Metacritic Film

Hellboy

Starring Ron Perlman, Selma Blair, Jeffrey Tambor, Karel Roden, Rupert Evans, John Hurt, Corey Johnson, and Doug Jones

MPAA RATING: PG-13 for sci-fi action violence and frightening images

Columbia Pictures / Sony Pictures Entertainment
Action  |  Adventure  |  Horror  |  Sci-fi
120 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters April 2, 2004

A supernatural action-adventure based on Mike Mignola's acclaimed Dark Horse Comic series of the same name. (Sony)

WRITTEN BY
Guillermo del Toro (also screen story)
Peter Briggs (screen story)
Mike Mignola (comic books)

DIRECTED BY
Guillermo del Toro

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

72 / 100

Critic Reviews

90 Washington Post Richard Harrington
Del Toro moves his story along with unrelenting energy and wit while introducing the opposing parties with admirable efficiency.
90 Wall Street Journal
A perfect fit in the category of instant classic, and, not incidentally, fits the profile of super-profitability. Bursting the bonds of its genre, Hellboy fills the screen with gorgeous imagery, vertiginous action and a surprising depth of feeling.
90 Washington Post
Surprisingly smart, graphically faithful live-action adaptation of the Mike Mignola series
90 Salon.com
One of the most poetic comic-book adaptations to come along in years, yet it never loses its sense of lightness and fun -- del Toro gives it just enough screwball nuttiness to keep it from bogging down.
90 Slate
Guillermo del Toro is in a class with Peter Jackson as a fan-boy who gets it--a brilliant filmmaker who has a kind of metabolic connection to horror and sci-fi that helps him transform secondhand genre material into something deep and nourishing. Del Toro reaches into himself and finds the Wagnerian grandeur in schlock.
90 Film Threat Pete Vonder Haar
Hellboy just might end up being one of the best movies you see this year.
88 Chicago Sun-Times
One of those rare movies that's not only based on a comic book, but also feels like a comic book. It's vibrating with energy, and you can sense the zeal and joy in its making.
83 Portland Oregonian M. E. Russell
The movie's got a heart as warm as hellfire.
80 Chicago Reader
Played by Ron Perlman, he's the most magnetic action hero I've come across in a long while.
80 LA Weekly
One of the sturdier superhero movies of the last couple of years, with monsters and effects and diabolical baddies to spare, a heart as big as a house and a love story that actually gets its hooks in you.
80 The New York Times
Mr. del Toro lets loose with an all-American, vaudevillian rambunctiousness that makes the movie daffy, loose and lovable.
75 Rolling Stone
Hellboy is on fire with scares and laughs and del Toro’s visionary dazzle. It’s the tenderness that comes as an unexpected bonus.
75 Philadelphia Inquirer
The film - despite being a half-hour too long - is a rocking, rolling supernatural spectacle.
75 Christian Science Monitor
The screenplay has flashes of real wit, and Perlman is perfect in the title role.
75 New York Daily News
Hellboy may be a big, noisy goof of a comic-book action film, but love is in the dank, dark, subterranean air as the bulky red-hued palooka tries to win the heart of the pyrokinetic beauty Liz Sherman.
75 ReelViews
Hellboy likely won't be the best comic-to-screen adaptation this year, but, squared off against its early-season challenger, Marvel's "The Punisher," this is the winner.
75 Entertainment Weekly
Directed by Guillermo del Toro with a colorfully kinetic visual imagination that seldom lets up.
75 San Francisco Chronicle Peter Hartlaub
The movie has a self- deprecating sense of humor and a strong emotional core that vaults it above most action movies that come out this time of year.
75 Miami Herald
There are other filmmakers who might have been drawn to a comic book as enchantingly ridiculous as Hellboy. But there are none who would have turned in a sleek $60 million picture as daringly silly, playful and imaginative as this one.
75 Premiere Sara Brady
If the film's love triangle feels a little silly and the arch-villains a little over the top, it's all secondary to del Toro's passionate immersion in Hellboy.
75 Boston Globe
So forget about taking anyone under 12. But if you want to see what a benign demon looks like when he's eating nachos and unwinding to Al Green, this is the movie for you.
75 Baltimore Sun
Hellboy is, to borrow a phrase, one helluva good time.
70 The Onion (A.V. Club)
Pretty much impossible not to like a little, but it's also hard to like a lot. There's a fantastic film to be made from this material, but now, the burden of making it falls to a sequel.
70 Village Voice
To his credit, del Toro does not flinch from the ridiculous. But he is equally sensitive to Hellboy's pulp poetry.
70 Variety
Has more than enough across-the-board appeal to attract mainstream auds unfamiliar with source material.
70 Los Angeles Times
An enjoyable if somewhat neutered defender of the free world. Make no mistake: Hellboy still has a hide as hard-boiled as Lee Marvin in "The Dirty Dozen," but now he's also wearing a smile.
67 Austin Chronicle
While the film ably thrusts longtime fans of Mignola’s highly stylized artwork and newcomers alike into the world of that ol' debbil Hellboy, the film suffers from both scattershot character development and a serious case of H.P. Lovecraft overdose.
63 New York Post
Surprisingly enjoyable, as adaptations of cult comic books go, thanks to a sense of humor all too rare in the genre, winning performances by Ron Perlman and Selma Blair, and a sweet romance of the kind that made "Spider-Man" a richer experience than its competitors.
63 Charlotte Observer
Will dazzle you while establishing the world in which it takes place. After that, you may wonder whether Guillermo del Toro got amnesia halfway through.
63 The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
It's a treat because, making no apologies for the source material, director Guillermo del Toro lets his picture gorge on power bars of pop energy, sugared with sprinkles of playful humour, and, at least twice, laced with a visual style so piercingly keen that horror morphs into beauty. Not bad for a pulpy outing.
60 Empire
Hellboy might not have the name-recognition factor of the Spider- or Batmen, but Guillermo del Toro brings the audience swiftly up to speed on artist-writer Mike Mignola's comic book anti-hero.
58 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
For all its f/x pageantry, it is rather tired, as if it's the third sequel of a franchise, not the initial episode.
50 TV Guide
Arguing that you shouldn't expect rich characterization from a comic-book movie misses the point: Vivid relationships separate the graphic novels from the funnies and, in the end, spectacular set design is just window dressing.
50 Chicago Tribune
Hellboy's adventures may take him to you-know-where and back, but the movie remains in limbo.
50 The Hollywood Reporter
Standard-issue superhero movie -- except that writer-director Guillermo del Toro, taking his cue from "Hellboy" comic book creator Mike Mignola, brings a wicked sense of humor to this particular monster mash.
50 USA Today
Hellboy's cheeky attitude and snarky dialogue, specifically Perlman's snidely funny lines, are the highlights.
40 Dallas Observer
Hellboy is as much a wreck as "The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen" or "The Punisher," coming and going in two weeks, and as much a bore as "The Hulk."

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