| 'The Incredible Hulk'
Reviewed by Martin McGrath

As one of the few people who enjoyed Ang Lee’s take
on The Hulk (2003), I approached this relaunch of
the franchise with a quiet dread. For all its faults Lee’s
film at least had the strength of obvious intelligence and
a seriousness of intent, even if it did eventually subside
into a low-rent pseudo-Freudian drama.
Having had the intelligent outing – the Banner side,
should we say – then the news that the director of the
new film would be Louis Leterrier (whose previous works include
only the ultraviolent Danny the Dog and the silly
Transporter 2) did not inspire confidence. This,
surely, would be the violent, stupid, green side of the franchise
– a big, dumb action movie that cast aside subtlety
in place of big action sequences.
But
the truth is that such assumptions are too crude. Leterrier’s
The Incredible Hulk features an intelligent cast,
led by the excellent Edward Norton and Tim Roth, giving strong
performance in a film that manages to pack plenty of action
but also find time for some really strong character development
and realistic human relations. Indeed, in many ways this film
is more subtle than Lee’s earlier effort. Lee’s
film concerns itself with archetypes – particularly
in the father/son relationship – to the point where
there is little room for anything that might recognisably
be Bruce Banner and all other relationships fall into the
shade.
Where Ang Lee was happy to confess that he’d never
read a single issue of a Hulk comic while planning or making
his film, Leterrier (and co-write Norton) are clearly fans
both of the comic book and of the 70s television show, which
is repeatedly referenced by the film (not least in the cameo
given to Lou Ferringo). The Incredible Hulk is filled
with characters and incidents and background details from
the character’s history. And the story is pure comic
book – with a neatly encapsulated origin story and an
increasingly dangerous foe from The Hulk’s rogues’
gallery leading to a cataclysmic final confrontation.
The film opens with a stunning sequence set in Rio de Janeiro,
as Bruce struggles to make a living, find a cure for himself
and remain calm but is, inevitably, dragged back to his green
half by a military led by Thunderbolt Ross (William Hurt)
and back to North America in search of a cure. Meanwhile Emil
Blonsky (Tim Roth) is moving in the opposite direction, seeking
the power that will allow him to challenge The Hulk and eventually
transforming into the terrible Abomination. The two men come
together in three fantastic set pieces – perhaps the
best being the middle one in which an enhanced but still human
Roth takes on The Hulk on a university lawn. The special effects
here are superb (and are bound to leave fans wondering what
might be possible if The Hulk ever got to go toe-to-toe with
Wolverine or Captain America on the big screen).
Between
the action sequences, Leterrier very sensibly makes plenty
of space for the characters. The relationship between Banner
and Betty Ross (the luscious Liv Tyler) is handled with surprising
tenderness and the two have a number of genuinely affecting
scenes. It is the fact that time is taken to make sure that
we care for these characters as humans – and the quality
of acting on show – that raises The Incredible Hulk
above standard action movie.
That said, the money has been spent on the action, and The
Incredible Hulk does deliver. The final confrontation
between The Hulk and the gruesomely transformed Blonsky is
a sense-stunning spectacle that manages to be shockingly brutal.
The final defeat of the Abomination is bloodily not to say
terrifyingly achieved with The Hulk’s ferocious power
finally revealed.
Marvel Productions have followed Iron Man with another
pitch-perfect comic adaptation. There’s plenty here
to appeal to the hardest of hardcore fans but there’s
also a strong human story that should attract to those looking
for a decent quality action movie with a bit of heart.
But, for fans, the biggest thrill in The Incredible Hulk
might well come after the action subsides with the appearance
in the last reel of Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jnr), approaching
Thunderbolt Ross in a bar and telling him, “We’re
putting a team together...” Can you say “Avengers
Assemble!”?

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