- Joined
- Aug 17, 2003
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I absolutely agree. Problem is that they tried way too hard to make it everyone's cookie, and there were fast pace and the usual one-liners that made it the average superhero movie.
The first act was perfect IMO. Except for crap like "don't make me hungry" which doesn't make anys ense because anyone knows that Portuguese doesn't have the same play of words.
But the fugitive angle from the TV series worked at a different level than in the TV series. It was great. Also when he had problems getting new clothes, something to eat. It was fantastic. But then there was so much going on to get. Since it didn't styart fropm the beginning, I felt disconnected with Bruce and Betty's romance. I just assumed it was the classic love interest and that's it. Abomination, Mr. Blue, etc, all good elements that were compressed into the less-than-2-hour movie.
Now things like "Can't make love... might hulk-out" or that completely unnecessary, made just for the sake of emotion free fall from Bruce was weird. Really? there was no chance but to suicide? And Ross and the military would allow a man to commit suicide just in case he turns into Hulk? Add to that that, once you get over that, in the middle of the fallen, in the middle of the excitement... Bruce goes "Oh, *****." Yes, THE worst part to place a joke. And they did it.
Now, this is just me, but I'm not keen on the Bruce controls Hulk thing. To me that's just like a gritty Superman, a smiling happy-with-life Batman or a Peter Parker that has no money problems. It's taking the tragedy out of a tragic character.
But he doesn't control the Hulk really. The movie hints he is attempting to do that, but in the final part of the movie, Bruce more or less guides the monster. As opposed to trying to destroy the monster, which stems from his own inner darkness, he tries to use it in a heroic light, and the Hulk becomes less feral as a result look at Hulk in prior scenes, willing to kill people, vs. when he relents once Betty asks him to stop. It shows a shift in how Bruce's inner compassion and desires are becoming more part of the Hulk now that he is embracing it to an extent. I don't think it took the tragedy away, because the Hulk is still a monster inside him he can't control. He just made it more noble. As for the free fall, I love that scene. It shows Bruce's inner hero, which becomes part of the Hulk. Now, the joke they inserted during the fall was lame, I give you that, but the moment itself when he jumps out of the plane is powerful.
