The Incredible Hulk
Starring: Edward Norton, Liv
Tyler, Tim Roth
Directed by: Louis Leterrier (“The Transporter”)
Written by: Zak Penn (“X-Men: The Last Stand”)
and Edward Norton (debut)
By Kiko
Martinez
Hulk
returns to the big screen, this time as “The Incredible
Hulk,” a reimaging of the underappreciated and artistic
Ang Lee version of 2003. Sadly, the film feels like a
brittle stepping stone for the bigger picture at Marvel:
setting up for an “Avengers” flick sometime in the near
future.
Although the
new cinematic version of the mean, green superhero wants
to completely disassociate itself from its predecessor,
the story seems to begin right where the Lee picture
left off. Bruce Banner (Eric Bana then, Edward Norton
now) is living in Brazil trying to control the monster
inside his gamma ray-filled body.
This means
if you don’t know the mythology of the Hulk, polish up
on your comic book history because “The Incredible Hulk”
doesn’t have time to explain. Head screenwriter Zak Penn
(“X-2”) decides to simply breeze through Banner’s
background and scientific discovery, which comes by way
of a cliché montage during the films opening credits
It’s been
158 days since the Hulk has emerged when we see Banner,
who is making a living working in a bottling factory. On
his wrist he wears a small watch-like monitor that lets
him know when his heart rate increases, which, in turn,
warns him that the big green guy could make an
appearance if he doesn’t control himself. This is an
unwarranted and erroneous addition to Banner’s story.
While the comic book, TV show, and 2003 film versions
explain that Bruce only transforms into the Hulk when he
became angry, this Hulk has to take deep breath for
everything including running long distances and getting
overly excited while in bed with Betty Ross (Jennifer
Connolly then, Liv Tyler now).
Betty and
Bruce are reunited when Bruce returns to the states
after Betty’s father, Gen. Thaddeus Ross (Sam Elliott
then, William Hurt now) and the U.S. government locate
the drifter and attempt to capture him so they can
create more Hulks as military weapons. To help, Gen.
Ross recruits super soldier Emil Blonsky (Tim Roth), who
later becomes the Abomination, to hunt for the Hulk and
subdue him.
In more
mainstream fashion and with far less style and
originality, “The Incredible Hulk,” helmed by unproven
action director Louis Leterrier (“Unleashed”), follows
the same pattern of most superhero/comic book movies.
Although this “Hulk” tends to lean more toward the
1970’s TV series, which starred Bill Bixby and Lou
Ferrigno, there’s really not much emotion behind the
Hulk to say the audience is immersed in his personal
story and conflict. Simply playing the TV show’s theme
song during one part of the movie isn’t going to cut it.
For
those Hulk fans who were critical of the lack of action
in the Lee version, there’s more in this one. But
really, are a couple extra smashed tanks really
benefiting a story that should be focusing on a
tormented soul? Lee’s version was brave enough to try
something completely different that all the trivial
comic book adaptations. In “The Incredible Hulk,”
Leterrier and crew are just mixing up the same imitative
concoction and pouring it out green this time.
Grade: C