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The Incredible Hulk
Reviewed By Rich Drees
It’s hard to discuss director Louis Leterrier’s comic book
adaptation The Incredible Hulk without mentioning the
character’s two previous live action iterations- the 1978 to 1982
television series which starred Bill Bixby and Lou Ferrigno and Ang
Lee’s 2003 film titled simply Hulk.
The television version, spearheaded by writer/producer Kenneth
Johnson, was one of the first live action productions to treat the
material as more than just campy juvenilia. The idea of a man living
a life in hiding while trying to find a cure for his unique
condition was played for its emotional reality. It is a theme that
Leterrier visits in his film, and he acknowledges the inspiration of
the television series with several subtle nods, one of which is
played for a well-earned laugh.
But it is Lee’s previous attempt to bring the misunderstood hero to
the screen that may be this film’s biggest obstacle to overcome.
While he did include some of the prerequisite action sequences, like
a spectacular showdown with the Army in the desert, Lee’s film was
more interested in the fractured psychology of Bruce Banner (played
in that film by Eric Bana) and how it resulted in the creation of
the Hulk. Unfortunately, that exploration led to a muddled and
disappointing third act which alienated many critics and much of its
audience, raising the question if anyone would return to the
theaters for a new film featuring the character.
If the audience does return for Leterrier’s new take on the
character, they will find a film that is long on action and perhaps
a bit less cerebral than Lee’s, though things never get dumbed down
to the point of insulting the audience.
It has been five years since the accident that cursed Bruce Banner
(Edward Norton) with a condition that causes him in times of great
stress to grow into the muscled, brutish misunderstood monster known
as the Hulk. Hiding out from the military, who want to study
Banner’s condition for its potential battlefield applications, he
has been practicing meditation techniques in order to keep himself
from loosing control and changing. A seemingly innocuous accident
ultimately leads to the military locating his hiding spot in Brazil,
setting Banner on the run back north to America. There he hopes to
find help from his biochemist ex-girlfriend Betty Ross (Liv Tyler)
and another researcher with whom he has been communicating via
encrypted email. However, the military is in hot pursuit, lead by
Betty’s father, Gen. Ross (William Hurt) and ex-commando Emil
Blonsky (Tim Roth), who will go to any lengths to capture Banner.
For the most part, The Incredible Hulk is a better movie, if
you are looking for more action and a faster overall pace. The first
fight the Hulk has with the military stylistically owes much to a
similar sequence in James Cameron’s Aliens (1986). A second
confrontation on a college campus recalls numerous Japanese giant
monster movies in which wave after wave of military hardware is
brought forward to futilely try to halt the advancing creature. The
film’s climactic slugfest between the Hulk and his opposite number
is everything that the finale of Lee’s 2003 film should have been.
However, where the film excels in action, it just misses the mark in
characterization. Leterrier does give us enough to set up Bruce
Banner’s feelings of guilt over accidentally hurting the love of his
life Betty in the accident. Ross’s drive to capture Banner is seen
to be driven by fear of what he has become but hidden by a “Peace
through superior firepower” bravado. But these things are painted in
broad strokes and could probably have used a bit more development.
Perhaps fittingly, the plot and characterization is merely the 98
pound weakling that transforms into a raging monster for action
sequences. |