#Hellboy the wild hunt
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They are occupying my brain again hehehe
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A Mike Mignola cover for Hellboy: The Wild Hunt.
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CRAPPY FEELS THE HEAD THAT WEARS THE CROWN
#hellboy#mignolaverse#fanart#hellboy fanart#hellboy web of wyrd#the wild hunt#art#my art#artwork#excalibur
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Mike Mignola - Hellboy: The Wild Hunt #3 (2009) Source
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Hellboy: The Wild Hunt (#1 of 8)
by Mike Mignola and Duncan Fegredo
#comics#comic books#art#illustration#panelswithoutpeople#Dark Horse#Dark Horse comics#Mike Mignola#duncan fegredo#Dave Stewart#Clem Robins#Hellboy#Hellboy: the wild hunt#the wild hunt#bird
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Hellboy by Simone D'Armini
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I swear to God, Satan, Odin and every other deity and daimon!!!! Someone needs to be making the West of Dead, Hellboy and Ghost Rider(and or Midnight Sons/Suns) crossover fan art and fan fiction that I desperately crave!!!!! And it can't be me because I have a million and one projects and ideas that I need to make and or finish 😭
And incidentally Hellboy and Marvel fans really need to check out West of Dead!!!! Although it's a little flawed in the execution of its gameplay concepts it's a criminally underrated indie game that stars Ron Perlman as a flaming skull headed psychopomp cowboy!!!!!
Do you understand why I need people to be writing scenarios where Mason interacts with Hellboy and any of the Ghost Riders, especially Demon Rider!
#west of dead#indie games#hellboy#mike mignola#ron perlman#ghost rider#demon rider#marvel's midnight suns#midnight sons#weird west#wild hunt#american folklore#american gothic#urban fantasy#urban fantasy comics#ghost cowboys!!!!!!!#kushala#spirit rider
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Me everytime Hellboy has to face the fact he's meant to be king of hell and bringer of the apocalypse but hes just a silly guy
#ITS SO SAD#I just finished the wild hunt and UGGGHHG#him loosing control with the giants#and then LITERALLY fighting himself#AND THEN HE THINKS ALICE IS DEAD BECAUSE OF HIM WAAAAA#absolute sucker for hellboy#hes just a silly lad#who doesnt want anything to do with his fate#man can never catch a break =(#hellboy#hellboy comics#the wild hunt#comic#mike mignola#graphic novel
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bouncing off of this wonderful post mentioning how zathuda expects to be the main character because he would be in many current stories, as well as my own thoughts about fearne & her family ive had for a while: i think it is interesting how fearne is representative of the different ways folk portray fae in modern media.
first off, id like to note how many fae in cr feel like they are an homage to fae stories embedded in our cultural consciousness. for example, artagan was most definitely based off of jareth in labyrinth, and his moniker of the traveler may be an homage to the fable of the satyr & the traveller. so, what is fearne?
one of the first 4-sided dives featured ashley & matt discussing how they based fearne's story off of a guillermo del toro flick - and this definitely clicked to me. morrigan, ira, & all her bizarre animal friends at morri's mansion would fit so easily into a del toro film you wouldn't even blink at them. in del toro's work (namely pan's labyrinth & hellboy 2: the golden army) faeries are fundamentally strange, offputting, & wonderfully weird. they are goblins with wagons as legs, and trolls with talking tumors, and terrifyingly skinny entities with eyes in their hands that eat children. you can practically see doug jones in an intricate suit & makeup to play ira like he did the pale man or the faun (i swear matt's hand usage as ira is an homage to jones's iconic hands in costume), see the puppet of morrigan that weighs over a ton controlled by five folk at once. del toro's work as well as matt & ashley's plays into a fae that is more complicated than a human imagines at face value, something you must work to imagine & understand (& create). something playful, integrally bound to oaths, ancient, mischievous. it is happy & natural to be gross & incomprehensible and that is part of what makes these films (as well as other bizarre puppeteered dreamscapes like the dark crystal, labyrinth) almost comforting even when sad. pan's labyrinth also features a young girl as a protagonist, ofelia, who sees these creatures as respite & destiny, who is a fae princess amidst mortal war. fearne couldn't be more ofelia if she tried. (side note - god does the scene of the pale man eating the pixies in front of ofelia feel like fearne learning what lud does to her people. someone even made a meme of it.)
on the other hand, zathuda & birdie's story is obviously based on a fae romance novel that populates shelves today - sarah j maas's or holly black's work comes to mind. zathuda is (or was - he seems a ghost of it) clearly a looker, a fierce & sexy hunter, a handsome & strong unseelie royal who somehow takes in & courts a random nobody girl, birdie. but cr notably frames the love story narrative as a classist manipulation, that leaves birdie running for the rest of her life, falling for a weirdo nobody like her over zathuda, and leaves fearne without parents that would show her this incredibly popular kind of romance as an answer. she cannot fall back on a family of kisses drawing blood, of hunter & hunted as a beautiful meet-cute, of a throne & power. she can only fall back on the strange, the grotesque, the raw. they are ugly compared to a promise of a masquerade ball or leading a wild hunt, what folk expect of fae in a barnes & noble book haul - but they promise a safety in the outcast. because a guillermo del toro film will always fundamentally be about the human condition. "monsters are the patron saints of our blissful imperfections." every monster in his stories is a person as much as you or me is.
fearne was born of a fae romance novel but raised in a puppeteer-and-vfx fairytale film. she holds not only exandria's fate in her hands, but the feywild's, too. fae see themselves as higher beings while squabbling in courts as much as mortals do. they refuse to accept their chaos and try to maintain order & royalty with courts and bloodlines against each other. try to keep fae out of exandria because they cant know they are alike to their mortal counterparts. they cant be wild like a party of puppets at the end of labyrinth dancing with the human girl sarah. they wish to be as mysterious as if they lived in a ya dystopia. and it is clearly leaving them worse. fearne is the literal unity of all the ways fae are potrayed in a modern landscape. what will that mean for her and her home in the end?
#long post#critical role#critical role meta#fearne calloway#athion zathuda#birdie calloway#morrigan calloway#ira wendagoth#matthew mercer#ashley johnson#guillermo del toro#fae#campaign 3#pan's labyrinth
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Mike Mignola: Hellboy
Cover "The Wild Hunt"#6
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Hellboy: The Wild Hunt #4 (Cover art by Mike Mignola)
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"Who the hell knows I'm here?"
Hellboy: The Wild Hunt (#1 of 8)
by Mike Mignola and Duncan Fegredo
#comics#comic books#art#illustration#panelswithoutpeople#The Osiris Club#Osiris Club#Mike Mignola#duncan fegredo#dave stewart#clem robins#Hellboy#Hellboy: The wild Hunt#the wild hunt#dark horse#dark horse comics#letter#wax seal#seal
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I've briefly mentioned before that Hellboy inspired Alias's character but I want to bring up the biggest part of the comics REALLY informed her character for me
Spoilers for Hellboy: The Wild Hunt (if you care about that)
A group of occultists try to assassinate him because of the prophecy that he'll end the world. They get eaten by giants. Hellboy is at is wit's end, and at the crux of the worst time in his entire life (the literal end of the world), he snaps. He gives in to the side of him that he's been running away from his entire life - the part of him he never truly wanted to acknowledge was there. The part of him that drove him to fight monsters over and over and over again to prove to the world that he wasn't one.
The birds that have come to help him tell him he's invisible. He is explicitly given a clear way to leave the conflict alive and well. He says "screw it" and starts a (wholly unnecessary) fight with these giants anyway. And he completely loses it. He indulges the part of himself that he loathes and fears the most: the part of him that is not Human, the part that craves violence and malice and hatred (toward himself and those who remind him of himself).
He immediately regrets it.
Hellboy has spent over sixty years avoiding the destiny his father conceived him for (re: ending the world), and despite how much he's tried to be Good, and keep humanity safe from "monsters" (like him), the world is ending anyway. He can't escape what has already been decided from him, nor the reality that he is not Human and, he must confront it face to face - quite literally. Even when all the odds are against him, even when he KNOWS he has no choice anymore, he's still not willing to stop fighting what he knows is Wrong.
But he still doubts himself. He questions how he can possibly be Good if he is not Human - if he is capable of doing all these horrible things (whether they have happened yet or not). Was it all for nothing? Does it matter that he's trying? Is it enough?
But it's enough BECAUSE he tries. Because he makes the CHOICE to try and fight and be Good and change what CAN be changed - not in spite of the worst parts of himself but BECAUSE of it. His nature is not in conflict with his love and desire to help the world. He IS worth it. He just doesn't see it even when those he loves tell him otherwise.
"You are so ready to believe all the bad things said about you. Why can you believe what she [and your friends] believed? Forget armies and saving the world - she [and your friends] knew you. [They] believed you were worth saving."
Anyway. Any time The Urge comes up or becomes a problem for Alias, this is what I'm thinking of. This is like. The foundation Alias's character is built on.
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Spooky season fairytales (6)
And we reach the penultimate post of this series! After looking at actual fairytale adaptations (well... roughly), for this post I want to love at fantasy movies that are not any adaptation of any specific tale or story... But which were made with the intentions of having a "fairytale feel" or a fairytale lore. Dark or creepy movies inspired by fairytales as a whole. Basically "dark fairytale fantasy".
And of course I have to begin with the most FAMOUS dark fairytale movie of our century... Guillermo del Toro's "Pan's Labyrinth", in the original Spanish, "El Laberinto del Fauno".
Do I need to present this movie? Probably not, since it was one of del Toro's masterpices, but to simply put it... This is a dark, haunting, poetic but tragic movie following a little girl's life in the Spain of Franco. Said little girl meets in the ruins of an old labyrinth, guided by fairies, a faun, who reveals to her she is the lost princess of a fairy realm... But to regain her place, she will have to undergo fairytale-trials. All while the little girl enjoys her "changeling fantasy", we follow the harsh and horrifying everyday life of World War II Spain that unfolds around her: the girl's step-father is a Falangist captain who hunts down with cruelty the resistance in the area, while her mother is having a very complicated pregnancy. And as the real-world piles on the horrors - famine, execution, torture - so does the fairy-world becomes darker and darker, filled with monsters, ogres and blood...
Of course, Guillermo del Toro did other dark "fairy pieces" - such as Hellboy II, which is a dark and gritty urban-fantasy homage to the fair folk - and recently returned to the fairytale world with his acclaimed Pinocchio.
1985's Legend, by Ridley Scott, is usually considered as one of the "great 80s fantasy movies", alongside pieces such as Ladyhawke, The Dark Crystal, Conan the Barbarian, Willow and more. However "Legend" is also, and this is less evoked, one of the prime examples of a movie belonging to the genre of "fairytale fantasy" - alongside stories such as Stardust or The Neverending Story.
After all, all the elements are there. The main hero is a brave young "wild man" of the woods, who must save a princess trapped by an evil monster, with the help of fairies and elves, and the whole quest goes through numerous folkloric motifs and characters - the unicorn, the water-hag, the fight of day and night, the endless winter... But speaking of "endless winter", the reason why this movie is featuring here is because of how dark it becomes. Truly. The main villain is even the literal embodiment of Darkness, an evil creature sporting the most iconic look of a devil in the history of cinema, and played by none other than Tim Curry himself. He sends hordes of goblins devour babies and kill unicorns throughout endless winter and ever-ending night... To reach him one must cross a monster-infected swamps leading to a dark palace of venomous charms, dancing statues and cannibal feasts... And even the elves and fairy sidekicks are truer to Brian Froud illustrations and the original "fair folk", being whimsical, capricious, easily angered and just as dangerous as the villains they're fighting...
Coraline. Another great piece of "fairytale fantasy".
Coraline (the movie or the book it is based on, the two have several differences but complement each other very well) is the story of a young girl living your typical "travel to another magical world" plot, as she discovers a secret door allowing her to escape her dreary, boring and unpleasant life to find an alternate, whimsical, fantastical and charming version of her own family and neighbors. But of course, this being a Neil Gaiman story, things quickly grow strange and eerie, as talking cats, fairy-ghosts, shapeshifting witches and buttons sewn in place of eyes come to turn the dream into a nightmare, and then into a battle of wits to survive against a dark and old magic...
Yet another VERY famous piece - there's a lot of famous pieces I am covering here, but hey, not my fault the good stuff is getting the recognition it deserves!
Over the Garden Wall, an animated mini-series that was created by the same man behind "Adventure Time", telling the story of two brothers as they try to find a way home while venturing into a bizarre and magical forest called "The Unknown". They are guided by a talking bird in hope of finding a good witch who will help them - all the while mysterious and dark figures such as the Woodsman or the Beast linger in the shadows and keep crossing path with them...
Over the Garden Wall is a perfect autumn watch, since it actually takes place during the autumn season, the first episodes exploring an Halloweenesque harvest festival, while the lasts take place in winter. More than just autumn imagery, the show relies heavily on the "vintage" and "old" imagery of early 20th, 19th and even 18th centuries America, building its wonders and magic with vintage Halloween cards, Colonial or Industrial-era fashions, Betty Boop or Silly Symphonies cartoons, the Dogville Comedies and the "Game of Frog Pond" board game... However, under its at first whimsical and fanciful appearance, the mini-series quickly reveal a haunting tale worthy of the darkest fairytales, exploring themes such as betrayal, despair, death and sacrifices.
In fact, "Over the Garden Wall" was inspired by numerous fairytales, hence its fairytale feel. Many, many people commented that, upon watching the series, they felt the exact same thing they experienced when, as a kid, they discovered new fairytales - I also felt it, and this proves the power of this series that truly captures the essence of what a fairytale is. On top of reusing fairytale tropes (two children exploring woods filled with girls turned into birds, good and bad witches, strange talking beasts...) and explicitely referencing some "fairytale-like" children novels (especially "The Wizad of Oz"), the very artstyle of the show was inspired by "fairytale art", ranging from Gustave Doré's illustrations of Perrault to Tenniel's Alice in Wonderland drawings, passing by old Andersen illustrations.
Ah, finally a more obscure piece! At last for non-French people... La Cité des Enfants Perdus, The City of Lost Children. A 1995 movie by Jean-Pierre Jeunet. Now, Jeunet is one of those French moviemakers distinctively recognizeable thanks to his very unique style of movie making. You will recognize this when you know that he is behind the movies "Delicatessen" (the one about a former clown in a post-war world behind hired in a building dominated by a cannibalistic butcher) and the "Amélie Poulain" movie (about a quirky Parisian waitress who decides to change whimsically the life of those around her). Jeunet enjoys the bizarre, the unusual, strange technologies, extravagant characters, dark humor, absurd comedy, and oniric or fairytale-like atmosphere... And this all blooms in the darkest and eeriest way in this movie.
To put the story simply (which is a challenge since it is a complex movie)... Off the shores of a shadowy, dirty, corrupt fishing town, in a manor in the middle of the sea (on top of an abandoned oil rig), an old mad scientist regularly captures children. For you see the scientist is unable to dream, and tries to steal away the dreams of children - which never works, since being captured by a creepy old man makes the children have nightmares rather than sweet dreams. One day, the little brother of a simple-minded circus strongman is captured - and the strongman teams up with a little girl, a street-savy member of a group of street urchins, to try to get him back. The story is further muddled by the presence of a cult of "cyclops" in town that do the dirty work of the mad scientit for him, the threat of greedy conjoined sisters that run the gang the little girl is part of, and the strange entourage of the mad scientist himself (six identical brothers acting like children, a dwarf-wife, and a sentient, talking brain in a jar).
This movie truly feels like a dream - like one of those dark, strange dreams that never fully go into a nightmare while still walking at the edge, and the story, no matter how feverish it can get, still keeps certain cohesive elements to maintain its flow of sinister wonders (such as the theme of family, heavily explored). The movie never goes into actual magic - we are more into a proto-steampunk world crossed with the mad science of Gothic literature and horror movies - but its oniric, bizarre and borderline surreal treatment of the subject did earn this movie the classification of "science-fantasy" and "dark fantasy", as mythological, folkloric and fantasy archetypes can be clearly seen throughout the science-fiction setting (the "cyclops" for example, or the very idea of "a creepy old man stealing children's dreams").
Heck - this movie was one of the prime inspirations behind "Little Nightmares"!
And finally, I cheat a little here, but I had to include it: Disney's Hocus Pocus. This is a classic of Halloween movies, a fun but dark horror-comedy for teens, (well rather like a full comedy but with elements that make it horrific here and there), campy in all the good ways, and with the greatest trio of witches ever depicted on stage since Shakespeare's Weird Sisters.
Now, the movie itself is not very much fairytale like. It is a Halloween comedy, an urban-fantasy story for teenagers, drawing upon the myth of the witch and the legends surrounding witchcraft. However, precisely because the movie explores the figure of the witch, there are several fairytale references here and there. While the Sanderson sisters were mostly build out of the Christian myth of the witch (using human-skin bound grimoires, having sold their souls to the devil, tied to black cats, summoning ghouls out of graves, hate salt...), there are also several parts of their characters tied to fairytale witches. Hansel and Gretel is the most obvious one - they are child-eating witches living into the woods who lure children to their home before "devouring" them (in souls if not body) - but Snow-White is also among the references (a very vain witch who is obsessed with staying the fairest/youngest and kills children to do so?). And of course, there's all the fairytale-witches tropes ranging from "turning people into animals" (here a cat rather than a frog) to the use of the number three.
Oh yes, and let's not forget the specific use of an oven...
#spooky season fairytales#spooky season#dark fairytales#fairytale movies#over the garden wall#pan's labyrinth#legend#hocus pocus#the city of lost children#coraline#fairytale fantasy
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Do you have a favorite Hellboy story? Or a Mike Mignola art piece you really like?
It's hard to decide cause I love everything Mignola related like BPRD, Lobster Jonson, Baltimore and way more.
but my favorite stories from Hellboy in no particular order that first come to mind are:
The Midnight Circus
The Coffin Man
The Baba Yaga
all Hellboy in Hell
The Wild Hunt
and The Conqueror Worm
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