Before the release of the first Hellboy
movie, Mike Mignola came to NYC in April 2004 to do a signing/promo-tour
at St. Mark’s Comics—
but the store had forgotten to publicize the event! I was the only person there—and I had never even read the comic before!
but the store had forgotten to publicize the event! I was the only person there—and I had never even read the comic before!
I had no idea who the guy was but took pity and
started a conversation with Mike Mignola. He was gracious and kind, and very
willing to promote his creation. I asked him which graphic novel a neophyte
should start with, and he recommended The Chained Coffin and Others
(1998).
I bought it, and asked him to sign it. (See
above)
I’ve been a Hellboy fan ever since.
Thanks, Mr. Mignola!
Thanks, Mr. Mignola!
(This originally started out as a tiny brief on The
Facebook; in fact, what’s written above the break was precisely my post on the
“Mike Mignola’s Art” page there.)
And now here’s
The REAL Short Story LONG About Meeting Mike Mignola
(and Hellboy, Essentially)
Sometimes meeting someone (semi-) famous whom
you admire, or even idolize, can be a complete bust—a total crash and burn—leaving
a bitter taste in your mouth. I know; it has happened to me, with authors,
filmmakers, and musicians.
But if you meet someone (semi-) famous before
you even know who they are or what they’ve done? Well then, it can turn into out
quite magnificently!
An incredible Hellboy poster by Mignola |
There was once a time when I wasn’t a fan of the
Hellboy comics, and was not even aware of the art and style of Mike Mignola.
He is a lovely, sweet, charitable man, whom I
didn’t even know existed before I met him.
The first version of the Hellboy film was
released “wide” on Friday, April 2, 2004, so the following adventure probably
happened during the preceding week (the week of March 29).
Our meeting took place at St. Mark’s Comics
(R.I.P. 2019; due to NYC’s unwanted and unnecessary hyper-gentrification). The
shop was a routine pit-stop for me, so there was no special reason to
visit—just checking in to see if there was something new before catching the
“L” train back to Bushwick.
Anyone who visited would remember that St.
Mark’s Comics had a décor and merchandize placement that rarely changed. It was
cleaned and dusted, but like the comfortable living room of a beloved grandma
it never seemed to change. (However, like grandma’s cats, the cute
goth/punk/new wave cuties who worked there did occasionally change. How many loser
comic book dudes—like me—kept coming back to catch a glimpse of a “dream gal”? That store was one place where I would routinely get a guaranteed
“insta-crush.”)
Mignola & Hellboy at Cannes, 2018 |
But this night, the store had been…rearranged.
WTF? There was a fold-up table set up with a cloth over it, and a pleasant and
unassuming (perhaps even harmless) looking gent sitting behind the table. Black
Hellboy T-shirt, glasses, semi-roly-poly, and if the head wasn’t shaved,
the hair was very close-cropped. The cloth tarp covering the table had writing
all over it which I cannot remember, but considering the circumstances,
probably had “Hellboy” on it, and other things related to either the comic, the
movie or both. On the table were, of course, several piles of his graphic
novels, other ephemera for sale, and the Sharpie pen for autographs, ubiquitous
at these sorts of events.
Mignola illustration of Pandemonium, the capital of Hell |
At the time, I was only familiar with the name
of the comic, having seen it on T-shirts and on the back of black leather
motorcycle jackets. I like heavy metal music, but the name sounded TOO heavy
metal for me. I am not sure what I thought it was, actually, but something
punky-cyber-goth—something that was trying SO HARD to be cool. (It’s hard to
believe I thought that way, but we’ll get to my change of mind in a moment….)
I stepped down into the store (remember? St.
Mark’s Comics was slightly lower than street level), looked around, wondered
about the rearranging (where did they put all the stuff they moved?)
smiled at the man behind the table, nodded at the employees around, and then
looked for my usual purchases.
Finding nothing to buy, I focused on the man and
the table. Aware that a movie called Hellboy was coming out, and knowing
that it was based on a comic book, I quickly surmised that the store had
forgotten to do publicity about Mignola’s signing! Someone’s head
was probably going to roll! But that wasn’t my concern: I felt bad for this guy
sitting behind the desk. Here Mignola was—a major comic book creator (I
recognized that at least) on a promotion tour—whose creation had
received the Major Hollywood Treatment (multi-million dollar budget, big name
stars, etc.)—in (at the time) one of NYC’s major comic book stores, at around
7:30 in the evening (prime retail time for shops like St. Mark’s Comics), and
aside from the staff, there was only one clueless goon there: me.
I approached the table. (Conversations are
approximate.)
“Are you Mike Mignola?”
Big smile: “Yes, I am.”
“Congratulations about the upcoming movie, you
must be very proud and excited.”
“Yes, I am. The movie looks great, and it was a
joy working with Guillermo Del Toro.”
“Ummmm…” I looked around nervously. “I hate to
say this, but I’m completely unfamiliar with your work.”
Mignola was nice enough—and polite enough—to be
nonplussed. “That’s okay. Where would you like to start?”
Unfortunately, I cannot remember the specifics
of what he said, but whatever it was, it completely piqued my interest:
the supernatural and folklore; the illustrative influences of Frazetta, Mike
Kaluta and Berni Wrightson; “weird” history and conspiracies; H.P. Lovecraft’s
stories….it went on. Also, I had noticed that he seemed to use a very Jack
Kirby-esque “krackle”—Mignola told an interviewer in 2018, "I was a Marvel comics kid and my favorites were the Jack Kirby things."
Our interests dovetailed and I was hooked.
A page from The Chained Coffin |
“Okay, I’m hooked,” I told Mignola, who could probably sell
ice to Eskimos, and still be nice about it. “But there’s so much,” I continued.
“I wouldn’t know where to start. What would you
recommend for a beginner?”
He pulled out a volume from one of the piles: The
Chained Coffin and Others (1998; published by Dark Horse Comics). “This
collection should be a good introduction to the character, and what the overall
stories are about,” he said, handing the pristine copy to me. The $17.95 price
tag would have made it iffy at any other time, but I’d already jumped. (Of
course, I was really hoping that he’d take pity on me, and give it to me for
free—but I guess maybe I was taking pity on him…)
I paid for it, then returned to the table. “I
hope I’m not being too much of a nerd, but would you mind signing it?”
“Of course!” he chirped (Mignola probably would
have been more upset if I had not asked him to sign).
Then we both started talking at the same time:
“Would you mind personalizing it?”/ “To whom should I make it out to?”
We laughed, and I added: “‘Ivan.’ Please make it
out to ‘Ivan,’ spelled the regular way….”
He did, and added a drawing of a cool profile of
Hellboy himself, with a word-balloon containing “To Ivan.”
I went home, only reading The Chained Coffin
when I got there (I don’t like reading comic books on the train; I think it
will attract “the wrong people”).
It was a fab read, and later that week, I went
and blew some disposable income on more of Mignola’s graphic novels.
I’ve been
a fan of Hellboy since, and while I haven’t read them all (or all of Mignola’s
various spin-offs), I have greatly enjoyed all that I have read.
Thanks, Mike Mignola!
The world of Hellboy is a blast, a crazy
combination of a variety of old legends, superstitions and quasi-spy action—drawn
impeccably—and a veritable joy to amateur researchers of the arcane and occult
(like myself) as well as fans of 1960s style comic book adventures (like
myself). Forgotten vampire legends, Russian super-witch Baba Yaga, various
nasties from Norse mythology, LOTS of werewolves, blood-drenched Aztec-Catholic
mash-ups, weirdness out of the craziest Dario Argento flick (there’s a serious giallo
vibes going on in these comics!), Nazi cyborg-apes, ancient Sumerian hoo-hah,
et cetera, et cetera are all mixed in, but carefully slotted into this
Alternative-History world Mignola & Company has created.
Of the Hellboys, after The Chained
Coffin, I have the interconnected collections Seed of Destruction
(1994) (dedicated to, among others, H.P. Lovecraft and Jack Kirby—whose The Demon comic is a kissing-cousin to Hellboy, although Kirby mines the
horror fields of the Classics, like Frankenstein and the Phantom of the Opera,
sometimes to his detriment; his better Demon stories feature more original
stories and villains, like Witchboy or Asmodon);
Wake the Devil (1997); The Right Hand of Doom (2000); Conqueror Worm
(2002); Strange Places (2006); and the (perhaps non-canonical) omnibus Weird
Tales: Volume One (2003).
Of the spin-off B.P.R.D. (Bureau of
Paranormal Research and Defense, the semi-secret U.S. government agency that
employs Hellboy) series, I have three: Hollow Earth (2003), The Soul
of Venice (2004), and The Universal Machine (2007), with the last
being my favorite of these three, involving alchemists, vampires, golems, entrapped
princes of Hell, and wiseacre professors of the occult.
But I have read a lot more than
the above: Bless the Lord for the New York Public Library! The NYPL has
LOTS of Mignola and Mignola-related material on hand, ready to be routed to
your local branch. The list is too long, but two faves consumed via the library
were:
A page from Aliens: Salvation |
Aliens: Salvation (1993)—obviously not
part of the Hellboy series, but a cool read/look, nonetheless—
written by Dave Gibbons (the illustrator of Watchmen), and drawn by Mignola. Aside from my enjoying this work’s expansion on the Dan
O’Bannon/Ridley Scott/HR Giger-inspired (with heavy world-building from James
Cameron) ALIEN franchise, Aliens: Salvation has a twisted
religious theme about it, and I can’t help but wonder how this may have been an
influence—there IS a weird and religious, or supernatural, belief system in
Mignola’s universe. Aliens: Salvation, on the other hand, is
horrifically nihilistic and awesomely bleak. With Mignola and his Hellboy
universe, there is always hope—even if that hope comes in the form of a Lord of
Hell…. (It’s the choices you make; even a demon like Hellboy—ordained to
destroy the world, it seems, can stray from his determinist future….)
The Visitor: How and Why He Stayed (2017; written by Mignola, but like much of
his work nowadays, illustrated by others—Chris Robertson, in this case), tying
back to the adventures in Conqueror Worm—but from a different perspective:
an alien observer of Hellboy’s early antics recalls life on Earth and in the
Stars, and then trapped by Nazi super-scientists and torturers. Melancholy,
beautiful stuff.
But even better, and one which I think I want to
own eventually (once I can get to a comic shop—if any are left—after the New
Plague), was BPRD: 1946-1948 (2015). I really got into the new
faces (aside from Professor “Broom”), and the post-war Europe location and time
appealed to me (there’s also a bit of a noir detective undercurrent going on),
with supernatural ties to Operation Paperclip, and WWII derring-do (and super-science
vampires!).
But since starting writing this, I’ve been
looking over my Hellboys, and I’m really in the mood to reread them,
treating them as one huge novel, and not just the “usual” graphic novel
collection.
This image was created for the 2004 Hellboy movie— I LOVE the old-school Marvel-esque layout and formatting, as well as how well it mimics a Kirby cover from the 1960s. |
Interestingly, while it was Del Toro’s Hellboy movie which helped me meet Mr. Mignola, I’m not really a fan of that movie, or
its sequel The Golden Army. (I haven’t seen the latest Hellboy cinematic reboot.) There’s not anything wrong with Del Toro’s flicks, and there
are many parts in both films which are magnificent and spectacular—it’s just
missing a special magic something—that no Del Toro film has ever delivered to
me, in fact. GDT’s movies start off well enough, have amazing visual style,
but… (And it feels bad to slam Senor Del Toro—since he is one of us, as
it were—but I have to agree with The AV Club’s assessment of Del Toro: B+.)
While the cinematic Mignola-adaptions haven’t
lived up to the potential that I feel they should have, there has been one filmic
adaptation of Mignola’s I truly love; love more than its original source
material even.
Mignola’s one-off of The Amazing Screw-On Head (2002) is amusing, even delightful, but the short film/TV pilot made from it in2007 is impressive!
A well-oiled entertainment machine packed to the
gills with weirdness and alterno-history madness, and a deranged sense of humor, as President Lincoln assigns
robot (cyborg?) Screw-On Head (yep, he’s a metal head that hops around until
attached to a body) to stop Emperor Zombie’s plans for world domination via
demons.
Much more so than the world of Hellboy,
the world of Amazing Screw-On Head as presented is never explained.
Emperor Zombie about to "smoke" someone to find out what they know, from The Amazing Screw-On Head |
No
origin stories (per se), no overt exposition, no info dump. Either keep up with
the weirdness, or get lost (in both senses…).
You are overwhelmed with bizarre concepts (like “smoking”
someone to get their knowledge) and quirky dialogue: “Yes, it’s as I
always say: All really intelligent people should be cremated for
reasons of public safety.”
Just settle back, viewer, and enjoy. The Amazing
Screw-On Head is now on YouTube HERE. Rather than me babble on (Babylon?) about
it, take 21 minutes and allow it to wash over you….
Last but hardly least—
Mr. Higgins Comes Home (2017), written by
Mignola, but with art by Warwick Johnson-Cadwell, whose style reminds me of the
late and lamented Richard Sala.
Similar to the children’s books I would read as
a kid in the early-1970s, not the bloodless, simplistic, pathetic literary
opiates—full of fluff and niceness—that are today’s children’s books, Mr. Higgins Comes Home is a book
I have often bought and then given away as gifts to family and friends since I discovered it (at the NYPL, if memory serves).
I have often bought and then given away as gifts to family and friends since I discovered it (at the NYPL, if memory serves).
A wistful, almost magical story, Mr. Higgins
Comes Home spins a tale of intrepid, if slightly bumbling vampire hunters, an
unwilling werewolf’s vengeance, a convention of the undead, and even The Devil
himself!
The best descriptive approximation that I could
come up with is if you took Rankin-Bass and forced them to work at Hammer Studios,
from a script by Edward Gorey and Fearless Vampire Killers-era Polanski.
Wonderfully weird, if fluffy, and even silly. The children’s book I wish I’d
had when I was seven years old.
A sequel, titled Our Encounters With Evil was published in 2019, but like most folks, I haven’t been able to make
it out of the house—but as soon as I can get to a store (or if I have any
disposable income after paying the bills….), I’m owning it!
So thanks again, Mike Mignola! To paraphrase
Terry Southern’s quote about Tom Wolfe, You should be showered with money and
other fine things!
Here's some various Mignola images
that are just plain awesome
(and not from the Hellboy canon!)
that are just plain awesome
(and not from the Hellboy canon!)
Not sure where this is from, but Godzilla chain-smoking and wearing a top hat? I'm there! |
Vampires preparing a meal from the magnificent Mr. Higgins Comes Home |
Emperor Zombie proposes, from the book to The Amazing Screw-On Head |
Xena crucified, from the comic |
I have no idea where this is from, but it's fucking PERFECT. |
Nightmare imagery from Aliens: Salvation. Creepy shit that blows Ridley Scott's lousy Alien: Covenant out of the water |
No comments:
Post a Comment