SpaghettiHULK
Civilian
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- Feb 13, 2007
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I understand what you mean, some events in their lives are catalysts. I agree with that.
But to me Murdock losing his eyesight by saving someone or by seeing that his dad is a criminal makes me think it would do the same impact, making him leaning towards the good side.
Parker the same, always feeling guilty and trying to atone.
Banner, now, is another case. I guess saving Rick and getting the blast is making his story tragic in an "out of the blue" way, but injecting himself makes him tragic in an equally (if not more) interesting way: A man so vain, he tried to go too far and got burned for it. Big time. And now he has a chance to atone for this (with the Abomination incident). I like it, it works. Man paying for his vanity isn't only a reminiscent of Parker, but also of classic tragic stories, plus it's faithful to a particular run of comics. It's the whole deal for me.
But he's not Bruce Banner anymore...
