Was this scene an homage to Hellboy?

Was this scene an homage to Hellboy? - Purple Leaf

In one scene, Ron Perlman's character is eaten by a giant monster. This isn't the first time this has happened to him in a del Toro movie, it also somewhat happened in Hellboy. Was this scene supposed to be an homage to Hellboy, or am I reading too much into it?



Best Answer

During the scene after the end credits, we see Perlman cut his way out of the Kaiju and then exclaim "Where's my Damn Shoe!?"

That whole bit where he gets swallowed (by a premature Birthed Kaiju with no teeth) was simple comedy relief scene to show that the character portrayed didn't know everything, but maintains posturing as though he does.

I doubt this was a nod or anything like that to Hellboy.




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Did Guillermo del Toro make Hellboy?

He's old, but he'll still do it.Ron Perlman and Guillermo del Toro were a perfect match when the two brought Hellboy to the big screen back in 2004, and in a sequel four years later.

Who replaced Ron Perlman as Hellboy?

Ron Perlman rejected the chance to make a cameo appearance in the 'Hellboy' reboot. The 70-year-old actor played the titular character in the original 2004 film and sequel 'Hellboy II: The Golden Army' in 2008, but was replaced by David Harbour in the reboot.

Will there be another Hellboy?

It had Ron Perlman portraying the titular character. The films earned praises from the audiences and were a success as they grossed over $168 million at the worldwide box office. A third instalment was planned but it did not saw the light of the day.



Helboy 2019 - Hellboy becomes \




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Answer 2

From the Wikipedia page of the movie:

Del Toro wanted to "honor" the kaiju and mecha genres while creating an original stand-alone film, something "conscious of the heritage, but not a pastiche or an homage or a greatest hits of everything". The director made a point of starting from scratch, without emulating or referencing any previous examples of those genres.

It doesn't refer Hellboy but it explicitly says that Del Toro doesn't want to pay homage to any film. Rather than popular culture, he drew inspiration from works of art such as Francisco Goya's The Colossus and George Bellows's boxing paintings.

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