So Hellboy is dead in 2016, as we all know. But there's a whole lot
of his career from 1945 through 2012 or so that hasn't been told, and a
whole lot of people who would be happy to buy regular comics and books
about Hellboy punching things without caring much about what year the
punching took place. And so now there's a continuity-insert series,
which will presumably move forward at about one year per year, filling
up all of those gaps and giving us many more Hellboy stories from now
until its theoretical end with Hellboy and the BPRD: 2010 in the year 2074. (Written by Michael Mignola III, I suppose, and pictographed by the All-Encompassing Robo-Brain.)
Even if we don't go that far, we do have Hellboy and the BPRD: 1953, collecting the miniseries of the same name along with some related short stories. (Actually, "related" is just in time;
the closest thing to continuity here is that Hellboy is with Prof.
Bruttenholm in England for the first group of stories.) The four shorter
stories are written by Mike Mignola with art by Ben Stenbeck, but
Mignola adds a co-writer, the redoubtable Chris Roberson, for the longer
pieces, and those are drawn by Michael Walsh (certainly not the Michael Walsh I'm thinking of right now) and Paolo Rivera.
This
is a young, impetuous Hellboy, still jumping in without thinking a lot
and trusting his natural toughness to keep him going without serious
damage. And that's still working out pretty well for him; these are
mostly monsters that can be defeated by punching and other forms of
physical violence -- and the ones that can't are in the stories where
Prof. Bruttenholm is available to supply a more intellectual response.
The last, longest story here -- "Beyond the Fences" -- sets up what I expect will continue in 1954
and subsequent years, with a team of Russian agents sent by Varvara
(the demon-in-creepy-little-girl-form that runs the USSR's equivalent of
the BPRD) plotting their own nefarious schemes and lurking near the
BPRD operation. At some point, Varvara gets overthrown by her department
and imprisoned for the next fifty-some years, so that may be coming up
in this series. (Maybe not for a while: I don't remember exactly when
that was supposed to have happened.)
This isn't full
Mignola, and it's all continuity insert, so it feels less important.
These are fun Hellboy stories, but I doubt this series will ever
substantially change anything we know about him and his world. That's
absolutely fine; if it leads to some more spooky stories about Hellboy
in odd corners of the world facing off against quirky folkloric
monsters, that will be a nice bonus.
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