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7 Reviews
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Hellboy Seen Through The Eyes of Others,
By
This review is from: Hellboy: Weird Tales, Vol. 1 (Paperback)
Hellboy has become a huge success and creator Mike Mignola is busier than ever. So what do you do when the public wants more of your character than you can safely create? You invite other artists to put their own spin on things. This volume is a collection of such stories.Midnight Cowboy - A young Hellboy gets into trouble at Area 51. This is a fun collection. The stories vary between the silly to the dark and eerie. Art styles also cover most of the spectrum from the beautiful pencils of Hot to the cartoonish Hellboy and Co in Downtime. A must read for any Hellboy fan.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Graphic SF Reader,
By Blue Tyson "- Research Finished" (Legion clubhouse) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Hellboy: Weird Tales, Vol. 1 (Paperback)
Weird Tales was a famous old magazine that turned up a lot of legends, so the title is a homage to that particular publication.
Mike Mignola lets some other people play with his character, and there are some pretty amusing things happen to him, as a girl chases him, a band harrasses him and other fun. There are also stories featuring other BPRD luminaries.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Nice change of pace,
By Schlosky (Boston, MA) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Hellboy: Weird Tales, Vol. 2 (Paperback)
Nice to see various artists' interpretations of Hellboy. Several interesting stories. Not the best but a good read and I am satisfied with my purchase.
4.0 out of 5 stars
mix bag from hell,
This review is from: Hellboy: Weird Tales, Vol. 1 (Paperback)
Liked Hellboy Weird Tales 1 better than two. The stories in volume 1 are all excellent except "the children of black mound". Which seemed not related to the Hellboy series. All the art are distinct in styles but the characters are consistent. Not only Hellboy but Liz Sherman, Abraham, Roger, Katie Corrigan, other members are great too. Hellboy is tough and raunchy but also compassionate and a good leader. His right hand symbolizes his mythical power. The left hand, the gun. All together there are thirteen stories. Funny stories, puzzling stories, scary stories, realistic stories, symbolic stories. Everything is here. (After reading this one I was curious about Roger which had only comical role in the story. So, I went for next book.)
5.0 out of 5 stars
ahhh... the artwork..,
By kremley stilts "the gnarley artist" (sumass, wa) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Hellboy: Weird Tales, Vol. 2 (Paperback)
as some of the other reviews stated already, mike mignola didn't do any of the art or stories in this collection. that being said, this is a great collection of stories that have different takes on the characters, and the art especially but all still have the hellboy feel. the artwork is awesome. there is a variety of styles and mediums. i especially liked the colored pencil. there are some old lobster johnson comics in the back, along with pencil sketches from two artists, an afterword by mike mignola and some extra hellboys pics from the other artists. the stories are really entertaining and some parts made me laugh out loud. all in all if you are a hellboy fan you will enjoy this collection.
6 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Twelve Different Hellboys and a Crustacean,
By Marc Ruby™ "The Noh Hare™" (Warren, MI USA) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER)
This review is from: Hellboy: Weird Tales, Vol. 2 (Paperback)
You reaction to the Hellboy compendium will have a lot to do with when you realize that none of the work included is Mike Mignola's. If you are simply a Hellboy fan and knew what you were buying when you bought it, you will most likely enjoy this effort by Dark Horse Books. If you didn't look closely (or failed to read the reviews), and specifically like Mignola's work, you may be disappointed. Unfortunately, I fall in the second category, having grabbed this off the shelves during a buying spree.
I'm not going to launch into an oration about publishers who profit by imitating (even if it is imitating themselves). There is a special place in hell for them and that will suffice. But behind the nicely done cover art there are only a few cases where the art is up to Mignola's standard - Jim Starlin, Simeon Wilkins, and Kia Amasiya. The others are pretty original, and one, done by J. H. Williams is interesting on its own right. But if you are looking for Mignola's severe, dark graphics, there isn't much here. Writing varies considerably as well. I liked Love Is Scarier Than Death, Theater Of The Dead, and Toy Soldier the best. You get stories, some extra sketches, a long inclusion - A Lobster Johnson story - that left me cold, and some obligatory explanation about why this really is a Mignola comic book even if it isn't. Obviously there are people who would disagree with me, but this just falls short of the Mignola magic, proving, if nothing else, why he is as respected as he is.
5 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Demon Babies Say the Sweetest Things!,
By TastyBabySyndrome "Matthew Lewis, author of M... ("Daddy Dagon's Daycare" - Proud Sponsor of the Little Tendril Baseball Team, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Hellboy: Weird Tales, Vol. 1 (Paperback)
While working for the BPRD, Hellboy and crew see a lot of action. Unfortunately for us, all this glorious information has to take a back seat to the other things pressing Mike Mignola for time. Its an understandable dilemma, mind you, and one that I?ve patiently worked around, hoping all the while for a few more delicious morsels from the Hellboy table and trying not to complain too much when I don?t get much. Still, only having one new story in 2003 come out that left my mouth watering, (in The Dark Horse Book of Hauntings) reminding me of drink without quenching my thirst, wasn?t really the greatest feeling. In order to fill in the gaps and to make us all feel better, Hellboy and the gang have been taken under the wings of mixed group of artists and storytellers, some questionable and some rather talented, allowing other people to work with what Mike started and try to give us that fix we want. And while they aren?t Mignola and you can tell it a few times way too much, some do an outstanding job of filling in and dosing up all the Hellboy junkies out there in need of a quick fix. Now before I continue and rain praise on this parade that could be taken in many different lights, I have to let you in on a little secret. I?m actually a Hellboy junkie, fan of just about anything Mike Mignola touches, and I like following the stream that flows from that magically-tasty trough. I?ve gone to lengths to follow the BPRD sagas that have been coming out, tracking down one-shots of Abe Sapien before the TPB and finding the little hints Mignola has dropped here and there, so I?m not what you would call "unbiased party." I?ve followed quite a few forgettable drops in the artistic bucket just to catch three-four pages of a character I can?t seem to get enough of, and I?m assuming that most people that would go out and purchase this have to be at least a lower grade of obsessive like myself. For anyone that isn?t and is not familiar with the concept of the BPRD, they research the paranormal and they try to remedy those problems. More often than not that results in a little fist-to-face action, and more often than not it also involves some really strange recounts. For anyone unaware of who Hellboy is, there are a few books out there to answer a question that I?m not even going to begin tackling here. In the Weird Tales installations, there were some rather high notes and quite a few stories. I personally enjoyed seeing a lot of them dedicated to the off-the-beaten-path characters, too, like Liz Sherman and Baba Yaga. While I wouldn?t go as far as to say that anything truly meaningful to Hellboy or the BPRD takes place in them, I?d say that they contain a lot of what you?d expect. Sometimes that unfortunately translates into something that I, as a reader knowledgeable in Hellboy, abhor because the writers feel they I have to be reminded of some of the essentials. Other times it also means that we get art that isn?t the greatest in the world (and, once or twice, that I wouldn't have let my pet use for diaper duty), and the short stories we find are just that and they aren?t really allowed to shuffle things around. A few times, however, everything hits just right, a demon kid breathes a little fire and sets everything ablaze, and I sit thinking that everything therein is just plain creepy. A little Baba Yaga comes to count the fingers of the dead, Hellboy does something interesting or recounts a tale of his youth, and Roger even finds his way into the fray. This happened enough times in the mix, at least once per comic edition to the Graphic Novel, so it made it pay off pretty well and made the other portions and complaints vanish. In fact, it was kind of surprising because I expected a disaster with Mignola off working on the Hellboy movie. If you really don?t know anything about Hellboy and you?ve picked up on this as something of a primer, I?d advise you to go back and try on Mike Mignola?s work so you can get thoroughly acquainted with the idea. In the four main graphic novels, you?ll see what?s what and how the idea has influenced so many people, understanding what these stories are all about. These are more like tasty little tidbits to tie a person over, given to us by people that enjoy the concept but aren?t the Patient Zero of the Hellboy contagion. Its would actually be something akin to a cover in music, only its done with frames instead of melody. Also take note that this isn?t the whole collection because there are eight comics in the Weird Tales collection. That means there?ll be another graphic novel to come, and some of the stories that?ll be in it are really, really superb. |
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Hellboy: Weird Tales, Vol. 1 by Joe Casey (Paperback - December 30, 2003)
$17.95 $17.30
In Stock | ||