Director: Brian Taylor
Screenplay: Christopher Golden, Mike Mignola and Brian Taylor
Starring: Jack Kesy, Jefferson White and Adeline Rudolph
Country: United States
Running Time: 99 min
Year: 2024
When it comes to live-action adaptations of Mike Mignolaâs Hellboy, thereâs little competition in the way of which adaptation people tend to love. Guillermo del Toroâs 2004 effort and its 2008 sequel, The Golden Army are fan favourites for a reason. del Toroâs inspired worlds, the loveable Ron Perlman as Big Red himself, those films are a great entry point for newcomers to the world of Mignolaâs anti-hero. When the 2019 effort rolled around, fans were disappointed that they werenât getting a third instalment to cap off del Toroâs trilogy and were negative towards the David Harbour-led reboot, which aimed for less of a fantastical world and leaned more into the Deadpool sense of humour, which was a dud for critics and audiences alike.Â
Fast-forward to 2024 and we get news that Brian Taylor, one half of filmmaking duo Nevaldine/Taylor (Crank, Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance, Gamer) was rebooting Hellboy yet again, fans were once again frustrated and ( unfairly) judged the film based on a leaked 240p trailer. The film looked cheaper than the previous efforts, and didn’t have the star power of the previous efforts, so it seemed like everything was going against it, outside of the fact that it was a direct adaptation of Mike Mignolaâs The Crooked Man story, with Mignola getting a writing credit for his work. The big question is, how did this turn out? Was it the dud everybody was expecting or better than anticipated? WellâŠ
Right off the bat, I want to say that comparing this film to the $50 million+ efforts that came before is something that feels unfair for a project thatâs considerably smaller in scale. Many people have stated that it looks more like a âfan filmâ than a studio effort, and while Taylor and co. werenât working with as much money as those other two films, I donât think it affects the end product. Within the opening frames of the film, weâre presented with the horror-esque title card (which rules) and given no introduction to Hellboy or his partner Bobbie Jo Song, outside of the fact that theyâre carrying a dangerous spider in a box on a train. Usually, thisâd be frustrating but given how many adaptations weâve already received, Taylor assumes we know what weâre in for. Hellboy works for the B.P.R.D. and deals with supernatural deities often.Â
I feel like Iâm going to be in the minority when saying this, but The Crooked Man absolutely rocks. The opening action set-piece of a train doesnât deliver with the greatest visual effects, but Jack Kesyâs take on Hellboy is something refreshing, opting not to recreate what Perlman or Harbour did previously, but instead making him a quiet and dry wise-cracking detective. Itâs a great performance and ranks as my favourite page-to-screen adaptation of the character, heâs that good.Â
Taylorâs direction throughout is as manic as youâd expect from the man behind the Crank movies, with crazy dutch angles, Raimi-esque performances from the antagonists and some killer action scenes, when theyâre present. The film focuses far more on the horror than prior instalments and really shines for that. Instead of giving us another âend of the worldâ disaster narrative, we get Hellboy taking on a weird, creepy old man in the woods and if youâre on board for that, itâs a delightful time.
I feel like most people will be expecting something more along the lines of those prior adaptations, which only does this film a disservice for what itâs aiming to deliver. Itâs a small-scale horror picture, with some fun action sprinkled in, a great source-accurate portrayal of the lead character and plenty of fun, haunted house vibes that are an absolute blast. As I said earlier, comparisons to the del Toro or Neil Marshall efforts from before will most likely be the reason why this doesnât immediately connect with audiences and critics, which is a shame to say, because Brian Taylor and his crew delivered something that undeniably rocks. Thereâs passion brimming through every single frame, care given when adapting the source material and itâs a lean, tight 90 minutes and change. If you head into it open-minded, without instantly comparing it to those earlier adaptations, itâs a riot and I canât wait to watch it again in the future.
Film:
Hellboy: The Crooked Man released on 4K UHD, Blu-ray and DVD on December 9th via Icon Home Entertainment. I viewed the UHD for the film and the Blu-ray for the bonus features. Thereâs no HDR on the UHD disc, which is unusual for a UHD disc but still, the disc looks solid. While the film was made on a lower budget compared to prior Hellboy films, the excellent direction from Taylor helps deliver a visually interesting film that looks really good on 4K UHD. Itâs not perfect and thereâs some visual inconsistencies, of course, but die-hard Hellboy fans will be pleased by the transfer. Audio wise, itâs a DTS-HD MA 5.1 track and it sounds good too.
The following extras are included:Â
COLLECTOR’S SPECIAL EDITION
Premium O-ring packaging
Cast and crew behind-the-scenes interviews
B-roll
Plus four bespoke art cards and double-sided poster!
There are an incredible amount of cast and crew interviews featured on this disc. Over an hour and 54 minutes of interviews, split across 14 interviews with all of the key players, actors Jack Kesy, Adeline Rudolph, Hannah Margetson, Jefferson White, Joseph Marcell, Martin Bassindale and Leah McNamara as well as director Brian Taylor, producer Jonathan Yunger and production designer Orlin Grozdanov. I feel like thereâd be a ton of overlap if I cover each individual interview, and they range in quality and interesting topics, so Iâll just cover a few highlights here. Director Brian Taylorâs interview is the best piece, with him talking about his admiration for the source, professing love for the del Toro features and the folk horror nature of The Crooked Man story. Jack Kesyâs interview is alright too, offering his insight on his preparation for the film and more. Martin Bassindale probably has my favourite interview, heâs clearly a fan of the source material. Overall, thereâs a lot of overlap and similar comments from each interview when you watch them back to back, but itâs nice to see interviews from virtually everybody involved in the film.Â
25 minutes of B-roll footage are included and this is an interesting watch. Itâs uncut, on-set footage that I loved seeing, given how much I enjoyed the film. Itâs clear how much passion and effort went into the film and fans will get a kick out of watching this extra.Â
The theatrical trailer is also included.
I wasnât provided with the o-ring, the art cards or poster so I canât comment on those, unfortunately.Â
Hellboy: The Crooked Man is an underrated gem of the year and I wasnât even sure that itâd get a DVD over here. When a UHD was announced, I was more than happy to check out the film for a second time and while the disc isnât fantastic, itâs worth owning for fans of the film. Solid extras, a nice looking physical release with a slipcover, art-cards and a poster and a decent transfer make it worth owning.
Disc/Packaging:
I felt like the film was a homage to 80âs horror films like Sam Raimi made with a nice tip 9f the hat to low budget Hammer films. While the film clearly was made by a passionate crew, the CGI is poor and but the make up and physical effects are quite good. It feels like a TV movie or pilot for a TV show. Much more could have been done with the narrative and with a bit more money and tweaking, this could have been terrific. As it is, itâs just mediocre.