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Hellboy and Weird
* Hellboy: Toy Soldier from Hellboy: Weird Tales Issue # 8
* Hellboy: Weird Tales # 5 ( artist ) ( Dark Horse, 2003 )
These included Ultimate Spider-Man Super Special for Marvel Comics in 2000, The Savage Dragon # 100 and The Amazing Spider-Man # 46 in 2002, Hellboy: Weird Tales # 6 in 2003 and Invincible # 14 in 2004. he then began doing full interior work on other Spider-Man books for Marvel, including issues # 5 and 8 of Marvel Knights Spider-Man in 2004 and 2005, respectively, and The Astonishing Spider-Man # 123, also in 2005.
# Hellboy: Weird Tales: Command Performance ( 2003 )
* " Long Distance Caller " ( script and art, in Hellboy Weird Tales # 7, Dark Horse Comics, 2004 )
* Hellboy: Weird Tales # 5: " Love is Scarier than Monsters " ( with W. Haden Blackman, Dark Horse, 2003 )
* Hellboy: Weird Tales # 2: " Flight Risk " ( with Steve Parkhouse, 2003 ) collected in H: WT Volume 1 ( tpb, 128 pages, 2003, ISBN 1-56971-622-6 )

Hellboy and #
He has also inked over Matt Smith's pencils in Lobster Johnson: The Killer in My Skull, a back-up story in Hellboy: Box Full of Evil # 1.
# Hellboy: The Vampire of Prague ( 2007 )
# REDIRECT Hellboy: Asylum Seeker
# REDIRECT Hellboy: Asylum Seeker
** Hellboy: Seed of Destruction # 1-4 ( co-feature, 1994 )
# REDIRECT Hellboy
# REDIRECT Hellboy # Right Hand of Doom
* Painkiller Jane / Hellboy # 1 ( 1998 )

Hellboy and Dark
A version of the hunt ( in which huntsmen are commissioned to destroy re-animated giants ) is the inciting incident of the Dark Horse Comics limited series Hellboy: The Wild Hunt, written by Mike Mignola.
Since then Corben has done more work for Marvel, DC, IDW, and most notably Dark Horse, drawing the Eisner Award – winning Hellboy.
Dark Horse also publishes creator owned comics such as Frank Miller's Sin City and 300, Mike Mignola's Hellboy, Stan Sakai's Usagi Yojimbo, Gerard Way's Umbrella Academy, and Michael Chabon's The Escapist.
An ancient woman ( apparently a witch ) appears throughout the Dark Horse Comics series Hellboy.
Most notable among these were a two-issue crossover with Dark Horse's Hellboy ( Ghost / Hellboy ), and a four-issue crossover with DC Comics ' Batgirl, Ghost / Batgirl: The Resurrection Machine.
Many sequels and spin-offs were also released throughout the decade, including Blade II ( 2002 ), X2: X-Men United ( 2003 ), Spider-Man 2 ( 2004 ), Blade: Trinity ( 2004 ), Elektra ( 2005 ), X-Men: The Last Stand ( 2006 ), TMNT ( 2007 ), Spider-Man 3 ( 2007 ), Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer ( 2007 ), Hellboy II: The Golden Army ( 2008 ), The Dark Knight ( 2008 ), and X-Men Origins: Wolverine ( 2009 ).
Shortly afterwards, DHI was granted the license to develop an interactive game based on Dark Horse's own comic book series, Hellboy, written and drawn by Mike Mignola.
The Hellboy game is based on Dark Horse Comics ' science fiction comic book series Hellboy, written and drawn by Mike Mignola.
His long-run " Monroe " series appeared in more than 100 issues of Mad, and he has also co-created Dark Horse Comics Hellboy Junior with Mike Mignola based on the Hellboy character.

Hellboy and 2003
Cambyses's lost army also appears in the 2003 Hellboy novel The Lost Army by Christopher Golden ( ISBN 9781840235692 ).
His movie roles to date include 15 Minutes ( 2001 ), Blade II ( 2002 ), Bulletproof Monk ( 2003 ), The Bourne Supremacy ( 2004 ), as Grigori Rasputin in Hellboy ( 2004 ), Running Scared ( 2006 ), Largo Winch ( 2008 ), RocknRolla ( 2008 ) and Orphan ( 2009 ).
With high ticket and DVD sales, several new superhero films were released every year in the 2000s ( decade ), including Daredevil ( 2003 ), The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen ( 2003 ), Hulk ( 2003 ), Catwoman ( 2004 ), Hellboy ( 2004 ), The Punisher ( 2004 ), Batman Begins ( 2005 ), Fantastic Four ( 2005 ), Ghost Rider ( 2007 ), Iron Man ( 2008 ), The Incredible Hulk ( 2008 ), and Watchmen ( 2009 ).
Hellboy: Asylum Seeker is a 2003 game, developed by Dreamcatcher Interactive.

Weird and Tales
The term was first coined by August Derleth, a contemporary correspondent of Lovecraft, who used the name of the creature Cthulhu — a central figure in Lovecraft literature and the focus of Lovecraft's famous short story The Call of Cthulhu ( first published in pulp magazine Weird Tales in 1928 )— to identify the system of lore employed by Lovecraft and his literary successors.
Smith was one of " the big three of Weird Tales, along with Robert E. Howard and H. P. Lovecraft, where some readers objected to his morbidness and violation of pulp traditions.
From 1933 to 1936, Smith, Howard and Lovecraft were the leaders of the Weird Tales school of fiction and corresponded frequently, although they never met.
As a result, he withdrew from the scene, marking the end of Weird Tales Golden Age.
His short stories originally appeared in the magazines Weird Tales, Strange Tales, Astounding Stories, Stirring Science Stories and Wonder Stories.
Clark Ashton Smith was the third member of the great triumvirate of Weird Tales, with Lovecraft and Robert E. Howard.
*" The Last Incantation " — Weird Tales, June 1930 LW2
*" A Voyage to Sfanomoe " — Weird Tales, August 1931 LW2
*" The Tale of Satampra Zeiros " — Weird Tales November 1931 LW2
*" The Planet of the Dead " — Weird Tales, March 1932 LW2
*" The Gorgon " — Weird Tales, April 1932 LW2
*" The Empire of the Necromancers " — Weird Tales, September 1932 LW1
*" The Isle of the Torturers " — Weird Tales, March 1933 LW1
*" The Beast of Averoigne " — Weird Tales, May 1933 LW1
*" The Holiness of Azedarac " — Weird Tales, November 1933 LW1
*" The Death of Malygris " — Weird Tales, April 1934 LW2
*" The Seven Geases " — Weird Tales, October 1934 LW2
*" Xeethra " — Weird Tales, December 1934 LW1
*" The Flower-Women " — Weird Tales, May 1935 LW2
*" The Treader of the Dust " — Weird Tales, August 1935 LW1
*" Necromancy in Naat " — Weird Tales, July 1936 LW1
*" The Maze of Maal Dweb " — Weird Tales, October 1938 LW2
The character was created by writer Robert E. Howard in 1932 via a series of fantasy stories published in Weird Tales magazine.
Conan the Barbarian was created by Howard in a series of fantasy stories published in Weird Tales magazine in 1932.

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