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Hellboy: The Fury #2 Review
By Leroy Douresseaux
July 13, 2011 - 11:07

Dark Horse Comics
Writer(s): Mike Mignola
Penciller(s): Duncan Fegredo
Inker(s): Duncan Fegredo
Colourist(s): Dave Stewart
Letterer(s): Clem Robins
Cover Artist(s): Mike Mignola, Dave Stewart
$2.99 US, 32pp, Color




hellboythefury02.jpg
Hellboy: The Fury #2 cover image

If I understand correctly, the new three-issue Hellboy miniseries, Hellboy: The Fury, is the conclusion the union of Hellboy creator Mike Mignola and artist Duncan Fegredo.  Apparently, The Fury brings an end to the story arc that began in Hellboy: Darkness Calls (2008) and continued in The Wild Hunt (2008-2009) and The Storm (2010).  I have not read those comics, nor have I read Hellboy since Conqueror Worm (2001).

In Hellboy: The Fury, Hellboy leads the undead army of England against the Queen of Blood, Nimue (also Queen of Witches), and her army of the damned.  Hellboy: The Fury #2 opens with Alice Monaghan in England.  She witness a raging battle between the forces of good and evil, as the battlefield fills with dead monsters and knights.  Meanwhile, Hellboy has a battle royale with the Queen of Blood’s champion.

THE LOWDOWN:  The moody, imaginative storytelling that comes most to mind when I think of Hellboy is absent from Hellboy: The Fury.  Mignola’s mind has conjured a story full of gigantic, kinetic action sequences that are right out of Peter Jackson’s Lord of the Rings films (or TOKYOPOP’s World of Warcraft manga).

Comics tell their stories in words, pictures, and graphics, and artist Duncan Fegredo unleashes and transforms Mignola’s arcane, eccentric storytelling with both vigor and imagination.  From the first panel to the next and the next after that, Fegredo portrays Armageddon and monster throw downs with surprising beauty and inventive design.  Fegredo has riffed on Mignola’s style since he has taken the Hellboy creator’s place in drawing Hellboy to life, which makes sense.  Still, Fegredo is true Hellboy, while managing to be true to himself by producing both beauty and good storytelling.

Of course, it doesn’t hurt to have the masterful coloring of Dave Stewart.  Anyway, I’m trying to catch up on Hellboy, but that isn’t stopping me from loving The Fury.

POSSIBLE AUDIENCE:  Hellboy readers will want Hellboy: The Fury, and so will readers looking for high-quality fantasy comic books.

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