Ang's Hulk is not the real Hulk.
The reboot is.
Lame excuse. They do. Because it's cool to watch.The don't need an entire scene dedicated to it again.
Lame excuse. They do. Because it's cool to watch.
Less realistic, actually. The same super-strong, gamma powered leg muscles that would enable the Hulk to pick up heavy ****, throw heavy ****, and punch heavy **** through walls would also allow him to jump - a long, long ways - instead of scrambling up walls and swinging from bridges. They made a stylistic choice they felt was necessary to further distance themselves from the first film - whether it worked or not really depends on how much you missed seeing those trademark leaps, or how necessary they were to the story (the answer to both of which is probably "not very much", or some variation thereof) - the new Hulk didn't really seem any more or less "weightless" than the old one.The director commented on not wanting the Hulk to seem weightless, which is clearly the direction he decided to go. Let's be honest, something that big and strong looks ridiculous easily flying through the air. I understand why the hardcore Hulk fan is disappointed he doesn't jump as far, but I personally prefer the more realistic route they've gone.
They said that they left "stuff" out on purpose. Maybe we'll see more of the super jumps in the sequel or in "The Avengers".
Anyone agree???
The director commented on not wanting the Hulk to seem weightless, which is clearly the direction he decided to go. Let's be honest, something that big and strong looks ridiculous easily flying through the air. I understand why the hardcore Hulk fan is disappointed he doesn't jump as far, but I personally prefer the more realistic route they've gone.
I don't think it needs that big a detail made of it. The Hulk leaping isn't some sort of separate superpower that only he has, it's just a natural product of the strength in his leg muscles. If it can be incorporated naturally into the course of any action sequences, then great. In Hulk, the leaping was, logically, a consequence of his being stranded in the middle of the desert; stylistically, it was a poetic, contemplative sequence that acted opposite the more hectic action moments - and I, personally, thought it was beautifully done.
Would I have liked to have seen Hulk leaping through the jungles of South America? Honestly, yes, I probably would have (though, it should be made clear that I wasn't, when viewing the film, actually thinking that). Seeing the Hulk in that jungle setting, with the abundance of green and dappled lighting, would have been great. But that probably would not have worked within Letterrier's narrative; he favored a faster pace that didn't make time for much of the more sedate scenarios that Lee did.
I thought it was pretty much insinuated that when he got to an open area (after his little monkey routine, which I thought was AWESOME) that he threw himself in the air to start up one big ol' jump. How else was he getting away?
You cannot jump 3 miles from any point in a city. ...Skyscrapers you know, well, I guess he could crash right through them, but Hulk doesn't always smash for the fun of smashing.
And then he have the campus scene, in which he obviously jumped to the cave.. I mean, we even caught the end of it.
And then the bottling plant...
He went from Brazil to Guatemala, I cannot stress this enough, he didn't just WALK THERE.
They didn't have to show the jumps, regardless if this is a reboot or not, people in that theater know from the last one, Hulk can jump. The don't need an entire scene dedicated to it again.
Geez, I wouldn't go that far. He is a more "classic" Hulk character, so he doesn't have much of the newfound obligatory "dark" qualities all heroes must have now to be interesting to some people, but I digress...
I didn't lift 50 pounds today.
No one saw me lift 50 pounds today.
Conclusion: I can't lift 50 pounds.
Just because we didn't see the Hulk jump as far as the 2003 Hulk doesn't mean he can't.
And just because we didn't see the Hulk throw a tank doesn't mean he can't.
Today I needed to move 10 objects from one location to another in a real hurry. My life even depended on it. However, instead of picking up all of the objects at once and moving them much quicker, I moved them one at a time. If I'm capable of moving them all at once, then why didn't I do so?
Now recall the scene from NY with Abomination running across the rooftops, dangerously close to the chopper that Betty's in. If Hulk was able to leap that distance all at once, then why didn't he do so?
It seems my previous reply in an another thread fits better here.
I've seen the movie and... yeah, it's way better than Ang Lee's film. More action, better actors etc. And every ability The Hulk has in the comic books is there; the Thunderclap, the Ground Slam. How cool isn't that. Except one ability: The breathtaking leaps. Now, it's been mentioned a lot that this is the Hulk movie we all have been waiting for. And yeah, it is, almost. I totally understand why they wanted to minimize the jumping range, that they didn't want the Hulk to seem too weightless. This also makes me think of a certain video game. Well, actually two: Ultimate Destruction and The Incredible Hulk, based on Leterrier's movie. Looking at how far and high the Hulk jumps in these games, I realised that his jumping ranges are perfect. He doesn't jump for miles, it's more like kilometers, which would've been more reasonable for the movie. In fact, let's take a look at how far he leaps in the license game:
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