Two years after making his cinematic debut, Mike Mignola's big red monster hunter had a short-lived franchise of animated films, the first of which was Hellboy: Sword Of Storms. This was animated mostly by the famous production company Madhouse who have been involved in several anime titles. Milestone writer Matt Wayne handled the adaptation of a Hellboy short story along with Tad Stones. This direct-to-video feature got a little traction from some screenings on Cartoon Network, but the timing of Anchor Bay Entertainment's release was just in the middle of DC and Marvel's opening shots in their war of original animated movies that they were also coming out with at the same time.
After a mission to a Mayan temple filled with mummies and a giant bat, Hellboy along with Abe Sapian and firestarter Liz Sherman head back to BPRD headquarters only for Hellboy to get called into his next investigation. A Japanese professor named Sakai gets possessed by the demon brothers of Thunder and Lightning, which most mythology junkies would know as Raijin and Fujin. Hellboy visits the home of a sword collector that Sakai attacked and is sent to another dimension when he finds the titular Sword of Storms. In this otherworldly realm, our hero is accosted with a never-ending barrage of yokai monsters sent by the possessed Sakai who want to break the sword to free Thunder and Lightning. The sheer number of monsters from Japanese folklore is staggering which Hellboy has to confront, including a kappa, a giant skeleton, an arachne, rubber-neck women, disembodied heads, and an army of zombies. Liz and Abe meanwhile are separated from Hellboy as they confront a kaiju-sized dragon in the Japanese sea who wants to join forces with Thunder and Lightning, all of which is being manipulated by the spirit of an old woman posing as a kitsune fox spirit. It all boils down to a final battle between Hellboy and the demon brothers in Japan.
The "animated" styled of Hellboy is different from what you see in comics and the live-action movie where Hellboy's legs seem much shorter, and his tail is much more noticeable. Most of the rest of the characters stick to their original models, even though the big draw is the voice cast they had for these productions. Ron Pearlman is back as Hellboy, Selma Blair is Liz, but the live-action actor for Abe, Doug Jones, takes up the speaking role of the gill-man for the first time after being voiced by David Hyde Pierce in the original movie. Peri Gilpin also appears as Kate Corrigan from the Hellboy comics who never showed up in the live-action movies and was more of Hellboy's love interest. The animation is above TV standards, but not so much up to theatrical level. The best bits involve Hellboy's journey through the Japanese spirit world where great detail was given to highlighting mythological creatures from eastern folklore, more than even some supernatural anime had done at the time. Most of the material of the movie involving the other BPRD members is pretty forgettable, even when Liz and Abe are fighting a giant dragon. Sword Of Storms isn't the best made-for-video animated superhero feature of the time, but it is worth checking out if you happen to be getting both Hellboy Animated movies.
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