2009-11-21 18:43 KST  
  RSS
Global Voices Online - The world is talking. Are you listening?
JapanFocus
'The Incredible Hulk' Returns
Action bonanza suffers from lack of depth
Brian Orndorf (briano)     Email Article  Print Article 
Published 2008-06-12 07:23 (KST)   
©2008 Universal Pictures
HULK SMASH! And he does in a big way in "The Incredible Hulk," a Hollywood patch job of sorts, a production aiming to realign the comic book chi lost to Ang Lee's angst-riddled "Hulk" back in 2003. Now, instead of heavy characterization and a glum attitude, "Incredible" reinstates the basics of the big green hero: destruction and solitude.

Hiding out peacefully in South America to keep his Gamma-induced mutation in control, Bruce Banner (Edward Norton) is looking for help to cure his affliction, trying to keep himself out of the hands of General Ross (William Hurt), who wants what's inside Banner to create an army of super-soldiers.

Heading back to America, Banner makes contact with longtime love Betty Ross (Liv Tyler), who urgently wants to help the ailing man cure himself. Hot on their trail is Emil Blonsky (Tim Roth), a brutal, unforgiving soldier who encourages the general to experiment further with Gamma poisoning by injecting him with a dose.

  TODAY'S TOP STORIES
Independent Inquiry Is Unavoidable
Will Hatoyama Ban Whaling?
Another Kyrgyz Journalist Attacked
Two Stories Become Three in Lexington
'Amreeka' Disappoints
  FROM THE SECTION
[DVD] 'Blood Rain:' Pouring Red
'Unmistaken Child'
'Munyurangabo'
'Where the Wild Things Are'
35 Shots of Rum: An Accessible Film Of Mystery
Now, to keep matters in perspective, I was one of the 15 people who embraced Lee's previous take on the comic book titan. Sure, the film was glacial, contained an atrocious final reel and refused to crack a smile, but Lee gave the property a mesmerizing screen intensity. The director took risks with Hulk and his heavy-muscled misery. Hulk didn't smash much under Lee's watch, but the lack of brutality offered something infinitely more demonstrative to process in a genre not known for its intellectual persuasion.

"Incredible Hulk" changes all that.

Now with orders to simplify matters, director Louis Leterrier returns Hulk to his car-throwing origins with a non-stop carousel of violence in "Incredible." This picture is popcorn entertainment all the way; Leterrier indulges his extreme visual instincts to fashion a peppier "Hulk" for the crowds who felt alienated by Lee's experimentation. The quest is noble and "Incredible" is stuffed with enough limb-cracking attitude to give the faithful exactly what they want from a Hulk movie.

What I'm having difficulty accepting is the price paid for such a high velocity diversion. "Incredible" is dense with exposition, but it's all stuffed carelessly into the few quiet moments the picture barely makes room for. "Incredible" acts like a sequel to the 2003 film in the way it plunges forward without much introduction time with Bruce or Betty, and it doesn't allow for much bonding during the action either.

"Incredible" feels paired down from a more extensive cut, with little cracks in the plot felt throughout the proceedings. Leterrier is in a hurry to get from one action sequence to the next, and while it's all comfortably numbing, there's not much characterization to get excited about here. "Incredible" comes off more as a wonderful video game than a meaningful exploration of the isolated soul.

Speaking of video games, "Incredible" suffers from an extremely off-putting lack of polish in the special effects department. It's been five years since Lee's film, not to mention the massive budget Leterrier is playing with here, and "Incredible" looks pathetically unfinished. The sweeping Hulk movement is accounted for, but the clarity is missing, with the creature lacking crucial big screen crispness.

I found it embarrassing to watch at times, especially since Lee's Hulk was such a dynamite visual exclamation point. I'd hand over all the deafening explosions that litter this film for one single scene of awe. For a film titled "Incredible," the CG Hulk is anything but.

Granted, I'm making "Incredible" sound like a drag, and it really isn't. It's a spirited ride boosted by some nice performances, strong romantic chemistry between Norton and Tyler and several swell tributes paid to the "Hulk" television series of the 1970s. When Hulk lets loose, there's a horde of building-leveling mayhem to enjoy, and Leterrier is the right man for the job, infusing new momentum to the character and taking his trail of destruction to pleasing extremes.

Hulk faces off against a towering enemy of equal measure for the picture's final showstopper and, by that time, "Incredible" has sufficiently emptied its bag of tricks. It's a persuasive, fist-pumping summer film that's intent on returning a primal scream to Hulk, and to that end it's a triumphant reboot.

Overall, "Incredible Hulk" feels dumbed down and truncated, tossing a wet blanket over the entire film. However, it's hard to remember such cries for dramatic nourishment when Hulk is getting pelted with a swarm of bullets, dodging fireballs and breaking police cars in half for use as boxing gloves.

B
©2008 OhmyNews
Other articles by reporter Brian Orndorf

Add to :  Add to Del.icio.usDel.icio.us |  Add to Digg this Digg  |  Add to reddit reddit |  Add to Y! MyWeb Y! MyWeb

  Comments    Note: Kindly refrain from personal attacks and profanity.
   Name   Your Blog  
   Title  
   Comment  
   Input
   number
  64   
Yehonathan Tommer
 
Independent Inquiry Is Unavoidable
Michael Werbowski
 
[Fiction] The Plague Chronicles
John Boland
 
Not So "Neet"
Michael Solis
 
Victims of HIV-related Travel Restrictions in Korea
[ESL/EFL Podcast] Saying No
Seventeenth in a series of English language lessons from Jennifer Lebedev...
  [ESL/EFL] Talking About Change
  [ESL/ EFL Podcast] Personal Finances
  [ESL/EFL] Buying and Selling
How worried are you about the H1N1 influenza virus?
  Very worried
  Somewhat worried
  Not yet
  Not at all
    * Vote to see the result.   
 Two Stories Become Three in Lexington, Va.
 Fund Raising Fair
 Will Hatoyama Ban Whaling?
 Beauty from the Fires of Hell
 Amazon Business Show Starts in a Week
 Questions for President Obama
 Tiepolo, Rembrandt, Van Gogh, Picasso and More:
 Brazil - Global Entrepreneurship Week
 A Serious Man
 I have been fired from my job
KOREA WORLD SCI&TECH ART&LIFE ENTERTAINMENT SPORTS GLOBAL WATCH INTERVIEWS PODCASTS
  copyright 1999 - 2009 ohmynews all rights reserved. internews@ohmynews.com Tel:+82-2-733-5505,5595(ext.125) Fax:+82-2-733-5011,5077