HELLBOY: La monstruosa fábula de Mike Mignola | Kirby Krackle!

BUY YOUR FAVORITE COMICS AT GENERATION X! Link to the website: https://adtr.co/t31CvI Link to Hellboy Vol. 1: Link to Hellboy Vol. 2: Link to Hellboy Vol. 3: Link to "Hellboy in Hell": Link to "Batman: By Gaslight": CALIFORNIA, 1993 There was a time when comics seemed to have been produced in Hell itself. We're referring to the early 1950s when Frederick Whertham led a crusade against the ninth art under the pretext that the barbarities appearing in comics like "Tales from the Crypt" and other horror titles corrupted the young people who consumed them due to their occult and sexual themes. This led to the creation of the Comics Code, a censorship regulatory body that prohibited the introduction of certain taboo subjects in future color magazines. In the early 1960s, authors from publishers like a fledgling Marvel or a somewhat clueless DC included more adult themes as best they could. Or they simply refrained from doing so. Although there were exceptions… The adventures of Doctor Strange, both those produced by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko and those later drawn by Gene Colan, had a supernatural component that never crossed the line. Even so, they allowed themselves to present monstrous creatures from other dimensions, play with witchcraft, and even dabble in the problem of satanic cults at the end of the decade. And after the reform of the code following Spider-Man's "Drug Peril," the darker side of the medium's authors proliferated once again. Young people who had grown up with the superheroes of the Marvel Age of Comics were now reading the stories that blossomed from this resurgence of comic book horror, such as "The Tomb of Dracula" drawn by Gene Colan, "Swamp Thing" illustrated by Bernie Wrightson, and the iconic "Demon" by Jack Kirby. One of those young people, who also complemented his passion for comics with the pulp narratives of authors like H.P. Lovecraft, was named Mike Mignola, and he had a dream: to be the one drawing those stories. | INDEX | 0:00 Awaken the Demon 3:55 Seed of Destruction 6:44 The Nature of the Beast 9:33 The Darkness Calls 11:54 The Storm and the Fury Music by Marco Beltrami. "Kirby Krackle!" created by Dani Arnal and Alex Díaz de Losada. In collaboration with Generación X.