Hulk
Hulk | |
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File:Incredible-hulk-20060221015639117.jpg | |
Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | The Incredible Hulk Vol. 1, #1 (May 1962) |
Created by | Stan Lee (writer) Jack Kirby (artist) |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Robert Bruce Banner |
Team affiliations | Warbound, Rick Jones, Avengers, Defenders, Secret Defenders, Fantastic Four, Pantheon, Horsemen of Apocalypse, Sentry, The Order |
Notable aliases | Joe Fixit, The Green Scar (on Planet Sakaar), War (one of Apocalypse's horsemen) |
Abilities | Superhuman strength, stamina, and invulnerability.Very Powerful Regenerative healing factor. Ability to see and communicate with astral bodies. Gamma radiation absorption. Transformation. Strong resistance (but not immunity) to mind control.The madder he gets the stronger he gets. Immortal. |
The Hulk (Dr. Robert Bruce Banner) is a fictional character, a superhero appearing in Marvel Comics. Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, the Hulk first appeared in Incredible Hulk # 1 (May 1962). He has since become one of Marvel Comic's most recognized and very popular superhero character.[citation needed]
After Nuclear physicist Dr. Robert Bruce Banner is caught in the blast of a gamma bomb he created, he is transformed into the Hulk, a raging monstrosity. The character, both as Banner and the Hulk, is frequently pursued by the police or the armed forces, often a result of the destruction he causes. While the coloration of the character's skin varies during the course of its publication history, the Hulk is most often depicted as green.
He is featured in a number of animated series, a feature film directed by Ang Lee, and a long-running television series and spin-off television movies starring Bill Bixby as Banner and Lou Ferrigno as the Hulk.
Publication history
Dr. Robert Bruce Banner is a nuclear physicist working to develop a new type of weapon called a "gamma bomb", a nuclear weapon with a high gamma radiation output, for the U.S. Government. On the day that the bomb is tested, he notices a teenager, Rick Jones, on the test site. Banner saves the young man, but the countdown proceeds. Banner is caught in the blast and absorbs an enormous dose of gamma radiation. Rick takes Banner to a hospital; it's there that he first transforms into the Hulk in a fit of rage.
The Hulk's skin color is gray in The Incredible Hulk #1, a decision made by Stan Lee, who wanted a color that did not suggest a particular ethnic group. [1] Colorist Stan Golberg, however, insisted to Lee that the coloring technology at the time could not present the color gray clearly or consistently, resulting in different shades of gray, and even green, in the issue. So in issue #2 and after, Goldberg colored the Hulk's skin green. [2] Reprints and retellings of the Hulk's origin during the next two decades feature him with green skin from the beginning, but in 1986, issue #324 reveals that the Hulk had been gray at the time of his creation. Incidentally, Iron Man is another early 1960s Marvel character who has a gray coloration in his first issue (Tales of Suspense #39) but whose color changes in the next issue; in Iron Man's case, he became gold-colored In early stories, Banner becomes the Hulk at sunset each day, but he later transforms whenever he becomes angry or panicked. Many early Hulk stories involve General Thaddeus "Thunderbolt" Ross trying to capture or destroy the Hulk with his U.S. Army battalion, the Hulkbusters, at his side. Ross' daughter, Betty, loves Banner and criticizes her father for pursuing the Hulk. General Ross' right-hand man, Major Glenn Talbot, also loves Betty and is torn between pursuing the Hulk and trying to gain Betty's love in a more honorable way. Rick Jones serves as the Hulk's friend and sidekick for a time. Later, another teenager, Jim Wilson, also befriends the Hulk.
Marvel published only six issues of the original Hulk series before canceling it to free space on the publishing schedule in order to give the Nick Fury character his own series, Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos. Shortly after the official cancellation notice was issued, creator Jack Kirby received a letter from a college dormitory stating that the Hulk had been chosen as their official mascot. Kirby and Lee realized that their character had found an audience in college-age readers—a demographic comic book publishers had almost entirely ignored.[citation needed] They featured the Hulk in numerous guest appearances in other series and added him to the founding ranks of the Avengers. The Hulk was then given a regular backup feature in Marvel's ongoing series Tales to Astonish. After several years, the series was re-titled The Incredible Hulk due to the character's popularity (#102), and it ran until March 1999, when Marvel restarted the series with a new issue #1.
Peter David became the writer of the series in 1986, beginning a run that lasted nearly 12 years. David's run altered Banner's pre-Hulk characterization and the nature of Banner and the Hulk's relationship. Originally, Banner was written as a normal but shy man whose negative emotions (the normal, repressed anger that all humans have) found expression through the Hulk; David, however, turned Banner into a victim of multiple personalities who had serious mental problems long before he became the Hulk. David expanded on an earlier story that establishes that Banner had suffered child abuse, writing that it fostered a great deal of repressed anger within the character, which in turn triggered a latent case of multiple personality disorder.[volume & issue needed] In issue #377, Doctor Leonard Samson engages the Ringmaster's services to hypnotize Bruce Banner and force him, the Savage Hulk (Green Hulk) and Mr. Fixit (Gray Hulk) to confront Banner's past abuse at the hands of his father. Upon finally facing this abuse, a new, larger and smarter Hulk emerges and completely replaces the "human" Bruce Banner and Hulk personas. This Hulk is a culmination of the three aspects of Banner. He has the vast power of the savage, green Hulk, the cunning of the gray Hulk and the intelligence of Bruce Banner.
In 1998, David followed editor Bobbie Chase's suggestion to kill Betty Ross. In an interview in Wizard: The Guide to Comics,[volume & issue needed] David reveals that his wife had recently left him at the time, providing inspiration for the storyline. Marvel executives used Betty's death as an opportunity to push the idea of bringing back the Savage Hulk. David disagreed, and the disagreement quickly led to David and Marvel Comics parting ways.
When David left the Hulk, Marvel hired Joe Casey as a temporary writer. Casey brought the character in the direction that Marvel had requested earlier[citation needed], making the Hulk mute, but his short run found little critical success,[citation needed] and he ended the series. Marvel then hired John Byrne for a second volume of the series, re-titled Hulk, with Ron Garney penciling. Byrne wrote of his plans for the first year,[citation needed] but creative differences led to his departure before the first year was over. Erik Larsen briefly filled scripting duties in his place, and the title of the book soon returned to The Incredible Hulk with the arrival of Paul Jenkins.
Jenkins wrote a story arc in which Banner and the three Hulks (Savage Hulk, Gray Hulk, and the Merged Hulk, now considered a separate personality and referred to as the Professor) are able to mentally interact with one another, each personality taking over their shared body. He also created John Ryker, a ruthless military general in charge of the original gamma bomb test responsible for the Hulk's creation and is planning to create similar creatures.
Bruce Jones followed as the series' writer, and his run features Banner using yoga to take control of the Hulk while pursued by a secret conspiracy and aided by the mysterious Mr. Blue. Jones focused on a horror theme with the Hulk as a fugitive, influenced by the classic TV series. He appended his 43-issue Incredible Hulk run with the Hulk/Thing: Hard Knocks limited series, which Marvel published after putting the ongoing series on hiatus.
Peter David, who had initially signed a contract for a six-issue Tempest Fugit limited series, returned as writer when it was decided to make the story part of the ongoing series instead. David contracted to complete a year on the title. Tempest Fugit reveals that Nightmare has manipulated the Hulk for years, tormenting him in various ways for "inconveniences" that the Hulk had caused him. After a four-part tie-in to the House of M crossover and a one-issue epilogue, David left the series once more, citing the need to do non-Hulk work for his career's sake. [3]
In the 2006 storyline "Planet Hulk" by Greg Pak, after the Hulk destroys much of Las Vegas, a secret group of superheroes (called the Illuminati) traps the Hulk and rockets him into space to live a peaceful existence on a planet uninhabited by intelligent life. After a trajectory malfunction, the Hulk travels through a wormhole and crashes on the violent planet Sakaar. Weakened by his journey through the wormhole, the Hulk is sold as a slave. In a gladiatorial arena, he makes a deadly enemy when he scars the emperor's face. The Hulk overcomes great odds to become a gladiator, a rebel leader, and a conqueror.
Starting May 2007, the Hulk will be the focus of a Marvel event called World War Hulk. Marvel Editor-in-Chief Joe Quesada claims it will affect everyone and rival Civil War in impact, although be smaller in volume of titles. It will be written by Grek Pak and pencilled by John Romita, Jr. [1]
Personality and behavior
The Hulk is the alter ego of Dr. Robert Bruce Banner, a genius in nuclear physics. As a result of exposure to gamma radiation, Banner often becomes a large, superhumanly strong green creature. Although the Hulk is usually classified as a superhero, he and Banner share a Jekyll and Hyde-like relationship. In his most well-known incarnation, the Hulk has little intelligence or self-control, and can cause great destruction. As a result, he has been hunted by the military and other superheroes, and as such, Banner considers the Hulk a curse.
In recent decades, comic book writers have portrayed the character as a symbol of inner rage and Freudian repression. The Hulk's existence has been retroactively explained as an after-effect of child abuse and latent multiple personality disorder.
Incarnations
The Hulk initially is characterized as a separate entity from Bruce Banner, a distillation of his anger that gradually develops its own personality and memories separate from Banner's.
Due to retroactive continuity established by writers Bill Mantlo and later Peter David in the 1980s, Banner is said to suffer from multiple personality disorder, which stems from the abuse he suffered as a child. The Hulk has many incarnations, each representing a different aspect of Banner's psyche.
- Bruce Banner – The core personality, he is an emotionally-repressed genius whose mind is so brilliant that it cannot be measured on any known intelligence test. Banner can transform into the different versions of the Hulk, whereas his alter-egos seem to be able only to transform into Bruce Banner.
- Savage Hulk – He possesses the mental capacity and temperament of a young child, and typically refers to himself in the third person. Savage Hulk often claims that he wants to be left alone, and is usually depicted as green-skinned and heavily-muscled with a loping, ape-like gait.
- Gray Hulk/Joe Fixit - The Gray Hulk (though possibly not the original) worked for a time as a Las Vegas enforcer called Joe Fixit. He has average intelligence, although he occasionally displays knowledge and intellectual ability normally associated with Bruce Banner. He is hedonistic, cunning, arrogant, crafty, and distant with a hidden conscience. In most of his Las Vegas appearances, he appears only at night. According to the Leader in Incredible Hulk Vol. 1, #333, the Gray Hulk persona is strongest during the night of the new moon and weakest during the full moon; this aversion to sunlight and moonlight vanished when the Gray Hulk's night-induced transformation trigger is later removed. Although he is the smallest of the Hulks, the Gray Hulk towers over the average human. He prefers to dress in tailored suits.
- Merged Hulk/The Professor – The merger of Bruce Banner and the Savage and Gray Hulks in Incredible Hulk #377 (written by Peter David). The Merged Hulk is later ret-conned into The Professor. The Professor, rather than being a merger of the three core personalities, was interpreted as a fourth, separate personality that represented Banner's ideal self. The primary difference between the two is that the Merged Hulk demonstrated aspects of the Banner, Grey Hulk, and Savage Hulk personalities (also possessing Banner's intelligence, Joe Fixit's cunning, and the Savage Hulk's size and strength), while the Professor did not. The Merged Hulk is even prone to uttering "Hulk smash!", which is the Savage Hulk's most common catchphrase. The Merged Hulk is an associate and leader of the team of superheroes called the Pantheon. Despite his exaggerated musculature, the Merged Hulk had a relatively normal-looking face, resembling that of Bruce Banner. The Professor personality is defined during Paul Jenkins' run as a "revelation" that the Merged Hulk is not actually a merger of the three personalities but rather a separate personality altogether. Unlike the Merged Hulk, the Professor is physically distinguished by having a pony tail, which the Merged Hulk did not. Jenkins justified this by ret-conning into the Hulk's continuity a new character named Angela Lipscomb (modeled after Jenkins' own girlfriend) who knew more about Bruce Banner than even Doc Samson. Lipscomb confronted Doc Samson with her observations of the Professor and Doc Samson validated them, despite events presented in previous issues to the contrary.
- Devil Hulk - The Devil Hulk is the malevolent personality of Bruce Banner, personifying all of Banner's resentment at the way he is treated by the world. He is also one of the Hulk's enemies, constantly threatening to escape confinement in Banner's mind and destroy the world that has tormented and abused them, simultaneously leaving nothing intact that Banner holds dear. He first appeared when Banner was dying of Lou Gehrig's Disease, Banner using a machine to travel into his own mind and make a deal with the three dominant Hulks that they would gain control of his body once the disease became too much for him to bear. The Devil Hulk was revealed at this point, but he only escaped a short while afterwards, when the machinations of General Ryker shattered the barriers keeping the Devil Hulk imprisoned. Fortunately, he was contained long enough for a cure for Banner's condition to be found, before finally being contained in Banner's subconscious by Banner, the Savage Hulk and Joe Fixit, the Professor Hulk remaining out in the real world to help scientists such as Doctor Samson and Reed Richards of the Fantastic Four find a cure for the disease.
Powers and abilities
The Hulk possesses the capacity for vast levels of physical strength. The most well-known incarnation, the Savage Hulk, possesses the greatest potential for immeasurable superhuman strength, often depending on his emotional state. His strength level is commensurate with his anger, spawning the famous quote: "the madder Hulk gets, the stronger he gets." During the Secret Wars limited series, he is shown supporting a 150 billion ton mountain range. At his peak during the fight against Onslaught, Jean Grey "turned off" Bruce Banner, bringing out the true Savage Hulk. After trading punches with Onslaught, Onslaught angered him to a point where he was able to then destroy Onslaught's armor fainting in the process. In Marvel Comics Presents #52, the Hulk shatters an asteroid twice the size of Earth with a single punch. The Hulk possesses highly developed leg muscles and is able to leap several miles at a time. He has been shown to be able to leap into a low-Earth orbit with a single bound. Both Doc Samson and the Leader are shown attempting to find limits to the Hulk's strength with their technology, but neither is successful.
The Hulk is depicted with a large degree of invulnerability and superhuman stamina. He is shown withstanding the impact of high-caliber artillery shells, falls from orbital heights, and powerful energy blasts without sustaining injury and resisting extreme temperatures, poisons, and diseases with no ill effect. In addition, the Hulk's body regenerates damaged or destroyed areas of tissue at an accelerated rate. Similar to his strength, his durability increases with his emotional stress.
In addition to his physical power and healing ability, the Hulk demonstrates the ability to "home in" on the desert base where he was empowered (see Incredible Hulk Vol. 1, #s 314, 393, et al). He can also see and hear spectres, such as the astral form of Doctor Strange.
Related characters
Allies
- She-Hulk – Also known as Jennifer Walters, she is Bruce Banner's cousin, whom he gives an emergency blood transfusion when she is critically wounded.
- Rick Jones – A teenager whom Banner saved, causing Banner to be caught in his life-changing explosion.
- Jim Wilson – A friend of Bruce Banner and sometime sidekick. He was the first character in mainstream comics to be HIV positive. Is deceased due to full-blown AIDS (Incredible Hulk #420).
- Doc Samson – The Hulk's occasional psychiatrist. Also happens to be a gamma-powered strong man with a working knowledge of nuclear biology.
- Tony Stark – He is in League with Doc Samson and aids him.
- Betty Ross Banner – Bruce Banner's love interest, and later his wife. Deceased.
- Jarella – The Hulk's lover from another planet. Deceased.
- Warbound from Planet Hulk
- Korg - A stone man who once fought Thor
- Miek - A meek insectoid who becomes king of his freed people before transforming into a behemoth.
- No-Name, the Broodspawn - Sole survivor of a pack of Brood warriors that landed on Planet Sakaar
- Elloe - Daughter of a high ranking Sakaaran official whom the Red King tries for treason
- Hiroim - a fallen "Shadow Priest"
- Caiera, the Oldstrong - former personal bodyguard to the Red King, betrayed due to the Red King's desire to destroy the Hulk
- Wolverine
- Sentry
- The Thing
- Marlo Chandler
- Sam Wilson – He has defended the Hulk on a few occasions due to the Hulk's comforting his nephew, Jim Wilson, during his last moments alive.
Enemies
- The Abomination – The Hulk's primary physical rival, also gamma-spawned
- Absorbing Man - Thor villain, able to magically "absorb" the properties of things/people he touches
- Bi-Beast
- The Leader – Gamma-irradiated super-genius
- Tyrannus - Would-be world conqueror and long-time Hulk villain, once possessed the body of the Abomination
- The Red King – The emperor of the planet Sakaar.
- General John Ryker - A ruthless military leader, who is also hunting for the Hulk.
- General Thaddeus Ross – Betty Ross' father, a military leader often on the hunt for the Hulk.
- Major Glenn Talbot – Betty Ross' ex-husband, a military officer who tries to kill Bruce Banner and destroy the Hulk.
- Wendigo - A large savage cannibalistic monster.
- Zzzax – Electricity-based villain
Other versions of Hulk
The Maestro
The Maestro is a version of the Hulk from an alternate future timeline, approximately a hundred years into the future, combining Banner's intelligence with the Hulk's more malevolent aspects. After a nuclear war kills almost all of Earth's superhumans and brings the world to the brink of extinction, the Maestro seizes control.
Gray haired and balding, the Maestro is clearly older than the Hulk - but is also significantly stronger, due to the radiation he has absorbed since the war. He rules the city of Dystopia, built to his own designs and protected by radiation shielding. Brutal soldiers with hi-tech equipment keep the "peace" and impose the Maestro's iron will. The Maestro himself dwells in a grand palace, where a Bacchanalian atmosphere reigns. Other gamma-irradiated beings, She-Hulk (now calling herself "Shulk") and the Abomination, survived the war and seem to have conquered other areas of the world.
Not long after the war, an elderly Rick Jones encounters the reality-hopping mutant Proteus, who is possessing the body of an alternate reality Hulk from the year 2099. Proteus intends to discard his current body and possess the Maestro. Jones, unaware of his plan, provides a weapon created by the X-Man Forge, which might be able to kill Maestro. However, the plan fails when Maestro is warned by the Exiles, who are pursuing Proteus. Proteus possesses a new host and flees to another world, breaking the Maestro's neck during his escape.
Years later, the Maestro, fully recovered from his injury, encounters a time-travelling Genis-Vell and Spider-Man 2099. Manipulated by the supervillain Thanatos, the three battle - but Captain Marvel and Spider-Man eventually return to their own time, with no consequence for Maestro.
Acquiring Doctor Doom's time machine, the rebels opposing Maestro (led by Rick Jones) eventually decide to bring the 'Professor' Hulk forward from the past, hoping that he can defeat Maestro. The Hulk agrees to help them and confronts the Maestro - but loses. The Maestro breaks Hulk's neck to immobilise him, then tries to persuade the incapacitated Hulk that he should side with his future self.
Maestro is eventually defeated by using Doom's time machine, sending him back to the time and place that the Hulk was created - ground zero during the testing of the atomic Gamma Bomb. Appearing next to the bomb itself, Maestro is seemingly killed in the same moment that creates the Hulk, but some degree of his consciousness still remains, tied to the skeletal fragments at the Gamma Bomb site.
Eventually, the Hulk learns that the "homing sense" which has always allowed him to locate ground zero, his "birth" place, is actually finding the Maestro's spirit and remains. The Maestro has also been absorbing gamma radiation from the Hulk each time he returns to the site, gradually restoring himself. When the Hulk returns from the Heroes Reborn universe, radiating vast amounts of energy, Maestro finally absorbs enough radiation to restore himself to life, although in a weakened and emaciated form.
Shortly thereafter, Maestro is captured by Asgardian trolls, who place his soul into the Asgardian Destroyer. As the Destroyer, he battles the Hulk - but as the Hulk and Maestro share the same DNA, Hulk is able to enter the Destroyer and defeat the weakened Maestro, who is seemingly killed by an avalanche.
Creator Peter David has stated that the Maestro is intended to be an evil and insane alternate Hulk - not a separate personality within Bruce Banner.
The End
The Incredible Hulk: The End one shot, set almost two hundred years into an alternative future, portrays Bruce Banner as the last human, the sole survivor of a nuclear war. In the aftermath of the war, Hulk retreated to a cave - emerging to find that the only other life left on earth was a swarm of mutated (and extremely dangerous) cockroaches. Banner, now extremely elderly, has gained a little of the Hulk's regenerative ability, but has lost his will to live. Hulk, on the other hand, is still not ready to die.
Ultimate Hulk
A version of the Hulk appears in the Ultimate Marvel series, first in Ultimate Marvel Team-Up #2 (2001), written by Brian Michael Bendis and drawn by Phil Hester. "Ultimate Hulk" amplifies Banner's emotions, particularly wrath, seeking to destroy those who wrong Banner. He also exhibits extreme sloth[volume & issue needed], lust (Ultimate Wolverine Vs. Hulk #1), and gluttony; several stories mention his devouring people (Ultimate War #03).
In Ultimates, Banner works for S.H.I.E.L.D., attempting to re-create the super-soldier formula that created Captain America. When Captain America is recovered from a block of ice, Banner's funding seems likely to be cut. The team forms without Banner's input, but S.H.I.E.L.D. faces heavy criticism for its extensive budget and lack of purpose. Banner, ridiculed by members of the Ultimates and rejected and taunted by his ex-girlfriend Betty Ross, combines Captain America's blood with the Hulk formula, and injects it into himself (Ultimates #4). He becomes a grey-skinned Hulk that tracks down Betty Ross, destroying everything in his path and murdering hundreds of people. The Hulk overpowers the Ultimates until the Wasp fires her bio-electric sting directly into his brain, which changes the Hulk back into Banner, who is restrained and imprisoned in the S.H.I.E.L.D. base the Triskelion - in a cell Banner had designed.
During a fight with an invading alien race called the Chitauri, Captain America orders that Banner be thrown from a helicopter high in the air. Captain America uses Banner's jealousy to make him fight the Chitauri commander, whom the Hulk pounds to a pulp and then eats. Captain America then tells the Hulk that the aliens had called him a "sissy-boy", and Hulk destroys an entire fleet of spaceships. After top-secret information regarding the Hulk/Banner connection is leaked to the press, Banner is convicted for the deaths of the more than 800 people who died in his New York City rampage and sentenced to death. Just before a nuclear weapon detonates, Banner wakes up and transforms into the Hulk.
Ultimate Wolverine Vs. Hulk shows that after travelling through France, Ireland and India, Bruce Banner finally arrives in Tibet, seeking the the Panchen Lama whom he hopes can reveal the true relationship behind Banner and the Hulk. In Ultimates 2 #11, Bruce Banner appears in Washington D.C. He lets a giant robot step on him and mentions being "in touch with [his] inner sociopath" before ripping the robot in two. He then continues to aid the Ultimates against the Liberators in issue #12.
Marvel Zombies
The Marvel Zombies series, set in an alternate world, features the Hulk as one of its main characters. Like almost every other superbeing on the planet, the Hulk has been affected by the zombification virus - although he retains his strength and invulnerability, he no longer heals, does not feel pain and now craves human flesh.
Template:Spoiler The zombie Hulk's transformations are controlled purely by his appetite - after feeding, he transforms back into Banner (also a zombie) until the hunger returns. As Banner is much smaller than the Hulk, one such transformation also causes his stomach to burst.
Hulk later succeeds in killing the Silver Surfer and is one of the zombies who devours the Surfer's corpse, absorbing some of its cosmic powers by doing so. When they later kill and consume Galactus himself, enhancing their powers even further, Hulk and the other five remaining zombies are able to leave the earth and seek food elsewhere. Ravaging and devouring entire planets, the six zombies eventually become the cosmic threat known as The Galactus. Template:Endspoiler
Hulk in other media
Television
The Hulk started out in television as part of the Marvel Super Heroes animated television series in 1966. The 39 (10-minute) episodes were shown along with those featuring Captain America, Iron Man, Thor, and the Sub-Mariner episodes based on early stories appearing in the Hulk and Tales to Astonish series.
The most famous TV adaptation is the live-action The Incredible Hulk TV series and its spin-off TV movies, starring Bill Bixby as David Banner and Lou Ferrigno as the Hulk. After the live-action show ended in 1982, the Hulk returned to cartoon format with 13 episodes of The Incredible Hulk, which aired in a combined hour with Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends. The series featured more characters from the comics than the live-action series, including Rick Jones, Betty Ross, and General Ross.
Typical of many superhero cartoons of the era,[citation needed] the show used stock transformation scenes which include Bruce Banner transforming back with his clothing somehow restored intact. The She-Hulk and the Leader made an appearance in the show. This series featured Stan Lee as a narrator. Bruce Banner and the Hulk also appeared in the Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends episode, "Spidey Goes Hollywood."
In 1996, Marvel Studios and Saban Entertainment brought the Hulk back to animated form in the animated series The Incredible Hulk, with Lou Ferrigno returning to role of the Hulk. The first season's stories are exceptionally dark, but in 1997, the show's name changed to The Incredible Hulk and She-Hulk, and featured She-Hulk in several episodes with the Gray Hulk. The series became much lighter during this season and was cancelled quickly. The show aired briefly on ABC Family following the release of the live-action movie in 2003.
The television show Saturday Night Live has used the Hulk character in several sketches. In the March 17, 1979 episode hosted by Margot Kidder, Lois Lane and Superman hold a dinner. One of the guests is the Incredible Hulk, played by John Belushi as a rude and offensive boor. In the November 21, 1992 episode hosted by Sinbad, Chris Farley plays the Incredible Hulk in a sketch about Superman's funeral. Farley's Hulk protests the suggestion of his giving a eulogy in broken English but then puts on a pair of glasses and delivers an erudite, impassioned farewell. In the December 17, 1994 hosted by George Foreman, Tim Meadows appears as Bruce Banner, who repeatedly has laboratory accidents and then changes into the Hulk, played by Foreman, who proceeds to further trash the laboratory before asking for the sketch to end because of its boring repetition.
Movies
In 2003, Ang Lee directed a film based on the Hulk for Universal Pictures. Eric Bana played Bruce Banner, and the Hulk was created with special effects. Here, Banner's father, David Banner (played by Nick Nolte), is partly responsible for the Hulk's origin as before Banner was born, he experiments on himself and passes his mutated genes onto his son. When Banner grows up, believing his real parents died (this is only half-true, as only his mother dies and his father is incarcerated for thirty years), he saves a co-worker from being killed by gamma radiation and takes the impact of the rays instead, mysteriously surviving the onslaught.
The Hulk causes a lot of destruction, wounding Glenn Talbot, killing his father's mutated dogs in battle, makes a path of danger from the Desert Base to San Francisco, and finally in a final battle against his insane father who had morphed into an amorphous cloud of energy. General Ross decides to end the battle by having one of his soldiers drop a gamma bomb at the site of the battle, ending the confrontation. It kills and disintegrates David, with the Hulk/Banner presumed dead from the event, but it is revealed at the very end of the movie that he did survive and is living as a secret doctor in South America, protecting the innocent from any intruders.
In 2006, the Hulk appears in the animated movie Ultimate Avengers, which is based on the comic book The Ultimates. The second Ultimate Avengers movie was released on August 8, 2006.
A second Hulk movie is in pre-production and scheduled for release in 2008. Titled The Incredible Hulk, it will be directed by Louis Leterrier. At the 2006 Comic-con Incredible Hulk panel, Letterier revealed that Abomination will be the villain.[4]
Video games
The Hulk appears in video games for many different systems, including the Sega Genesis, SNES, PlayStation, PlayStation 2, Xbox, GameCube, Game Boy Advance, and personal computer. Most are based on the comics, although the more recent releases draw primarily from the 2003 movie.
In Incredible Hulk: Ultimate Destruction, Bruce Banner's voice is performed by Neal McDonough, who voiced the character in the 1996 animated series. In Ultimate Destruction, the Hulk is so uncontrolled that he will kill even innocent civilians in his path and the Desert Base soldiers that dare fight him. As much as the Hulk sounds like a villain, he is merely an uncontrolled creature.
Sometimes the Hulk can be a hero as one time, when he is battling the Abomination (the real villain) in a final showdown, his goal is to protect the dam the Abomination wants to destroy until every soldier has evacuated. Some of these soldiers fly off in jets, in which the Hulk can easily use as weapons to target the Abomination, but that is the player's decision.
The Hulk is also in a cutscene in the Marvel Nemesis: Rise of the Imperfects game for the PS2, Xbox, and GameCube.
In addition to his own games, the Hulk appears in several fighting games by Capcom, starting with Marvel Super Heroes in 1995 and including the Marvel vs. Capcom series. The version of the Hulk appearing in these games closely resembles the Professor. His strength and defences in Marvel vs. Capcom is a focus on advance players.
Hulk is one of the first revealed characters in Marvel Universe Online, a new MMO for PC and Xbox360, but it is still in early development .
Hulk is set to play a role in Marvel Ultimate Alliance.
Themed products
Hulk-themed products include action figures, clothes, jewelry, video games, cards, pins, posters, cars, games, lunchboxes, toys, pinball machines, all types of collectibles and even the Incredible Hulk roller coaster at Universal Studios Islands of Adventure in Orlando, Florida.
Bibliography
- The Incredible Hulk #1–6 (Marvel Comics, May 1962–March 1963)
- Tales to Astonish #59–101 (Marvel Comics, September 1964–March 1968)
- The Incredible Hulk #102–474 (Marvel Comics, April 1968–March 1999)
- The Incredible Hulk Annual #1–20 (Marvel Comics, 1968–1994)
- The Incredible Hulk #-1 (Marvel Comics, July 1997, ISSN 0274-5275)
- Hulk #1–11 (Marvel Comics, April 1999–February 2000)
- The Incredible Hulk #12–76, #77–present (Marvel Comics, March 2000–September 2004, January 2005–present)
- Hulk Weekly #1–69, Marvel UK title published between 1979–1981. Features new material produced by the likes of Paul Neary and Steve Dillon.
Collections
- Hulk Visionaries: Peter David Vol. 1 Written by Peter David; Pencils & Cover by Todd McFarlane; collects Incredible Hulk #331-339 Vol. 1.
- Hulk Visionaries: Peter David Vol. 2 Written by Peter David; Penciled by Todd McFarlane, Erik Larsen & Jeff Purves; collects Incredible Hulk #340-348 Vol. 1.
- Hulk Visionaries: Peter David Vol. 3 Written by Peter David & Steve Englehart; Penciled by Jeff Purves, Alex Saviuk & Keith Pollard; Collects Incredible Hulk #349-354 Vol. 1, Web of Spider-Man #44 and Fantastic Four #320.
- Incredible Hulk: Dogs of War Written by Paul Jenkins; Penciled by Ron Garney and Mike McKone; collects Incredible Hulk #12-20 Vol. 2.
- Incredible Hulk Vol. 1: Return of the Monster Written by Bruce Jones; Penciled by John Romita, Jr.; collects Incredible Hulk #34-39 Vol. 2.
- Incredible Hulk Vol. 2: Boiling Point Written by Bruce Jones; Penciled by John Romita, Jr.; collects Incredible Hulk #40-43 Vol. 2.
- Incredible Hulk Vol. 3: Transfer Of Power Written by Bruce Jones; Penciled by Stuart Immonen; collects Incredible Hulk #44-49 Vol. 2.
- Incredible Hulk Vol. 4: Abominable Written by Bruce Jones; Penciled by Mike Deodato, Jr.; collects Incredible Hulk #50-54 Vol. 2.
- Incredible Hulk Vol. 5: Hide In Plain Sight Written by Bruce Jones; Penciled by Leandro Fernández; collects Incredible Hulk #55-59 Vol. 2.
- Incredible Hulk Vol. 6: Split Decisions Written by Bruce Jones; Penciled by Mike Deodato Jr.; collects Incredible Hulk #60-65 Vol. 2.
- Incredible Hulk Vol. 7: Dead Like Me Written Bruce Jones & Garth Ennis; Pencils by Doug Braithwaite & John McCrea; collects Incredible Hulk #65-69 Vol. 2, and Hulk Smash #1 and #2.
- Incredible Hulk Vol. 8: Big Things Written Bruce Jones; Pencils by Mike Deodato, Jr.; collects Incredible Hulk #70-76 Vol. 2.
- Hulk: Tempest Fugit Written by Peter David; Penciled by Lee Weeks & Jae Lee; collects Incredible Hulk #77-82 Vol. 2.
- House Of M: Hulk Written by Peter David; Penciled by Jorge Lucas & Adam Kubert; collects Incredible Hulk #83-87 Vol. 2.
- Hulk: Planet Hulk Prelude Written by Daniel Way; Penciled by Keu Cha & Juan Santacruz; collects Incredible Hulk #88-91 Vol. 2.
References
- ^ Comics Buyer's Guide #1617 (June 2006)
- ^ Starlog #213 (July 2003)
- ^ Peter David (July 18 2005). "My leaving "Hulk"". The Incredible Hulk Message Board. Retrieved 2005-08-28.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|year=
(help)CS1 maint: year (link) - ^ Chris Carle (July 23, 2006). "Comic-Con 2006: The Incredible Hulk Panel". IGN. Retrieved 2006-08-16.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: year (link)
External links
- Official webpage at marvel.com
- Official Marvel UK Store
- MDP: Hulk (Bruce Banner) - Marvel Database Project
- One of Stan Lee's Best Article on the Incredible Hulk's Popularity
- The 1982 Incredible Hulk Cartoon @ Toon Zone
- Comics Buyer's Guide Fan Awards
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