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Hulk (film)

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This page is similar in name or subject to other pages.

See also Earth-20030620 for a complete list of references to distinguish between these closely named or closely related articles.


Jennifer Connelly="hiddenStructure"
Hulk
Directed by Ang Lee
Produced by Gale Anne Hurd
James Schamus
Written by Comic Book:
Stan Lee
Jack Kirby
Story:
James Schamus
Screenplay:
Michael France
John Turman
James Schamus
Starring Eric Bana


Jennifer Connelly

Music by Danny Elfman
Cinematography
Editing
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release date June 20, 2003
Running time 138 minutes
Rating
Language English
Budget $120,000,000
Preceded by
Followed by "The Incredible Hulk"

Hulk (2003) is a movie based on the series The Incredible Hulk. It was directed by Ang Lee

and stars Eric Bana

, Jennifer Connelly , Sam Elliott , Josh Lucas , and Nick Nolte .

The movie was not well-received by audiences and experienced a second-weekend box office drop of 70%, the second-largest drop ever recorded for a movie that opened as the top box office draw its opening week. This was reportedly due to negative word-of-mouth in response to what many considered a misleading advertising campaign and the use of an unconvincing CGI Hulk[citation needed]

.

Others praised the film's action sequences, the use of symbolism and visual metaphors, and technical effects, but felt the overall pacing was much too slow and dramatic.

Many fans of the comics also felt that the filmmakers re-imagined the Hulk character in a manner that failed to grasp his appeal, changing him from a symbol of frustration and pent-up anger into the passive victim of parental abuse. While the abuse aspect had been present in the comic since the late 1980s under writer Bill Mantlo, there it was building on an already well-established character and was part of a much more complex storyline.

While not a box office bomb, the film fell well short of Universal's financial expectations. Reception from mainstream critics was generally lukewarm to negative, often criticizing the film for being overly serious. The New York Times critic A O Scott called it "incredibly long, incredibly tedious, incredibly turgid" and Entertainment Weekly wrote that "a big-budget comic-book adaptation has rarely felt so humorless and intellectually defensive about its own pulpy roots". MSN Movies ranks Hulk as the fifth worst superhero movie to date, behind Batman and Robin, Daredevil, Catwoman, and the 2005 Fantastic Four film.[1] However, critic Roger Ebert gave it a fairly positive review [2].

One month before the release of "Hulk" a non-finalized "bootleg" was circulated. It was complete except for the vocals, grunts, roars and so forth coming from The Hulk. Fans feel that film was lackluster for an Ang Lee

film and after seeing the bootleg, decided not to attend the theater release.

The movie had a tie-in video-game that received a lukewarm reception from critics.

Contents

Plot


Cast

Actor Role
Eric Bana Dr. Bruce Banner / The Hulk
Jennifer Connelly Dr. Betty Ross
Sam Elliott General Thaddeus "Thunderbolt" Ross
Josh Lucas Major Glenn Talbot
Nick Nolte David Banner
Paul Kersey Young David Banner
Cara Buono Edith Banner
Todd Tesen Young Ross
Kevin O. Rankin Harper
Celia Weston Mrs. Krensler
Mike Erwin Teenage Bruce Banner
Lou Ferrigno Security Guard
Stan Lee Security Guard
Geoffrey Scott President of the United States
Regina McKee Redwing National Security Advisor
Daniel Dae Kim Aide
Michael Kronenberg Bruce Banner as Child
David Kronenberg Bruce Banner as Child
Rhiannon Leigh Wryn Betty Ross as Child

Trivia

  • The military vehicles featured in the movie include the M1 Abrams tank, F-22 Raptor, and RAH-66 Comanche. Ironically, while the Comanche was in service in the film, it had yet to do so in real life, and was eventually canceled by the army in 2004.
  • The name "David Banner" is a reference to the "Doctor David Bruce Banner" from the 1980s television series starring Bill Bixby

. In the comics, the name of the Hulk's father was Brian Banner.

  • David Banner in the film essentially becomes a film-adapted version of the Absorbing Man, a Hulk villain from the early comic series, who has also battled Thor and Spider-Man, various individual members of, and different team incarnations, of the Avengers, among others. David Banner's electrical transformation also pays homage to another Hulk villain (Zzzax, a colossal living energy-being who drains/feeds on the life force and mental energies of others). Both characters are 'vampiric' in some sense.
  • Ang Lee makes a cameo appearance in one scene.
  • Early in the movie, Stan Lee and Lou Ferrigno
appear in a brief cameo appearance, discussing the security of the laboratory.  Stan Lee (along with Jack Kirby), created the Hulk character, and Lou Ferrigno played the hulk in the 1977 television series.

Sequel

There have been talks of a sequel, which would expand the character of Hulk and most likely be more action driven than a philosophical drama. In a January 2006 interview, Bana stated that "nobody's talking about any sequel" to the film. However, Ain't It Cool News spoke with Avi Arad on January 18, 2006 and announced that Marvel is moving forward with a sequel and that Marvel Enterprises will produce the film while Universal Studios will distribute it. This deal is outside of the Paramount distribution deal that Marvel finalized with Paramount Pictures late last year. Arad announced that he is talking to various writers that he is interested in having work on the film. Arad also stated that he felt that the Hulk was too big in the first and that he will be smaller for the sequel. At this point, there is no recasting in place or planned. Avi Arad also debunked a few rumors circulating about the film: the film will not star David Duchovny in a straight-to-DVD release. Arad recently (April 26th) stated that the villain in the upcoming Hulk 2 will be the Abomination with the title "The Incredible Hulk".

In 2006 it was announced that Louis Leterrier had been signed to direct. No casting has been announced.

External links

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