrote an opera from the experience and was then condemned to a madhouse for his efforts. The four newly-christened B.P.R.D. agents are to investigate the chateau and hopefully locate Konig, who is believed responsible for the mutilations. Once in France, the studious merchant marine Anders gets caught up in a dream-world involving two vampire ladies, and the remainder of the team must fight their way into and out of the cabal in order to set him free.

The creative team for "B.P.R.D. 1947" was truly a "team," and one which merged flawlessly. Mignola provided the plot and over-story. Joshua Dysart filled in with the backgrounds, personalities and dialog of the agents, and the art was provided by two men, Gabrial Ba and Fabio Moon. The double-artists was Mignola's idea, who wanted the transition from "real world" to "vampire kingdom" to be a visual one as well as written one, and found just the right answer in Ba and Moon. The two artists share a studio together, and worked together to create a mixed style that captures Mignola's idea fluently. Continuity is maintained by the magnificent colorist Dave Stewart, who changes his own style from the more graphic colors of modern France to the more fluid and painterly colors of the vampire world.

The whole experiment works really well, and there are some magnificent moments here. Without giving too much away, there is a brilliant scene when an old, crotchety priest stands against the forces of darkness, while a glimpse at his true soul shows a magnificent warrior full of power and light. The scene was nothing less than cinematic.

And yeah, there is some cute stuff here as well. Aside from the heavy good-vs-evil (and I loved Baron Konig's rationalization for dismembering the Nazis. Great stuff there) "Lil' Hellboy is bopping around the B.P.R.D. headquarters as well, trying to drag a weeping Bruttenholm away from his desk to go play catch, or at least find someone to make him some pamcakes.

Dark Horse always delivers some good bang for the buck with their collected editions, and especially with "B.P.R.D. 1947." Because of the nature of the work, it was fascinating to see Mignola's original sketches, then see the two interpretations by Ba and Moon, and to go back and hunt for the scenes they collaborated on picking out their individual styles.

This collection also includes a Trevor Bruttenholm solo-adventure, "And What Shall I Find There?" that originally appeared as a promotion on MySpace. The art is by Patric Reynolds, and shows a young Bruttenholm on his first supernatural adventure.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The Art The Art August 9, 2010
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
I have almost all of Mike Mignola's books in this series, they tend to be addictive, and for me, they are best read late at night. B.P.R.D. 1947 is very much like the others, in fact there were times when I found myself thinking, did I read this already? But what sets this book apart is the art by twins Gabriel Ba and Fabio Moon; artistic genius... Their whimsical, kinetic line work applied to compositions of balanced detail create panels that build pages into a book that is a masterpiece. And the color by Dave Stewart is perfection: the glows of old fashioned lighting in 1947 Europe; the blue of a bright night sky; the diamond stars in dark night filled with sharp eyed cats in a leafless tree; the bright flashes and dark undertones of a D-Day beach, an omnious bunker on a hilltop, its dark slit of an opening punctuated by flashes of machine gun fire... Every page, every character has been crafted with: "We were so excited to be working on a Hellboy comic. We really put all our strengths into this... And working with Dave Stewart is always a delight. He is just the best." (Gabriel Ba and Fabio Moon). Their passion and dedication shows. 1947 is a book, with an interesting story, and Clem Robins lettering played a large part in making it such an enjoyable read. Even after finishing B.P.R.D. 1947, I find myself constantly going back to look at the panels and pages, again and again; I feel like I am being haunted by the artists, and of course the master: Mike Mignola.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Haven't seen that Hitler in a while... August 26, 2010
Format:Paperback
BPRD #13 opens with the mass mutilation of a train full of SS officers. The tone is set right? The story involves centuries old vampires, malevolent spirits, an eternal ball of dead people, and how the BPRD made it through the rocky second year of their formation without Abe Sapien or Hellboy or Liz or any of the regulars to help them. Hellboy puts in a cutesy performance as the kid he was, asking for pancakes and reading Lobster Johnson, but essentially the story centres around a small group of former GIs who go out to do battle with the ghosties and the ghoulies.

Ace script from Mignola, some fantastic artwork from Gabriel Ba and Fabio Moon, and a haunting tale of an ordinary man magicked away to fairy land and somehow finding his way back. This edition also features a small strip about the Professor in his youth staying the night in a haunted church. A great addition to the BPRD series, roll on 1948!
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