MY TOP 20 GREATEST HULK STORIES EVER TOLD
by
John "THE MEGO STRETCH HULK" Cimino
Let's just make something clear from the very start, I HATE comic books today! I HATED them throughout the 2000s and I HATED
them (the most) throughout the 1990s. In fact, I started collecting
comics religiously in the early '80s and stopped in 2003, so I
personally endured through the horrendous '90s. Don't get me wrong,
some good stories and titles came out here and there, but for the most
part, if I needed to wipe my dirty tush with something and there was no toilet
paper, the first thing I would do is look for a box of Defiant or Valiant
comics. Hell, almost anything out of these decades is a good enough for
my tush, especially comics with those horrendous foil covers.
Now
to know me, one must understand that I'm also comics' biggest fan!!
That's right, after reading that little intro I just ranted, you
probably would never know it. But show me a superhero comic from the
late 1930s until the mid 1980s and I'm a happy, bouncing baby boy!! These are the comics I love to see, read and talk about. I worship
them and LOVE them, especially their smell. Yup, the scent of old comics especially from the 1960s smell just like "CHILDHOOD" or something to the extent
of a mixture of old newspaper prints and Pillsbury chocolate chip cookie
dough baking in the oven on Christmas morning.
The biggest reason why I have such a love/obsession for these comics is because they gave me the ability to dream when I was a child. It was a time when superheroes were "FANTASTIC" and did the right thing despite the odds against them. They made you want to be better in your own life as you cheered them on in their never-ending adventures of wonderment. You could pick any issue off the shelf, and you instantly knew what was going on and you were truly inspired by it all. It was a glorious time.
The biggest reason why I have such a love/obsession for these comics is because they gave me the ability to dream when I was a child. It was a time when superheroes were "FANTASTIC" and did the right thing despite the odds against them. They made you want to be better in your own life as you cheered them on in their never-ending adventures of wonderment. You could pick any issue off the shelf, and you instantly knew what was going on and you were truly inspired by it all. It was a glorious time.
Today,
the market is so saturated with titles and limited series' that even the
writers themselves lose track of what's going on. And oh, how everyone
wants realism -- oooohh, make it real, make it accessible, make it
politically correct -- blah, blah, blah!! How the hell can a fictional
character that can fly and shoot thunder from his eyes be REAL??
Why the constant need for realism? Why would I want to read about how
bad the economy is doing in the Marvel Universe when it sucks in real
life? I need my comics to escape and enjoy! I don't want all this
misery and gloom. If I wanted that I could just look outside my window
and talk to overweight grownups about the pussification of America.
But I love comics. Yup, I really do. In fact, I LOVE
the Hulk. He was and still is my favorite comic character (even though
Captain Marvel/SHAZAM! creeps up in there every now and then). My first
exposure to the Green Goliath was in 1977, when my mother made me go to bed early
because she thought I would be scared of an episode of The Incredible Hulk
live-action series starring Bill Bixby and Lou Ferrigno. I secretly peeked in,
watched the whole thing and then became a Hulk-addict before I went
back to sleep.
The first time I ever saw a comic book was when I was about four years old going up an escalator, holding my mom's hand and a guy a few feet in front of us had a rolled-up Conan #1 in his back pocket. I didn't know what a "Conan" was and that the comic itself was about seven years old because it hit the newsstands in 1970. But, for some reason, I was drawn to it. The colors and the images (from what I could see), it kind of reminded me of cartoons and cereal boxes. Soon after that in 1980, a whole new world was opened up to me on my birthday when I turned seven. My godfather Salvatore bought me a copy of The Incredible Hulk #247 (with a ten-dollar bill in it). Everyone at the party thought he was cheap for getting me just a comic book (because he was very cheap), but little did my family know, he gave me THE BEST GIFT EVER -- a comic book of my own.
A comic book. My little hands could instantly feel the energy that radiated from this strange paper that had the Hulk on it. It was like a colorful love letter from heaven that totally represented how my young mind saw the world. My addiction to this strange folded 4-color action-packed newspaper strip had begun!
The first time I ever saw a comic book was when I was about four years old going up an escalator, holding my mom's hand and a guy a few feet in front of us had a rolled-up Conan #1 in his back pocket. I didn't know what a "Conan" was and that the comic itself was about seven years old because it hit the newsstands in 1970. But, for some reason, I was drawn to it. The colors and the images (from what I could see), it kind of reminded me of cartoons and cereal boxes. Soon after that in 1980, a whole new world was opened up to me on my birthday when I turned seven. My godfather Salvatore bought me a copy of The Incredible Hulk #247 (with a ten-dollar bill in it). Everyone at the party thought he was cheap for getting me just a comic book (because he was very cheap), but little did my family know, he gave me THE BEST GIFT EVER -- a comic book of my own.
A comic book. My little hands could instantly feel the energy that radiated from this strange paper that had the Hulk on it. It was like a colorful love letter from heaven that totally represented how my young mind saw the world. My addiction to this strange folded 4-color action-packed newspaper strip had begun!
The Incredible Hulk #247, the first comic I ever got! Man, it was a beauty. |
I looked everywhere to find both Marvel and DC titles (I was a BIG Super Friends and Spider-man (1967) cartoon fan at this time along with watching The SHAZAM! Television series and Spider-man shorts on the Electric Company religiously). I looked in barber shops, flea markets,
grocery stores, newsstands, etc. I went everywhere and I wanted anything
with superheroes, but my main focus was on the Hulk. I was so inexperienced that I didn't even know what the
numbers meant on them. I would read the last page of the comic and
hopefully the first page of the next one matched the same ending scene
(hey, I was young and naïve, but man, was I having fun). Once I started
to understand the numbering system, I began to get them sporadically. The first comic shop I went to was a flea market type shop, not sure
where or the name, but they had stacks of comics and my mom got me Iron Man and the Sub-Mariner #1 (1968) for 5 bucks (the cover spoke to me).
Soon I became a "Marvel Zombie" and just collected the Marvel titles, but it was, of course, the Hulk comic that I started to get every month without fail in 1983 with issue #289, and I never stopped until 2003. By then, my collection was boundless. I had EVERY key Marvel Silver and Bronze Age issue as well as the entire runs of The Incredible Hulk, The Amazing Spider-man, Fantastic Four, The Avengers, The Mighty Thor, Captain America, Sub-Mariner, The Defenders, etc. basically, I had it all (even a few key DC titles from this time period). My collection of comics, memorabilia and toys was pretty legendary. You can read about it here; "In Search of the Holy Grail of Hulk."
Soon I became a "Marvel Zombie" and just collected the Marvel titles, but it was, of course, the Hulk comic that I started to get every month without fail in 1983 with issue #289, and I never stopped until 2003. By then, my collection was boundless. I had EVERY key Marvel Silver and Bronze Age issue as well as the entire runs of The Incredible Hulk, The Amazing Spider-man, Fantastic Four, The Avengers, The Mighty Thor, Captain America, Sub-Mariner, The Defenders, etc. basically, I had it all (even a few key DC titles from this time period). My collection of comics, memorabilia and toys was pretty legendary. You can read about it here; "In Search of the Holy Grail of Hulk."
Now
let's get back to the Hulk. When I got into him and really started to
collect his comic every month in the early '80s he was actually losing
his luster and becoming depowered (although I never knew it). He was talking like Bruce Banner and seemed more docile. As
I became more of an educated reader (collecting and reading back issues
to catch up on everything), I started noticing a BIG GAP in the
Hulk's timeline. Anyone out there ever read The Incredible Hulk #272? For me, and a few Hulk-purists out there, believe that this is the last issue the REAL-DEAL-ONE-TRUE "SAVAGE"
Hulk ever appeared in. Yup, that's right, waaaaaay back in 1982, was the
last time anyone ever truly saw the "definitive" Hulk. The story itself
was a pretty good read as the Hulk and Sasquatch beat up the Wendigo in
a
mega-brawl. But during the fight, the Hulk switches back and forth from
Banner's mind to the Hulk's for control of the Green Goliath's body.
Although things
like this happened in the Hulk's past before, this time when Banner's
mind
wins out in the end, the character remained that way. And ever since
that moment, the Hulk went into a direction he had never gone
before, and his entire history would change because of it.
The Incredible Hulk #272; say bye, bye to the REAL Incredible Hulk forever in this issue. |
Writer Bill Mantlo had begun his Hulk run with a bang in The Incredible Hulk #245 and did "incredible" work up until issue #272. When The Incredible Hulk #273
started his "new" direction with a Bruce Banner controlled Hulk, it
also started the foundation of all the horrible
story lines that followed it. Mantlo (self-admittedly) was getting bored
writing the Hulk and was running out of ideas which lead him to make
Bruce Banner an abused child and gave him a hint of multiple
personalities (or MPD). This all lead to his last Hulk story arch called
"The Crossroads" (which caused me excruciating pain just to get through). He then switched
titles with Alpha Flight writer/artist John
Byrne who looked promising but only worked his magic on the Hulk for 6
issues before leaving. Longtime Hulk cover artist, Al Milgrom would
conclude the lingering story lines before a new Hulk-writer took over.
Then along came Peter David (and I say that in a hollow tone).
Peter David wrote the Hulk for the next 11 plus years and is considered by many to be the best Hulk-scribe ever. I gotta give credit where credit is due before I get real. Peter David is a great comic-writer and has to be commended for adding so much new characterization and depth to the Hulk's world and clearing up all the loopholes in its history. But everything he did was not always for the better (here comes the "get real" part). He changed up the Hulk's powers and made him less invulnerable but able to heal quickly (having a Wolverine-like healing factor was all the rage back then -- UGH). He took Bill Mantlo's MPD muck and went wild with it which introduced this new weak/bleeding and always crying Hulk personality called the "Merged" Hulk (later dubbed the "Professor" Hulk). Let's also not forget David's story lines where the "Grey" Hulk returns and becomes a mobster thug known as Mr. Fixit (?) and then his "Merged" Hulk becomes leader of the team known as the Pantheon. Basically, what all his stories did was make the Hulk weaker than ever and dropped him a notch from his "Strongest One There Is" days (during this period writer/artist Erik Larsen even had the "Merged" Hulk get beaten to a bloody pulp up by Dr. Octopus -- yes, I said Dr. Octopus??? But it was plausible because of how this Hulk reacted to situations -- UGH). Despite his immense talent, Peter David did too many Hulk-history changing events that forever hurt the character and it can never be forgiven.
Unfortunately, more bad writing and ideas came along that added to Peter David's mess and kept knocking the Hulk down from his years of dominance. Joe Casey having a regular python snake knock out a depressed Hulk (yes, you read that correctly), Paul Jenkins giving the Hulk thousands of new personalities (that's right, thousands of them including a Hulk-Clown and a Hulk-Demon???), Bruce Jones' bald-mute Hulk and slow moving story line head-aches, Jeph Loeb's Red Hulk, (dubbed Rulk -- yes, I said Rulk!?!) and Red She-Hulk (talk about lazy creations)??? Greg Pak's colored Hulks, World War Hulks, Son of Hulks and "Brady Bunch" family Hulks (I guess anyone can become a "Hulk" now)?? Jason Aaron's bald Hulk run -- Yeech!! Mark Waid's armor-wearing (?) mute Hulk?? The Hulk paling around with the Avengers and SHIELD like it's no big deal?? Hulk with crew cuts, mohawks, beards and nervous breakdowns??? There have been so many incarnations of the Hulk over the years he's now considered a shapeshifter. Yeah, I said a shapeshifter -- how pathetic is that??? And despite all the fans and creators who try to keep track of them, no one even knows what Hulk incarnation is currently around because it has become a complete convoluted mess (don't get me started on all the "alternate" reality incarnations of the Hulk running around as well -- UGH). This just makes the Hulk more ridiculous and more out of touch than ever. Let's give another thanks to Peter David for starting all this -- UGGHHH!!!
Think it'll ever end? No way! Now we have the "Totally Awesome PC Generation Nothingness" Amadeus Cho Korean Hulk on the scene (written by Greg Pak and whoever Marvel decides to throw in there) and we come to find that Bruce Banner is dead from yet another mindless Marvel limited-series event (yeah, like death and story continuity mean anything in comics anyways -- sheesh), so the Hulk can be completely phased out for this new Chulk -- yes, I said Chulk and I see a ridiculous recurring theme going on! And to make it more pathetic, since anything can become a "Hulk" now, why not have a Wolverine/Hulk hybrid character from Batch-H (lol) or let's just have Bruce Banner make yet another miraculous comeback from the dead (I told you) and call the Hulk "immortal." I'm guessing anything to impress the disenchanted youth and continually show them that nothing good comes out of the long bankrupt Marvel "House of Ideas."
There's so much convoluted gamma-crap out there that it ended my childhood love affair with the character forever. But let's be honest, does anyone even care about these dreadful constant messy revamps? Not me. Plus, past comic history is totally irrelevant to readers (and writers) of today -- so why even care about it? This horrible direction just keeps on going and going and is never-ending.
The Hulk is so far gone from what he was originally intended to be -- a unique game changing character that's a force of freaking nature! When he shows up, it should mean something to the story. Today, he's just one of the gang who fights side-by-side with the Avengers, gets his ass-kicked and then needs them for back up to win the day (think I'm wrong, check out episodes of Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes, Avengers Assemble, Hulk and the Agents of S.M.A.S.H. and any other animated feature of today he appears in, it's absolutely embarrassing). And did you see the block-buster movies in the MCU? The Hulk doesn't get madder or stronger in The Incredible Hulk and just pouts and yells a lot, gets beaten by Iron Man in his Hulk-Buster Armor in Avengers: Age of Ultron, humbled by Thor in Thor: Ragnarok, thrashed by Thanos in Avengers: Infinity War and was a complete non-factor in Avengers: Endgame as the "Professor" Hulk of all things. So, I say, what's the freakin' point of even calling him the strongest one there is? Let's just say that the Hulk hasn't been the Hulk for so long that I wish he would show up and SMASH ALL THIS STUPIDITY!! Hey, if some of you have no idea what I've been talking about all this time then consider yourselves lucky. Thank God I'm out of comics and never returning.
Then along came Peter David (and I say that in a hollow tone).
Peter David wrote the Hulk for the next 11 plus years and is considered by many to be the best Hulk-scribe ever. I gotta give credit where credit is due before I get real. Peter David is a great comic-writer and has to be commended for adding so much new characterization and depth to the Hulk's world and clearing up all the loopholes in its history. But everything he did was not always for the better (here comes the "get real" part). He changed up the Hulk's powers and made him less invulnerable but able to heal quickly (having a Wolverine-like healing factor was all the rage back then -- UGH). He took Bill Mantlo's MPD muck and went wild with it which introduced this new weak/bleeding and always crying Hulk personality called the "Merged" Hulk (later dubbed the "Professor" Hulk). Let's also not forget David's story lines where the "Grey" Hulk returns and becomes a mobster thug known as Mr. Fixit (?) and then his "Merged" Hulk becomes leader of the team known as the Pantheon. Basically, what all his stories did was make the Hulk weaker than ever and dropped him a notch from his "Strongest One There Is" days (during this period writer/artist Erik Larsen even had the "Merged" Hulk get beaten to a bloody pulp up by Dr. Octopus -- yes, I said Dr. Octopus??? But it was plausible because of how this Hulk reacted to situations -- UGH). Despite his immense talent, Peter David did too many Hulk-history changing events that forever hurt the character and it can never be forgiven.
Once Peter David got the call to write the Hulk, the character has never been the same. |
Unfortunately, more bad writing and ideas came along that added to Peter David's mess and kept knocking the Hulk down from his years of dominance. Joe Casey having a regular python snake knock out a depressed Hulk (yes, you read that correctly), Paul Jenkins giving the Hulk thousands of new personalities (that's right, thousands of them including a Hulk-Clown and a Hulk-Demon???), Bruce Jones' bald-mute Hulk and slow moving story line head-aches, Jeph Loeb's Red Hulk, (dubbed Rulk -- yes, I said Rulk!?!) and Red She-Hulk (talk about lazy creations)??? Greg Pak's colored Hulks, World War Hulks, Son of Hulks and "Brady Bunch" family Hulks (I guess anyone can become a "Hulk" now)?? Jason Aaron's bald Hulk run -- Yeech!! Mark Waid's armor-wearing (?) mute Hulk?? The Hulk paling around with the Avengers and SHIELD like it's no big deal?? Hulk with crew cuts, mohawks, beards and nervous breakdowns??? There have been so many incarnations of the Hulk over the years he's now considered a shapeshifter. Yeah, I said a shapeshifter -- how pathetic is that??? And despite all the fans and creators who try to keep track of them, no one even knows what Hulk incarnation is currently around because it has become a complete convoluted mess (don't get me started on all the "alternate" reality incarnations of the Hulk running around as well -- UGH). This just makes the Hulk more ridiculous and more out of touch than ever. Let's give another thanks to Peter David for starting all this -- UGGHHH!!!
Think it'll ever end? No way! Now we have the "Totally Awesome PC Generation Nothingness" Amadeus Cho Korean Hulk on the scene (written by Greg Pak and whoever Marvel decides to throw in there) and we come to find that Bruce Banner is dead from yet another mindless Marvel limited-series event (yeah, like death and story continuity mean anything in comics anyways -- sheesh), so the Hulk can be completely phased out for this new Chulk -- yes, I said Chulk and I see a ridiculous recurring theme going on! And to make it more pathetic, since anything can become a "Hulk" now, why not have a Wolverine/Hulk hybrid character from Batch-H (lol) or let's just have Bruce Banner make yet another miraculous comeback from the dead (I told you) and call the Hulk "immortal." I'm guessing anything to impress the disenchanted youth and continually show them that nothing good comes out of the long bankrupt Marvel "House of Ideas."
There's so much convoluted gamma-crap out there that it ended my childhood love affair with the character forever. But let's be honest, does anyone even care about these dreadful constant messy revamps? Not me. Plus, past comic history is totally irrelevant to readers (and writers) of today -- so why even care about it? This horrible direction just keeps on going and going and is never-ending.
The Hulk is so far gone from what he was originally intended to be -- a unique game changing character that's a force of freaking nature! When he shows up, it should mean something to the story. Today, he's just one of the gang who fights side-by-side with the Avengers, gets his ass-kicked and then needs them for back up to win the day (think I'm wrong, check out episodes of Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes, Avengers Assemble, Hulk and the Agents of S.M.A.S.H. and any other animated feature of today he appears in, it's absolutely embarrassing). And did you see the block-buster movies in the MCU? The Hulk doesn't get madder or stronger in The Incredible Hulk and just pouts and yells a lot, gets beaten by Iron Man in his Hulk-Buster Armor in Avengers: Age of Ultron, humbled by Thor in Thor: Ragnarok, thrashed by Thanos in Avengers: Infinity War and was a complete non-factor in Avengers: Endgame as the "Professor" Hulk of all things. So, I say, what's the freakin' point of even calling him the strongest one there is? Let's just say that the Hulk hasn't been the Hulk for so long that I wish he would show up and SMASH ALL THIS STUPIDITY!! Hey, if some of you have no idea what I've been talking about all this time then consider yourselves lucky. Thank God I'm out of comics and never returning.
Oh, and yes, although I did throw some major shade in this write-up, I do
think Greg Pak and Al Ewing are great Hulk-writers and without a doubt the two best
Hulk-writers since Bill Mantlo's run on the Hulk from #245 - 272. And to
make myself clear once again, you do get a good story or fight (that
I'll even check out) every now and then in today's comics. But I can't get into
the overall stories as much; it's just too silly for me. I stay far away from
the smell of this Hulk-trash or all comic-trash in general.
Say hello to The Incredible Hulk #273 and the Hulk's "new" direction but expect nothing but disaster for the next 30 plus years. |
So,
this lack of Hulk today got me thinking. If I'm such an expert or
bigshot, can I come up with the tales that represents the Hulk and his
world EXACTLY as it should be? Oh yes, I can true believer because that's what this top 20 list is all about!!!
For
me, the greatest Hulk stories I will present to you is what I see when I think
about the Hulk. The art, the "Hulk" logo, the stories, the Army, the
desert, the villains, the atmosphere, the action -- everything!
It's pure Hulk-mythos the way it was
meant to be Bruce Banner on a relentless hunt for a cure of being this
thousand-pound rampaging brute who was the strongest being on Earth. He
would just randomly
wander around the world as a tragic loner, running from the explicable
General Thaddeus E. "Thunderbolt" Ross and the Hulk-Buster Army who
constantly hounded him. The Hulk would always find himself in another
adventure
with another adversary trying to get his power or to challenge his
might. Even with having the greatest physical strength of all, the Hulk
could never overcome his tragic and lonely life.
I think everything from the stories I've chosen represent the foundation of how the Hulk should act, speak, and be written. It all fits together so perfectly in these brilliant epics which I call -- MY TOP 20 GREATEST HULK STORIES EVER TOLD!
I think everything from the stories I've chosen represent the foundation of how the Hulk should act, speak, and be written. It all fits together so perfectly in these brilliant epics which I call -- MY TOP 20 GREATEST HULK STORIES EVER TOLD!
20.) THE INCREDIBLE HULK #182 (1974)
Writer: Len Wein Artist: Herb Trimpe
Having failed at stopping the Hulk and Wendigo's rampage through
Quebec, Wolverine's superiors have come to take matters into their own
hands. Arriving in a helicopter, they knock
the Hulk out with a gas bomb and contain him in a cage that is airlifted
out of the area. Coming around, the Hulk is furious to find himself in
captivity once more and breaks free, fleeing into the countryside. As
he tramples through the forest, he overhears music and smells food. Following his senses, the Hulk comes across a traveling hobo named Crackerjack
Jackson. Jackson, a former professional harmonica musician, invites the
Hulk to sit down and keep him company. He offers the brute some of the beans
that he's cooking up, the Hulk accepts the invitation and the two
become quick friends.
Elsewhere,
two escaped convicts; the racist Johnny Anvil and the
white-hating "Hammer" Jackson are fleeing from the authorities following
their dramatic escape from their chain-gang. Coming across a crashed
alien ship, they run into a member of the Glx race. Fearing the strange
creature, Hammer fires bullets at it and surprisingly saves
the metal-based life form's life. In thanks, the creature replaces the
chains that they are shackled together with a power enhancing umbilicus
that connects the two men together. At first Hammer and Anvil are furious that the creature
has permanently fused them together, but they soon realize that this new
"chain" actually has given them super-powers. They decide to put
aside their racial differences and work together in a life of crime.
Their first stop is to get revenge on the officers at the prison they
just escaped from.
The next morning Crackerjack Johnson takes the Hulk out and
teaches him how to fish, while telling the brute about his musical career and
how he's on the road to go and visit his son. Later that evening
Crackerjack teaches the Hulk how to write his own name. Much to the
creatures delight and the two form a strong bond.
While on the road, the Hulk hides
while Crackerjack approaches a police barricade. When they will not let Crackerjack pass, the Hulk intervenes smashing
their way through and carrying Crackerjack where he intends to go: the
nearby prison. Crackerjack embarrassingly explains that his son has been a
prisoner there for over five years. Nonjudgmental of his new friend, the
Hulk carries Crackerjack over the prison wall to meet his son. They
land in the middle of a fight with Hammer and Anvil, who are
getting revenge on their former keepers. As it turns out, Hammer is
Crackerjack's son and he is less than ecstatic to see his father, whom
he accuses of abandoning him as a child.
Reaching out for his son, Crackerjack touches the coil that
attaches Hammer and Anvil together, the resulting jolt kills Crackerjack
on the spot. Furious that the son of his only friend had just murdered
his own father, the Hulk savagely attacks the duo. Although the
Hulk can withstand the jolts from the coil, its strength keeps him off
guard until he gets angry enough to resist the pain. As they battle on,
the Hulk ultimately rips the coil in half, which
causes both Hammer and Anvil to pass out. As prison security surrounds
them, the Hulk scoops up the body of Crackerjack Jackson and leaps away.
Far off into the wilderness, the Hulk buries his dead friend and with
his crude new writing skills writes a tomb stone marking the final resting
place of someone who called the Hulk his friend.
Did you know in the movie Thor: Ranganrok (2017) the Valkyrie had the nickname "Scrapper 142"? She was called that in an homage to this issue. BOOM!!!
The Hulk has returned to New York City where he decides to sleep tucked in the arms of the Statue of Liberty. His choice of sleeping space does not go unnoticed and it soon makes the front page of the newspaper. This story attracts the attention of socialites Malicia and Reggie Parrington who decide to try and do a benefit for the Hulk, believing that the monster has been persecuted and discriminated against. When their daughter Samantha suggests that they do a benefit for her Women's Lib movement, they decline since one of their associates had already done one previously.
As a side effect of the spell's reversal, the Hulk is also
transformed back into Bruce Banner, who is exasperated by the whole
experience and leaves. The confused Samantha also wanders off wondering if
she dreamed the whole thing, leaving behind the staff of Valkyrie in the
rubble.
Although Bruce Banner may have voluntarily turned himself in to the authorities at Gamma Base, the Hulk has no such predilection for staying. Doc Samson tries to keep him from leaving, but the Hulk literally pounds him into the ground until his young friend Jim Wilson manages to calm the brute down.
Meanwhile, Bobby Drake, aka Iceman, brings his girlfriend, Terri Sue Bottoms to the Rocky Mountains chalet of his friend and team-mate, Warren Worthington III aka the Angel. As the friends are relaxing by the pool, they find themselves suddenly attacked by a disguised Master Mold. Master Mold captures Iceman, while the Angel flies off hoping to lure him away from Terri and his own girlfriend, Candy Southern.
Master Mold flies after him and before long; they reach the airspace over top of Gamma Base. The klaxons sound and Doc Samson runs out to face Master Mold. Master Mold quickly dispatches Doc Samson by slamming him into the side of one of the buildings, disrupting a formerly resting Hulk. The Hulk rampages outside just as Master Mold captures Angel. The giant robotic Sentinel then flies off, but the Hulk leaps onto him and piggybacks on Master Mold's foot.
Master Mold finally reaches his space station planetoid where he places Angel, Iceman and the Hulk into special tubes designed to dampen mutant powers. As the Hulk is not a mutant, he easily breaks free and releases the other two. The Hulk follows Master Mold back to his command center and lays into him. Master Mold tries to keep the Hulk at bay with a million volts of electricity, but this only stuns the Hulk momentarily who then proceeds to tear Master Mold into pieces. Afterward, the three heroes get into an escape pod and return to Earth.
19.) THE INCREDIBLE HULK #142 (1971)
Writer: Roy Thomas Artists: Herb Trimpe and John Severin
Did you know in the movie Thor: Ranganrok (2017) the Valkyrie had the nickname "Scrapper 142"? She was called that in an homage to this issue. BOOM!!!
The Hulk has returned to New York City where he decides to sleep tucked in the arms of the Statue of Liberty. His choice of sleeping space does not go unnoticed and it soon makes the front page of the newspaper. This story attracts the attention of socialites Malicia and Reggie Parrington who decide to try and do a benefit for the Hulk, believing that the monster has been persecuted and discriminated against. When their daughter Samantha suggests that they do a benefit for her Women's Lib movement, they decline since one of their associates had already done one previously.
The Parringtons then use their influence and money to get a boat
to Liberty Island, where Samantha trips up the military security guard,
they have posted there to keep the public away. Samantha then travels to
the top of the Statue where she convinces the Hulk to go with them
and participate in the benefit. When they bring the Hulk to the
mainland, Reggie takes all the praise credit for getting the Hulk much to Samantha's chagrin.
As the socialites have their rich friends over for a cocktail
party with the Hulk as the guest of honor, Samantha decides to ditch
the party to participate in another Women's Lib protest. Witnessing this
tableau unfold, the Enchantress decides to use it as a means of getting
revenge against the Hulk. She uses her magic to change Samantha into a
host body for the Valkyrie and sends her after the brute.
Back at the party, the Hulk is given a large sum of money
that has been collected on his behalf. The Hulk, having no use for
money, simply dumps it on the ground, finding the whole
experience exasperating. Just then the Valkyrie smashes through the wall
and attacks the Hulk. Their battle rages out into the streets where the
Hulk refuses to fight back because she is a girl and wants to leap away.
Valkyrie then tricks the Hulk and knocks him out by pressing a pressure
point on his neck. She then carries the brute to the top of
the Empire State Building where she tosses him to his doom. Going down
to check
the body, she is shocked to find that the Hulk is still alive and
unhurt. The Hulk
still not wanting to fight a woman begins to get angry and warns her to
leave him alone. Just then the Enchantress's spell wears off changing
Samantha back to normal.
18.) THE INCREDIBLE HULK ANNUAL #7 (1978)
Writers: Roger Stern and John Byrne Artists: John Byrne and Bob Layton
Although Bruce Banner may have voluntarily turned himself in to the authorities at Gamma Base, the Hulk has no such predilection for staying. Doc Samson tries to keep him from leaving, but the Hulk literally pounds him into the ground until his young friend Jim Wilson manages to calm the brute down.
Meanwhile, Bobby Drake, aka Iceman, brings his girlfriend, Terri Sue Bottoms to the Rocky Mountains chalet of his friend and team-mate, Warren Worthington III aka the Angel. As the friends are relaxing by the pool, they find themselves suddenly attacked by a disguised Master Mold. Master Mold captures Iceman, while the Angel flies off hoping to lure him away from Terri and his own girlfriend, Candy Southern.
Master Mold flies after him and before long; they reach the airspace over top of Gamma Base. The klaxons sound and Doc Samson runs out to face Master Mold. Master Mold quickly dispatches Doc Samson by slamming him into the side of one of the buildings, disrupting a formerly resting Hulk. The Hulk rampages outside just as Master Mold captures Angel. The giant robotic Sentinel then flies off, but the Hulk leaps onto him and piggybacks on Master Mold's foot.
Master Mold finally reaches his space station planetoid where he places Angel, Iceman and the Hulk into special tubes designed to dampen mutant powers. As the Hulk is not a mutant, he easily breaks free and releases the other two. The Hulk follows Master Mold back to his command center and lays into him. Master Mold tries to keep the Hulk at bay with a million volts of electricity, but this only stuns the Hulk momentarily who then proceeds to tear Master Mold into pieces. Afterward, the three heroes get into an escape pod and return to Earth.
17.) THE INCREDIBLE HULK #179 (1974)
Writer: Len Wein Artists: Herb Trimpe and Jack Able
Following the resurrection of Adam Warlock and the defeat of the
Man-Beast on Counter-Earth, the Recorder puts the Hulk on a rocket back
to his own Earth. While the Hulk departs as friends, he
soon forgets why he's in the rocket and starts to think that he's a captive, so he tries to break out. The Hulk manages to do this
just as he's entering Earth's orbit. The military picks up both the Hulk
and the rocket in free fall and fire missiles at them. While the rocket
is destroyed, the Hulk is merely knocked out, and crashes to the ground.
There while unconscious he reverts back into Bruce Banner.
Banner revives unsure of where he is, but soon learns that he's
in the Appalachia mountains and found by Clay Brickford and his
family. Taken into their home and given clean clothes and some food,
Banner is surprised when another member of the Brickford family comes
home from the mines for dinner: a creature named Lincoln. Bruce doesn't
recall that as the Hulk he met this creature in the past -- a creature
known as the Missing Link, which seemingly died when its body hit
critical mass during it's previous battle with the Hulk. However, it's
fragments reconstituted, and he was taken in and raised by the
Brickfords, taught how to speak English and put to work in the mines.
Bruce also takes up ajob
there, and he soon
becomes close friends with Lincoln. When watching the creature playing
with the Brickford children, both Bruce and Lincoln become concerned when
Jimmy-Jack Brickford suddenly collapses from stomach contractions.
After the boy is put to bed, Bruce privately comes to the conclusion
that Jimmy-Jack must be suffering from radiation sickness. Secretly
going into town, Banner buys a Geiger counter and takes it back to the
Brickford home. Waiting for nightfall Banner checks
the family while they are sleeping and realizes that they're all
suffering from radiation exposure and that the source of the radiation
is coming from Lincoln. Banner's heart sinks upon the
realization that such a loving and peaceful creature is unknowingly
killing the people that he cares about.
Bruce also takes up a
Bruce tries to explain to Lincoln of the danger he poses to everyone in town. Not understanding and thinking that Bruce is trying to drive him away maliciously, Lincoln swats him away, accidentally knocking Bruce down a mine shaft. But before he hits the ground, Bruce transforms into the Hulk, who can only understand Lincoln's reaction as an attack on the innocent people of the town and jumps back to the surface and begins a fight with him. The two brutes battle across the mining pit, and as the battle rages on the radioactive energies within Lincoln begin to surge out of control. Realizing what Banner had said to be true, Lincoln cannot jump away before he reaches critical mass and explodes.
In the aftermath of the blast, while in the rubble, the Hulk thinks the locals are coming to help him out of it because he was trying to protect them. To his surprise, they dig the reformed Lincoln out and carry him off, telling him that they are helping him out of friendship and love. The Hulk, now all alone, digs himself out silently and is unable to understand what just happened. But he understands all too well that he is alone.
16.) THE INCREDIBLE HULK #239 - 243 (1979/1980)
Writer: Roger Stern Artists: Sal Buscema, Mike Esposito and Joe Sinnott
As the Hulk continues to sleep, some soldiers are sent up the side of the national monument unaware that the villain Goldbug is approaching to take the Hulk for his masters; "They Who Wield Power." He fires a laser that awakens the Hulk just in time to see the arriving soldiers. Thinking the soldiers had attacked him, the Hulk attacks. When he disables their gas guns, the two soldiers surrender. Just then, Goldbug shows up and offers to help the Hulk escape. To convince the gamma-spawned monster that they are allies, Goldbug seals the two soldiers in gold and then pulls the Hulk aboard his ship. Offering the Hulk, a means to escape, Goldbug convinces the brute to grip two cables that channels the Hulk's strength into the ship's power supply. With a sufficient power boost, Goldbug's ship is able to speed away from the arriving Hulkbuster jet. However, this also incapacitates the Hulk and makes him incapable of moving.
Soon, Goldbug takes them to El Dorado, the headquarters of "They Who Wield Power." Detecting Goldbug's arrival, they decide that Goldbug's usefulness has worn itself out. They activate a device that allows the Hulk to break free. Furious at being used again, the Hulk goes on a rampage aboard the ship. The Hulk demolishes the ship, and the pair land on the ground. The Hulk is about to pummel Goldbug, but he's stopped by a man named Tulak who welcomes the Hulk to El Dorado and bows before him, calling the Hulk their savior. Tulak explains that his masters "They Who Wield Power" claim that the Hulk will save their people. This comes as a shock to Goldbug. The Hulk, meanwhile, thinks this is a trap but decides to go along with Tulak and see what happens.
Meanwhile, hundreds of miles away at Gamma Base in New Mexico, Clay Quartermain learns that there have been no sightings of the Hulk since he escaped with Goldbug. He's surprised when a fighter plane carrying Betty Ross lands at the base. Although happy to see her, Clay learns about her recent divorce from Glenn Talbot. Betty explains that she has returned to Gamma Base after hearing about her father's mental breakdown. That's when Senator Hawk tells her how Doc Samson recently left the base with her father to treat him. Betty also learns that Fred Sloan has been calling for her recently. In San Francisco, Fred Sloan and Trish Starr are working on a book about the Hulk. The two are reaching out to associates and friends of the Hulk so that they can get their unique perspective on the brute.
Back in El Dorado, the Hulk feasts on food. Although Tulak is confident the Hulk will be the savior of his people, the other citizens of this hidden city are unsure that the one to save them is a monster like the Hulk. The Hulk is still suspicious that he's being set up for a trap. Soon, "They Who Wield Power" arrive and reveal themselves to the Hulk: They are Prince Rey and Lann, the Keeper of the Flame as well as an elderly man named Dez. When Lann insults the Hulk, Dez manages to calm the Hulk down. The Hulk demands answers and Dez shows him a special globe that reveals that the military has been holding the body of Jarella since her death. This causes the Hulk to lash out and go on a rampage, however, the brute is emotionally exhausted and eventually reverts back into Bruce Banner.
Banner is shown every amenity and the following day he's asked to see "They" at the Temple of the Flame. There, Dez explains the origins of the people of El Dorado, how they fled to this region's century to escape the Spanish conquistadors. They discovered the ancient Cobalt Flame which led to wars over its power. After interference from the Avengers, Prince Rey and Lann discovered Dez in the tunnels beneath El Dorado who convinced them of a way to revitalize the now waning flame. When Banner offers his scientific expertise, Dez explains that the only thing they need is the Hulk's raw power and uses a device to capture and bind Banner.
Elsewhere,
Goldbug wakes up to find himself still alive and inside El Dorado. He is
not happy that "They Wield Power" has played him. Even more so, when he
takes a look outside at the city, he's shocked to see that
the legends are true, and it is a city made out of gold. This upsets him
even more as this much gold on the market would render the metal
worthless in the outside world. Goldbug then begins plotting against
both "They Who Wield Power" and the Hulk.
Back in the Temple of the Flame, "They Who Wield Power" explains that for quite some time they have been manipulating heroes and villains into battles in order to absorb the energies to empower the flame. They eventually discovered that only the Hulk had enough power to fully restore the Flame. Hearing this, Banner is furious and purposely triggers a transformation into the Hulk. However, the device he is strapped into begins absorbing his energy, causing the transformation to be incomplete. Banner finds himself trapped in mid-transformation between his human and Hulk forms.
With the power of the Cobalt Flame being restored, Prince Rey and Lann are too distracted that they don't see Dez removing a vial filled with fluid, or that Goldbug has arrived at the temple. He then uses the restraints to bind both Rey and Lann while activating a device that drains the energies from both of his men until they crumble to dust. When Banner/Hulk asks Dez why he killed his allies, the elderly man drinks the contents of his vial which causes the man to reduce in age, revealing him to be the Hulk's longtime foe, Tyrannus! Tyrannus explains how his Tyrannoids attempted to revive him in the Fountain of Youth, but while he was healed, his body began to age rapidly. Tyrannus explains how his "recent" appearance was that of a Tyrannoid who he took control of and reshaped his form. When his attempt to cause Earth tremors to boost the power of the flame was foiled by Nova, Tyrannus abandoned the Tyrannoid body.
It's at this point that Goldbug tries to attack Tyrannus, but the villain traps him in a net. Seeking to get the Hulk to help, Goldbug tosses one of his devices that coats Banner/Hulk with gold. The sudden panic causes the transformation into the Hulk to finally complete itself. Although the Hulk breaks free, Tyrannus is not without defenses. He explains that the Cobalt Flame was invented by the Deviants centuries ago and that it is armed with many weapons. A blast from a cannon knocks the Hulk out of the temple and into the streets below. Tyrannus then announces to the people of El Dorado that he intends to use the power of the Cobalt Flame to take over the world.
Back in the Temple of the Flame, "They Who Wield Power" explains that for quite some time they have been manipulating heroes and villains into battles in order to absorb the energies to empower the flame. They eventually discovered that only the Hulk had enough power to fully restore the Flame. Hearing this, Banner is furious and purposely triggers a transformation into the Hulk. However, the device he is strapped into begins absorbing his energy, causing the transformation to be incomplete. Banner finds himself trapped in mid-transformation between his human and Hulk forms.
With the power of the Cobalt Flame being restored, Prince Rey and Lann are too distracted that they don't see Dez removing a vial filled with fluid, or that Goldbug has arrived at the temple. He then uses the restraints to bind both Rey and Lann while activating a device that drains the energies from both of his men until they crumble to dust. When Banner/Hulk asks Dez why he killed his allies, the elderly man drinks the contents of his vial which causes the man to reduce in age, revealing him to be the Hulk's longtime foe, Tyrannus! Tyrannus explains how his Tyrannoids attempted to revive him in the Fountain of Youth, but while he was healed, his body began to age rapidly. Tyrannus explains how his "recent" appearance was that of a Tyrannoid who he took control of and reshaped his form. When his attempt to cause Earth tremors to boost the power of the flame was foiled by Nova, Tyrannus abandoned the Tyrannoid body.
It's at this point that Goldbug tries to attack Tyrannus, but the villain traps him in a net. Seeking to get the Hulk to help, Goldbug tosses one of his devices that coats Banner/Hulk with gold. The sudden panic causes the transformation into the Hulk to finally complete itself. Although the Hulk breaks free, Tyrannus is not without defenses. He explains that the Cobalt Flame was invented by the Deviants centuries ago and that it is armed with many weapons. A blast from a cannon knocks the Hulk out of the temple and into the streets below. Tyrannus then announces to the people of El Dorado that he intends to use the power of the Cobalt Flame to take over the world.
The Hulk
smashes against the remains of the Temple of the Flame, revealing the ancient machinery. As the Hulk tries to destroy the device, Tyrannus
laughs because this ancient Deviant machinery is indestructible. He also gloats how
easily he defeated Goldbug for trying to betray him. The Hulk then tries to
leap on top of the tower, but Tyranus erects an energy barrier to try
and block the Hulk. However, the Hulk is plenty mad enough to force his
way through to his foe. Tyrannus unleashes more Deviant weapons,
ultimately incapacitating the Hulk with a Brain Mine.
Tyrannus gloats his victories and then offers the people of El Dorado an opportunity to bow to him and be his subjects. However, speaking for his people Tulak refuses to bend knee to the tyrant. Tyrannus isn't moved by this in the slightest and commands the flame to summon armor for him. Then through willpower he has the flame transform into a massive metal arm. The arm reaches down and grabs Tulak and drains the life out of him. Tulak's final words to his people are that they flee into the underground caverns and escape. When Tulak crumbles to dust, the people of El Dorado flee as they are instructed.
While Tyrannus is distracted, Goldbug frees himself from the net he has been trapped in. Seeking to free the Hulk in order to save himself, Goldbug uses a vial of Aqua Regia on the Brain Mind, succeeding in removing it. The Hulk snaps back and more furious than ever before, the man-monster rushes at Tyrannus. Tyrannus unleashes the metal arm on the Hulk, but the monster breaks free from its grip and then smashes it to pieces. The destruction is transferred to Tyrannus as pain. Tyrannus decides to stop fooling with his foes and merges himself with the Cobalt Flame. This doesn't even phase the Hulk as he does the impossible and begins to rip apart the the tower that contains the flame as it was designed to withstand the power of the space gods known as the Celestials. This unbelievable, almost unfathomable strength feat causes a massive explosion.
Tyrannus gloats his victories and then offers the people of El Dorado an opportunity to bow to him and be his subjects. However, speaking for his people Tulak refuses to bend knee to the tyrant. Tyrannus isn't moved by this in the slightest and commands the flame to summon armor for him. Then through willpower he has the flame transform into a massive metal arm. The arm reaches down and grabs Tulak and drains the life out of him. Tulak's final words to his people are that they flee into the underground caverns and escape. When Tulak crumbles to dust, the people of El Dorado flee as they are instructed.
While Tyrannus is distracted, Goldbug frees himself from the net he has been trapped in. Seeking to free the Hulk in order to save himself, Goldbug uses a vial of Aqua Regia on the Brain Mind, succeeding in removing it. The Hulk snaps back and more furious than ever before, the man-monster rushes at Tyrannus. Tyrannus unleashes the metal arm on the Hulk, but the monster breaks free from its grip and then smashes it to pieces. The destruction is transferred to Tyrannus as pain. Tyrannus decides to stop fooling with his foes and merges himself with the Cobalt Flame. This doesn't even phase the Hulk as he does the impossible and begins to rip apart the the tower that contains the flame as it was designed to withstand the power of the space gods known as the Celestials. This unbelievable, almost unfathomable strength feat causes a massive explosion.
With the
containment of the flame now destroyed, Tyrannus feels his consciousness
slowly coming apart. He attempts to use the last of his control to try
and destroy the Hulk. Undaunted, the gamma-spawned monster continues
ripping apart the ancient Deviant machine. With nothing to contain the
Cobalt flame, Tyrannus and the flame shoot up into the air where it
dissipates in space. This is briefly witnessed by the Celestial known as
Gammenon. After a passing interest, the Celestial goes back to its task
of judging the fate of life on the planet Earth.
With Tyrannus defeated the Hulk still rages on, furious at being attacked once again. Goldbug tries to convince the Hulk to help them get out of there. Remembering how Goldbug initially tricked him into coming to El Dorado, he lashed out against the costumed villain. He knocks Goldbug onto a teleportation platform which raises a dome around them. This makes the Hulk remember what Tyrannus showed him, that the body of Jarella was still in the possession of Gamma Base. He demands that they go there, and the teleportation device suddenly activates. Meanwhile, deep below the ruins of El Dorado, the people who once lived there decide to venture deeper into the underground cavern to form a new life of peace and justice.
At that moment, the Hulk and Goldbug materialize in the sewers of New York City. Happy to be back in the United States, Goldbug quickly climbs up to the surface. There he bumps into his old foe Power Man, who introduces Goldbug to his new partner Iron Fist before carting him off to jail. Goldbug's claims that he helped save the world with the Hulk are ignored. Moments later, the Hulk rips his way to the surface. Unimpressed to find himself in the city that he dislikes the Hulk leaps away.
Meanwhile, in San Francisco, Fred Sloan continues his research for the book he wants to write about the Hulk. As he's finishing up his interview with Betty Ross, his assistant Trish Starr manages to get Fred on a national talk show on the same day that Rick Jones will be on it. This is great news as Fred hopes to get plenty of insight from the Hulk's one-time sidekick. However, Sloan wishes he knew where the Hulk is. As Sloan wonders about this, the Hulk is involved on a series of missions with his teammates in the Defenders which he fought in Valhalla, stopped the Omegatron, the Anything Man, traveled to Tunnelworld and clashed with Daredevil.
Back at Gamma Base, Clay Quartermain's tenure at that facility comes to an end. As he checks out, he meets with the new commanding officer at Gamma Base: Colonel Glenn Talbot. Talbot worked on this promotion since General Ross had his breakdown and got it thanks to his past experience. He is determined to find and take down the Hulk. As Quartermain leaves, he can't help but wonder if Talbot's personal vendetta against the Hulk will prevent him from doing the job. After the SHIELD agent leaves, Talbot summons Lt. Perrywinkle and Dr. Maxwell so they can start planning how they are going to stop the Hulk anyway they can.
With Tyrannus defeated the Hulk still rages on, furious at being attacked once again. Goldbug tries to convince the Hulk to help them get out of there. Remembering how Goldbug initially tricked him into coming to El Dorado, he lashed out against the costumed villain. He knocks Goldbug onto a teleportation platform which raises a dome around them. This makes the Hulk remember what Tyrannus showed him, that the body of Jarella was still in the possession of Gamma Base. He demands that they go there, and the teleportation device suddenly activates. Meanwhile, deep below the ruins of El Dorado, the people who once lived there decide to venture deeper into the underground cavern to form a new life of peace and justice.
At that moment, the Hulk and Goldbug materialize in the sewers of New York City. Happy to be back in the United States, Goldbug quickly climbs up to the surface. There he bumps into his old foe Power Man, who introduces Goldbug to his new partner Iron Fist before carting him off to jail. Goldbug's claims that he helped save the world with the Hulk are ignored. Moments later, the Hulk rips his way to the surface. Unimpressed to find himself in the city that he dislikes the Hulk leaps away.
Meanwhile, in San Francisco, Fred Sloan continues his research for the book he wants to write about the Hulk. As he's finishing up his interview with Betty Ross, his assistant Trish Starr manages to get Fred on a national talk show on the same day that Rick Jones will be on it. This is great news as Fred hopes to get plenty of insight from the Hulk's one-time sidekick. However, Sloan wishes he knew where the Hulk is. As Sloan wonders about this, the Hulk is involved on a series of missions with his teammates in the Defenders which he fought in Valhalla, stopped the Omegatron, the Anything Man, traveled to Tunnelworld and clashed with Daredevil.
Back at Gamma Base, Clay Quartermain's tenure at that facility comes to an end. As he checks out, he meets with the new commanding officer at Gamma Base: Colonel Glenn Talbot. Talbot worked on this promotion since General Ross had his breakdown and got it thanks to his past experience. He is determined to find and take down the Hulk. As Quartermain leaves, he can't help but wonder if Talbot's personal vendetta against the Hulk will prevent him from doing the job. After the SHIELD agent leaves, Talbot summons Lt. Perrywinkle and Dr. Maxwell so they can start planning how they are going to stop the Hulk anyway they can.
15.) THE DEFENDERS #46 - 51 (1977)
Writer: David Kraft Artists: Keith Giffen, Klaus Janson, Dan Green and Mike Royer
With the announcement that Dr. Strange plans to leave the Defenders
for personal reasons, Power Man, and Red Guardian also leave the group. However, Hellcat decides to join, and Val and
Nighthawk manage to convince the Hulk to stay. Deciding that they should
no longer use Dr. Strange's Sanctum as a headquarters anymore, Nighthawk
suggests they use his riding academy as a base of operations.
Meanwhile, Jack Norris is finally caught by his pursuer, who turns out to be none other than Nick Fury. When the Defenders arrive at their new base of operations, they find that it has been broken into by Scorpio who has come seeking Kyle Richmond. Scorpio is soon overpowered by the combined might of the Defenders and is forced to retreat.
As the Defenders part company to spend some R&R time, Jack Norris is being carted away by men hired by Nick Fury. Moon Knight, watching the whole incident finds it fishy and saves Jack and they escape. Valkyrie makes a stop to Dr. Strange's Sanctum to have Clea fix the spell Stephen cast on her to make her costume appear so that it will manifest her new costume instead of her old one.
Hellcat makes a stop at Avengers Mansion, and soon finds herself being attacked by Wonder Man who doesn't recognize her as a member of the group, while Jack Norris and Moon Knight arrive at Dr. Strange's Sanctum for help. There Clea uses her magics to learn what happened to Jack shortly after the incident with Ruby Thursday, Jack was confronted by apparent SHIELD agents about the candidate, and he refused to speak not wanting to reveal the secret behind the Defenders. They eventually let him go but still hound him.
Going to retrieve Hellcat, the group hears commotion coming from Avengers Mansion and Valkyrie breaks them in. Hellcat is saved by the combined efforts of Valkyrie and Moon Knight who manage to fight Wonder Man until Hellcat can activate the Avengers logs that prove to Wonder Man that she has membership with the Avengers. After all is sorted out, a message from Nick Fury comes over the Avengers computers informing them to seek out and capture Jack Norris.
The Defenders decide the best thing to do is to turn Jack Norris over to SHIELD in order to straighten things out, however they soon find out that the Nick Fury they turned Jack over too was an impostor working for Scorpio who has demanded Kyle Richmond (Nighthawk) pay a ransom so that he can have the funds necessary to complete his army of Zodiac androids.
Meanwhile, Jack Norris is finally caught by his pursuer, who turns out to be none other than Nick Fury. When the Defenders arrive at their new base of operations, they find that it has been broken into by Scorpio who has come seeking Kyle Richmond. Scorpio is soon overpowered by the combined might of the Defenders and is forced to retreat.
As the Defenders part company to spend some R&R time, Jack Norris is being carted away by men hired by Nick Fury. Moon Knight, watching the whole incident finds it fishy and saves Jack and they escape. Valkyrie makes a stop to Dr. Strange's Sanctum to have Clea fix the spell Stephen cast on her to make her costume appear so that it will manifest her new costume instead of her old one.
Hellcat makes a stop at Avengers Mansion, and soon finds herself being attacked by Wonder Man who doesn't recognize her as a member of the group, while Jack Norris and Moon Knight arrive at Dr. Strange's Sanctum for help. There Clea uses her magics to learn what happened to Jack shortly after the incident with Ruby Thursday, Jack was confronted by apparent SHIELD agents about the candidate, and he refused to speak not wanting to reveal the secret behind the Defenders. They eventually let him go but still hound him.
Going to retrieve Hellcat, the group hears commotion coming from Avengers Mansion and Valkyrie breaks them in. Hellcat is saved by the combined efforts of Valkyrie and Moon Knight who manage to fight Wonder Man until Hellcat can activate the Avengers logs that prove to Wonder Man that she has membership with the Avengers. After all is sorted out, a message from Nick Fury comes over the Avengers computers informing them to seek out and capture Jack Norris.
The Defenders decide the best thing to do is to turn Jack Norris over to SHIELD in order to straighten things out, however they soon find out that the Nick Fury they turned Jack over too was an impostor working for Scorpio who has demanded Kyle Richmond (Nighthawk) pay a ransom so that he can have the funds necessary to complete his army of Zodiac androids.
First Moon Knight tracks Scorpio down to his "theater of
genetics" and is captured and left to die in a tank filled with water.
While Kyle gives in and arrives in High Point, New Jersey, to hand over
the ransom to Scorpio, who reneges on the deal. When Kyle tries to
attack, Scorpio blasts him with the Scorpio Key and takes him as a hostage.
As
Moon Knight makes his escape to inform the Defenders of his
findings, they decide they need the Hulk's power to help free
Nighthawk and Jack from Scorpio's base. However, when they find the
Hulk, the Green Goliath is reluctant to fight for them and wants to be
left alone. They now resort
to bringing the Hulk into a rampage and tricking him into following them
to Scorpio's base. However, they arrive too late, as Scorpio has just
activated his android LMD Zodiac army.
The Hulk sees this army and attacks them with reckless abandon. The rest
of the Defenders and Moon Knight join in and help the crazed brute
battle the army to even up the odds. During the melee the Hulk gets
blindsided by the LMD of Aries from behind, who manages to knock him
through a wall and into the ocean below. This causes the Hulk to go
absolutely ballistic (he hates the water) and he goes on a volatile
rampage to find the android smashing everything and everyone in sight!
Nighthawk
finally manages to get free and helps the Hulk out as Aries was
preparing to blindside the brute again from behind. This makes the Hulk
happy to see "bird-nose" as all the heroes begin to gain the upper hand
and seemingly destroy the Zodiac
androids set against them. Wrought with despair over his loss, Scorpio
orders the LMD of Nick Fury to hand him a gun, and promptly shoots
himself in the head.
Following
their battle, SHIELD arrives on the scene and the Defenders bid
farewell to Moon
Knight while Jack Norris is offered a job by Nick
Fury. The Hulk, now in a playful mood after all the utter destruction he
caused, wants to have some fun but unfortunately no one is listening to
him.
14.) THE INCREDIBLE HULK #24 - 25 (2001)
Writer: Paul Jenkins Artists: John Romita Jr., Dick Giordano and Tom Palmer
While in my introduction I stated my hatred and frustration with contemporary comics, this Hulk-story is an exception to the rule. This story had all the elements of the "classic" Hulk-mythos that I know and love. Even the art of John Romita Jr. (especially with Dick Giordan inking him) in issue #24 had the Hulk looking, well -- incredible! Reading these issues back in the day was truly an exciting experience and brought me back to a time when the Hulk was at his peak. However, after issue #25 things went tragically back down into the gamma-toilet.
Bruce Banner writes a letter to his beloved wife, Betty Banner, in hopes of obtaining closure in regard to her death. Meanwhile, Emil Blonsky (aka the Abomination) is seen teaching an English class at a library. Each details their own respective origins. Bruce confronts Leonard Samson about the "Merged" Hulk incarnation (aka the "Professor" Hulk) and Samson justifies lying to Bruce in terms of Banner's mind being in control of the Hulk. Banner also tells Samson that the "Professor" Hulk forgave Emil, yet Banner had not. Emil is shown phoning his wife, Nadia, and is unable to talk to her. She thinks it's a stalker. General Ross shows Bruce that Betty is not buried, but her body was held in stasis in a secret chamber. Ross manipulates Banner into changing into the Hulk to obtain revenge for Betty's death. The Hulk leaps out of the stasis chamber and goes to confront the Abomination.
When the Hulk reaches the Abomination, they have a tremendous, bloody brawl to the finish. While destruction is left in their wake, the Hulk eventually overwhelms his arch-foe with his ever-increasing strength and endurance. Now almost beating the Abomination to the brink of death, the Hulk changes back into Banner and shows Emil mercy by not killing him. While Emil continues to taunt Bruce for his failure to kill him, the Abomination is put in a holding cell where he has to watch a video of him proclaiming his love to his wife Nadia Blonsky during a moment in his past on a continuous loop. This causes the Abomination to scream in pain begging Banner to shut it off.
13.) THE INCREDIBLE HULK #215 - 216 (1977)
Writer: Len Wein Artists: Sal Buscema and Ernie Chan
On board of a big SHIELD heli-carrier, General Ross, Clay Quartermain, Professor Gaffer
and several agents become prisoners of an alien being they rescued from
the ocean floor which happens to be the Bi-Beast! In order to confront him, Ross pulls
Bruce Banner from the streets with a pulling beam. Banner gets excited and turns into the
Hulk before he reaches the heli-carrier. With a raging mad-on, the Hulk chases his old-enemy General Ross through
the corridors until he shows up in front of the Bi-Beast, who greets ol' greenskin with powerful laser beams.
Despite the Hulk's awesome endurance and invulnerability, the attack cannot penetrate his skin but manages to boil his blood from within and knock him out. Watching via monitors, General Ross orders to rescue the Hulk and Gaffer opens a secret floor gate. The Hulk plummets through a tunnel until he reaches the chamber where Ross, Gaffer and Clay Quartermain are located. The Hulk quickly recovers and seeingthe general lifts him and prepares to smash him to the floor. But Gaffer dissuades the Hulk by telling him that Ross just wants his help. Amazingly, they convince the brute to team up and all four reach the main computer room and the Hulk breaks the primary circuits seconds before the Bi-Beast could launch the atomic missiles.
The SHIELD heli-carrier's emergency power systems hold the ship in the air, but they won't last long. Gaffer starts working on reactivating the primary systems when the Bi-Beast shows up wearing a battle vest which enhances his strength. The Hulk attacks the alien and they both brawl it out ending up at the ship's roof. They continue to go back and forth but the sudden ship's turn makes both combatants loose feet and fall towards the Earth. In the biggest surprise of all, General Ross actually sheds a tear, when he believes that the Hulk just plummeted to his death.
12.) THE INCREDIBLE HULK ANNUAL #8 (1979)
Writers: Roger Stern and John Byrne Artists: Sal Buscema and Alfedro Alcala
The Hulk was sent flying through the skies by the power of Machine Man, and he crashes in Northeastern British Columbia. After feeling the shock from the impact a woman nearby, named Maureen Mores Friesen, goes outside to see what happened. She finds the Hulk face down with his head buried and she tried to help him so he won't suffocate. When Hulk wakes up, he sees her and thinks she is an enemy but the girl explains to him what happened and he calls her a friend. The Hulk will take Maureen to her home where he calms down and becomes Bruce Banner.
In the meantime the Canadian army is trying to find someone who is powerful enough to fight and capture the Hulk. They find the active member of the Alpha Flight; Sasquatch. When Dr. Langkowski learns of the situation he accepts the mission and becomes excited because he is interested in knowing if he's more powerful than the Hulk. At the arrival point he transforms into Sasquatch and lands in the area searching for the brute.
After some time Banner hears a scream and goes out with a shotgun to find Maureen in the hands of Sasquatch. Banner tries to communicate with Sasquatch, but he wants a fight with the Hulk so he tries to enrage Banner by tossing him around. After pushing Banner off a cliff by mistake, it's the Hulk who returns back up the mountain and is ready to smash. As the two monsters fight, Sasquatch soon realizes it's hopeless to slug it out with the Hulk because he just keeps getting stronger with each passing second.
There battle causes an avalanche and rocks begin to fall on Maureen. Sasquatch sees this and leaps to save her but the Hulk follows because he thinks Sasquatch is trying to attack her. When the avalanche finally stops, Sasquatch manages to rise from the rubble with Maureen in his arms safe. The Hulk then rises from the rubble and becomes consumed with anger and wants to kill Sasquatch for trying to hurt her. But the brute stops when he sees that Maureen is more terrified of him than of Sasquatch. This will cause the Hulk to leap away and while in the air he begins to cry.
11.) DAREDEVIL #163 (1980)
Writer: Roger McKenzie Artists: Frank Miller, Klaus Janson and Joe Rubinstein
While this is more of a Daredevil story,
the Hulk's appearance in this issue was simply one of his greatest
guest appearances. Not only was the brute written perfectly, but he was
also drawn to look absolutely terrifying by Frank Miller that it
actually scared me when I was a kid reading it. The story itself reads
like a heroic-horror story that put me on the edge of my seat and made
me really care about the characters, especially Daredevil, who tried so
hard to help Bruce Banner and stop the Hulk's crazed rampage. It was one
of the only times I rooted against the Hulk in a fight. The beating he
gave Daredevil was painful to watch, even more so because it was the first time I ever saw a super hero bleed. Overall, this story had such an impact on me during my youth that it remains one of my absolute favorite ever.
While
attending a party, Daredevil detects that the Hulk is loose in
New York City. In his civilian attire, Matthew Murdock leaves his
friends and approaches the brute. Matt calms the Hulk down and turns him into
his human alter ego Bruce Banner. Matt takes Banner into his home and
lets him rest. Later Banner
goes on his way to leave the city thanking Matt Murdock for his help.
Unfortunately a chaotic and crowded subway agitates Banner enough to
transform back into the Hulk.
Again, Daredevil confronts him only to be ineffective and slapped away
by
the Jade Giant. Badly beaten and bloodied, Daredevil realizes that he
has done his
part to stop the Hulk's rampage and should stop, but thinks to himself that if he quit he would've always
known he quit. Like a man possessed,
Daredevil tracks down and confronts the Hulk again, but after another
horrific beating he collapses. Rather than killing Daredevil, a
confused Hulk leaps out of the city crying because he thinks he has
lost another friend.
Writers: Archie Goodwin, Roy Thomas and Steve Gerber Artists: Herb Trimpe and Sal Tapani
Having returned from the Microverse, the Hulk just barely recalls his
reunion with Jarella and its abrupt ending and struggles to understand
why he is so sad. His return has not gone unnoticed as there is a ship
in space piloted by some being that is very interested in what the Hulk
is up too and begins initiating a plan of attack.
Meanwhile,
at Project: Greenskin, Betty Ross and Glenn Talbot
begin rehearsing their wedding, with General Ross hoping that Glenn has
better luck with Betty than Bruce Banner did. Jim Wilson is also in the
audience, however he feels like a traitor to Bruce by participating in
Betty and Glenn's wedding and decides to cut out and hitches a ride with the next craft out off the base, destination: New Jersey.
While on the west coast, the unconscious body of the Rhino suddenly comes to life and smashes it's way out of the mental hospital
he has been left in since his last defeat at the hands of the Hulk. The
comatose body is drawn to a ship and is carried out to the station high
above Earth. As it turns out, the station is controlled by the Leader,
who is now immobilized following his last encounter with the Hulk. Hoping
to get revenge against the Green Goliath once more, the Leader takes full
control of the Rhino's body and has it dawn a new suit of Rhino armor
and sends it out to destroy the brute.
The Hulk meanwhile has let his grief give into anger and he
starts to go on a rampage through the area. His tantrum causes a traffic
jam on the highway into Newark, New Jersey. Hitching a ride into the
area Jim Wilson spots the Hulk and manages to calm him down and stop
his rampage long enough to get him hidden at an oil refinery. There
the Hulk reverts back into Bruce Banner. Jim tells
Banner the bad news about Betty and Glenn's upcoming wedding. Although
Bruce accepts the reality, he can't help but feel a sense of loss and
blames the Hulk for messing up his opportunities with Betty, and
struggles to maintain control of his life.
They are then interrupted by the Leader controlled Rhino, who
taunts Bruce and tells him that he intends on crashing Betty and Glenn's
wedding. Bruce, not wanting to ruin the wedding by showing up as the
Hulk tries to resist the urge to change into the creature within him. The final straw
is when Jim attempts to stop the Rhino and is swatted aside, Bruce
then allows himself to transform into the Hulk.
The two brutes clash and the Leader's superior intellect controlling
the Rhino's body appears to grant him the upper hand. Battering the Hulk
aside, the Leader/Rhino boards his ship with the intent of
crashing Betty's wedding. The Hulk is about to pounce after him when Jim
warns him not to follow, however the Hulk doesn't listen and jumps
after the ship anyway.
Jim has no other choice but to call General Ross at Project:
Greenskin and warn him of the Hulk's approach. Although this greatly
upsets Ross, he hides the truth when Betty comes to express her
excitement of the coming wedding.
As
the rocket controlled by the Leader streaks towards the wedding of
Betty Ross and Glenn Talbot, the Hulk smashes the ship from the outside causing the Leader to
loosen his hold on the Rhino's body. With no memory of how he got aboard
the ship, the Rhino is confused as to why the Hulk is attacking him.
Putting on a space helmet, the Rhino exits the ship and battles the
raging brute. With the elimination of both the Hulk and the Rhino (whom
the
Leader assumes will only attempt to betray him again) the Leader decides
to let the two duke it out as their ship spirals out of control into
the furthest reaches of space.
This battle is also being monitored by General Ross and his men,
who inform the General that the ship is spiraling toward the sun and
ultimate destruction, much to the General's relief. However, such is not
the fate of the Rhino and the Hulk, the ship instead orbits around the
sun until it passes through the atmosphere of the High Evolutionary's
Counter-Earth. Here, the Hulk knocks the Rhino off the ship and then lands in a
city where he interrupts a battle between Kohbra's beast men and
Porcuninus' rebellion group. The Hulk's appearance causes Kohbra and
his minions to flee. As Porcuninus offers the Hulk friendship and
sanctuary they are spotted by the military who are being led by
Counter-Earth versions of General Ross and Glenn Talbot. However they
flee the scene, leaving Ross and his men to wonder what the heck
happened.
Aboard his space station watching over his creations, the High
Evolutionary muses grimly at the discovery of his New Men on
Counter-Earth, even though he knew it was going to be an eventuality.
When Ross is harassed by newspaper reporter Jason Anders, Ross tells him
to get lost, however he sticks around long enough for the arrival of
Counter-Earth's versions of Bruce Banner and Betty Ross to arrive and
report to General Ross about an alien ship that the military has seized.
Anders rushes off to report this story and it makes all the papers. The
story gets into the hands of both warring factions of New-Men who seek
to claim the shuttle.
At the military base, Bruce Banner examines the ship and is
surprised to learn that it is powered by Gamma Rays, and recalls his
close encounter where he saved a young boy named Rick Jones from the
explosion of his experimental Gamma Bomb. On Counter-Earth, instead of
being caught in the explosion and being turned into the Hulk, Bruce
Banner managed to get to safety.
When the Hulk and Porcuninus' New-Men arrive, the Hulk recognizes
Banner, but since the Hulk considers Bruce Banner to be a separate
being, he doesn't realize that this Bruce Banner is a duplicate. Before
the Hulk can attack Banner, Bruce's son Bobbie tries to hit the Hulk
demanding that the Hulk not hurt his father. The Hulk, confused by all
this and unable to strike a child, stops his attack on Banner. Just then, the Hulk is walloped by the Rhino who has teamed up with Kohbra and his
minions to begin the battle to see who gets control of the ship.
Watching this from his space station, the Leader attempts to call
back his ship in the hopes of stranding both brutes on
Counter-Earth. However, during the rumble, the Hulk manages to knock the Rhino out and
noticing that the ship is about to take off boards it carrying the
unconscious Rhino with him. As the ship blasts off, both gangs of the
New Men retreat and the Hulk reflects on his hatred of Bruce Banner,
and realizes that he cannot hate a man who has a good son. As the ship
flies away from Counter-Earth, the relaxed Hulk transforms back into
Bruce Banner. As Banner reflects on what he can recall, he begins to
wonder if the Betty of his Earth has a future with him as well.
9.) THE INCREDIBLE HULK #252 - 253 (1980)
Writer: Bill Mantlo Artist: Sal Buscema
Some
of the best dialogue and quotes the Hulk ever had are written here in
these two issues by Bill Mantlo (especially issue #252). And as I stated above, his run on The Incredible Hulk
#245 - 272 are some of the best and most consistent Hulk stories ever
produced. But these two issues rank at the very top of his run.
The
Hulk reaches the cabin where Doc Samson and General "Thunderbolt" Ross
are staying.
He finds the superhero psychiatrist injured lying on the floor badly hurt. Samson
tells the
Hulk that the Changelings kidnapped Betty Ross, Rick Jones, Fred Sloan
and General Ross. The Hulk goes looking for his friends because he knows he
has the power to stop the kidnappers while Samson couldn't. Meanwhile,
Woodgood, the Changeling's father and leader, tries saving Centaurus.
But the elixir was secretly poisoned by Leoninus, another Changeling who
wants to take over as leader. The Hulk shows and overpowers the
Changelings but is not welcomed by
his friends whom he came to rescue. Feeling betrayed the brute sadly
leaves.
When Centaurus is pronounced
dead, the Changelings claim for the captive humans lives in justice.
It's when
Leoninus shows up with the evil Changelings demanding the same. Just
then Woodgood
discovers that Leoninus was behind of all this to challenge his rule. A
great rift now divides the Changelings and the two groups stand ready to
face one another.
The Hulk meanwhile comes upon the dried out body of the
Changeling, Neptunus, and helps to replenish him by diverting water into
the dried riverbed. Moments later, the Hulk encounters a revived Doc Samson in
the middle of the forest. Samson is angry, and baits the Hulk into a
fight. The two begin trading blows, causing all wildlife in the
immediate vicinity to scatter.
In the Valley, the feud between the Changeling factions reaches a
fever pitch, and Leoninus' followers attack Woodgod. Siren flies off
and returns to her cottage, where she discovers that it was actually
Leoninus who killed Centauron by poisoning his medicine.
Flying back to the scene of battle, she witnesses the Hulk's
battle with Samson. She lands between the two and convinces them to stop
fighting one another and to come with her. When Siren arrives and informs the Changelings of Leoninus' duplicity,
several of his followers turn against him. Elephantine however, remains
loyal to Leoninus and fights with the Hulk. Doc Samson battles against
Pantherus while Rick and Fred double-team Viperus. Ultimately, those
loyal to Woodgod prove triumphant and the fight concludes.
When everything settles down, Betty Ross, Rick Jones and Doc Samson apologize to
the Hulk for misjudging him. General Ross however, reminds everyone that the
Hulk is an irredeemable monster. Frustrated with them, the Hulk
leaps away.
8.) THE INCREDIBLE HULK #136 - 137 (1971)
Writer: Roy Thomas and Gerry Conway Artists: Herb Trimpe, Sal Buscema and Mike Esposito
Having
revived from his adventure through time somewhere in modern day Europe,
Bruce Banner hitches a ride to a NATO unit and is personally escorted
back to the United States under the supervision of General Ross and
Glenn Talbot,
on a steady dose of tranquilizers to keep him from transforming into
the Hulk. Along the way, Ross tells Banner that both Betty Ross (who
suffered a
nervous breakdown) and Jim Wilson (who was injured by Hydra) are
recovering well together.
As they fly into New York
and pass the Empire State Building, some invisible force near it causes
Banner to suddenly transform into the Hulk, smash out of the plane, and
climb up the Empire State Building. As this is happening the same force
appears to be draining all the electricity out of the city. Suddenly in
space, a giant space vessel appears and Xeron the Star-Slayer is
dispatched to Earth. This alien being has been dispatched by his masters
to destroy a creature known as Klaatu, an energy creature that is "from
beyond space."
When the Hulk reaches the top of the ESB, he is shocked by the
arrival of Xeron and the sudden appearance of the gigantic Klaatu.
Confused by the whole tableau unfolding, the Hulk decides to attack
Klaatu. However, he's beneath the creature's notice and it simply swats the brute out of the way before disappearing again.
Furious over the Hulk's involvement, Xeron has his slaves "row"
his hunting ship toward the Hulk so that they may capture him. The Hulk tries to fight off Xeron and his men, Xeron however
uses his energy harpoon to incapacitate the Hulk, draining him of enough
energy to knock the brute out and make him easy for capture.
Taken aboard the ship, the Hulk revives and learns that his old foe the
Abomination has a high ranking position aboard the ship.
Naturally, the Hulk and
Abomination begin fighting; however the brawl is soon broken up by Xeron
who tells the Abomination that the Hulk will be useful in their hunt of
Klaatu. An alien named Cerexo takes the Hulk with him and explains
that they have been all consigned to hunt down the elusive Klaatu and
that they had found the Abomination in their chase. And since his
addition to the crew, the Abomination has killed his way into the position of
First Mate.
The Hulk spends his time thereafter being forced to row the giant
space ship, and live and work among the aliens, all the while the
Abomination is plotting his revenge on him. One day the Hulk is out
watching the Earth in the distance when the Abomination attacks him from
behind, knocking him into space. Xeron and the others pull the Hulk
back aboard the ship and he warns the Abomination not to try another
attempt on the Hulk's life. Just then they are summoned to meet the
captain of the vessel, an alien named Cybor.
In Cybor's presence, the Hulk is told that he has been on a quest to destroy Klaatu ever since the
creature destroyed half his body. The Hulk is then sent back to his room
where he suddenly reverts back into Bruce Banner. Although he's
without the Hulk's great strength, Banner is put aboard one of the
hunting vessels to row with the other aliens on their next trek to hunt
down and kill Klaatu.
Once Klaatu is found and the hunt begins, Banner is knocked loose and attacked by the
Abomination, causing him to transform back into the Hulk and begin their inevitable slugfest. Cybor
meanwhile harpoons Klaatu, but gets pulled off his ship and gets stuck on the
creature as it flies into the sun killing him and seemingly destroying
itself. Xeron and the others, on a damaged vessel, realize that their
fate is numbered as well, with no means of returning to their ship and
their artificial atmosphere on a limited supply, they too will meet
their eventual end.
Forgetting
about everything that is going on around them, the Hulk and Abomination
drift through space slugging it out, their blows now
bringing them close to Earth's atmosphere. Eventually the Abomination
begins to succumb to the Hulk's increasing strength and endurance and is
sent rocketing down towards the Earth humbled and defeated.
7.) THE INCREDIBLE HULK #193 - 200 (1975/1976)
Writer: Len Wein Artists: Sal Buscema, Herb Trimpe and Joe Staton
Following his adventure in Scotland, Bruce Banner manages to get cheap fare
back to America aboard the RMS Black Wraith provided that he stay
below deck and keep a low profile. However, Banner decides to go up to
the deck and think about his current plight. This angers the crew, who
are very strict on their rules for Banner's passage. Banner soon
realizes why: the crew of this vessel are illegally dumping radioactive
waste into the ocean. Furious at being discovered, the crew attacks
Banner prompting him to transform into the Hulk once more. He easily
overpowers them and smashes the ship, causing it to sink. As the crew
gets to life boats, the Hulk jumps into the ocean and swims away.
At
Hulkbuster Base, Leonard Samson prepares the base for the
eventual capture of the Hulk so that they can use him to
restore Glenn Talbot's mind (which was messed up when he was a prisoner
of the Gremlin). To this end he is running a test on the
Gammatron device however, it reaches critical mass. Pushing General
Ross, Betty Talbot and Clay Quartermain to safety, Samson is too late to
protect himself when the device explodes and bombards him with gamma
radiation. Instead of killing him, the exposure causes him to mutate
back into his gamma ray powered form, heralding the rebirth of Doc
Samson.
The Hulk meanwhile has managed to swim back to the shores of
Manhattan where he is spotted and attacked by the police. The Hulk easily destroys their
weapons before leaping off into the city. With reports of the Hulk's
return to America, SHIELD decide to send the newly empowered Doc Samson out to try
and capture the Hulk personally. Traveling to New York aboard a robot helicopter, Samson finds the Hulk and orders him to surrender. However, the Hulk
refuses and smashes the remote controlled device, this distracts the brute long enough for Samson to get close enough and attack him.
The
Hulk and Samson engage in battle across the city,
however the Hulk gets mad and gains the upper hand and defeats Samson,
knocking him into the middle of a nearby sand lot where children
are playing baseball. As the Hulk leaps away, Samson pulls himself up
and promises to capture the Hulk if it's the last thing he does.
Wandering in the wilderness, the Hulk is attracted by the smell of cooking
food, he comes across a group of hobos. When they detect the Hulk's presence they
attempt to attack him but the Hulk scares them off. Inspecting their
food, he finds that they were cooking up his favorite food: beans. He
chows down on the beans and then falls asleep, reverting back into Bruce
Banner. Banner wakes up the next morning wondering where he is and goes
out to hitch-hike on the streets. There he is picked up by Bob Hickman
and his wife Carol. Despite their warnings that riding with them would
be trouble, Bruce hops in anyway. They soon come to a town that is
barricaded off. Allowed access into the town, Carol explains to the
confused Banner that this is their fault.
While back in New Mexico, Doc Samson returns to Hulkbuster Base where Clay Quartermain mocks him for
being unprofessional in his attempt to capture the brute. As Samson
loses his temper, a soldier on site for repairs tells Ross, Samson and Quartermain that there is something that
they have to see.
Back
in the Midwest, the Hickmans explain to Bruce that they
married without Carol's permission while he was in jail and upon hearing
of their marriage, and after destroying Bob's farm he has been causing a
path of destruction across America's farmlands. Just then, a swarm of
locusts begins to head toward the town and Bruce allows himself to
transform into the Hulk in order to defend it from the locust attack. As
the Hulk attempts to fight them off, he is confronted by Carol's
father, a villain named the Locust. He sees the Hulk as a threat and
attacks him with his ionic gun before using his devices to grow a giant
insect army.
The Hulk fights off the insects, crushing them all one by one,
but when a giant-preying mantis threatens Carol's life, the Locust
realizes what he's done and goes to his daughters aid, and gets knocked
aside by his mad creation. When he witnesses Bob come to his daughters
rescue, he realizes that he is truly worthy of his daughter's love. The
Hulk, having crushed the remainder of the bugs destroys the praying
mantis saving Bob and Carol from danger. The Hulk then turns around to
resume his anger towards the Locust, however he's stopped by Carol
who tries to explain that she still loves her father and that he needs
help. Confused, the Hulk expresses frustration and wanders off to leave
the Locus to his fate.
While back on Hulkbuster Base, Samson, Ross and Quartermain stand
before the Abomination, who was found in the rubble of the damaged base.
When the Abomination revives they tell him that they have planted a bomb
inside his head and that in order to have it deactivated he must
hunt down and capture the Hulk. The Abomination agrees to help them.
A
young boy named Ricky is running away from the orphanage that he
lives in order to escape the taunting of his peers. Stowing away in a
freight car, Ricky encounters the Hulk. At first Ricky is frightened of
the Hulk, but the two become fast friends. However, when the train stops
at a station a bunch of rail yard workers attempt to throw them out, the
Hulk easily fights them off, grabs Ricky and then leaps off
into the sky.
While at Hulkbuster Base, Betty Talbot tries to get
through to the mind of her catatonic husband Glenn. Blaming herself for
what happened, she's interrupted by her father who tells her not to
blame herself for what's happened to Glenn and focus her energies on
finding a cure for his condition. They are interrupted by Clay who
enters and tells him that intelligence reports have located the Hulk in
Florida.
Back in Florida, Ricky has the Hulk don a crude disguise and
visit Wonderland, an amusement park that the boy was seeking to reach
after running away. With the Hulk helping him sneak in, Ricky soon finds
trouble when he's hassled by a park employee who tries to sell him a
hat. This prompts the Hulk to lose his temper and blow his disguise,
causing a panic. With police arriving on the scene, the Hulk leaps away
from young Ricky, having grown weary of the day's constant harassment.
The Hulk then climbs atop a Ferris wheel and demands that they give
Ricky back to him, or he'll go on a rampage. This threat-making lasts
long enough for the Abomination to arrive and attack the Hulk.
Their
battle rages across the amusement park, with the
Abomination using his superior mentality to trick the Hulk into entering
various rides, such as the hall of mirrors, which he utilizes to trip
up the Hulk. Ultimately, the Hulk's punches deactivate the bomb inside
his head (in
reality it was not a bomb at all but a monitoring device Ross and the
others were using to
trick the Abomination into subservience). Free from the military's
control, the Abomination tries to reason with the Hulk, deciding to make
him an ally in his plot for revenge. The Abomination succeeds in doing
so,
but Ricky grabs a police officer's gun and attempts to shoot the
Abomination. Noticing this attempt, the Abomination slams his fist into
the group, causing the shot to go off target and strike the Hulk.
Convincing the Hulk that Ricky shot him on purpose, the Abomination
gains the Hulk's allegiance, and both brutes bound off to get revenge
against
the army. Watching the Hulk jump away, Ricky futility pleads with Jade
Jaws to come back because they're friends. His cries fall on deaf ears,
however.
With the two brutes heading toward Hulkbuster Base, much to the
dismay of Doc Samson, General Ross, Clay Quartermain, and Betty Talbot.
This creates yet another obstacle for them to capture the Hulk so that
they might use Bruce Banner to restore Glenn Talbot from a catatonic
state.
The Abomination leads the Hulk to a Florida
Space Station and the two easily smash through the defenses and takes
the station under their control. The
Abomination takes to their broadcasting capabilities and
televises his demands: He is ransoming the entire space station for 100
million dollars in uncut diamonds to be given to him by midnight or he
and the Hulk will destroy the base.
Holding the base staff hostage, the Abomination demands meals
from them, when one of the employees attempts to electrocute the
Abomination, he orders the Hulk to kill the man. When the Hulk finds
that his intended victim is not afraid of death, he loses interest and earning the ire of his would-be partner who is beginning to realize that the Hulk is not as ruthless as he appears.
With time running out, the US Government leaves it up to
Hulkbuster Base to deal with the crisis and General Ross decides to
attack their weakest link: the Hulk's apathy for his daughter Betty. Having Betty appears on television screens
pleading for the Hulk to remember who she is. Her pleas to get the Hulk
to stop his attack confuses the brute, prompting the Abomination to smash all the televisions that are broadcasting the message.
Deciding that the
government has not succumbed to his demands, the Abomination leads the Hulk
out to destroy the base. When the Abomination smashes another television
screen playing Betty's message, the Hulk finally remembers who she
is. When the Abomination refers to her as "just another puny human,"
this angers the Hulk. No longer considering the Abomination a friend,
the Hulk angrily attacks him.
Their battle takes them to a nearby rocket that was scheduled for
launch before their invasion of the base. During the fight the
Abomination attempts to escape inside of it. As it begins to blast off, the Hulk
jumps onto the exterior hull and attempts to smash his way in. However,
the Abomination kicks him loose sending him crashing back into Earth's
orbit. The Abomination's get away isn't quite so clean however; as the
damages caused by the Hulk make the rocket explode seemingly killing
him. The Hulk meanwhile crash lands somewhere in the Florida swamps.
When news reaches Hulkbuster Base, they all assume that the Hulk had
perished in the battle, sending Betty into a torrent of tears.
Now in the Florida
Everglades, the Hulk is not happy. As he tromps through the swamp he's
completely unaware that his presence has attracted the attention of the
Man-Thing, who watches the brute silently. The Hulk is attacked by
various alligators and snakes, prompting the Hulk to angrily ball them
up and toss them away. He then stumbles across the ruins of Omegaville.
Weary from his ordeals, the Hulk finds a bed and goes to sleep,
reverting back into Bruce Banner. As he slumbers, a figure appears in the
shadows and watches over him.
Back at Hulkbuster Base, Doc Samson and Betty Talbot take a
stroll around the base, talking about Glenn's catatonic state and how
she can cope with the situation. In a moment of despair and loneliness,
Betty allows herself to be kissed by Samson, completely unaware that
they are being spied upon by Clay Quartermain.
In Florida, Bruce Banner awakens and realizes that he's within
the remains of the failed Omegaville commune and spots the man who has
been watching him sleep. When the man flees the area in fear, Banner
chases after him and convinces him that he's not a threat. However,
Banner soon learns whom this strange mute man had been fleeing from: a
band of pirates led by Captain Horatio Cutlass. When the pirates attack
them, they cause Banner to transform into the Hulk, who easily makes
short work of the pirates. The Hulk and his companion are soon greeted
by the Collector, who tells them that the pirates are in his command.
When the Hulk attempts to attack the Collector, he unleashes his latest slave to fight for him, The Man-Thing.
As the Hulk battles the Man-Thing, he is distracted enough to
allow the Collector to blast the mute man with the Philosopher's
stone, reverting him into his true form -- The Glob. With the Glob now
under his control, the Collector orders him to attack the Hulk as well.
The Hulk is over-powered by the two muck-monsters because he can't seem to hurt them. Eventually the two monsters manage to
defeat the brute by shoving his face into the Man-Thing's mire-made body until
he passes out from lack of oxygen (due to the fact that he forgot to hold his breath). With the Hulk humbled, the Collector orders
the pirates to carry the brute back to his base in order to be added to
his collection.
Taken to the Collector's ship, the Hulk is placed inside one of his habitats and is shackled with a device
that prevents him from escaping. He is put on display in a swamp like
environment with both the Glob and Man-Thing. In "payment" for helping
the Collector capture the Hulk, Captain Cutlass and his pirates are
returned to the miniature ship in a bottle they have been prisoner in
for hundreds of years since the Collector first captured them.
Left to slumber in his new habitat, the Hulk reverts back to his
Bruce Banner form. Since the leg shackle were designed to fit the Hulk,
Banner easily slips them off and escapes and begins exploring
where he is. Banner finds to his horror that the Collector has captured
an enslaved many beings from Earth and other worlds from various points
in history and has made them all his slaves for his own personal museum.
Listening to their pleas, Banner agrees to try and free them from their
captivity. As Banner rushes off, he runs into the Collector who
recognizes the Hulk's alter ego and offers him a proposition.
Back at Hulkbuster Base, General Ross meets with Clay Quartermain
to tell him that the base has been officially renamed and reclassified
as Gamma Base where they would expand their focus on trying to cure all
creatures mutated by gamma radiation, and not just hunt down the Hulk.
Ross happily informs Clay that he has been appointed SHIELD liaison at
Gamma Base. Looking out the window, Clay spots Doc Samson out on another
walk with Betty Talbot, and comments grimly that he finds his new
assignment is "just swell."
Back aboard the Collector's ship, the Collector shows Banner
around and shows him his first line of defense should any of
his prisoners escape: Akbar, former bodyguard of Kubla Khan. The
Collector explains to Banner that his travels have been lonely and that
he seeks a companion to travel the stars
with and offers Banner that position, offering to cure him of being the
Hulk. Deciding that he has nothing to hold him on Earth, Banner
accepts. When the Man-Thing and Glob manage to escape from their cells
(their shackles slip off their malleable forms) it sets off an alarm.
Hearing the Collector refer to the people he has captured as merely
"exhibits," Banner changes his mind on his offer forcing the Collector
to set Akbar on him.
Banner transforms into the Hulk and easily fights off the
barbarian warrior and sets his sights on the Collector. When the
Collector offers the Hulk the serum to change him back into Bruce
Banner, the Hulk angrily smashes the vial and continues his advance. The
Collector seals the Hulk in a powerful force field, and when the Glob
and Man-Thing arrive on the scene, sends an army of various creatures
and humans from different time periods under his control against them.
As the battle rages on, the Hulk manages to free himself and join the
fight, causing damage to the controls that kept the Collectors prisoners
trapped. In the confusion, the Collector makes his escape and the
princess that convinced Banner to try and free them manages to talk
everyone into stopping the fight. They all leave as the
Collector flees to repair his ship and prevent his captives from
escaping. The Glob follows after him and seemingly kills him, ending
his efforts to stop them.
As the captors escape the ship, the many years of captivity catch
up with them as they begin to rapidly age once outside. As
the princess thanks the Hulk for freeing them -- death was a better
choice than eternal slavery -- the Man-Thing shambles off into the swamp
leaving the Hulk to try and make sense of what he has just witnessed.
Now the Hulk wanders into
Citrusville, Florida where the population approaches the creature with
interest. This causes the Hulk to become angry and demand that people
leave him alone. His presence in the town attracts the attention of
Gamma Base's SHIELD liaison Clay Quartermain who convinces Nick Fury to
allow him to use SHIELD weapons to capture the Hulk before he can get
away again.
Flying out to Florida, the opening salvo is made when Doc Samson
jumps from a SHIELD chopper and attacks the Hulk directly. As the Hulk
is distracted, the helicopters use neuro-clamps to bind him.
However, before they can pump anesthetic into the Hulk's system the
brute breaks free crashing into the nearby swamp. Samson rejoins the
others, and they continue on to chase down the Hulk.
Back at Gamma Base, Betty visits with her catatonic
husband Glenn Talbot. Betty is wracked with guilt over her marital
transgressions with Doc Samson while Glenn has been in his current
conditions and asks her oblivious husband to forgive him.
Back in Florida, the SHIELD unit sent to capture the Hulk decides
to try another tactic on him, a paralysis gas. However, the Hulk's
titanic leaps keep them from getting close enough to use it. Doc Samson
decides to go against orders and engage the Hulk physically one more time in
order to keep him in one spot so that they can use the gas on the green
giant.
As Samson battles the Hulk, Quartermain and his SHIELD unit get
up close with the gas. Unable to break off from his fight with the Hulk
for fear the brute might escape again, Samson orders SHIELD to gas him and the Hulk to take them both out. Although Quartermain has
reservations and is unsure how the gas might affect Samson, he orders his men
to fire. The gas manages to quickly knock out Samson and the Hulk bellows of being strong enough to withstand it. That is, until the Hulk breathes enough of it in and finally passes out. Both combatants
are gathered up by SHIELD and taken to a transport to be taken back to Gamma
Base.
With the Hulk now captured, and thanks to an
encephalo-helmet designed by Doc Samson, Bruce Banner's mind now
operates in the Hulk's body. Using a shrinking device, they intend to
send the Banner/Hulk into the brain of Glenn Talbot and repair the damage
caused to his mind by the Gremlin
and revive him from his catatonic state, as the Hulk's unique
physiology would protect him from the harsh electrical activity in
Glenn's brain. After being wished luck and promising everyone that he
will do his best to restore Glenn to normal, Banner gets shrunken
down and implanted inside Talbot's brain.
Almost immediately from his arrival, Banner is assaulted by the
electrical fields from Glenn's brain and tries to adjust his helmet to
deal with them. He is then attacked by manifestations of the Hulk's old foes,
the Missing Link, Juggernaut and the Abomination. Although these phantom
versions of his enemies try to stop him, Banner manages to fight them
off, causing them to dissipate into immaterial smoke. He is then
attacked by phantoms of both the Rhino and the Leader. In this fight, Banner's helmet gets
slightly damaged causing him to begin to lose his
temper.
During a fight with phantoms of the Mandarin and Sandman, Banner
cannot take the feedback from the helmet and angrily rips it off, submerging his
consciousness and releasing the Hulk's mind. The Hulk is then attacked
by more constructs based on Iron Man, the Sub-Mariner, Hercules, Silver
Surfer and Doc Samson. The Hulk easily fights them off as they
are joined by illusions of MODOK, the Harpy and the Gremlin. The Hulk
smashes them all until he comes across the vile creature in Glenn's mind that
is keeping him in his catatonic state.
When the creature attempts to consume the Hulk, he rips it
apart killing it. The creature's death causes Glenn to suddenly sit up
and belt out a scream before passing out again. Before they can see if he's okay, an alarm goes off warning Doc Samson that the Hulk is
beginning to grow, threatening to kill Glenn in the process. With
no other choice, Samson fires the shrink ray, targeting the Hulk and
causing him to shrink so small that he disappears from their readings.
Glenn awakens alive and well and is reunited with his wife Betty. Samson
informs them that while they've saved the life of Glenn Talbot, it was done at the expense of the life of Bruce Banner.
6.) THE INCREDIBLE HULK #162 (1972)
The Hulk continues to rampage through Canada in search for Betty Talbot, leading the Canadian military to call in General Ross to discuss the matter. After going over the situation the Royal Canadian Air-Force and the Prime Minister of Canada allows for Ross and his Hulkbusters to operate in Canada to capture the Hulk and extradite him back to the United States.
The Hulk meanwhile continues North through the Canadian wilderness, becoming more muddled and confused as to why he's there, holding onto the dim remembrance that he's trying to find Betty. The Hulk begins to have a tantrum until he is contacted by a voice of a man called Paul Cartier who is begging for help. Before the Hulk can make sense of the eerie voice from nowhere, he's attacked by a group of hunters. The Hulk easily swats them away and is about to pummel them when a girl named Marie begins attacking. She has confused the Hulk with a creature called the Wendigo that has apparently attacked and killed her brother, Paul Cartier. The Hulk, touched by the woman's sadness doesn't fight back and explains who he is and promises to go looking for whoever harmed her brother.
The Hulk hunts across the Canadian wilderness, searching for the Wendigo, however the giant creature finds the green brute first and attacks. Apparently, the Hulk has stumbled upon the creature just as it was about to feed on a man. The man begs the Hulk to save him from the Wendigo's cannibalistic hunger. Thinking this man is Paul Cartier, the Hulk attacks the Wendigo, and appear to be evenly matched. Eventually, the Hulk is knocked off a cliff, and then the Wendigo tosses the man at him down below. However, the man is caught and saved by the Hulk.
The Hulk takes the injured man back to the logging camp where Marie Cartier and the others recognize him as Georges Baptiste, Paul's friend. There George explains that he and Paul were out hunting with their friend Henri Cluzot. They were attacked by wolves and were forced to hide out in a cave where Henri died. With no food, they eventually began to starve, and Paul would commit an act of cannibalism on Henri's dead body. They explain to the Hulk that Paul became a victim of the "Curse of the Wendigo" and became the Wendigo himself.
Understanding in his own naive, innocent way, the Hulk goes back out into the wilderness to try and find the Wendigo and help Paul break the curse. The Hulk finds the creature at a logging camp and their fight resumes. Paul's spirit calls out to the Hulk telling him that his mind is dissolving and that the Wendigo is taking full control. But try as he might, the Hulk is unable to stop the Wendigo who appears to be an even match for him. In the end, Paul's mind completely dissolves and the Wendigo, now in full control, kicks the Hulk away and runs off into the wilderness. As it runs off, the Hulk remarks that no matter how strong he was, there was nothing he could do to save Paul.
5.) THE INCREDIBLE HULK #1 (1962)
Writer: Stan Lee Artists: Jack Kirby and Paul Reinman
At
an Army base in the desert, Doctor Bruce Banner is readying
the first test of his invention, the G-Bomb. General "Thunderbolt" Ross
wants to know why Banner keeps delaying the test. His daughter Betty
tries to calm him down, with little success. Banner tells Ross that the
final countdown has begun. His assistant, Igor, demands that Banner
share his work so that someone may check his calculations. Banner takes a
last look at the bomb with binoculars when he notices a
teenage boy in a car in the test area. Banner tells Igor to halt the countdown, and
hurries
after the boy in a jeep. But little does everyone know that Igor is
actually a Russian spy and continues the countdown hoping Banner will
die in the explosion. Bruce gets the teenager into a trench, but before
he
can jump in himself, the G-Bomb explodes! Gamma rays saturate Banner's
body, and his life will forever change..
Hours
later, Banner regains his senses. The boy, Rick Jones, brought him back
to the base. When night
falls, Jones turns on a "radio," which actually is a Geiger counter. The clicking
increases as Banner transforms into a huge grey hulking brute that shoves Jones aside. The brutish humanoid pushes through
the wall, wrecks a jeep full of soldiers when it hits him, and wanders
off into the night. Jones makes haste and follows.
The
thing that was once Banner, with Jones trailing him, sneaks
past the soldiers trying to find him and finds Banner's cabin. Inside
Igor is trying to find Banner's notes of the secret to the G-Bomb. When
he sees the massive brute looming before him, he shoots at it without
any
effect. The Hulk takes away his gun and crushes it with one hand. He
then picks up Igor and slams across a table. Jones notices a folder
taped to the bottom of a large beaker, labeled "Top Secret: Report on
Gamma Ray Bomb," and takes it. The Hulk picks up a photo of Banner and
says, "I -- I know that face!! But it is weak -- soft!! I hate it! Take
it
away!" Jones reminds him that he is Banner. The Hulk briefly
remembers what happened, then says, "I don't need you! I don't need
anybody! With my strength -- my power -- the world is mine!" But before the Hulk can finish off Jones, the sun sets and the man-monster changes back into Bruce Banner.
In his cell, Igor uses a transmitter overlaid on his thumbnail.
The message finds its way to the Gargoyle, who travels by submarine and
short-range missile to the desert. Banner and Jones take a jeep out into
the desert before night falls, in case he changes again. But suddenly he does
change, and the Hulk wrecks the jeep. The brute recognizes the area near Ross's
house and decides to visit Betty. At the same time, Betty decides to
take a walk. She encounters the Hulk and faints in his arms. Soon the
Gargoyle appears.
The
Gargoyle shoots the Hulk and Jones with drug-filled bullets, putting
them under his control. They follow him to a truck, whose driver also
gets shot. Ross finds Betty, who was frightened by her encounter but
says, "In spite of everything, there was something -- something sad
about him!! Almost as though he was seeking -- help!" Ross says, "If it
takes an eternity, I'll find that monster!" And so, begins the General's
implacable journey to capture the Hulk.
4.) FANTASTIC FOUR #112 (1971)
Writer: Stan Lee Artists: John Buscema and Joe Sinnott
Meanwhile, back out in Central Park, the Thing and the Hulk continue their brawl as the authorities close in with heavy artillery. These weapons hardly faze the two combatants who send the police fleeing in the ensuing chaos. As the fight brings the two into the city streets, the press continues to record events as they happen. Listening to developments at the home of Agatha Harkness in Whisper Hill, Sue begins to worry over her husband. Offering her aid; Agatha conjurers up an image of Reed from her crystal ball. Realizing that Reed is working hard at solving the current crisis, Sue decides to be by her husband's side and leaves baby Franklin in Agatha's care and flies off in a ship. Also hearing developments over the radio is Alicia Masters who decides to go into the city and find Ben and try to convince him to stop his fight. Being a blind woman among the chaos in the streets makes this a daunting task.
Thing and the Hulk's battle has taken them back into the heart of the city where the pair continue to cause untold property damage as they fight each other. Alicia manages to find the pair and begins calling out to her estranged boyfriend. While back at the Baxter Building, Reed has found a solution to their electricity problem: with Johnny channeling his flame into an energizer device, Reed has enough power to begin completing the device that will allow him to cure the Thing. However, back at the battle, Alicia is struck in the head by flying debris distracting the Thing long enough for the Hulk to land a powerful blow. Reed and Johnny soon arrive in the aftermath of the battle. As the Hulk begins to revert back to his human form of Bruce Banner, Alicia and Johnny make a horrifying discovery -- the Thing is apparently dead!
3.) JOURNEY INTO MYSTERY #112 (1965)
Writer: Stan Lee Artists: Jack Kirby and Chic Stone
While flying through the city, Thor happens upon two groups of teenagers arguing over the who is the stronger between Thor and the Hulk.
Interested in the debate, Thor lands to see what all the commotion is
about, and they ask him if he knows who is the stronger of the
two. Thor recounts for them his last encounter with the Hulk that had taken place in Avengers #3. He goes into a part of the story that was not previously recorded.
In Thor's recounting of the events, he and the Hulk are separated
from the Avengers and the Sub-Mariner during their battle. Realizing the Hulk's
great strength, Thor asks Odin to lift the enchantment that forces Thor to
change to Donald Blake after being kept from his hammer for sixty
seconds so he can pit his strength against the green-skinned brute. Odin grants Thor's wish, giving him five minutes free
of the enchantment that binds his power to his hammer. However, it makes
Thor's hammer vulnerable to damage and able to be picked up by anybody,
which causes the Hulk to attempt to destroy it, keeping Thor on the defensive
during the battle.
During
their savage slugfest the integrity of the cavern the two
Super-Heavyweights
are fighting in caves, covering the Hulk with tons of rock. About
that
time the five minutes Odin granted Thor are up. Thor smashes through the
rubble to continue his fight but discovers that the Hulk had already
escaped. Thor attempts to follow the brute but cannot find a trace
of him. The test to see who is the strongest is inconclusive. Thor
rejoins his comrades and battles Namor until the Hulk arrives again to
resume their fight (and the story continues into the final moments of Avengers #3).
2.) FANTASTIC FOUR #12 (1963)
Writer: Stan Lee Artists: Jack Kirby and Dick Ayers
The Thing and Alicia Masters are exiting a symphony auditorium at the end of
their date when they notice soldiers marching on the streets. Someone
panics as they see through the Thing's disguise and calls him a monster.
The soldiers attack Ben -- mistaking him for the Hulk. After they
subdue Ben, they realize the error and apologize for the unprovoked
attack. Alicia calms Ben down and he returns to the Baxter Building.
There he complains about being mistaken for the Hulk to his
teammates. The Fantastic Four are soon visited by General "Thunderbolt"
Ross, who has come to ask for the Fantastic Four's assistance in
destroying the Hulk.
Ross then shows them footage of the Hulk as well as the recent
destruction of various military test weapons that are being designed by
Dr. Bruce Banner. Ross tells them that the military believes that the
Hulk is responsible for the destruction of these devices. After coming
up with various theories on how to take down the Hulk, the Fantastic
Four bring Ross to their newest model of the Fantasti-Car that was
designed by Johnny Storm, and they all fly to New Mexico to Gamma Base. When
they arrive, they find that the military's prototype anti-gravity missile
has been wrecked. Ross introduces Reed Richards to Bruce Banner, his
young assistant Rick Jones, and another scientist named Karl Kort. When
Ross tells them that the Fantastic Four will be going after the Hulk,
Banner tells his employer that he believes that someone is framing the
Hulk for these acts of sabotage. Kort then excuses himself from the
meeting and on his way out bumps into the other members of the
Fantastic Four who have been waiting impatiently outside. Kort is
frightened by the Thing and flees the hallway, dropping his wallet as he
goes, and it's picked up by the Human Torch.
Having become fed up with waiting, the Thing comes bursting into the
office with the other members of the Fantastic Four, angering Ross,
especially when the Thing picks up an entire bookshelf of phone books
and rips them in half. Reed calms down the General and Banner goes on
to explain that he believes that someone, whom he and Rick have dubbed "The Wrecker," is really responsible for the acts of sabotage. The
Torch then introduces himself to Rick, showing off his flame powers
before handing over Karl Kort's wallet asking Jones to return it to him.
Banner and Jones then leave and go to their secret cave hideout. There
Bruce shows Rick a scale model of his next invention; a device that could
erect a force field around a city in order to protect it from a nuclear
attack. Bruce vows to stop the Wrecker as the Hulk before he can
destroy his invention. Meanwhile, Rick goes to return the wallet to Karl
Kort and seeing a card sticking out of it, he is shocked to find that
it's a membership card to a communist organization. Kort, having
sneaked up behind the boy gets the drop on Rick and takes him prisoner
at gunpoint.
The Wrecker meanwhile takes Rick through a series of underground passages to an abandoned frontier town. Also searching the various tunnels are the Hulk and the Fantastic Four. When the Hulk crosses paths with the FF, a fight soon breaks out between him and the Thing. Unable to fight in such closed quarters the Hulk forces his way to the surface where the fight rages on in the old ghost town. The Hulk manages to incapacitate Mr. Fantastic and the Human Torch, but as he struggles with the Thing again a beam is fired through the ground below and strikes the Hulk from behind, knocking him out. Seeing this, the Invisible Girl points it out to the Thing who digs through the Earth to find its source. Below he finds a robot, confirming the existence of the Wrecker. Ben easily demolishes the robot and then breaks through a metal door. On the other side he finds Kort holding Rick prisoner. Before Kort can blast Ben with a atomic-powered weapon, Sue invisibly sneaks around Kort and knocks the gun out of his hand. The Thing then apprehends Kort and frees Rick. They return to the surface to reveal the truth to Reed and Johnny and while they are comparing notes, the Hulk recovers as well and bounds away for his secret lab to change back into Bruce Banner.
Later Bruce is waiting at the military base when the FF arrive, and he thanks Reed Richards for his help. The FF is then celebrated by the military before they head back home for New York. As they fly away, the Hulk (whom Bruce has transformed into again) watches from the distance as they depart. The Hulk has a strong feeling that they will meet again someday.
1.) FANTASTIC FOUR #25 - 26 (1964)
Writer: Stan Lee Artists: Jack Kirby and George Roussos
Reed Richards has once again created a formula he believes will cure
the Thing. However, this time Ben is uninterested in a cure because his
girlfriend Alicia Masters loves him the way he is. When Reed presses the
issue, the Thing destroys the beaker containing the cure, much to
Reed's frustration. When Alicia later arrives, she informs the group of
the latest news about the Avengers manhunt for the Hulk.
Meanwhile, in New Mexico, the Hulk flees from the
authorities. With a cordon surrounding the area, the Hulk forces some
truck drivers to stow him in the back of their truck. As he sleeps, the
Hulk reverts back to Bruce Banner and when the truck is later stopped at
a check point, Banner flees into the desert. Banner seeks shelter in a
nearby cave, hoping that he can find Rick Jones and get
some help. Unfortunately, the stress causes him to transform into the
Hulk once again who then seeks shelter in his cave. Elsewhere the
Avengers and Rick Jones search nearby wreckage for clues to
the Hulk's whereabouts. As their search turns up nothing, the Hulk
learns that the Avengers have replaced him with Captain America and
decides to get revenge against them. The Hulk then leaps off to New York
City to face them.
Back at the Baxter Building, Reed suddenly collapses while
working on an experiment and Johnny Storm is sent out in the Fantasti-Car to
fetch a doctor. Along the way he spots the Hulk trashing the streets and turns into the Human Torch to face the Green Goliath. The Torch is no match for
the Hulk and is quickly defeated and his flame smothered. As the news
of the Hulk reaches the Baxter Building, Reed tells Ben and Sue to deal
with the Hulk instead of him, leaving them to worry that his sudden
illness is grim, and their leader might die. When they arrive at the
scene Johnny is still fighting a losing battle against the Hulk. Sue
protects her brother with her invisible force field, but soon passes out
from the strain. That's when the Thing steps in for a rematch against
the Hulk (they first locked horns in Fantastic Four #12). As the Thing and the Hulk battle it out throughout the city, Reed
tries to leave his bed to help the team but finds that his malady has
made him too weak to do anything. Ben and the Hulk's battle take them
out into the Hudson River and onto the George Washington Bridge. The
ongoing battle exhausting him, Ben tries to get a reprieve by trying to
bind the Hulk in one of the bridge's tension cables.
Meanwhile, Sue returns to the Baxter Building with a doctor and the prognosis is grim: Reed has been afflicted by a unknown
virus, likely from his own experiments and all the doctor can recommend
is bed rest. Meanwhile, the Hulk breaks free from the cables and unmercifully pounds on the Thing thus defeating him and moves
on, seeking to get his revenge against the Avengers. Left behind, the
Thing picks himself up and follows after the Hulk, intent on stopping the Green Giant even if it kills him.
Following
his defeat while battling the Hulk, the Thing manages to
pull himself back up and start the fight anew as an army of soldiers and
reporters watch on. Watching this on television is Mr. Fantastic
who tries to go into action but is still too weak from his illness to do
anything. Out of concern Sue calls for an ambulance and hands over the
formulas that Reed had been working
on so the doctors can try to cure him. Also at the hospital is the
Human Torch who has been patched up following his failed battle with the
Hulk. Realizing that the Hulk is still out on a rampage, Johnny flames
on and heads back out into battle despite the fact that his is injured.
Johnny catches up to the Thing and the Hulk who are still brawling
and tries to lend Ben a hand. When the Hulk swats the two away, the
soldiers step in by firing a mortar shell at the Hulk, but he easily
deflects the shot. Johnny is winded after the conflict and Ben tells him
to stay put while he continues on after the Hulk. As he plods along,
Ben shrugs off an attempt by reports to interview
him. Meanwhile, the Hulk has retreated into the subway where he hijacks
a subway train to ride it toward Avengers Mansion. When he
arrives there, he finds that the Avengers are already home waiting for
him, and a battle breaks out. The Hulk steamrolls into the heroes and
grabs Rick Jones and
then flees the scene, unaware that the Wasp is following him.
Back at the hospital, the doctors have succeeded in formulating
an antidote that instantly cures Reed. The Fantastic Four
then regroup and head out to try and stop the Hulk once and for all.
They spot
the brute on the street as he's stunned by the Wasp who is using her
Wasp's sting inside his ear. Distracted, the Hulk is ambushed by the
Avengers and the Fantastic Four at the same time. However, the two groups
are uncoordinated and get
into each other's way. During the confusion, the Hulk manages to leap
onto a nearby construction site. After a brief squabble about who is
best suited for stopping the Hulk, both the Avengers and the Fantastic
Four agree to work
together. This time the two teams attack the
Hulk and a battle royal for the ages breaks out. In the ensuing chaos,
Rick manages to toss a gamma-ray treated
capsule into the Hulk's mouth, this triggers the transformation back into the Hulk's alter-ego. As the Hulk falls into the Hudson River trying to get rid of the
clusters of ants all over his body, it's Bruce Banner who
surfaces from the water and is swept away by the current.
HONORABLE MENTION
THE INCREDIBLE HULK ANNUAL (2001)
Writer: James Kochalka Artist: James Kochalka
NUFF SAID.
"Within each of us, ofttimes, there dwells a mighty raging fury."
Let me hear what you guys think!!
Check out other Hero Envy "Top" Lists:
Top 50 Greatest Marvel Slugfests of All Time (1961-1999)
Top 10 Greatest Captain America Moments
http://hero-envy.blogspot.com/2015/06/the-top-10-greatest-captain-america.html
Top 10 Most Evil Villains in Comics
Top 10 Superhero Capes of All Time
Top 5 Weirdest, Wackiest, Worst and Downright Despicable Cartoons Ever Made
http://hero-envy.blogspot.com/2013/08/the-top-5-weirdest-wackiest-and.html
Top 10 Most Badass Heroes Ever
http://hero-envy.blogspot.com/2014/06/the-top-10-most-badass-heroes-ever.html
Doctor Who: The Top 5 Greatest Doctors Ever
http://hero-envy.blogspot.com/2014/12/doctor-who-top-5-greatest-doctors-ever.html
My Top 30 Greatest Super Heroes of All Time
http://hero-envy.blogspot.com/2015/01/my-top-30-greatest-super-heroes-of-all.html
My Top 30 Greatest Super Heroes of All Time
http://hero-envy.blogspot.com/2015/01/my-top-30-greatest-super-heroes-of-all.html
The Top 20 Greatest Stretch Figures of All Time
http://hero-envy.blogspot.com/2017/06/the-top-20-stretch-figures-of-all-time.html
The Top 5 Greatest Feats of Strength of The Incredible Hulk
http://hero-envy.blogspot.com/2019/01/the-top-5-greatest-feats-of-strength-of.html
Very chuffed and honored to make the list! --DAK
ReplyDeleteIt's an honor to have you my friend.
DeleteYou did a very good job with your write up and yes there is a lot of truth to it. I never forgave Mantlo for what he did to The Real Hulk and you are right it has never been the same since. I always say Sal's Hulk is Hulk prior to 272. I was even more outraged with that trash Mantlo wrote starting at 301 which was the first time I recall a mute Hulk and I hated a mute Hulk every time I saw it. I do not think all of the 90s were bad and I did enjoy some of PAD's early Merged Hulk work mainly because of Keown and Frank. I lost all respect for PAD after he did The Savage Banner and that led up to all these constant changes that pretty much diluted the character beyond repair. I agree that The Hulk prior to 272 was The Real Hulk and I blame his demise on that Turtle in issue 271. I also blame Axel Alonso for many of these horrible runs starting with Jones. I have to disagree about issues 24 and 25 with JR Jr as the artist being on the list. I thought his work was really poor and him drawing The Abomination without his blue shorts was so tacky and stupid. The biggest problem with The Hulk is there are way too many different Hulks and too many changes.
ReplyDeleteI would be happy to have the "Merged bunny slipper wearing Hulk with tank top and big guns" instead of this Phoney Chulk we have now. As far as writers the "worst of the worst" honor goes to Jones followed Waid in close second. Waid did such an atrocious job trying to write the Savage Hulk it was difficult to read.
ReplyDeleteNo offense meant, but the writer of this article reminds me of one of those dudes you see checking out some good stuff at a comic shop, and when you talk to them, it's clear that they're on something completely different, and you just have to back away slowly.
ReplyDeleteBut yes, I did grow up a Hulk fan, do miss Bruce Banner as Hulk, thought Bill Mantlo did generally my favorite stories, and find that the DD issue mentioned is quite underrated.
LOL. You don't have to be that scared of me. Just a little bit is fine though and understandable.
DeleteI liked Merged Hulk. He's probably better left in the past, but PAD's writing made it work.
ReplyDeleteThe notion that Hulk's been constantly weakened for the past decades is also laughable -didn't he nearly destroy Earth on a whim a few events ago? And thanks to the Wolverine squared healing factor he comes back from absolutely anything you throw at him.
Whether the Hulk smashes or not generally dictates the quality of the story.
ReplyDeleteTotally agree hahaha.
DeleteWhen the Hulk first appeared, he wasn't depicted as feeble minded as he often appears in television and film, just angry and brutish. It's a character that doesn't really seem to have a consistent persona. Sometimes dumb, sometimes brilliant. Sometimes violent and cruel, other times with a childlike innocence. (Worldbreaker Hulk, Mr. Fix it, Doc Green, etc.) Not sure if you can easily differentiate between Hulk stories and good stories about the Hulk because of this.
ReplyDeleteAnyways, I liked Planet Hulk and Hulk: Grey. I also enjoyed the Hulk vs. Avengers series. (But that one was more due to nostalgia and seeing the changing Avengers Line ups battling various versions of the Hulk throughout the decades.) The first two are probably Hulk stories and the last one feels more like a story about the Hulk.
People who find the classic savage hulk "boring" should realize that they don't speak for everyone. As someone who competes in combat sports and works out regularly, I find his epic battles entertaining and inspiring. If you want an intelligent, charismatic, character there are plenty others to choose from that better fit that mold
ReplyDeleteI like these stories but I also thought Plant Hulk was good. I also enjoyed WW Hulk when he busted everybody up. There's nothing wrong with Hulk smash. When you are the heavyweight champ you need to defend your title every now and then. And the grey Mr Fixit weaker Hulk was good. He lost to the thing and then had to use tactics to beat him in the rematch. The only time the Thing won the title and he lost it right back in the next issue. Quite frankly Amadeus has been quite the boring Hulk IMO. I'm still waiting for him to rip someones head off to let everyone know he's the new champ.
ReplyDeleteThe James Kochalka story from the Hulk annual is wonderful.
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ReplyDeleteI thought "reasonable" Hulk in the Hickman and Avengers Assembled era was a change from what the Hulk should be, but who knows what the Hulk should be.
I like Captain America and Hulk team ups, but, if writers were to ever get back to the essential Hulk, he is divorced from Bruce Banner. I don't care if there is a psychological reason for who Banner is and who Hulk is, the Hulk is this other creature. Hulk is sensitive, able to show compassion, but, he will destroy any threat that comes after him. Think. Hulk could have killed General Ross a thousand times over, but he didn't. There is something in there, and maybe it's because Gen.Ross was Betty Ross's father. But he could certainly have got that old battle axe off his back very early on. There are stories there we haven't even looked to find about what it is Hulk is doing. Hulk bellows how he just wants to be left alone. He goes around destroying anything that gets in his way. But he doesn't totally go berserk and destroy the earth like he could have after WORLD WAR HULK. He stood there timidly to let Stark drain off his whole power. There are Stories there just waiting to be told.
I think the Hulk/General Ross dynamic imitates the Spidey/J Jonah Jameson dynamic, where there is some patriarchal dislike of anyone who has dealings with their children. In these cases, Hulks affection for Betty, and, Spidey rescuing John Jameson. The trauma Betty feels when meeting the Hulk is the exact opposite of the affection Betty has for Banner, so The General has to eradicate Hulk. (The positive affection Jonah has for Spiderman as a a super hero, is completely reversed when Spidey rescues his son, thus taking away Johns status as the hero for being rescued). Ross and Jonah have obsessions against the object of their vendettas.
Very good article. Well researched.
ReplyDeleteI think Tyrannus is th Hulk's greatest foe, besides Ross.
I much prefer the savage Hulk. I wish he would come back.
I agree with this article. Good job.
ReplyDeletePlant Hulk was good. I also enjoyed WW Hulk when he busted everybody up. There's nothing wrong with Hulk smash. When you are the heavyweight champ you need to defend your title every now and then. And the grey Mr Fixit weaker Hulk was good. He lost to the thing and then had to use tactics to beat him in the rematch. The only time the Thing won the title and he lost it right back in the next issue. Quite frankly Amadeus has been quite the boring Hulk IMO. I'm still waiting for him to rip someones head off to let everyone know he's the new champ.
ReplyDeleteAfter reading the Hulks origin story, a good Hulk story would examine two things:
ReplyDelete1. Banners non-violence stance, and the Hulks personality which is nothing but violence.
2. The Military's non-stop trying to kill the Hulk.
Pak wrote a Warlock that I cannot forgive. Bruce Jones' Hulk was out when the first movie was out and could drive the most ardent fan away. I agree with the writer and a bunch of those issues he shows are some of my best Hulk memories. I enjoyed Peter David' run but mostly issues drawn by Dale Keown.
ReplyDeleteLaughed pretty hard at this...
"Everyone at the party thought he was cheap for getting me just a comic book (because he was very cheap)"
I've sold 85% of my collection. The one thing I did keep was my complete Hulk run. I'm only missing six Silver Age appearances. Otherwise, it's everything until 2000.
ReplyDeleteThis list is pretty damn accurate to my take. FF 25/26 is not just the best Hulk, but apart of the defining issues of Marvelmania. Hulk Annual 8 and DD 163 are fantastic stand-alone issues. Mystery 112, FF 112, the 70's Hulk you picked...all great choices.
Ones I would add...
...Hulk 261 Perfect Absorbing Man story
...Parts of the Tales to Astonish runs and the Byrne/post-Byrne/McFarlane era.
Completely right about 272. Mantlo's idea should have been a odd divergent, but it was the groundwork David needed to not write the Hulk. I've said before if you took David's Hulk run and subbed Superman, Shazam or Thor, it would be the defining storyarc of that character. But for Hulk it's not close.
Definitely, and I enjoyed it as some amazing storytelling but was far and away from THE Incredible Hulk. He even looked like Clark Kent in some of the Liam Sharp drawn issues.
DeleteIt's funny, I recently had a conversation with a friend not too unlike this, where I observed that something has changed with Batman. I was a huge Batman fan as a kid, but something is off today. I can't place what that "something" is exactly, but there are a few things that might contribute to it. He's become much more militarized for one. He's also become a total brute. The Batman I remember was more of a modern swashbuckling, James Bond-esque superhero who functioned as a detective in mystery stories and crime capers. Today Batman is far too grim, sometimes even depicted as psychotic, and it seems every Batman story has to be some city-saving epic. Every time the Joker shows up it's this giant, epic storyline that's supposed to make you go "is this the final battle!?" And it never is. Gotham has been destroyed several times now it seems. There's also a wide number of allies now. Today there's Robin, Nightwing, Red Robin, Red Hood, Batgirl, Batwoman, Spoiler, and a former Batgirl has taken on the new mantle of Orphan. Yes, Orphan. And on top of all of them, Clayface is working alongside Batman now, and there's yet another new sidekick coming up soon I've heard.
ReplyDeleteSorry to hijack the thread with a Batman rant. The point I'm getting at is, it seems a lot of these characters have changed. It's particularly distressing for us Superman fans, though.
All that said, I have sensed a change in the Hulk as well. Every time I think of giving the current Hulk comics a chance, I find that it's just...not what I look for in a Hulk story.
"My little hands could instantly feel the energy that radiated from this strange paper that had the Hulk on it. A comic book. It was like a colorful love letter from heaven that totally represented how my young mind saw the world. My addiction to this strange folded 4-color action-packed newspaper strip had begun!"
ReplyDeleteBest description of a comic-book I've ever read.
Thank you.
DeleteWhen I write about comics, I'm writing about love.
Yeah, regardless of how I enjoy the later Hulk persona changes, the writer does have a point here and there.
ReplyDeleteYeah, although Stan took a while to really adjust get the Hulk to work (about half way through "Tales to Astonish" I think). Then again, the same can be argued about the Thing, who went a bit of a ways from the bitter "Bah! Doors are too small!" monster of the first issue to the "Ever-loving blue-eyed" "It's clobbering time!" guy these days (although occasionally the old bitterness pops up).
There's been a few other characters in fiction with differing personas-The Doctor from Doctor Who of course is an interesting example-but he's a far different character than the Hulk of course, and his abilities to change were pretty much cemented on early on in the show's run (and honestly he's never really changed in intelligence or tone that much.) Although a lot of the old fans don't like the fact that the Doctor-at least in his Paul Mcgann, David Tennant and Matt Smith versions-has become a somewhat more 'romantic' hero, and hence lost some of his uniqueness (apart from a moment or hint or two in the old series, there was not that many hints of the Doctor being romantically involved with his companions or female guest-stars).
I was a huge fan of the Steve Ditko Hulk stories in Tales To Astonish -- all that stuff about the Leader and his Humanoids. These were also adapted into those 1966 Hulk cartoons, which were so bad they were great!
ReplyDeleteThis was an awesome telling of the current state of comics and the complex history of the incredible Hulk. I may not agree what you think of Peter David but I do agree with the disaster that that the Hulk has been. He needs to go back to his roots and become the strongest one there is again! Sadly, that was a different time so the real Hulk will never return.
ReplyDeleteMy favorite version of the Hulk is the classic Green Hulk as drawn by John Buscema. FF #112 is also my favorite Superhero comic.
ReplyDeleteWhen I trimmed my comic collection down to my favorites I stopped collecting most Superhero books in the late '70s. I ended my Incredible Hulk run at #200. Sure, there are lots of great Hulk comics that came later, but after being burdened with 13K comics for years I felt the need to make some room and cut back, so #200 is my stepping off point for many of my favorite Superhero titles- Avengers, Fantastic Four, Incredible Hulk, and Captain America. The other Superhero titles in my collection end in the late '70s as well. I just don't have much interest in most Superhero comics from the '80s onward. With all of the reboots and re-imaginings, Crisis On Infinite Earths, Secret Wars, New Universe, Ultimate this or that, I just got burned out on that newer stuff. I got so tired of all the Marvel mutant hoopla and over-saturation of Spider-Man that I don't even collect anything Spider-Man or X-Men/New Mutants/X-Factor/X-Force/mutant whatever anymore. The only X-Men issues in my collection are the Neal Adams issues, and that's for Adams not the X-Men. The only Spider-Man issues I kept are issues like #101 and #102 (1st app. and origin of Morbius). My collection focuses on Monsters so I kept certain Superhero comics with Monster character appearances like issues of Marvel Team-Up and Marvel Two-In-One with appearances by characters like Man-Thing, Ghost Rider, Werewolf By Night, and Dracula. I also like Sword & Sorcery so I kept my Conans, Kulls, etc. and Warlord up to #71 (last Mike Grell written issue). My Monster Mags (around 3K) are more of a focus than my comics. I also like Savage Sword Of Conan which is arguably a Monster Mag, and Deadly Hands Of Kung Fu.
My favorite Incredible Hulk issues are drawn by Jack Kirby, Herb Trimpe, and Sal Buscema. They're the ones I grew up reading in the '60s and '70s (Tales To Astonish and Incredible Hulk). I lost my taste for later versions of the Hulk like Peter David's Gray Hulk. I went back to what I enjoyed as a kid, because those are the comics that mean the most to me.
We all collect differently and I respect everyone's right to collect as they choose. This is where I am after 42 years of collecting comics (and 54 years of reading them).
I’m with you! I love comics from the 60’s through the 80’s. The Golden Age stuff is OK, the 90’s stuff is terrible (though DC had some good stuff and The Silver Surfer was pretty good) and the 2000’s stuff is an improvement on the 90’s stuff, but I just couldn’t get into it like the Bronze Age stuff or even the Silver Age stuff.
ReplyDeleteI, too love the smell of old comics, and the ads, and the lettercols….
And yes, reading comics as a child probably helped shape my morals. I also agree with you that it’s silly to try to make comics too “realistic”. Comics, by their very nature, are always going to be unrealistic and require suspension of disbelieve. It’s escapist fantasy, people!
Oh yeah, Super-Friends and Spider-man 1967! Don’t forget Spider-Man on The Electric Company. That was the reason I watched that show!
The Hulk was never my favorite (or close to it) back in the day, but I have definitely gained an appreciation for ol’ jade jaws over the years.
Yes, I have actually read Hulk #272. I don’t remember much about it, though I know I liked it fairly well, though I didn’t think it was one of Sal’s better jobs.
So, if #272 was the last issue with the “real” Hulk, what was the first issue with him? Since I know he started out not quite savage or childlike.
I’ve read 6 Peter David Hulk issues and liked just 2 of them, though that’s not enough of a sample size for me to call him a good or a bad Hulk writer.
Hulk was beaten up by Doc Ock?? No way!! Embarrassing. Wow, it does sound like there have been some bad Hulk stories over the years. I’m glad I don’t read newer comics. I especially hate alternate reality incarnations, like what has plagued the X-Men for the past 30-odd years.
A Wolverine-Hulk? Brilliant!! And of course Bruce Banner will come back. Death means nothing in comics anymore.
Out of comics and never returning…that’s me too, except for returning to the Silver and Bronze Age again and again.
Anyway, nice list. I am not a Hulk expert and haven’t read all of his comics, but in addition to some of the ones listed here, I also enjoyed The Incredible Hulk #181, The Incredible Hulk #188, The Incredible Hulk #207-209, The Incredible Hulk #258, and The Incredible Hulk #265, to name a few.
You wrote a book, my man. Your selection represents almost all the classic writers and artists. I'd lobby for a Marie Severin story-- probably the Silver Surfer guest shot-- and an Archie Goodwin script-- "Destination: Nightmare" (# 155), as well as the Thomas/Trimpe/Severin "Heaven is a Very Small Place" (# 147). Thanks for the long but engaging look back.
ReplyDeleteOk not every 90s comic was bad mate. There were actually some good stuff too like Starman. Also have you considered that each of the writers you complain about just wanted to do something new while building upon what came before? Muvh better than going back to the status quo every time. I bet you hate the current Al Eling run right now
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