Jonathan Pacheco, TheHouseNextDoor.com:
A more significant lesson learned between the two films has to do with their villains: this time around, they actually have personality. While in the first film, del Toro struggled to make even the main baddie remotely interesting, Hellboy II is rich with interesting creatures, minions, and evil-doers. And it's not restricted to the bad guys alone; even the heroes are more interesting, all the boring characters weeded out. With Hellboy II, del Toro has gotten much closer to creating what I've always craved from him: a fully-realized world. The universe of the first Hellboy seemed too bland, and while Blade II did an honorable job with its mythos, the world of Pan's Labyrinth's was paper-thin. But once again, I see del Toro's success with Hellboy II as a stepping stone leading to The Hobbit, where rich and fleshed-out worlds are imperative and essential. And that's what we're all looking forward to, isn't it?
It's been interesting see how some critics think the first
Hellboy was better while others think the second
Hellboy is better. My own inclination is to say the second one is better, for the simply, uncomplicated reason that I felt more entertained by this film than I remember being by the first film.
Jacques wrote:
: Question to those in the know: of late i have seen this term "fan-boy" tossed around . . . Is this term a complement?
It depends on the context or manner in which it is used, I think. It's kind of like William Hurt saying he's a comic-book geek -- we wouldn't have expected it, based on his past film choices, but it's a term many comic-book geeks use to describe themselves, and in the context of Hurt co-starring in a film like
The Incredible Hulk, a statement like that is a way for him to bond with the fans and persuade them that he didn't take the role just for the paycheque. But certainly there are much more abusive ways in which people could use the word "geek" if they were so inclined -- and there are also more unhealthy ways in which people could legitimately be described as "geeks".
Overstreet wrote:
: Having said that: I think
Iron Man is a better work of storytelling, and the better-made picture. It's simple, efficient, and slick. But
Hellboy 2 is the movie I personally
prefer. (Yes, I may be the only one here to have that preference.)
Afraid not, old chap -- you've got me in your corner there, too.

In fact, after last night's screening, I told my wife that I think
Hellboy II is my favorite of the comic-book movies so far this summer (hence better than
Iron Man,
The Incredible Hulk and
Wanted -- have there been others?). I like aspects of
Iron Man, but it has always felt to me like the pilot episode of a series that hasn't begun yet. It had first-movie syndrome, basically. The original
Hellboy had that, to a point, too -- but
Hellboy II is free to just get on with the story.
It's probably no coincidence that both
Iron Man and
Hellboy II get a lot of humorous mileage out of the romantic relationships, whereas
Hulk is more angsty and
Wanted doesn't really even have one.