Sigh. No, it didn't. Seriously. Describe to me these compelling features the Abomination had. He was more a cardboard cutout than Malekith, and had less personality and charisma, and a far worse aesthetic. What, exactly, is so great about him?
Hulk
Budget: $137 million
Box Office: $245,360,480
The Incredible Hulk
Budget: $150 million
Box Office: $263,427,551
Underwhelming but they didn't do like John Carter and actually lose money.
Plus these things never seem to factor home viewing sales.
I'm positive that Hulk will get a sequel during Phase 3, he was the show stealer during the Avengers and will probably rise even more in popularity in Age of Ultron.
The first Hulk movie left some loose ends hanging, namely Red Hulk .
No, no it didn't. The movie gave not even the slightest hint of anything involving the Red Hulk.
It has General Ross as a character. General Ross has been a major character in his own right for decades before Loeb ever had the brain aneurysm that led to the Red Hulk.
No, no it didn't. The movie gave not even the slightest hint of anything involving the Red Hulk.
It has General Ross as a character. General Ross has been a major character in his own right for decades before Loeb ever had the brain aneurysm that led to the Red Hulk.
Hulk
Budget: $137 million
Box Office: $245,360,480
The Incredible Hulk
Budget: $150 million
Box Office: $263,427,551
Underwhelming but they didn't do like John Carter and actually lose money.
Plus these things never seem to factor home viewing sales.
I'm positive that Hulk will get a sequel during Phase 3, he was the show stealer during the Avengers and will probably rise even more in popularity in Age of Ultron.
See that extra $63 million is a nice bump, has to count for something.
Regardless I really hope he gets a chance to smash for Phase 3. That means we could have a Hulk movie as early as 2 years from now!
I'm wondering if the use of the Sakaarans in GotG will close the use of them for anything Hulk related in the future.
I was felt like the 2008 Incredible Hulk movie that Marvel released would have been better if it wasn't for the 2003 Hulk movie not being that good. I remember I had a few friends who didn't want to or were kind of hesitant to go to the theaters to see the Incredible Hulk because they didn't like the 2003 Hulk, and thought they were tied together or it was its sequel. I'm pretty sure if the 2003 Hulk movie was never released and the first Hulk movie would have been the 2008 version, money wise it would did alot better. The 2008 Incredible Hulk is still a great movie in my opinion, but yeah we need a Incredible Hulk 2
Hulk
Budget: $137 million
Box Office: $245,360,480
The Incredible Hulk
Budget: $150 million
Box Office: $263,427,551
Underwhelming but they didn't do like John Carter and actually lose money.
Plus these things never seem to factor home viewing sales.
I'm positive that Hulk will get a sequel during Phase 3, he was the show stealer during the Avengers and will probably rise even more in popularity in Age of Ultron.
Rule of thumb is that the Studio only gets 1/2 of the box office gross so when a movie doesn't double it's budget by the time the world wide gross is factored in it can only be considered a flop by the studio. Compare that to a movie that turns a profit with domestic gross alone and its not difficult to see why marvel wouldn't want to do another Hulk movie.Domestic Box Office $134,806,913 Details International Box Office $128,611,000 Worldwide Box Office $263,417,913 Home Market Performance Domestic DVD Sales $60,414,291 Details Domestic Blu-ray Sales $3,538,563 Details Total Domestic Video Sales $63,952,854
I found this , factoring in DVD & Blu ray for Incredible Hulk 2008 from The Numbers.com
Couldn't agree more with this entire post. I remember being in college when Ang Lee's travesty came out. As the lone hardcore comicbook freak among my buddies, I literally felt I owed the other guys an apology for dragging them to the movie.I was felt like the 2008 Incredible Hulk movie that Marvel released would have been better if it wasn't for the 2003 Hulk movie not being that good. I remember I had a few friends who didn't want to or were kind of hesitant to go to the theaters to see the Incredible Hulk because they didn't like the 2003 Hulk, and thought they were tied together or it was its sequel. I'm pretty sure if the 2003 Hulk movie was never released and the first Hulk movie would have been the 2008 version, money wise it would did alot better. The 2008 Incredible Hulk is still a great movie in my opinion, but yeah we need a Incredible Hulk 2
Couldn't agree more with this entire post. I remember being in college when Ang Lee's travesty came out. As the lone hardcore comicbook freak among my buddies, I literally felt I owed the other guys an apology for dragging them to the movie.
Rule of thumb is that the Studio only gets 1/2 of the box office gross so when a movie doesn't double it's budget by the time the world wide gross is factored in it can only be considered a flop by the studio. Compare that to a movie that turns a profit with domestic gross alone and its not difficult to see why marvel wouldn't want to do another Hulk movie.
Yep, and this doesn't even start to consider the weird, amorphous and quasi-legal-at-best practice commonly referred to as "Hollywood accounting". Harry Potter And The Order Of The Phoenix, for example, made $967 mill and went down on the books as a loss of $167 mill.Um, no. Just because it doesn't break even in theaters doesn't mean its a flop. It means it didn't do well, but "doesn't do well" and "flop" are *not synonymous*. Flop really means "the studio takes a bath on the movie", which is not the case when it only just misses going black in theaters. A flop would be if a 150M budget movie only made 200M in theaters, leaving it with a long struggle to *maybe* break even post-release.
( and a bomb would be when a 150M budget movie makes 100M in theaters, assuring that it will never escape the red ink )