Studio: Ketchup Entertainment
Director: Brian Taylor
Writer: Christopher Golden, Mike Mignola, Brian Taylor
Producer: Mike Richardson, Jeffrey Greenstein, Yariv Lerner, Jonathan Yunger, Les Weldon, Robert Van Norden, Sam Schulte
Stars: Jack Kesy, Jefferson White, Adeline Rudolph, Leah McNamara, Hannah Margetson, Martin Bassindale, Joseph Marcell
Review Score:
Summary:
In 1959, Hellboy confronts a conspiracy of witches connected to an emissary of the devil deep in the Appalachian Mountains.
Review:
"Hellboy: The Crooked Man" may not be the movie many Hellboy film fans want. Guillermo del Toro devotees in particular still hope for a third installment to cap off his unfinished trilogy with Ron Perlman, even though that sailed ship seemingly has little chance of ever finding its way back to port. As long as that wish remains ungranted, anything else automatically begins behind the proverbial eight-ball.
Who did want "Hellboy: The Crooked Man" made into a movie? The character's creator, Mike Mignola. In a September 2024 interview with The A.V. Club, the comics industry veteran said, "...this time they got it right, at least from the creative perspective." Mignola's words come seasoned with a grain of salt since he cowrote the screenplay and has a vested interest in the project's success as an executive producer. But he added, "I've never seen something that is that close to my work." Even if film fans had become accustomed to a different interpretation of Hellboy, "The Crooked Man" promised to be the most accurate version yet of Mignola's original vision.
Two days after publishing that interview, The A.V. Club dampened expectations with the loaded headline: "'Hellboy: The Crooked Man' banished to VOD release." Not quite the deafening death knell it used to be in DVD's heyday, a DTV debut in the United States nevertheless stuffed extra baggage into the movie's overhead bins. The article's text backtracked a bit, although words like "banished" followed later by "low-budget" and "stripped-down approach" weren't doing anybody any favors. Neither were negative comments from those who'd seen the movie in UK cinemas and were writing off "Hellboy: The Crooked Man" as a "cheap" disappointment that looked "like a fan film."
A few of those terms have some truth to them. Made for much less money and without the big studio backing "Hellboy" 2004 and "Hellboy II: The Golden Army" had, "Hellboy: The Crooked Man" replaces celebrity names with lesser-known actors and swaps FX-heavy spectacles for grounded drama, among other reductions that land the movie on a lower level than its predecessors.
Oddly though, there's a comforting nostalgia that comes with seeing Hellboy sink deeper into a B-movie basement. Contemporary audiences are less likely to have this affinity, yet "Hellboy: The Crooked Man's" economical effort pleasantly recalls a time when franchise films continually shrunk in scope as they went on, and fearlessly took strange swings because of new restrictions, as opposed to how Hollywood now chases bigger box office by just pumping more cash into similar sequels.
In the 1990s, we used to get weird follow-up films like "RoboCop 3." Horror series such as "Hellraiser" and "Leprechaun" went from wide theatrical releases to increasingly wilder, annualized installments on VHS. Even Disney got in on the act by churning out straight-to-video sequels including "The Return of Jafar" and "The Lion King II: Simba's Pride," something they'd never do in the 21st century. This habit of cutting corners wore thin then, yet there's a quaint appeal in the concept now, making "Hellboy: The Crooked Man" a throwback not because it's a period piece, but because it's reminiscent of the maverick state of genre cinema back when Blockbuster was big.
Mike Mignola's intention with "Hellboy: The Crooked Man" is to bring Hellboy back to the basics of being an ordinary guy in a beastly body investigating paranormal activity, rather than a superpowered antihero regularly roped into apocalyptic events. Accordingly, "Hellboy: The Crooked Man" becomes a simple, standalone adventure instead of another origin tale or high-stakes saga spanning multiple worlds. The film trusts the viewer to know enough about Hellboy that only a bit of his backstory is included. The fast-moving plot then handles story-related exposition like a hot rock, holding on essential background only as long as is necessary before bouncing back to the current timeline to maintain a tight 90-minute duration.
At the outset, Hellboy and a fellow BPRD agent, Bobbie Jo Song, end up stranded in Appalachia when a demon spider they were tasked with transporting overturns their train car. Hellboy and Jo make their way to a shack full of mountain folk monitoring a bewitched boy. Recently returned to the region after many years away, local man Tom Ferrell joins Hellboy and Jo in tracking the evil that's been upsetting the area.
That investigation leads them to one good witch and one bad witch. The bad witch aligns herself with The Crooked Man, an undead miser who claims souls for the devil that he exchanges for coins. The Crooked Man has unfinished business with Tom, who possesses a "lucky bone" imbued with magic The Crooked Man desperately desires. Combatting the devil's dirty deed-doer puts Hellboy, Jo, and Tom on a supernatural path where they're forced to face resurrected ghouls, a coven of backwoods witches, and other ancient evils lurking in the forest's haunted hills.
If there's one criticism of "Hellboy: The Crooked Man" that's nigh impossible to argue against, it's that the title attraction's role is so curiously diminished, Hellboy essentially operates as support in a movie bearing his name. Part of that has to do with the movie intentionally focusing on the situation and surroundings Hellboy lands in, not on Hellboy himself. The other part has to do with Jack Kesy being the least commanding of the three silver screen Hellboys. Beneath his makeup, Kesy has a babyface that Ron Perlman and David Harbour definitely don't have. When you watch Kesy's Hellboy chain smoke, there's a sense it's his first time inhaling a cigarette, which is one other way where he seems softer, unlike the fiery biker personality we're familiar with. His tamer take on Hellboy takes some getting used to, although he eventually settles in to earn his keep before the movie is over.
It also takes some getting used to "Hellboy: The Crooked Man's" scaled-back styling, yet once you do, the film's unsettling aura of folk horror quietly creeps up on you. Instead of vibrant superhero action, the movie delivers an unexpectedly eerie fright film, which is precisely want Mignola wants, even if Hellboy gets cut down as a character in the process. Whether the viewer wants this too is where audiences split into conflicting camps. Where one side sees a weakened film whose inferior Hellboy seems unrecognizable to them, I see a dark midnight movie that reminds me of a fitting Halloween season rental from when "DTV" didn't automatically equal "disaster." Based on everyone else's unfavorable responses, I appear to be in the minority here, but I wouldn't mind seeing more sequels strip down and dare to go in different creative directions like "Hellboy: The Crooked Man" does.
Review Score: 75
“Kraven the Hunter” might as well be renamed “Kraven the Explainer,” as it’s much more of an unnecessarily tedious origin story than an action-intensive adventure.