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{{Short description|Marvel Comics Character}} | |||
{{redirect|Incredible Hulk}} | |||
{{Redirect-multi|3|Bruce Banner|The Hulk|The Incredible Hulk|the Marvel Cinematic Universe character|Bruce Banner (Marvel Cinematic Universe)|other uses|Hulk (disambiguation)|and|The Incredible Hulk (disambiguation)}} | |||
{{Superherobox| <!--Part of Misplaced Pages:WikiProject Comics--> | |||
{{pp|small=yes}} | |||
|image=] | |||
{{Use mdy dates|date=November 2016}} | |||
|caption=Variant cover art for ''The Incredible Hulk'' vol. 3 #92.<br />Art by ]. | |||
{{Use American English|date=November 2016}} | |||
|character_name=Hulk | |||
{{Infobox comics character<!--Misplaced Pages:WikiProject Comics--> | |||
|publisher=] | |||
| character_name = Bruce Banner<br />{{small|Hulk}} | |||
|debut=''The Incredible Hulk'' vol. 1, #1 (May 1962) | |||
| image = Hulk (circa 2019).png | |||
|creators=]<br>] | |||
| caption = Cover art for the comic book issue '']'' #20 (July 2019)<br>Art by ] and ] | |||
|real_name = Robert Bruce Banner | |||
| converted = y | |||
|species = <!-- optional --> | |||
| publisher = ] | |||
|homeworld = <!-- optional --> | |||
| debut = '']'' #1 (May 1962) | |||
|alliances = Warbound<br>]<br>]<br>]<br>]<br>]<br>] | |||
| creators = ]<br>] | |||
|aliases = Joe Fixit, The Green Scar, The Sakaar'son, ] | |||
| full name = {{ubl|Robert Bruce Banner<ref name=CBR>{{cite web|url= http://goodcomics.comicbookresources.com/2005/11/03/comic-book-urban-legends-revealed-23/|title= Comic Book Urban Legends Revealed #23|first= Brian|last= Cronin|date= November 3, 2005|website = ]|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20150427015712/http://goodcomics.comicbookresources.com/2005/11/03/comic-book-urban-legends-revealed-23|archive-date= April 27, 2015|url-status= dead|quote= Lee began referring (for more than a couple of months) to the Incredible Hulk's alter ego as 'Bob Banner' rather than the 'Bruce Banner' that he was originally named. Responding to criticism of the goof, Stan Lee, in issue #28 of the ''Fantastic Four'', laid out how he was going to handle the situation, 'There's only one thing to do-we're not going to take the cowardly way out. From now on his name is Robert Bruce Banner-so we can't go wrong no matter WHAT we call him!'}}</ref>}} | |||
|supports=<!--optional--> | |||
| species= Human mutate{{efn|name=mutate|In Marvel comics, the term "mutate" is used as a noun to designate characters that received superpowers from an external source, as opposed to Marvel's ].}} | |||
|powers =Superhuman strength, speed, stamina, and durability<br>Regenerative ]<br>Ability to see astral forms<br>Gamma radiation absorption<br>Transformation<br>Resistance to mind control<br>Genius level intellect in certain incarnations | |||
| alliances = ]<br>]<br>]<br>]<ref>{{cite comic|writer= ]|penciller= ]|inker= ]|story= Big Trouble on Little Earth!|title= Fantastic Four|issue= 347|date= December 1990}}</ref><br>]<br>]<br>]<br>] | |||
| partners = ] | |||
| aliases = Joe Fixit, World-Breaker, ], Jade Giant, Jade Jaws,<ref>''World War Hulk: Gamma Files'' #1</ref> Doc Green, ], ] | |||
| powers = '''As Bruce Banner/Doc Green:''' | |||
*] level intellect | |||
*Proficient scientist and engineer | |||
'''As Hulk/Joe Fixit:''' | |||
*Superhuman strength, speed, stamina, and durability | |||
*Anger empowerment | |||
*Regeneration | |||
*Shockwave generation | |||
*Gamma ray emission and manipulation | |||
| cat = super | |||
| subcat = Marvel Comics | |||
| sortkey = Hulk (comics) | |||
}} | }} | ||
The '''Hulk''' is a ] appearing in ] published by ]. Created by writer ] and artist ], the character first appeared in the debut issue of '']'' (May 1962). In his comic book appearances, the character, who has ] (DID), is primarily represented by the alter ego Hulk, a green-skinned, hulking, and muscular humanoid possessing a limitless degree of physical strength, and the alter ego '''Dr. Robert Bruce Banner''', a physically weak, socially withdrawn, and emotionally reserved physicist, both of whom typically resent each other. | |||
Following his accidental exposure to ]s while saving the life of ] during the detonation of an experimental bomb, Banner is physically transformed into the Hulk when subjected to emotional stress, at or against his will. This transformation often leads to destructive rampages and conflicts that complicate Banner's civilian life. The Hulk's level of strength is usually conveyed proportionate to his anger level. Commonly portrayed as a raging savage, the Hulk has been represented with other alter egos, from a mindless, destructive force (''']''') to a brilliant warrior ('''World-Breaker'''), a ] protector (the ''']'''), a genius scientist in his own right ('''Doc Green'''), and a ] ('''Joe Fixit'''). | |||
'''The Hulk''' ('''Dr. Robert Bruce Banner'''), sometimes referred to as '''The Incredible Hulk''', is a ], a ] appearing in the {{Marvel Universe}}. Created by ] and ], the Hulk first appeared in ''Incredible Hulk'' # 1 (] ]). He has since become one of Marvel Comics' most recognized superhero characters. | |||
Despite Hulk and Banner's desire for solitude, the character has a large supporting cast. This includes Banner's love interest ], his best friend, ], his cousin ], and therapist and ally ]. In addition, the Hulk alter ego has many key supporting characters, like his co-founders of the superhero team the ], his queen ], fellow warriors ] and ], and sons ] and ]. However, his uncontrollable power has brought him into conflict with his fellow heroes and others. Despite this, he tries his best to do what's right while battling villains such as the ], the ], the ], and more. | |||
After ] Dr. Bruce Banner was caught in the blast of a gamma bomb he created, he was transformed into the Hulk, a raging monstrosity. The character, both as Banner and the Hulk, is frequently pursued by the police or the armed forces, often as a result of the destruction he causes. While the coloration of the character's skin varies during the course of its publication history, the Hulk is most often depicted as green. | |||
Lee stated that the Hulk's creation was inspired by a combination of '']'' and '']''.<ref name="HulkTIG">{{Cite book | last=DeFalco | first=Tom | title=The Hulk: The Incredible Guide | publisher=] | date=2003 | location=London, United Kingdom | page=200 | isbn=978-0-7894-9260-9 | url=https://archive.org/details/hulkincrediblegu0000defa | url-access=registration }}</ref> Although the Hulk's coloration has varied throughout the character's publication history, the usual color is green. | |||
He is featured in a number of ], a ] directed by ], and a long-running ] with spin-off ] starring ] as Banner and ] as the Hulk. | |||
One of the most iconic characters in popular culture,<ref name="HulkIconic"/><ref name="HulkIconic2"/> the character has appeared on a variety of merchandise, such as clothing and collectable items, inspired real-world structures (such as theme park attractions), and been referenced in several media. Banner and the Hulk have been adapted into live-action, animated, and video game incarnations. The character was first played in live-action by ] and ] in the 1978 television series '']'' and its subsequent television films '']'' (1988), '']'' (1989), and '']'' (1990). In the film, the character was played by ] in '']'' (2003). In the ] (MCU), ] was first portrayed by ] in the film '']'' (2008) and then by ] in later appearances in the franchise. | |||
==Publication history== | ==Publication history== | ||
{{Further|List of Hulk titles}} | |||
In the Hulk's debut appearance in ''The Incredible Hulk'' #1, the Hulk was gray rather than his longtime trademark green. That initial color choice was by writer and Marvel editor-in-chief Stan Lee, who wanted a color that did not suggest any particular ethnic group.<ref>'']'' #1617 (June 2006)</ref> Colorist ], however, insisted to Lee that the coloring technology at the time could not present the color gray clearly or consistently, resulting in different shades of gray, and even green, in the issue. So in issue #2 and after, Goldberg colored the Hulk's skin green.<ref>'']'' #213 (July 2003)</ref> Reprints and retellings of the Hulk's origin during the next two decades feature him with green skin from the beginning, but beginning in 1985, with issue #302, the Hulk is again shown as having been gray in flashback to an early appearance. Furthermore, in 1986, issue #318 states definitively that the Hulk had been gray at the time of his creation, and all subsequent reprints of the first issue have reinstated the original coloring. | |||
] and inker Reinman]] | |||
In early stories, Banner becomes the Hulk at sunset each day, but he later transforms whenever he becomes angry or panicked. Another method was shown in '']'' #12 (March 1963), featuring the Hulk's first battle with ]; Banner uses a gamma ray machine of his own design to intentionally transform into the Hulk. Many early Hulk stories involve ] trying to capture or destroy the Hulk with his ] battalion, the Hulkbusters, at his side. Ross' daughter, ], loves Banner and criticizes her father for pursuing the Hulk. General Ross' right-hand man, ], also loves Betty and is torn between pursuing the Hulk and trying to gain Betty's love in a more honorable way. Rick Jones serves as the Hulk's friend and sidekick for a time. Later, another teenager, ], also befriends the Hulk. | |||
===Concept and creation=== | |||
The original series was canceled after six issues, in part due to a distribution deal Marvel Comics then had with DC Comics that limited the number of titles that could be published every month. Shortly afterward, co-creator Jack Kirby received a letter from a college dormitory stating the Hulk had been chosen as its official mascot.{{Fact|date=March 2007}} Kirby and Lee realized their character had found an audience in college-age readers. The Hulk had proven a saleable guest-star in three issues of '']'' and an issue of '']'', and was included, however briefly, as a founding member of the superhero team the ]. | |||
The Hulk first appeared in ''The Incredible Hulk'' #1 (]d May 1962), written by writer-editor Stan Lee, ] and co-plotted by Jack Kirby,<ref>{{cite book|last = DeFalco|first = Tom|author-link = Tom DeFalco|editor1-last= Gilbert|editor1-first= Laura |chapter= 1960s|title = Marvel Chronicle A Year by Year History|publisher = ]|date= 2008|location= London, United Kingdom|page = 85|isbn =978-0756641238|quote= Based on their collaboration on ''The Fantastic Four'', Lee worked with Jack Kirby. Instead of a team that fought traditional Marvel monsters, however, Lee decided that this time he wanted to feature a monster as the hero.}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20120509-radiation-rage|title=Hulk makes a monster out of gamma rays|publisher=BBC|first= Quentin|last= Cooper|date=May 11, 2012|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20161013022820/http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20120509-radiation-rage|archive-date= October 13, 2016|url-status= live|access-date=September 22, 2016}}</ref> and ] by ]. Lee cites influence from '']''<ref name="OyVey"/> and '']'' in the Hulk's creation: | |||
{{blockquote|It was patently apparent that ] was the most popular character in ]. ... For a long time, I'd been aware of the fact that people were more likely to favor someone who was less than perfect. ... It's a safe bet that you remember ], but how easily can you name any of the heroic, handsomer, more glamorous characters in '']''? And then there's Frankenstein ... I've always had a soft spot in my heart for the Frankenstein monster. No one could ever convince me that he was the bad guy. ... He never wanted to hurt anyone; he merely groped his torturous way through a second life trying to defend himself, trying to come to terms with those who sought to destroy him. ... I decided I might as well borrow from Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde as well—our protagonist would constantly change from his normal identity to his superhuman alter ego and back again.<ref>{{cite book | author-link=Stan Lee | last=Lee | first = Stan | title = ]| publisher = ]/]|date= 1974|location= New York, New York|page= 75|isbn= 978-0-671-21863-8}}</ref>}} | |||
The Hulk starred again in his own feature in the "split book" '']'', beginning with issue #60 (Oct. 1964), following his appearance the previous issue as the antagonist for ], star of the book's other feature. These new stories were initially scripted by Lee and illustrated by the seldom-seen team of penciler ] and ] ]. Other artists later in this run included ] from #68-84 (June 1965 - Oct. 1966), either as full pencils or, more often, else layouts for other artists; ] (making his Marvel Comics debut, under the pseudonym "Scott Edwards", in #76; ] (inking Kirby, #78-84); and ] (one of his earliest Marvel assignments). "Split books" were common in the 1960s, again due to the aforementioned distribution deal. | |||
] comic logo]] | |||
This early part of the Hulk's run introduced the ], who would become the Hulk's archnemesis, and the ], a gamma being stronger than the Hulk. Additionally, in issue #77 (Mar. 1966), the Hulk's identity was rendered public knowledge. | |||
Kirby also stated the Frankenstein inspiration stating, "I did a story called "The Hulk"– a small feature, and it was quite different from the Hulk that we know. But I felt that the Hulk had possibilities, and I took this little character from the small feature and I transformed it into the Hulk that we know today. | |||
*** | |||
Of course, I was experimenting with it. I thought the Hulk might be a good-looking Frankenstein. I felt there's a Frankenstein in all of us; I’ve seen it demonstrated. And I felt that the Hulk had the element of truth in it, and anything to me with the element of truth is valid and the reader relates to that. And if you dramatize it, the reader will enjoy it."<ref>{{cite web | url=https://kirbymuseum.org/blogs/effect/2012/08/06/19867-kirby-interview/ | title=1986/7 Jack Kirby Interview | date=August 6, 2012 }}</ref> Kirby also commented upon his influences in drawing the character, and recalled the inspiration of witnessing the ] of a mother lifting a car off her trapped child.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://film.guardian.co.uk/features/featurepages/0,,999977,00.html |last=Hill |first=Dave |title=Green with anger |date=July 17, 2003 |location=London, United Kingdom |work=] |archive-url=https://archive.today/20130505014926/http://film.guardian.co.uk/features/featurepages/0,,999977,00.html |archive-date=May 5, 2013 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all |quote=one of the Hulk comic books' artists, Jack Kirby, has said he was inspired by seeing a woman rescue her child from beneath a trapped car.}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.tcj.com/jack-kirby-interview/6/ |title=Jack Kirby Interview - Part 6 |work=The Comics Journal |first=Gary |last=Groth |date=23 May 2011 |quote=KIRBY: The Hulk I created when I saw a woman lift a car. Her baby was caught under the running board of this car. The little child was playing in the gutter and he was crawling from the gutter onto the sidewalk under the running board of this car — he was playing in the gutter. His mother was horrified. She looked from the rear window of the car, and this woman in desperation lifted the rear end of the car.}} From The Comics Journal #134 (February 1990)</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://io9.gizmodo.com/the-incredible-hulk-was-inspired-by-a-woman-saving-her-1727562968 |work=Gizmodo |first=Andrew |last=Lipstak |title=The Incredible Hulk Was Inspired By A Woman Saving Her Baby |date=30 August 2015 |quote=Jack Kirby witnessed a woman lift a car to get her child out from under it. The moment helped inspire one of his most famous creations: the Incredible Hulk.}}</ref> | |||
Giant-Man's popularity in the title waned, and he departed the book after issue #69 (July 1965), replaced by ] beginning with #70 (Aug. 1965). After several years, the distribution deal with DC ceased and the Hulk took over the book, which was re-titled beginning with issue #102 (Apr. 1968). It ran under that name until March 1999, when Marvel restarted the series with a new issue #1. | |||
Lee has also compared Hulk to the ] of Jewish mythology.<ref name="OyVey"/> In ''The Science of Superheroes'', Gresh and Weinberg see the Hulk as a reaction to the Cold War<ref name=GreshWeinberg>{{Cite book|last=Gresh|first=Lois|author2=Robert Weinberg|title=The Science of Superheroes|publisher=]|date=September 29, 2003| location= Hoboken, New Jersey|isbn=978-0-471-46882-0}}{{Page needed|date=September 2010}}<!-- page=200 | page=27 Again, which is it?? --></ref> and the threat of nuclear attack, an interpretation shared by Weinstein in '']''.<ref name="OyVey"/> This interpretation corresponds with other popularized fictional media created during this time period, which took advantage of the prevailing sense among Americans that nuclear power could produce monsters and mutants.<ref name="Poole">Poole, W. Scott. ''Monsters in America: Our Historical Obsession with the Hideous and the Haunting.'' Waco, Texas: Baylor University Press, 2011. {{ISBN|978-1-60258-314-6}}.</ref> | |||
] became the writer of the series in 1987 (issue 328), beginning a run that lasted nearly 12 years. David's run altered Banner's pre-Hulk characterization and the nature of Banner and the Hulk's relationship. Originally, Banner was written as a normal but shy man whose negative emotions (the normal, repressed anger that all humans have) found expression through the Hulk; David, however, turned Banner into a victim of ] who had serious mental problems long before he became the Hulk. David expanded on earlier stories by ] and ] that established that Banner had suffered ], writing that it fostered a great deal of repressed anger within the character, which in turn triggered a latent case of DID.{{issue}} In issue #377, Doctor Leonard Samson engages the ]'s services to hypnotize Bruce Banner and force him, the Savage Hulk (Green Hulk) and Mr. Fixit (Gray Hulk) to confront Banner's past abuse at the hands of his father, Brian Banner. Upon finally facing this abuse, a new, larger and smarter Hulk emerges and completely replaces the "human" Bruce Banner and Hulk personas. This Hulk is a culmination of the three aspects of Banner. He has the vast power of the savage, green Hulk, the cunning of the gray Hulk and the intelligence of Bruce Banner. | |||
In the debut, Lee chose grey for the Hulk because he wanted a color that did not suggest any particular ethnic group.<ref name="CBG">'']'' #1617 (June 2006)</ref> Colorist ], however, had problems with the grey coloring, resulting in different shades of grey, and even green, in the issue. After seeing the first published issue, Lee chose to change the skin color to green.<ref>{{cite journal|last= Murray|first= Will|author-link= Will Murray|title= The Historic Hulk|journal= ]|issue= 312|page= 73|date= July 2003|url= https://archive.org/stream/starlog_magazine-312JPG/312#page/n72/mode/1up}}</ref> Green was used in retellings of the origin, with even reprints of the original story being recolored for the next two decades, until ''The Incredible Hulk'' vol. 2, #302 (December 1984) reintroduced the grey Hulk in flashbacks set close to the origin story. An exception is the early trade paperback, '']'', from 1974, which explains the difficulties in keeping the grey color consistent in a Stan Lee-written prologue, and reprints the origin story keeping the grey coloration. Since December 1984, reprints of the first issue have displayed the original grey coloring, with the fictional canon specifying that the Hulk's skin had initially been grey. | |||
In 1998, David followed editor ]'s suggestion to kill Betty Ross. In the introduction to the Hulk trade paperback ''Beauty and the Behemoth'' ,{{issue}} David said that his wife had recently left him, providing inspiration for the storyline. Marvel executives used Ross' death as an opportunity to push the idea of bringing back the Savage Hulk. David disagreed, leading to his and Marvel's parting ways. | |||
Lee gave the Hulk's alter ego the alliterative name "Bruce Banner" because he found he had less difficulty remembering alliterative names. Despite this, in later stories he misremembered the character's name and referred to him as "'''Bob Banner'''", an error which readers quickly picked up on.<ref>{{cite news | last = Boatz | first = Darrel L. | date = December 1988 | title = Stan Lee | work = ] | issue = 64 | page = 15 | publisher = ]}}</ref> The discrepancy was resolved by giving the character the official full name "'''Robert Bruce Banner'''."<ref name=CBR/> | |||
When David left the Hulk, Marvel hired ] as a temporary writer. Casey brought the character in the direction that Marvel had requested earlier{{Fact|date=February 2007}}, making the Hulk mute, but his short run found little critical success,{{Fact|date=February 2007}} and he ended the series. Marvel then hired ] for a second volume of the series, re-titled ''Hulk'', with ] penciling. Byrne wrote of his plans for the first year,{{Fact|date=February 2007}} but creative differences led to his departure before the first year was over. ] and ] briefly filled scripting duties in his place, and the title of the book soon returned to ''The Incredible Hulk'' with the arrival of ]. | |||
The Hulk got his name from a comic book character named ] who was a large green swamp monster.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://screenrant.com/14-things-you-didnt-know-about-the-hulk/|title=14 Things You Didn't Know About the Hulk|date=2016-06-03|website=ScreenRant|language=en-US|access-date=2019-12-15}}</ref> | |||
Jenkins wrote a story arc in which Banner and the three Hulks (Savage Hulk, Gray Hulk, and the Merged Hulk, now considered a separate personality and referred to as the Professor) are able to mentally interact with one another, each personality taking over their shared body. He also created ]{{Fact|date=February 2007}}, a ruthless military general in charge of the original gamma bomb test responsible for the Hulk's creation and planning to create similar creatures. | |||
] | |||
===Series history=== | |||
] followed as the series' writer, and his run features Banner using ] to take control of the Hulk while he is pursued by a secret conspiracy and aided by the mysterious Mr. Blue. Jones focused on a horror theme with the Hulk as a fugitive, influenced by the classic TV series. He appended his 43-issue ''Incredible Hulk'' run with the ''Hulk/Thing: Hard Knocks'' ], which Marvel published after putting the ongoing series on hiatus. | |||
The Hulk's original series was canceled with issue #6 (March 1963). Lee had written each story, with Kirby penciling the first five issues and ] penciling and inking the sixth. The character immediately guest-starred in '']'' #12<!-- "The" part of cover logo through issue #15 --> (March 1963), and months later became a founding member of the superhero team the ], appearing in the first two issues of the team's eponymous series (Sept. and Nov. 1963), and returning as an antagonist in issue #3 and as an ally in #5 (Jan.–May 1964). He then guest-starred in ''Fantastic Four'' #25–26 (April–May 1964), which revealed Banner's full name as Robert Bruce Banner, and '']'' #14 (July 1964).<ref>{{cite book|last = Manning|first = Matthew K.|editor-last= Gilbert|editor-first= Laura|chapter= 1960s|title = Spider-Man Chronicle Celebrating 50 Years of Web-Slinging|publisher = ]|date = 2012|location= London, United Kingdom|page = 26|isbn = 978-0756692360|quote= Another important character entered Spider-Man's life in ''Amazing Spider-Man'' #14. Hiding in the same cavern that Spider-Man entered during his fight with the Enforcers and the Goblin, Totally paranoic now, the Hulk attacked the web-slinger.}}</ref> | |||
] and ].]] | |||
Peter David, who had initially signed a contract for a six-issue ''Tempest Fugit'' ], returned as writer when it was decided to make the story, now only five parts, part of the ongoing series instead. David contracted to complete a year on the title. ''Tempest Fugit'' revealed that Nightmare has manipulated the Hulk for years, tormenting him in various ways for "inconveniences" that the Hulk had caused him. After a four-part tie-in to the '']'' ] and a one-issue ], David left the series once more, citing the need to do non-Hulk work for his career's sake.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.comicboards.com/hulk/view.php?trd=050718024904 | title=My leaving "Hulk" | author=Peter David | year=July 18 2005 | publisher=The Incredible Hulk Message Board | accessdate=2005-08-28 }}</ref> | |||
Around this time, co-creator Kirby received a letter from a college dormitory stating the Hulk had been chosen as its official mascot.<ref name="OyVey"/> Kirby and Lee realized their character had found an audience in college-age readers. | |||
===''Planet Hulk''=== | |||
In the 2006 storyline "Planet Hulk" by ], after the Hulk destroys much of Las Vegas, a secret group of superheroes called the ] trap the Hulk and rocket him into space to live a peaceful existence on a planet uninhabited by intelligent life. After a trajectory malfunction, the Hulk travels through a ] and crashes on the violent planet Sakaar. Weakened by his journey through the wormhole, the Hulk is sold as a slave. In a gladiatorial arena, he makes a deadly enemy when he scars the emperor's face. The Hulk overcomes great odds to become a gladiator, a rebel leader and eventually a king. | |||
Marvel Editor-in-Chief ] announced in 2006 that beginning with May 2007 comics, the Hulk will be the focus of the Marvel ] event '']''.<ref>{{cite news| title = Joe Quesada interview| url = http://www.newsarama.com/NewJoeFridays/JoeMonday_2.html| accessdate = 2006-10-26}}</ref> | |||
A year and a half after ''The Incredible Hulk'' was canceled, the Hulk became one of two features in '']'', beginning in issue #60 (Oct. 1964).<ref>DeFalco "1960s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 102: "''Tales to Astonish'' #60 ... introduced a new series – The Incredible Hulk – starring the famous character."</ref> | |||
The Hulk is recruited by Nick Fury and S.H.I.E.L.D. and then shot into space to destroy a rogue satellite known as “Godseye” that can adapt to any type of technological attack. However, Godseye is no match for the brute strength of the Hulk and is easily destroyed by the gamma-irradiated goliath. As the Hulk prepares to go home, he quickly learns that S.H.I.E.L.D. never intended for him to come home. Working with the Illuminati, the shuttle sends the Hulk in the opposite direction and the Hulk can only grimace in rage as a message comes through on the monitor from Reed Richards. | |||
This new Hulk feature was initially scripted by Lee, with pencils by ] and inks by ]. Other artists later in this run included ] (#68–87, June 1965 – Oct. 1966); ] (credited as "Scott Edwards", #76, (Feb. 1966)); ] (#78–84, April–Oct. 1966); ] (#85–87); and ]. The ''Tales to Astonish'' run introduced the super-villains the ],<ref name="HulkTIG"/> who would become the Hulk's nemesis, and the ], another gamma-irradiated being.<ref name="HulkTIG"/> ] finished out the Hulk's run in ''Tales to Astonish''. Beginning with issue #102 (April 1968) the book was retitled ''The Incredible Hulk'' vol. 2,<ref>DeFalco "1960s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 128: "Hailing 1968 as the beginning of the 'Second Age of Marvel Comics,' and with more titles to play with, editor Stan Lee discarded his split books and gave more characters their own titles ... ''Tales to Astonish'' #101 by ''The Incredible Hulk'' #102."</ref> and ran until 1999, when Marvel canceled the series and launched ''Hulk'' #1. Marvel filed for a ] for "The Incredible Hulk" in 1967, and the ] issued the registration in 1970.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://trademark.markify.com/trademarks/uspto/the+incredible+hulk/72277675|title= The Incredible Hulk|publisher= Markify|access-date= January 6, 2016}}</ref> | |||
The goal of the Illuminati was to rid the Earth of one of its greatest menaces. They wanted to send the Hulk to a world where he could cause no harm and where he could finally be left alone. Although, Sakaar wasn’t the intended planet, in a sense the Illuminati did just that. They sent him home. | |||
] wrote the series from 1974 through 1978, working first with ], then, as of issue #194 (December 1975), with ], who was the regular artist for ten years.<ref>{{cite book|last = Amash|first = Jim|title = Sal Buscema: Comics' Fast & Furious Artist|publisher = ]|date= 2010|location= Raleigh, North Carolina|page = 17|isbn = 978-1605490212}}</ref> Issues #180–181 (Oct.–Nov. 1974) introduced ] as an antagonist,<ref>] "1970s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 167: "Len Wein wrote and Herb Trimpe drew Wolverine's cameo appearance in ''The Incredible Hulk'' #180 and his premiere in issue #181."</ref> who would go on to become one of Marvel Comics' most popular characters. In 1977, Marvel launched a second title, '']'', a black-and-white comics magazine.<ref name="HulkTIG"/> This was originally conceived as a flashback series, set between the end of his original, short-lived solo title and the beginning of his feature in ''Tales to Astonish''.<ref>Sanderson, "1970s", in Gilbert (2008), p. 178: "This black-and-white magazine starred the Hulk in adventures set in Europe shortly after his original six-issue series."</ref> After nine issues, the magazine was retitled ''The Hulk!'' and printed in color.<ref>Sanderson, "1970s", in Gilbert (2008), p. 186: "To appeal to the audience of the popular new ''Incredible Hulk'' TV series, Marvel revamped ''The Rampaging Hulk'' magazine, calling it ''The Hulk!''."</ref> | |||
Passing through a wormhole and then crashing landing on the planet, we find a weakened Hulk ready for a fight, that to his surprise he can’t win. He is captured, made a slave and forced to fight as a gladiator for the entertainment of the maniacal Emperor of Sakaar known as the Red King. The Hulk and his new ally (to Hulk he’s more of an annoyance) Miek survive the contest and are about to be pardoned, but the Hulk would rather smash his captor. Again, the Hulk loses and actually bleeds to a smarter and stronger foe. Yet, rumors of the creature defying the Emperor began to spread. | |||
In 1977, two Hulk ]s were aired to strong ratings, leading to an ] that aired from 1978 to 1982. A huge ratings success, the series introduced the popular Hulk ] "Don't make me angry. You wouldn't like me when I'm angry", and broadened the character's popularity from a niche comic book readership into the mainstream consciousness.<ref>{{cite journal|last= Greenberg|first= Glenn|author-link= Glenn Greenberg |date= February 2014|title = The Televised Hulk|journal= ]|issue= 70|pages= 19–26}}</ref> | |||
The Hulk and Miek are sent to the Maw, a training ground for gladiators/slaves and through combat (forced to fight thanks to implanted obedience disks that shocks the slaves at the will of their handlers) and trials of survival become part of a team of seven warriors. Hulk, Miek, Korg (a rock-like creature that resembles the Thing), a Brood, Hiroim (a Shadow Warrior), Elloe and Lavin Skee make up this team. The seven then fight in the Emperor’s arena, but learn that if they survive three rounds of combat that they will be granted their freedom. After two massive battles (leading to the death of Skee), the members took an oath of allegiance to each other as they prepared for the final battle with a captured Silver Surfer (forced to fight by the Emperor as the Silver Savage). | |||
] became the series' writer for five years beginning with issue #245 (March 1980). Mantlo's "Crossroads of Eternity" stories (#300–313 (Oct. 1984 – Nov. 1985)) explored the idea that Banner had suffered ]. Later Hulk writers ] and ] have called these stories an influence on their approaches to the character.<ref>{{cite news | last = O'Neill | first = Patrick Daniel | date = February 1992 | title = Peter David | work = ] | issue = 105 | page = 22 | publisher = ]}}</ref><ref>{{cite web| last=Taylor | first=Robert | title=Greg Goes Wild on Planet Pak | work=] | publisher=Wizard Entertainment Group | date=August 3, 2006 | url = http://www.wizarduniverse.com/magazine/wizard/001199809.cfm | access-date=November 15, 2007 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070402044123/http://www.wizarduniverse.com/magazine/wizard/001199809.cfm |archive-date = April 2, 2007}}</ref> Mantlo left the series for '']'' and that series' writer ] took over ''The Incredible Hulk''.<ref>{{cite web| last=Serwin | first=Andy | title=The Wizard Retrospective: Mike Mignola | work= Wizard| publisher=Wizard Entertainment Group | date=July 23, 2007 | url=http://www.wizarduniverse.com/magazine/wizard/005255245.cfm | access-date=November 13, 2007 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080120105210/http://www.wizarduniverse.com/magazine/wizard/005255245.cfm |archive-date = January 20, 2008}}</ref> The final issue of Byrne's six issue run featured the wedding of Bruce Banner and ].<ref name="DeFalcos">DeFalco "1980s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 227: "Dr. Bruce Banner first met Betty Ross in ''The Incredible Hulk'' #1 (May 1962) and finally married her in issue #319 by John Byrne."</ref> Writer Peter David began a 12-year run with issue #331 (May 1987). He returned to the ] and Mantlo abuse storylines, expanding the damage caused, and depicting Banner as suffering ].<ref name="HulkTIG"/> | |||
Through skill and cunning, not brute force, the Hulk and his team are able to defeat the Surfer. The Surfer, free from the Emperor’s control, then frees all of the slaves by destroying all of the obedience disks. Now the freed slaves are on the run as the Emperor sends his armies (led by Lieutenant Caiera) to destroy them. A rebellion is formed as the people begin to wonder if the Hulk is the legendary Sakaarson (savior) or the Worldbreaker (destroyer) according to prophecy. While the Hulk is reluctant in leading this fight (he fears that in the end he is the Worldbreaker), he is convinced by Miek and the others to fight. Hulk has a face-to-face battle with Caiera (leading to an attraction and a respect between the two), but there is no winner as the mad Red King launches alien entities known as Spikes (which transform people into monstrosities) at both his enemies and soldiers. The Hulk learns that the Spikes aren’t evil but much like him are misunderstood and do what they do to survive. So he forms an allegiance with Caiera and the Spikes to take down the Red King and his remaining soldiers. | |||
In 1998, David killed off Banner's long-time love Betty Ross. Marvel executives used Ross' death as an opportunity to pursue the return of the Savage Hulk. David disagreed, leading to his parting ways with Marvel.<ref>{{Cite news| last=Radford | first=Bill | page=L4 | date=February 21, 1999|location= Colorado Springs, Colorado|work=] | title=Marvel's not-so-jolly green giant gets a fresh start and a new team}}</ref> Also in 1998, Marvel relaunched ''The Rampaging Hulk'' as a standard comic book rather than as a comics magazine.<ref name="HulkTIG"/> ''The Incredible Hulk'' was again cancelled with issue #474 of its second volume in March 1999 and was replaced with a new series, ''Hulk'' the following month, with returning writer Byrne and art by ].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.maelmill-insi.de/UHBMCC/hulk5.htm#S2499|title=The Unofficial Handbook of Marvel Comics Creators|website=www.maelmill-insi.de}}</ref><ref>Manning, Matthew K. "1990s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 294: "Bruce Banner took to the road in an attempt to escape his past in this new series by writer John Byrne and artist Ron Garney."</ref> New series writer ] developed the Hulk's multiple dissociative identities,<ref name="HV3:13">{{cite comic| writer= ]|penciller= ]|inker= ]|story= Snake Eyes, Part 2|title= ]|volume= 3|issue= 13|date= April 2000}}</ref> and his run was followed by ]<ref>Manning "2000s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 310: "Creating a lengthy run to rival J. Michael Straczynski over on ''The Amazing Spider-Man'' and Brian Michael Bendis on ''Daredevil'', writer Bruce Jones reinvented the green goliath with a modern, cinematic approach."</ref> with his run featuring Banner being pursued by a secret conspiracy and aided by the mysterious Mr. Blue. Jones appended his 43-issue ''Incredible Hulk'' run with the ] ''Hulk/Thing: Hard Knocks'' #1–4 (Nov. 2004 – Feb. 2005), which Marvel published after putting the ongoing series on hiatus. Peter David, who had initially signed a contract for the six-issue ''Tempest Fugit'' limited series, returned as writer when it was decided to make that story the first five parts of the revived (vol. 3).<ref>{{cite web| url=http://peterdavid.malibulist.com/archives/2004_09.html | title=Slight change of plan with ''Hulk'' | date=September 30, 2004 | publisher=PeterDavid.net | access-date=November 5, 2007 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20071025033916/http://peterdavid.malibulist.com/archives/2004_09.html |archive-date = October 25, 2007}}</ref> After a four-part tie-in to the "]" storyline and a one-issue ], David left the series once more, citing the need to do non-Hulk work for the sake of his career.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.comicboards.com/hulk/view.php?trd=050718024904 | title=My leaving ''Hulk'' | last=David | first=Peter | date=July 18, 2005 | publisher=The Incredible Hulk Message Board|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20060307145556/http://www.comicboards.com/hulk/view.php?trd=050718024904|archive-date= March 7, 2006|url-status= dead| access-date=August 28, 2005}}</ref> | |||
The Hulk then stops the attempts of retribution by the various races/species and declares that all of the planet is free and is crowned as the new King of the planet. Hulk asks Caiera to be his queen and we later learn that she is pregnant with his child. Things are going well for the planet and its new King. The kingdom is in the process of making treaties with all the factions within the planet, lifelong enemies are now becoming allies and, for once, the Hulk is happy. But just as things are starting to look up, the shuttle that sent hulk to Sakaar in the first place malfunctions and causes a massive explosion, killing thousands, including Caiera and her unborn child. The explosion causes a fracture and the eventual disintegration of the planet's tectonic plates, cataclysmically killing everyone in the kingdom. | |||
Writer ] took over the series in 2006, leading the Hulk through several crossover storylines including "]" and "]", which left the Hulk temporarily incapacitated and replaced as the series' title character by the demigod ] in the retitled '']'' (Feb. 2008). The Hulk returned periodically in ''Hulk'', which then starred the new ].<ref name=uhmcci_incredible600 /> In September 2009, ''The Incredible Hulk'' was relaunched as ''The Incredible Hulk'' (vol. 2) #600.<ref name=uhmcci_incredible600>{{Cite web|url=http://www.maelmill-insi.de/UHBMCC/hulk15.htm#S2281|title=The Unofficial Handbook of Marvel Comics Creators|website=www.maelmill-insi.de}}</ref> The series was retitled ''The Incredible Hulks'' with issue #612 (Nov. 2010) to encompass the Hulk's expanded family, and ran until issue #635 (Oct. 2011) when it was replaced with ''The Incredible Hulk'' (vol. 3) (15 issues, Dec. 2011 – Dec. 2012) written by ] with art by ].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.maelmill-insi.de/UHBMCC/hulk24.htm#S6171|title=The Unofficial Handbook of Marvel Comics Creators|website=www.maelmill-insi.de}}</ref> As part of Marvel's 2012 ] relaunch, a series called '']'' (Nov. 2012) debuted under the creative team of ] and ].<ref name="Hulk">{{cite web|url=http://marvel.com/news/story/19195/marvel_now_qa_indestructible_hulk |title=Marvel NOW! Q&A: Indestructible Hulk |last=Hoffman |first=Carla |date=August 8, 2012 |publisher=Marvel Comics |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121218135712/http://marvel.com/news/story/19195/marvel_now_qa_indestructible_hulk |archive-date=December 18, 2012 |url-status=live |access-date=November 10, 2012 |df=mdy-all }}</ref> This series was replaced in 2014 with ''The Hulk'' by Waid and artist ].<ref>{{cite news |url= http://www.newsarama.com/19971-mark-waid-talks-2014-hulk-relaunch-who-shot-bruce-banner.html|title= Mark Waid Talks 2014 ''Hulk'' Relaunch, Who Shot Bruce Banner?|first= Chris|last= Arrant|date= January 7, 2014|work= Newsarama|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20140429123956/http://www.newsarama.com/19971-mark-waid-talks-2014-hulk-relaunch-who-shot-bruce-banner.html|archive-date= April 29, 2014|url-status= live}}</ref> | |||
===World War Hulk=== | |||
A new series titled '']'', written by ] and drawn by ], was launched in 2018 and ran for 50 issues. The series had a spin-off one-shot ''Immortal She-Hulk''<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.cbr.com/immortal-she-hulk-empyre-one-shot/|title=Immortal She-Hulk Smashes the Marvel Universe in September |first=Collier |last=Jennings |date=June 16, 2020 |work=CBR |access-date=April 15, 2021 }}</ref> and a spin-off series about ] in June 2021.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.cbr.com/immortal-hulk-spinoff-gamma-flight/|title=Gamma Flight: Marvel Announces Immortal Hulk Spinoff Series |first=Collier |last=Jennings |date=March 16, 2021 |work=CBR |access-date=April 15, 2021 }}</ref> | |||
In a violent rage, remembering the Illuminati and the humans of Earth, Hulk reunites with his Warbound brothers from Sakaar and takes off in a spaceship heading for Earth. On board, the Hulk spends his time crafting large swords and other weapons in order to wage war against the Illuminati. The events here lead into the ] event. | |||
In November 2021, ] became the new writer of ''Hulk'', with ] joining as artist. In May 2022, the series did a crossover with the ''Thor'' series, also written by Cates, entitled ''Hulk vs Thor: Banner of War''. The series ran for 14 issues, with Ottley taking over as writer for the last 4 issues afters Cates left the book.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Donny Cates and Ryan Ottley Seek Out the Final Answer to the Hulk's Uncontrollable Rage in a New Series |url=https://www.marvel.com/articles/comics/hulk-2021-new-comic-series-by-donny-cates-and-ryan-ottley |access-date=2022-05-30 |website=Marvel Entertainment |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=First Look at 'Hulk Vs Thor: Banner Of War' Covers in May |url=https://www.marvel.com/articles/comics/hulk-vs-thor-banner-of-war-crossover-by-donny-cates-and-martin-coccolo-covers-in-may |access-date=2022-05-30 |website=Marvel Entertainment |language=en}}</ref> | |||
==Personality and behavior== | |||
{{Moresources|date=March 2007}} | |||
] | |||
The Hulk is the ] of Dr. Robert Bruce Banner, an expert in ]. As a result of exposure to ], Banner often becomes a large, superhumanly strong green creature. Although the Hulk is usually classified as a superhero, he and Banner share a ]-like relationship. In his most well-known incarnation, the Hulk has little intelligence or ], and can cause great destruction. As a result, he has been hunted by the military and other superheroes, and as such, Banner considers the Hulk a curse. The transformation is usually triggered by emotional stress, but at times has been initiated by radiation or other factors, and even at will in later incarnations of the character. | |||
In March 2023, it was announced that a new volume of ''The Incredible Hulk'' would launch in June 2023, written by Philip Kennedy Johnson and drawn by Nic Klein.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Bruce Banner Takes on Marvel's Most Gruesome Monsters in Chilling New 'Hulk' Run by Phillip Kennedy Johnson and Nic Klein |url=https://www.marvel.com/articles/comics/incredible-hulk-phillip-kennedy-johnson-nic-klein-bruce-banner-monsters |access-date=2023-05-17 |website=Marvel Entertainment}}</ref> | |||
The Hulk initially was characterized as a separate entity from Bruce Banner, a symbol of inner ] and ] repression; a distillation of his anger that gradually developed its own personality and memories separate from Banner's. | |||
==Characterization== | |||
Due to ] established by writers ] and later ] in the ], Banner is said to suffer from ], which stems from the ] he had suffered early in life. The Hulk has many incarnations, each representing a different aspect of Banner's psyche. | |||
===Fictional character biography=== | |||
] | |||
Robert Bruce Banner's psyche was profoundly affected by his troubled childhood, in which his father, ], regarded him as a monster due to his seemingly unnatural intellect from a young age.<ref>{{cite comic |writer=Mantlo, Bill |penciller=Mignola, Mike |inker=Talaoc, Gerry |story=Monster |title=The Incredible Hulk |volume=2 |issue=312 |date=October 1985}}</ref> These experiences caused Bruce to develop a ] and repress his negative emotions as a coping mechanism. After Brian killed Bruce's mother in a fit of rage,<ref name="Hulk377">{{cite comic |writer=David, Peter |penciller=Keown, Dale |inker=McLeod, Bob |story=Honey, I Shrunk the Hulk |title=The Incredible Hulk |volume=2 |issue=377 |date=January 1991}}</ref> Bruce lived with several relatives up until his high school years, when his intelligence caught the attention of the ].<ref>{{cite comic |writer=David, Peter |penciller=] |inker=] |story=Tempest Fugit Conclusion |title=The Incredible Hulk |volume=3 |issue=81 |date=July 2005}}</ref> Banner was recruited to develop nuclear weapons under the authority of ], and soon developed a relationship with the General's daughter ].<ref name="Hulk1">{{cite comic |writer=] |penciller=] |inker=] |story=The Hulk |title=The Incredible Hulk |issue=1 |date=May 1962 |page=8}}</ref> | |||
During the experimental detonation of a gamma bomb, Banner saves teenager ], who was dared onto the testing field; Banner pushes Jones into a trench to save him, but is hit with the blast, absorbing massive amounts of gamma radiation. He awakens later seemingly unscathed, but he begins transforming into a powerful and destructive creature upon nightfall, which a pursuing soldier describes as a "hulk".<ref name="Hulk1"/> Banner's attempts to cure himself of these transformations alter their conditions, causing Banner to transform as a response to rage or fear.<ref>{{cite comic |writer=Lee, Stan |penciller=] |inker=] |story=The Incredible Hulk |title=] |issue=60 |date=October 1964}}</ref> The Hulk is a founding member of the ],<ref>{{cite comic |writer=Lee, Stan |penciller=Kirby, Jack |inker=Ayers, Dick |story=The Coming of the Avengers! |title=] |issue=1 |date=September 1963}}</ref> but quickly leaves the group due to their distrust of him.<ref>{{cite comic |writer=Lee, Stan |penciller=Kirby, Jack |inker=Reinman, Paul |story=The Avengers Battle... the Space Phantom |title=] |issue=2 |date=November 1963}}</ref> Banner maintains the secret of his dual identity with Rick's aid, but Rick reveals his secret following his assumed death to Major ] who subsequently informed his superiors, forcing Banner to become a fugitive upon returning from the future where he was actually thrown to.<ref>{{cite comic |writer=Lee, Stan |penciller=Colan, Gene |inker=Colletta, Vince |story=Bruce Banner is the Hulk! |title=Tales to Astonish |volume=1 |issue=77 |date=March 1966}}</ref> | |||
Psychiatrist ] captures the Hulk and manages to physically separate Banner and the Hulk,<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Byrne, John|penciller= Byrne, John|inker= Byrne, John; Williams, Keith|story= Freedom!|title= The Incredible Hulk|volume= 2|issue= 315|date= January 1986}}</ref> allowing Banner to marry Betty.<ref>{{cite comic |writer=] |penciller=Byrne, John |inker=Byrne, John; ] |story=Member of the Wedding |title=The Incredible Hulk |volume=2 |issue=319 |date=May 1986}}</ref> However, Banner and the Hulk's molecular structure destabilized and threatened to kill them, requiring Samson to reunite them with the aid of ].<ref>{{cite comic |writer=] |penciller=Milgrom, Al |inker=Barras, Dell; Bulanadi, Danny |story=Certain Intangibles |title=The Incredible Hulk |volume=2 |issue=323 |date=September 1986}}</ref> Samson is later able to merge elements of Banner's fractured psyche to create Professor Hulk, an intelligent but egocentric variation of the Hulk.<ref name="Hulk377"/> Professor Hulk soon becomes a key member of the ], a secretive organization of superpowered individuals.<ref>{{cite comic |writer=David, Peter |penciller=Keown, Dale |inker=Farmer, Mark |story=Moving On |title=The Incredible Hulk |volume=2 |issue=382 |date=June 1991}}</ref><ref>Manning "1990s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 253: "The Hulk first met Agamemnon, the leader of the Pantheon team, in a story written by Peter David with art by Dale Keown."</ref> His tenure with the organization brings him into conflict with a tyrannical alternate future version of himself called the ], who rules over a world where many heroes are dead.<ref name="Imperfect">{{cite comic |writer=David, Peter |penciller=Perez, George |inker=Perez, George |story=Future Imperfect, Part 2 |title=Hulk: Future Imperfect |volume=1 |issue=2 |date=January 1993}}</ref> The Professor Hulk construct ultimately proves unstable, and Banner's psyche eventually splinters once more. | |||
===Bruce Banner=== | |||
The core personality, an emotionally-suppressed ], rating amongst ] and ] as one of the greatest minds in the Marvel Universe. Banner can transform into the different versions of the Hulk, whereas his alter-egos seem to be able only to transform into Bruce Banner. These transformations are usually involuntary, as is the selection of which one emerges. | |||
In "]", the ] decide the Hulk is too dangerous to remain on Earth and send him away by rocket ship which crashes on Planet Sakaar. The Hulk finds allies in the ] and marries alien queen ], a relationship that bears him two sons: ] and ].<ref>''Incredible Hulk'' Vol. 3 #92-104. Marvel Comics.</ref> After the Illuminati's ship explodes and kills Caiera, the Hulk returns to Earth with his superhero group Warbound and declares war on the planet in "]".<ref>''Incredible Hulk'' Vol. 3 #105. Marvel Comics.</ref> However, after learning that ], one of the Warbound, had actually been responsible for the destruction, the Hulk allows himself to be defeated, with Banner subsequently redeeming himself as a hero as he works with and against the new Red Hulk to defeat the new supervillain team the Intelligencia.<ref>''World War Hulk'' #5. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
===Savage Hulk=== | |||
The "classic" Hulk, the Savage Hulk possesses the mental capacity and temperament of a young child, and typically refers to himself in the third person. The primary drive of the Savage Hulk (other than utterly destroying anything that angers him) is the urge to "get away" and "to be left alone." It has been proposed that if the authorities simply let the Savage Hulk escape to the wilderness and isolation he desires, that much less damage would result, as any attack simply angers him further and increases his strength. Characterised by his extraordinarily bulky, muscular physique, his green skin and his loping, ]-like gait, the Savage Hulk is instantly recognizable. Since the Hulk's (all versions) strength is directly proportional to his rage, this is the incarnation with the greatest potential for sheer physical power as it possesses little self-control. His potential for sheer brute strength is so great that when "freed" from Bruce Banner by Jean Grey it was able to go head-to-head with the psychic being ]. | |||
Later, the Hulk turns to ] to physically separate himself and Banner, with Doom surgically extracting the elements of the Hulk's brain uniquely belonging to Banner and inserting them into a clone body.<ref>{{cite comic |writer=] |penciller=] |inker=Martinez, Allen; Ketcham, Rick; Hanna, Scott |story=Hulk vs. Banner! Chapter Two: There Will Be Doom |title=The Incredible Hulk |volume=4 |issue=5 |date=April 2012 |publisher=Marvel Comics}}</ref> Banner eventually re-combines with the Hulk when his cloned body is destroyed in an attempt to recreate his original transformation.<ref>{{cite comic |writer=Aaron, Jason |penciller=] |inker=Talajić, Dalibor |story=The Search for the City of Sasquatches |title=The Incredible Hulk |volume=4 |issue=11 |date=September 2012 |publisher=Marvel Comics}}</ref> Following this, Bruce willingly joins the spy organization ], allowing them to use the Hulk as a weapon in exchange for providing him with the means and funding to create a lasting legacy for himself.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= ]|penciller= ]|inker= ]|story= Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D.|title= Indestructible Hulk|issue= 1|date= January 2013|publisher=Marvel Comics}}</ref> When Banner is shot in the head by an assassin, Tony Stark saves him with a variant of the ] virus.<ref>{{cite comic |writer=Waid, Mark |penciller=] |inker=Hennessy, Andrew |story=Who Shot the Hulk #4 |title=Hulk |volume=3 |issue=4 |date=August 2014 |publisher=Marvel Comics}}</ref> This procedure creates a new intelligent persona named Doc Green, who concludes that the world is in danger by Gamma Mutates{{efn|name=mutate}} and thus need to be depowered. He creates a cure and depowers A-Bomb, Skaar and Red Hulk. Eventually, Doc Green's intellect fades and his normal Hulk form is restored.<ref>{{cite comic|writer= Duggan, Gerry|penciller= Bagley, Mark|inker= Hennessy, Andrew|story= The Omega Hulk Chapter Twelve|title= Hulk|volume= 3|issue= 16|date= July 2015|publisher=Marvel Comics}}</ref> | |||
===Gray Hulk/Joe Fixit=== | |||
The Gray Hulk, the original Hulk incarnation, worked for a time as a ] enforcer called Joe Fixit. He has average intelligence, although he occasionally displays knowledge and intellectual ability normally associated with Bruce Banner. He is hedonistic, cunning, arrogant, crafty, and distant with a hidden ]. In most of his ] appearances, he appears only at night. According to the ] in ''Incredible Hulk'' Vol. 1, #333, the Gray Hulk persona is strongest during the night of the new moon and weakest during the full moon; this aversion to sunlight and moonlight vanished when the Gray Hulk's night-induced transformation trigger is later removed. Although he is the smallest of the Hulks, the Gray Hulk towers over the average human. He prefers to dress in tailored suits and his base strength level is the lowest of all the primary Hulk incarnations. However, this strength level can grow as he gets angry, but at a much slower pace than the other Hulk incarnations. Despite his lower strength, Gray Hulk is able to use cunning and strategy in fights to gain the upper hand against foes expecting a savage Hulk. | |||
When the vision of the Inhuman ] shows a rampaging Hulk standing over the corpses of many superheroes,<ref>{{cite comic |writer=Bendis, Brian Michael |artist=Marquez, David |story=How we looking, Friday? |title=Civil War II |issue=2 |date=August 2016 |publisher=Marvel Comics}}</ref> Banner gives ] special arrows capable of killing him during a transformation, which Hawkeye accomplishes.<ref>{{cite comic |writer=Bendis, Brian Michael |artist=Marquez, David; Coipel, Olivier |story=Mister Murdock, call your first witness |title=Civil War II |issue=3 |date=September 2016 |publisher=Marvel Comics}}</ref> The Hulk was first revived by the ],<ref>{{cite comic|writer= Duggan, Gerry|penciller= Larraz, Pepe|inker= Larraz, Pepe|story= The Rebound|title= Uncanny Avengers|volume= 3|issue= 15|date= December 2016|publisher=Marvel Comics}}</ref> then by Hydra,<ref>''Secret Empire'' #6-7 (2017). Marvel Comics.</ref> and finally by the ] for a contest against the ].<ref>''Avengers'' #679-688. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
===Merged Hulk/The Professor=== | |||
] with the ], on the cover of ''Incredible Hulk'' #424.]] | |||
The merging of Bruce Banner and the Savage and Gray Hulks in ''Incredible Hulk'' #377 (written by ]). The Merged Hulk is later ] into The Professor. The Professor, rather than being a merging of the three core personalities, was interpreted as a fourth, separate personality that represented Banner's ideal self. The primary difference between the two is that the Merged Hulk demonstrated aspects of the Banner, Grey Hulk, and Savage Hulk personalities (also possessing Banner's intelligence, Joe Fixit's cunning, and the Savage Hulk's size and strength), while the Professor did not. The Merged Hulk is even prone to uttering "Hulk smash!", which is the Savage Hulk's most common ]. The Merged Hulk is an associate and leader of the team of superheroes called the ]. Despite his exaggerated musculature, the Merged Hulk had a relatively normal-looking face, resembling that of Bruce Banner, and straight-backed posture that gives him the appearance of being the tallest and least beastial Hulk incarnation. The Professor personality is defined during ]' run as a "revelation" that the Merged Hulk is not actually a merging of the three personalities but rather a separate personality altogether. Unlike the Merged Hulk, the Professor is physically distinguished by having a pony tail, which the Merged Hulk did not. Jenkins justified this by ret-conning into the Hulk's continuity a new character named Angela Lipscomb (modeled after Jenkins' own girlfriend) who knew more about Bruce Banner than even ]. Lipscomb confronted Doc Samson with her observations of the Professor and Doc Samson validated them, despite events presented in previous issues to the contrary. | |||
=== |
===Personality=== | ||
Like other long-lived characters, the Hulk's character and cultural interpretations have changed with time, adding or modifying character traits. The Hulk is typically seen as a hulking man with green skin, hair, and eyes, wearing only a pair of torn purple pants that survive his physical transformation as the character progressed. As Bruce Banner, the character is about 5 ft 9 in (1.75 m) tall and weighs 128 lbs (58.05 kg), but when transformed into the Hulk, the character stands between 7 and 8 ft (2.13 - 2.43 m) tall and weighs between 1,040 and 1,400 lbs (471.73 - 635.02 kg). The Gray Hulk stands 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) tall and weighs 900 lbs (408.23 kg); the Merged Hulk stands 7 ft 6 in (2.28 m) tall and weighs 1,150 lbs (521.63 kg); the Green Scar stands 8 ft 8 in (2.64 m) tall and weighs 2,400 lbs (1.08 ton).<ref name="BioMarvel"/> The Devil Hulk is roughly the same size as Sasquatch, standing around 9 or 10 ft (2.74 / 3.04 m) tall and weighing roughly 2,000 lbs (907.18 kg). Following his debut, Banner's transformations were triggered at nightfall, turning him into a grey-skinned Hulk. In ''Incredible Hulk'' #2, the Hulk started to appear with green skin,<ref name="NewsAramaPg2"/> and in ''Avengers'' #3 (1963) Banner realized that his transformations were now triggered by surges of adrenaline in response to feelings of fear, pain or anger.<ref name="NewsAramaPg3"/> ''Incredible Hulk'' #227 (1978) established that the Hulk's separate identity was not due to the mutation affecting his brain, but because Banner was suffering from ], with the savage Green Hulk representing Banner's repressed childhood rage and aggression,<ref name="NewsAramaPg5"/> and the Grey Hulk representing Banner's repressed selfish desires and urges.<ref name="NewsAramaPg9"/> | |||
This Hulk first emerged in ''Incredible Hulk'' #5 and would go on to become a founding member of ] and later re-emerged after the Merged Hulk was separated from Banner in the aftermath of ''Onslaught'' and again with Peter David's second run on the title with ''Incredible Hulk'' (vol. 3) #77. This incarnation is popularly called the "Gravage" Hulk. The name has it origins due to its similarities to both the Savage and Gray incarnations. This Hulk retains the Savage Hulk's size and physical power, but has the normal intelligence, craftiness and a personality reminiscent of the Gray Hulk. This is the current incarnation of the Hulk. | |||
=== |
====Identities==== | ||
=====Bruce Banner===== | |||
], in an attempt to find new ways to hurt his enemy Doctor Strange by going through his friends, penetrated Bruce Banner's mind and discovered his influence had an unexpected side effect; a new personality began to develop out of Banner's worst visions of the Hulk. At this period in Banner's life, he had just gained control over the Hulk's body, but was constantly on alert and terrified this was just temporarily, and that the Hulk, which he saw as nothing but a savage and destructive beast, would break free once more when the world least expected it. Far from being identical with the original Hulk, this version was based on a nightmarish imagination made of all of Banner's worst fears and ideas of his former alter ego. Nightmare continued to manipulate and increase his influence, allowing this dark incarnation to gradually rise to the surface. It finally became its own personality after Banner made his "psychic suicide", allowing it to break free of Banner's domination. Eventually, with the assistance of three creatures created by his subconscious, (Glow, Goblin, and Guardian), this Hulk gained the ability to speak and behave much less savagely. Since then, this personality has not been seen again, and it has been suggested that it is no longer a part of Banner's personality. In "Web of Spider-Man #7", a part of the Hulk, with the assistance of Doctor Strange, entered the Dimension of Nightmare as a similar manifestation as Mindless Hulk, threatening to kill him. Nightmare was forced to seek out Spider-Man's help, as this Hulk was destroying the whole domain. Spider-Man eventually pushed the Hulk into another realm, but he pulled Nightmare in with him. Nightmare has since been seen still alive, but this Hulk seems to have disappeared. | |||
During his decades of publication, Banner has been portrayed differently, but common themes persist. Banner, a ] who earned his Ph.D. in nuclear physics from the ] (Caltech), is sarcastic and seemingly very self-assured when he first appears in ''Incredible Hulk'' #1, but is also emotionally withdrawn.<ref name="HulkTIG"/> Banner designed the gamma bomb that caused his affliction, and the ironic twist of his self-inflicted fate has been one of the most persistent common themes.<ref name="OyVey">{{Cite book|last= Weinstein|first= Simcha|title= Up, Up, and Oy Vey!|publisher= Leviathan Press| date= 2006|location= Baltimore, Maryland|pages= 82–97|isbn=978-1-881927-32-7}}</ref> Arie Kaplan describes the character thus: "Robert Bruce Banner lives in a constant state of panic, always wary that the monster inside him will erupt, and therefore he cannot form meaningful bonds with anyone."<ref name=Kaplan>{{Cite book|last= Kaplan|first= Arie|title= Masters of the Comic Book Universe Revealed!|publisher= ]|date= 2006|page= 58|location= Chicago, Illinois|isbn=978-1556526336}}</ref> As a child, Banner's father ] often got mad and physically abused both Banner and his mother, creating the ] of fear, anger, and the fear of anger and the destruction it can cause that underlies the character. Banner has been shown to be emotionally repressed, but capable of deep love for Betty Ross, and for solving problems posed to him. Under the writing of Paul Jenkins, Banner was shown to be a capable fugitive, applying deductive reasoning and observation to figure out the events transpiring around him. On the occasions that Banner controlled the Hulk's body, he applied principles of physics to problems and challenges and used deductive reasoning. It was shown after his ability to turn into the Hulk was taken away by the red Hulk that Banner has been extremely versatile as well as cunning when dealing with the many situations that followed. When he was briefly separated from the Hulk by Doom, Banner became criminally insane, driven by his desire to regain the power of the Hulk, but once the two recombined he came to accept that he was a better person with the Hulk to provide something for him to focus on controlling rather than allowing his intellect to run without restraint against the world.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Aaron, Jason|penciller= Palo, Jefte|inker= Palo, Jefte|story= Hulk: United Part 1|title= The Incredible Hulk|volume= 4|issue= 13|date= November 2012|publisher=Marvel Comics}}</ref> | |||
=== |
=====Hulk===== | ||
The traditional Hulk, often called "Savage Hulk", was originally shown as grey and average in intelligence. He roamed aimlessly and became annoyed at "puny" humans who took him for a dangerous monster. Shortly after becoming the Hulk, his transformation continued turning him green, coinciding with him beginning to display primitive speech.<ref name="NewsAramaPg2"/> By ''Incredible Hulk'' #4, radiation treatments gave Banner's mind complete control of the Hulk's body. While Banner relished his indestructibility and power, he was quick to anger and more aggressive in his Hulk form. He became known as a hero alongside the Avengers, but his increasing paranoia caused him to leave the group. He was convinced that he would never be trusted.<ref name="NewsAramaPg3"/> | |||
Originally, the Hulk was shown as simple-minded and quick to anger.<ref name=Hulk4>{{cite comic| writer= Lee, Stan|penciller= Kirby, Jack|inker= ]|story= The Monster and the Machine!|title= The Incredible Hulk|issue= 4|date= November 1962}}</ref> The Hulk generally divorces his identity from Banner's, decrying Banner as "puny Banner."<ref>{{cite comic|writer= Milgrom, Al|penciller= Milgrom, Al|inker= Janke, Dennis|story= The Monster's Analyst|title= The Incredible Hulk|volume= 2|issue= 221|date= September 1972}}</ref> From his earliest stories, the Hulk has been concerned with finding sanctuary and quiet.<ref name="OyVey"/> He is often shown to quickly react emotionally to situations. Grest and Weinberg call Hulk the "dark, primordial side of Banner's psyche."<ref name=GreshWeinberg/> Even in the earliest appearances, Hulk spoke in the third person. Hulk retains a modest intelligence, thinking and talking in full sentences. Lee even gives the Hulk expository dialogue in issue #6, allowing readers to learn just what capabilities Hulk has, when the Hulk says, "But these muscles ain't just for show! All I gotta do is spring up and just keep goin'!" In the 1970s, Hulk was shown as more prone to anger and rage, and less talkative. Writers played with the nature of his transformations,<ref name="Nation">{{Cite book | title=Comic Book Nation | last=Wright | first=Bradford | date=March 22, 2001 | publisher=] | location=Baltimore, Maryland | isbn=978-0-8018-6514-5 | page= | url=https://archive.org/details/comicbooknationt00wrig/page/336 }}</ref> briefly giving Banner control over the change, and the ability to maintain control of his Hulk form. Artistically and conceptually, the character has become progressively more muscular and powerful in the years since his debut.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/science/2006/may/17/medicalresearch.medicineandhealth |last=Randerson |first=James |title=Superman copycats 'risk health' |work=The Guardian |date=May 17, 2006 |location=London, United Kingdom |archive-url=https://archive.today/20130505013854/http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2006/may/17/medicalresearch.medicineandhealth |archive-date=May 5, 2013 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}</ref> | |||
] | |||
] | |||
The Guilt Hulk, also known as "The Beast", is another of Bruce Banner's personas, though this one created by his regret. The Guilt Hulk originally manifested itself in Banner's mind as his father and tormented him by forcing him to relive memories of his traumatic childhood. Eventually, the Guilt Hulk was defeated by Banner himself. | |||
=====Joe Fixit===== | |||
The Guilt Hulk later returned after Betty's death, albeit much more powerful because of Banner's emotionally fractured state. After brutally beating the Professor and Joe Fixit, the Guilt Hulk was eventually subdued again by the Savage Hulk. | |||
Originally, Stan Lee wanted the Hulk to be grey. Due to ink problems, Hulk's color was changed to green. This was later changed in the story to indicate that the {{anchor|Grey Hulk}}Grey Hulk and the Savage Hulk are separate ] or entities fighting for control in Bruce's subconscious. The Grey Hulk incarnation can do the more unscrupulous things that Banner could not bring himself to do, with many sources comparing the Grey Hulk to the moody teenager that Banner never allowed himself to be. While the grey Hulk still had the-madder-he-gets, the-stronger-he-gets part that is similar to the Savage Hulk, it is on a much slower rate. It is said by the Leader that the Grey Hulk is stronger on nights of the new moon and weaker on nights of the full moon. Originally, the night is when Bruce Banner became the Grey Hulk and changed back by dawn. In later comics, willpower or stress would have Banner turn into the Grey Hulk.<ref>{{cite comic|writer= Milgrom, Al|penciller= Milgrom, Al|inker= Janke, Dennis|story= The More Things Change ...|title= The Incredible Hulk|volume= 2|issue= 324|date= October 1986}}</ref> During one storyline where he was placed under a spell to prevent him turning back into Bruce Banner and publicly presumed dead when he was teleported away from a gamma bomb explosion that destroyed an entire town, the grey Hulk adopted a specific name as {{anchor|Joe Fixit}}'''Joe Fixit''', a security expert for Las Vegas casino owner Michael Berengetti, with the grey Hulk often being referred to as Joe after these events.<ref>{{cite comic |title=The Incredible Hulk |volume=2 |issue=347 |date=September 1988 |writer=Peter David |penciller=Jeff Purves |inker=Mike Gustovich |story=Crapshoot}}</ref> Joe Fixit later gained the ability to transform into his version of ''']''' form when in the Below-Place.<ref>''Immortal Hulk'' #45. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
=====Merged Hulk===== | |||
Due to its monstrous size, the Guilt Hulk was physically very powerful. It also possessed claws and spikes all over its body. The Guilt Hulk also showed the ability to breathe fire on one occasion. | |||
Convinced that unaided, the Banner, Green Hulk, and Grey Hulk identities would eventually destroy each other, Doc Samson uses hypnosis to merge the three to create a new single identity combining Banner's intelligence with the Grey Hulk's and Banner's attitudes and the Green Hulk's body. This new {{anchor|Merged Hulk}}'''Merged Hulk''', {{anchor|Professor Hulk}}{{anchor|The Professor}}'''Professor Hulk''', or simply '''The Professor''', considered himself cured and began a new life, but the merger was not perfect, and the Hulk sometimes still considered Banner a separate person, and when overcome with rage the Merged Hulk would transform back into Banner's human body while still thinking himself the Hulk.<ref name="NewsAramaPg9"/> The Merged Hulk is the largest of the three primary Hulk incarnations. While in a calm emotional state, the Merged Hulk is stronger than Savage Hulk when he is calm. Unlike the Savage Hulk and the Grey Hulk, Banner subconsciously installed a type of safeguard within this incarnation. The safeguard is that when the Merged Hulk gets angry, he regresses back to Banner with the mind of the Savage Hulk.<ref>{{cite comic|writer= David, Peter|penciller= Keown, Dale|inker= Farmer, Mark|story= Hit and Myth|title= The Incredible Hulk|volume= 2|issue= 379|date= March 1991}}</ref> | |||
=== |
=====Doc Green===== | ||
A variation of the Merged Hulk identity takes on the name '''Doc Green''' as the result of ] fixing Hulk's brain, becoming powerful enough to destroy Tony Stark's mansion with one thunderclap. This form was also known as '''Omega Hulk'''.<ref name="Hulk #5">{{cite comic|writer= ]|penciller= Bagley, Mark|inker= Hennessy, Andrew|story= The Omega Hulk Chapter One|title= Hulk|volume= 3|issue= 5|date= October 2014|publisher=Marvel Comics}}</ref> It was theorized by Doc Green that this form was an earlier incarnation of his possible future form Maestro.<ref>''Hulk'' Vol. 3 #9. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
The Devil Hulk is the malevolent personality of Bruce Banner, personifying all of Banner's resentment at the way he is treated by the world. He is also one of the Hulk's enemies, constantly threatening to escape confinement in Banner's mind and destroy the world that has tormented and abused them, simultaneously leaving nothing intact that Banner holds dear. He first appeared when Banner was dying of ], and Banner used a machine to travel into his own mind and make a deal with the three dominant Hulks that they would gain control of his body once the disease became too much for him to bear. The Devil Hulk was revealed at this point, but escaped a short while afterwards when the machinations of General Ryker shattered the barriers keeping the Devil Hulk imprisoned. Fortunately, he was contained long enough for a cure for Banner's condition to be found, before finally being contained in Banner's subconscious by Banner, the Savage Hulk and Joe Fixit; the Professor Hulk remaining out in the real world to help scientists such as Doctor Samson and Reed Richards of the Fantastic Four find a cure for the disease. Devil Hulk appears as a boss in ] game and first appears in the cutscene ''Dark Reflection''. After the mission of protecting Doc Samson, Devil Hulk will take over the objectives in Banner's mind and tell you to destroy civilian buildings tricking you. | |||
====={{anchor|Devil Hulk}}The Devil Hulk===== | |||
==Powers and abilities== | |||
The ''']''', or simply the '''Devil''', is the result of the Hulk needing a father figure. While the character's physical appearance varies, he is always depicted as having glowing red eyes and reptilian traits.<ref>''The Incredible Hulk'' Vol. 3 #19. Marvel Comics.</ref> The new form of the Devil Hulk is the result of Banner and Hulk having been through different deaths and rebirths. This incarnation is articulate, smart, and cunning, and does merciless attacks on those who do harm. Unlike the other Hulk incarnations, the Devil Hulk is content with waiting inside Bruce. If Bruce is injured by sunset, the Devil Hulk will emerge with his transformation being limited to night-time.<ref name="Immortal Hulk">''Immortal Hulk'' #1. Marvel Comics.</ref> Thanks to the Devil Hulk side and Banner working together, the Devil Hulk can maintain his form in sunlight.<ref>''Immortal Hulk'' #27. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
]]] The Hulk possesses incredible levels of physical strength. The most well-known incarnation, the Savage Hulk, possesses the greatest potential for immeasurable superhuman strength, depending on his emotional state, spawning the famous quote: "the madder Hulk gets, the stronger Hulk gets." The Hulk is capable of supporting, with the assistance of leverage, a 150 billion ton ] range while in an enraged emotional state.<ref>''Secret Wars'' ]</ref> During combat with the ] entity known as ], Jean Grey psionically disables Bruce Banner's persona, bringing out the true Savage Hulk. While trading punches with the Hulk, the psionic being Onslaught angers him to a point where he was able to break through Onslaught's armor.<ref>''Onslaught'': Marvel #1</ref> The Hulk has also been shown shattering an ] twice the size of ] with a single punch.<ref>''Marvel Comics Presents'' #52</ref> The Hulk possesses highly developed leg muscles and is able to leap several miles at a time. Since the Hulk's strength increases with anger, he is able to leap distances much greater than he normally could while in a "calm" state. For instance, he has been shown covering a distance of 1,000 miles in a single leap<ref>''Incredible Hulk'' vol.2 #33</ref> and even leaping into a low-Earth orbit.<ref>''Incredible Hulk'' vol.1 #254</ref> There are examples of the ]<ref>''Tales to Astonish'' #73</ref> and ]<ref>''Incredible Hulk'' vol.1 #228</ref>attempting, unsuccessfully, to measure the limits of the Hulk's strength using the advanced technology at their disposal. | |||
=====Other identities===== | |||
The Hulk is depicted with extremely high levels of superhuman stamina and resistance to physical injury. His muscles are resistant to fatigue poisons due to his healing factor's ability to negate them similar to Wolverine's ability. He's been shown withstanding the impact of high-caliber artillery shells, falls from orbital heights, and powerful energy blasts without sustaining injury and resisting extreme temperatures, poisons, and diseases with no ill effect. The Hulk is capable of surviving a ground zero nuclear explosion.<ref>''Incredible Hulk'' vol.1, #440</ref> At the end of the ''Planet Hulk'' storyline, he survives the impact of a warp core breach, which generates enough force to destroy a planet. <ref>''Incredible Hulk'' vol.2 #105</ref> | |||
The {{anchor|Gravage Hulk}}'''Gravage Hulk''' is the result of Banner using the Gamma Projector on himself which merged his Savage Hulk and Grey Hulk identities. This form possesses the raw power of the Savage Hulk and the cunning intellect of the Grey Hulk. While he does not draw on anger to empower him, the Gravage Hulk identity draws on dimensional nexus energies to increase his strength.<ref>''Incredible Hulk'' Vol. 3 #60. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
The {{anchor|Dark Hulk}}'''Dark Hulk''' identity is the result of Hulk being possessed by Shanzar. This form has black skin and is viciously strong.<ref>''Incredible Hulk'' Vol. 2 #371. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
]]]Despite his body's high resistance to injury, it is possible to injure the Hulk. He has been injured numerous times by opponents using weapons composed of ].<ref>''Incredible Hulk'' vol.1 #340</ref><ref>''Wolverine'' vol.2 #145</ref> However, the Hulk can regenerate damaged or destroyed tissue with far greater efficiency than an ordinary human. He has proven capable of regenerating all of his skin and most of his muscle tissue, after having them flayed from his body, within a few minutes.<ref>''Incredible Hulk'' vol.1 #398</ref>. It has also been stated that the Hulk's durability (resistance to physical injury), stamina and the efficiency of his healing powers fluctuates with his emotional state, much like his physical strength.<ref>''Incredible Hulk vol.1 #394</ref> | |||
The ''']''' is a malevolent representation of Banner's abusive father, Brian Banner, that manifests itself in Banner's childhood memories.<ref>''The Incredible Hulk'' Vol. 2 #377 (January 1991). Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
The Hulk is extremely resistant to drugs, but they can affect him, although his near-impenetrable skin makes gas a more reliable method of administering them. He can also be immobilized, put to sleep, transformed into Banner (or other Hulk manifestations), or pacified against his will, either by the use magic or by the powers of certain superhuman individuals (such as the radiation emitted by the Missing Link, the psionic abilities of a high-level telepath like ], or the powers of ], the Sentry). | |||
The {{anchor|Green Scar}}'''Green Scar''' identity is unleashed on Sakaar and is an enraged version of the Gravage Hulk. In addition, he is an expert in armed combat like the use of swords and shields. Green Scar is also a capable leader and an expert strategist.<ref>''Incredible Hulk'' Vol. 3 #93. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
In addition to his physical power and healing ability, the Hulk has demonstrated the ability to "home in" on the desert base where he was empowered.<ref>''Incredible Hulk'' Vol.1 #314</ref> He also has a unique ability to see and hear ]s, such as the astral form of ]. | |||
{{anchor|Kluh}}'''Kluh''' is a personality of Hulk who is described as the "Hulk's Hulk". This form sports a white mohawk, black skin, and red lines on him.<ref name="Avengers & X-Men: AXIS">{{cite comic| writer= Remender, Rick|penciller= Yu, Leinil Francis|inker= Alanguilan, Gerardo; Yu, Leinil Francis|story= Altered beast|title= ]|issue= 4|date= January 2015|publisher=Marvel Comics}}</ref> | |||
==Related characters== | |||
====Allies & friends==== | |||
* ''']''' – Bruce Banner's ], and later his wife. | |||
* ''']''' - former girlfriend to Mr. Fixit, now wife of [[Rick Jones (comics)| | |||
Rick Jones]]. | |||
* ''']''' – The Hulk's lover from another planet. Deceased. | |||
* ''']''' – A teenager whom Banner saved, causing Banner to be caught in his life-changing explosion. | |||
* ''']''' – The Hulk's occasional ]. A gamma-powered strong man with a working knowledge of nuclear biology, he got his power from an experiment he conducted on the Hulk. | |||
* ''']''' – Jennifer Walters, Bruce Banner's cousin, to whom he gave an emergency ] when she was critically wounded. | |||
* ''']''' - Ben Grimm, member of the ]. | |||
* ''']''' – A friend of Bruce Banner and sometime sidekick. He was the first character in mainstream comics to be ] positive. Is deceased due to ] (''Incredible Hulk'' #420). | |||
* ''']''' – Sam Wilson. He has defended the Hulk on a few occasions due to the Hulk's comforting his nephew, ], during his last moments alive. | |||
* '''The ]''' - a super-hero group of "non-joiners", including the Hulk, the ], ], the ], ], ], ] and others. | |||
* '''Warbound''' from ''Planet Hulk'' | |||
** ''']''' - A stone man of the Kronan race who once fought ]. | |||
** ''']''' - A meek insectoid who becomes king of his freed people before transforming into a behemoth. | |||
** '''No-Name, the ]''' - Sole survivor of a pack of Brood warriors that landed on Planet Sakaar. | |||
** '''Elloe''' - Daughter of a high ranking Sakaaran official whom the Red King tries for treason. | |||
** '''Hiroim, the Shamed''' - a fallen "Shadow Priest", he was expelled from his order for the heresy of believing he could be the Sakaarson, the fabled savior of planet Sakaar. | |||
** '''], the Oldstrong''' - the Hulk's queen. Died in #105. | |||
* ] | |||
{{anchor|Titan}}'''Titan''' is a more monstrous and malicious form of Hulk who stands at 30 ft., has black skin, rock-like spikes on his shoulders, and possesses the ability to shoot lasers from his eyes.<ref>''Hulk'' Vol. 5 #3. Marvel Comics.</ref> This personality was born when it was planted in Hulk by ].<ref>''Hulk'' Vol. 5 #14. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
====Enemies==== | |||
].]] | |||
* ''']''' – The Hulk's primary physical rival, also gamma-spawned | |||
* ''']''' - Thor villain, able to magically "absorb" the properties of things/people he touches | |||
* ''']''' - a giant two-headed android | |||
* ''']'''- A super strong villian whose magical strength rival that of the Hulk's. | |||
* ''']''' – Gamma-irradiated super-genius | |||
* ''']''' - Would-be world conqueror and long-time Hulk villain, who once possessed the body of the Abomination | |||
* '''The Red King''' – The emperor of the planet Sakaar, dethroned and killed by the Hulk and his Warbound. | |||
* ''']'''- A ]-based villain with super strength, speed, and tough hide like a rhino. | |||
* ''']''' - A ruthless military leader, who is also hunting for the Hulk. | |||
* ''']''' – Betty Ross' father, a military leader often on the hunt for the Hulk. | |||
* ''']''' – Betty Ross' ex-husband, a military officer who tries to kill Bruce Banner and destroy the Hulk. Currently deceased. | |||
* ''']''' | |||
* ''']''' - A large savage cannibalistic monster from the Canadian north woods. | |||
* ''']''' – Electricity-based villain/monster | |||
===Powers and abilities=== | |||
==Other versions== | |||
====Bruce Banner==== | |||
Considered to be one of the greatest scientific minds on Earth, Banner possesses "a mind so brilliant it cannot be measured on any known intelligence test."<ref>{{cite news| last=Pisani | first=Joseph | title=The Smartest Superheroes | work=BusinessWeek | date=June 2006 | url= http://www.businessweek.com/stories/2006-05-31/the-smartest-superheroes-businessweek-business-news-stock-market-and-financial-advice|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20140115135337/http://www.businessweek.com/stories/2006-05-31/the-smartest-superheroes-businessweek-business-news-stock-market-and-financial-advice|archive-date= January 15, 2014|url-status= dead|access-date=December 9, 2007}}</ref> ] estimates that he is the fourth most-intelligent person on Earth.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Pak, Greg|penciller= Oliver, Ben |inker= Oliver, Ben|colorist=Gandini, Veronica | letterer=Bowland, Simon | editor=Paniccia, Mark | story= The List: Hulk |title= Dark Reign: The List – Hulk|volume= 1|issue= 1|date= December 2009}}</ref> Banner holds expertise in biology, chemistry, engineering, medicine, physiology, and nuclear physics. Using this knowledge, he creates advanced technology dubbed "Bannertech", which is on par with technological development from Tony Stark or Doctor Doom. These technologies include a ] and a ] that can protect him from the attacks of Hulk-level entities. | |||
After becoming a fugitive from the law, Banner is forced to go on the run and over the years learns various skills in order to both survive and remain under radar of those who are hunting him. Banner's most frequent method of travel includes hitchhiking, train hopping or simply just walking as he is unable to travel legally via planes, passenger ships or buses due to being in several travel watchlists. Banner is generally on the move and rarely ever stays in one place for very long and only does so if there's a possibility of curing himself. He will only ever stay in one place for an extended period of time if it provides him with complete solitude and privacy where the Hulk can do little to no harm. | |||
===The Maestro=== | |||
To avoid being tracked, Banner does not use cell phones, debit or credit cards and will only use payphones or cash. He will often use fake identities when staying at motels or working jobs that require identification. Having been on the run for years, Banner can normally tell when he is being followed and will generally make a run for it when he is discovered. Having traveled across the globe, Banner is able to sneak over borders without being detected and can get by, by either knowing or learning the local language. Often traveling light, Banner has little to no possessions that he carries in either a satchel or backpack. Often losing everything he owns after transforming into the Hulk, Banner avoids keeping anything of personal value to him so that he can easily replace the items and clothes that were lost or destroyed. | |||
The Maestro, who first appears in ''Hulk: Future Imperfect'' #1 (Jan. 1993), is a version of the Hulk from an alternate future timeline, approximately a hundred years into the future, combining Banner's intelligence with the Hulk's more malevolent aspects. After a nuclear war kills almost all of Earth's superhumans and brings the world to the brink of extinction, the Maestro seizes control. | |||
To support himself financially, Banner will work quick part-time jobs and will only accept payments in cash. These jobs have varied from simply working in low pay diners to working as local doctor. Banner's work ethic as well as his vast knowledge and skillset in science, medicine and engineering often help him get hired rather quickly. Unless desperate, Banner will generally avoid jobs that are high stress due to the potential danger of transforming into the Hulk. | |||
Gray haired and balding, the Maestro is clearly older than the Hulk, but is also significantly stronger due to the radiation he has absorbed since the war. He rules the city of Dystopia, built to his own designs and protected by radiation shielding. Brutal soldiers with hi-tech equipment keep the "peace" and impose the Maestro's iron will. The Maestro himself dwells in a grand palace, where a ]n atmosphere reigns. Other gamma-irradiated beings, She-Hulk (now calling herself "Shulk") and the Abomination, survived the war and seem to have conquered other areas of the world. | |||
].]] | |||
Not long after the war, an elderly Rick Jones encounters the reality-hopping mutant ], who has possessed the body of an alternate reality Hulk from the year ]. Proteus intends to discard his current body and possess the Maestro. Jones, unaware of his plan, provides a weapon created by the X-Man ], which might be able to kill Maestro. However, the plan fails when the Maestro is warned by the ], who are pursuing Proteus. Proteus possesses a new host and flees to another world, breaking the Maestro's neck during his escape. | |||
Banner has little to no memories of the Hulk's actions aside from his initial transformation which he described as being extremely painful. Banner's lack of memories often terrifies him as he has often transformed back to witness the devastating aftermath of the Hulk's battles which both saddens and encourages him to find a way to understand his condition so that he won't cause anymore destruction or harm. During his travels, Banner has developed several different techniques to help suppress or control his transformations when he becomes a little angry or upset. Among the techniques he has learned over the years include meditation and hypnotherapy. While they have helped him to better understand and suppress his transformations, none of techniques Banner has learned have helped him to gain full control over the Hulk. | |||
Years later the Maestro, fully recovered from his injury, encounters a time-travelling ] and ]. Manipulated by the supervillain Thanatos, the three battle - but Captain Marvel and Spider-Man eventually return to their own time, with no consequence for the Maestro. | |||
====The Hulk==== | |||
Acquiring ]'s time machine, the rebels opposing the Maestro (led by Rick Jones) eventually decide to bring the 'Professor' Hulk forward from the past, hoping that he can defeat the Maestro. The Hulk agrees to help them and confronts the Maestro, but loses due to the Maestro's greater experience, and his ability to predict the Hulk's moves in combat (Although the Hulk does manage to deliver a few good punches). The Maestro breaks Hulk's neck to immobilize him, then tries to persuade the incapacitated Hulk that he should side with his future self, telling him that nothing will change when he returns home and he will still be persecuted.<ref name="futim2">''Hulk: Future Imperfect'' #2</ref> | |||
The Hulk possesses the potential for seemingly limitless physical strength that is influenced by his emotional state, particularly his anger.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Pak, Greg|penciller= ]|inker= Huet, Jeffrey|story= Warbound -- Part IV|title= The Incredible Hulk|volume= 2|issue= 109|date= October 2007}}</ref> This has been reflected in the repeated comment "The madder Hulk gets, the stronger Hulk gets."<ref>Achenbach, Joel (June 19, 2003). . '']''.</ref> The cosmically powerful entity known as the ] once analyzed the Hulk's physiology, and claimed that the Hulk's potential strength had "no finite element inside."<ref name="NerdistPowers"/> Hulk's strength has been depicted as sometimes limited by Banner's subconscious influence; when ] psionically "shut Banner off", Hulk became strong enough to overpower and destroy the physical form of the villain ].<ref>{{cite comic| writer= ]; Waid, Mark|penciller= ]; ]|inker= ]; ]; Townsend, Tim; Delpergang, Jesse|story= With Great Power ...|title= Onslaught: Marvel|issue= 1|date= October 1996}}</ref> Writer Greg Pak described the Worldbreaker Hulk shown during ''World War Hulk'' as having a level of physical power where "Hulk was stronger than any mortal—and most immortals—who ever walked the Earth"<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.brokenfrontier.com/columns/p/detail/hulk-skaar-hercules|title= Hulk, Skaar & Hercules|first= Greg|last= Pak|date= April 2, 2008|publisher= Broken Frontier|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20100111010836/http://www.brokenfrontier.com/columns/p/detail/hulk-skaar-hercules|archive-date= January 11, 2010|url-status= dead|access-date= April 27, 2010|df= mdy-all}}</ref> and depicted the character as powerful enough to completely destroy entire planets.<ref name="Hulks635" /><ref name="Hulks634">{{cite comic| writer= Pak, Greg|penciller= Pelletier, Paul|inker= Miki, Danny|story= Heart of the Monster Part Five|title= Incredible Hulks|issue= 634|date= October 2011}}</ref> His strength allows him to leap into lower Earth orbit or across continents,<ref>{{cite comic| writer= ]|penciller= ]|inker= Bogdanove, Jon|story= Tides|title= The Incredible Hulk|volume= 3|issue= 33|date= December 2001}}</ref><ref>{{cite comic| writer= Mantlo, Bill|penciller= Buscema, Sal|inker= Buscema, Sal|story= Waiting For the U-Foes!|title= The Incredible Hulk|volume= 2|issue= 254|date= December 1980}}</ref> and he has displayed superhuman speed.<ref name="Hulk440" /><ref name="World War Hulk #5 2007">{{cite comic| writer= Pak, Greg|penciller= ]|inker= ]|story= The Incredible Hulk Versus the Sentry|title= World War Hulk|issue= 5|date= January 2008}}</ref> Exposure to radiation has also been shown to make the Hulk stronger.<ref name="NerdistPowers"/> It is unknown how he gains biomass during transformation but it may be linked to the One-Below-All. | |||
His durability, regeneration, and endurance also increase in proportion to his temper.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= David, Peter|penciller= ]|inker= Ivy, Chris|story= Cold Storage|title= The Incredible Hulk|volume= 2|issue= 394|date= June 1992}}</ref> Hulk is resistant to injury or damage, though the degree to which varies between interpretations, but he has withstood the equivalent of solar temperatures,<ref>{{cite comic| writer= ]|penciller= Rebner, Jeff|inker= Irwin, Mark|story= Sins of the Father|title= The Incredible Hulk '97|issue= 1|date= 1997}}</ref><ref>{{cite comic| writer= Pak, Greg|penciller= Romita, John Jr.|inker= Janson, Klaus|story= Hulk|title= ]|issue= 2|date= September 2007}}</ref> nuclear explosions,<ref name="Hulk440">{{cite comic| writer= David, Peter|penciller= ]|inker= ]|story= The Big Bang|title= The Incredible Hulk|volume= 2|issue= 440|date= April 1996}}</ref><ref>{{cite comic| writer= Way, Daniel|penciller= Dazo, Bong|inker= Pimentel, Joe|story= Operation: Annihilation Part One: Journada Del Muerto|title= ]|volume= 4|issue= 37|date= July 2011}}</ref><ref name="FF533">{{cite comic| writer= ]|penciller= ]|inker= ]|story= What Happens in Vegas, Stays in Vegas|title= ]|issue= 533|date= January 2006}}</ref><ref name="Hulk3.105">{{cite comic| writer= Pak, Greg|penciller= Pagulayan, Carlo|inker= Huet, Jeffrey|story= Planet Hulk Armageddon Part II|title= The Incredible Hulk|volume= 3|issue= 105|date= June 2007}}</ref> and planet-shattering impacts.<ref name="Hulks635"/><ref name="Hulks634"/><ref>{{cite comic| writer= ]|penciller= Wilson, Ron|inker= ]|story= Kids Will Be Kids|title= ]|issue= 52|date= June 1990}}</ref><ref>{{cite comic| writer= Greenberg, Glen; ]|penciller= Garney, Ron|inker= ]|story= Heart of the Beast|title= ]|volume= 3|issue= 125|date= February 1997}}</ref><ref>{{cite comic| writer= Lee, Stan|penciller= Trimpe, Herb|inker= Adkins, Dan|story= The Brute Battles On!|title= The Incredible Hulk|volume= 2|issue= 112|date= February 1969}}</ref> Despite his remarkable resiliency, continuous barrages of high-caliber gunfire can hinder his movement to some degree while he can be temporarily subdued by intense attacks with chemical weapons such as anesthetic gases, although any interruption of such dosages will allow him to quickly recover.<ref>{{cite comic|writer= ]|penciller= Buscema, Sal|inker= Palmer, Tom|story=You Just Don't Quarrel With the Quintronic Man!|title=The Incredible Hulk|date=July 1977|volume=2|issue=213}}</ref> He has been shown to have both regenerative and adaptive healing abilities, including growing tissues to allow him to breathe underwater,<ref>{{cite comic| writer= David, Peter|penciller= Weeks, Lee|inker= Palmer, Tom|story= Tempest Fugit, Part 1 of 5|title= The Incredible Hulk|volume= 3|issue= 77|date= March 2005}}</ref> surviving unprotected in space for extended periods,<ref>{{cite comic| writer= David, Peter|penciller= ]; Weeks, Lee; ]|inker= Hanna, Scott; Weeks, Lee; Palmer, Tom|story= Casus Belli|title= World War Hulk Prologue: World Breaker|issue= 1|date= July 2007}}</ref> and when injured, healing from most wounds within seconds, including, on one occasion, the complete destruction of most of his body mass.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= David, Peter|penciller= Keown, Dale|inker= Farmer, Mark|story= Betrayals|title= The Incredible Hulk|volume= 2|issue= 398|date= October 1992}}</ref> His future self, the "Maestro", was even eventually able to recover from being blown to pieces.<ref name="Hulk460">{{cite comic| writer= David, Peter|penciller= Kubert, Adam|inker= Farmer, Mark|story= Homecoming|title= The Incredible Hulk|volume= 2|issue= 460|date= January 1998}}</ref> As an effect, he has an extremely prolonged lifespan.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= David, Peter|penciller= Keown, Dale|inker= Weems, Joe; Livesay, John|story= The Last Titan|title= Incredible Hulk: The End|issue= 1|date= August 2002}}</ref><ref name="ThanosWins">{{cite comic| writer= Cates, Donny|penciller= Shaw, Geoff|inker= Shaw, Geoff|story= Thanos Wins|title= Thanos|volume= 2|issue= 17|date= March 2018}}</ref> | |||
After the Hulk's recovery, the two clash once more; but despite the Hulk's best efforts, the Maestro is still far too powerful for him. At the last minute, the Maestro is defeated by the use of Doom's time machine, and sent back to the time and place that the Hulk was created: ground zero during the testing of the atomic Gamma Bomb, the only bomb that the Hulk knew the ground zero location of. (It was speculated that such an explosion was the only thing that could kill the Maestro.) Appearing next to the bomb itself, Maestro is seemingly killed in the same moment that creates the Hulk,<ref name="futim2"/> but some part of his consciousness still remains, tied to the skeletal fragments at the Gamma Bomb site. | |||
He also possesses less commonly described powers, including abilities allowing him to "home in" to his place of origin in New Mexico;<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Byrne, John|penciller= Byrne, John|inker= Wiacek, Bob|story= Call of the Desert|title= The Incredible Hulk|volume= 2|issue= 314|date= December 1985}}</ref> resist ],<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Wein, Len|penciller= Buscema, Sal|inker= ]|story= The Titan Strikes Back!|title= ]|issue= 12|date= February 1974}}</ref><ref>{{cite comic| writer= Mantlo, Bill|penciller= Buscema, Sal|inker= Buscema, Sal; Milgrom, Al|story= The Family That Dies Together ... !|title= The Incredible Hulk|volume= 2|issue= 259|date= May 1981}}</ref><ref>{{cite comic| writer= Loeb, Jeph|penciller= ]|inker= Hanna, Scott|story= Loose Cannons|title= ]|issue= 34|date= August 1996}}</ref><ref>{{cite comic| writer= ]|penciller= ]|inker= Di Vito, Andrea|story= Hard Questions|title= World War Hulk: X-Men|issue= 1|date= August 2007}}</ref> or ];<ref>{{cite comic| writer= ]; Wein, Len|penciller= Buscema, Sal|inker= Abel, Jack|story= And Six Shall Crush the Hulk|title= The Incredible Hulk Annual|issue= 5|date= October 1976}}</ref><ref>{{cite comic| writer= Mantlo, Bill|penciller= Buscema, Sal|inker= Buscema, Sal|story= Devolution!|title= The Incredible Hulk|volume= 2|issue= 266|date= December 1981}}</ref><ref>{{cite comic| writer= David, Peter|penciller= Purves, Jeff|inker= ]|story= Countdown Part 4: The Abomination|title= The Incredible Hulk|volume= 2|issue= 364|date= December 1989}}</ref> grow stronger from radiation<ref name="Hulks635">{{cite comic| writer= Pak, Greg|penciller= Pelletier, Paul|inker= Miki, Danny|story= Heart of the Monster Part Six|title= Incredible Hulks|issue= 635|date= October 2011}}</ref><ref name="FF533" /><ref name="Hulk3.105" /><ref>{{cite comic| writer= David, Peter|penciller= ]|inker= Pérez, George|story= Part 2 of 2|title= Hulk: Future Imperfect|issue= 2|date= January 1993}}</ref><ref>{{cite comic| writer= Gage, Christos|penciller= Di Vito, Andrea|inker= Di Vito, Andrea|story= Sworn to Protect|title= World War Hulk: X-Men|issue= 2|date= September 2007}}</ref> or dark magic;<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Jenkins, Paul|penciller= Keown, Dale|inker= Keown, Dale|title= ] / The Incredible Hulk|issue= 1|date= June 2004}}</ref><ref name="Hulk3.82">{{cite comic| writer= David, Peter|penciller= ]|inker= Lee, Jae|story= Dear Tricia ...|title= The Incredible Hulk|volume= 3|issue= 82|date= August 2005}}</ref> punch his way between separate temporal<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Thomas, Roy|penciller= Trimpe, Herb|inker= Buscema, Sal|story= Descent Into the Time-Stream|title= The Incredible Hulk|volume= 2|issue= 135|date= January 1971}}</ref><ref>{{cite comic| writer= Waid, Mark|penciller= Jacinto, Kim|inker= Jacinto, Kim|story= Agent of T.I.M.E. Part Five|title= The Indestructible Hulk|issue= 15|date= January 2014}}</ref> or spatial<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Waid, Mark|penciller= Bagley, Mark|inker= Hennessy, Andrew|story= Who Shot the Hulk #1|title= Hulk|volume= 3|issue= 1|date= June 2014}}</ref> dimensions; and to see and interact with astral forms.<ref name="Hulk3.82" /><ref>{{cite comic| writer= David, Peter|penciller= Keown, Dale|inker= McLeod, Bob|story= Silent Screams|title= The Incredible Hulk|volume= 2|issue= 369|date= May 1990}}</ref> Some of these abilities were in later years explained as being related; his ability to home in on the New Mexico bomb site was due to his latent ability to sense astral forms and spirits, since the bomb site was also the place where the Maestro's skeleton was and the Maestro's spirit was calling out to him in order to absorb his radiation.<ref name="Hulk460"/> He is also shown to have a separate memory to Bruce Banner - when Spider-Man has the knowledge of his secret identity erased during ], the Hulk later asks how '''Peter''' is doing, not Spider-Man; upon questioning, he enigmatically states "Banner forgot. But '''I''' don't forget." | |||
Eventually the Hulk learns that the "homing sense" which has always allowed him to locate ground zero, his "birth" place, is actually attracted to the Maestro's spirit and remains. The Maestro has also been absorbing gamma radiation from the Hulk each time he returns to the site, gradually restoring himself. When the Hulk returns, shortly after the ] crossover, he is radiating vast amounts of energy. Maestro finally absorbs enough radiation to restore himself to life, although in a weakened and emaciated form. | |||
In the first ''Hulk'' comic series, "massive" doses of gamma rays would cause the Hulk to transform back to Banner, although this ability was written out of the character by the 1970s.{{citation needed|date=November 2018}} | |||
Shortly thereafter, Maestro is captured by Asgardian trolls, who place his soul into the Asgardian ]. As the Destroyer, he battles the Hulk - but as the Hulk and Maestro share the same DNA, Hulk is able to enter the Destroyer and defeat the weakened Maestro, who is seemingly killed by an avalanche. | |||
==Supporting characters== | |||
Creator Peter David has stated{{Fact|date=March 2007}} that the Maestro is intended to be an evil and insane alternate Hulk - not a separate personality within Bruce Banner. | |||
{{Main|List of Hulk supporting characters}} | |||
Over the long publication history of the Hulk's adventures, many recurring characters have featured prominently, including his best friend and sidekick ], love interest and wife ] and her father, the often adversarial ]. Both Banner and Hulk have families created in their respective personas. Banner is son to Brian, an abusive father who killed Banner's mother while she tried to protect her son from his father's delusional attacks, and cousin to ], the ], who serves as his frequent ally.<ref name="DeFalco197">DeFalco "1980s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 197: "Stan Lee decided to introduce a female version of the Hulk ... With the help of artist John Buscema, Lee created Jennifer Walters, the cousin of Bruce Banner."</ref> Banner had a stillborn child with Betty, while the Hulk has two sons with his deceased second wife ] Oldstrong, ] and ], and his DNA was used to create a daughter named ] with ] the warrior woman.<ref>{{cite news |first=David |last=Pepose |url=http://www.newsarama.com/comics/Hulks-Dark-Son-100611.html |title=Dark Son Rising As The Other Son Of Hulk Hits Earth |work=]|date=June 11, 2010|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20141208023445/http://www.newsarama.com/5432-dark-son-rising-as-the-other-son-of-hulk-hits-earth.html|archive-date=December 8, 2014 |url-status= live|access-date=June 11, 2010}}</ref> | |||
''The Fantastic Four'' #12<!-- "The" part of the cover logo through issue #15 --> (March 1963), featured the Hulk's first battle with the ]. Although many early Hulk stories involve Ross trying to capture or destroy the Hulk, the main villain is often a radiation-based character, like the ] or the Leader, along with other foes such as the ], or Asian warlord General Fang. Ross' daughter Betty loves Banner and criticizes her father for pursuing the Hulk. General Ross' right-hand man, ], also loves Betty and is torn between pursuing Hulk and trying to gain Betty's love more honorably. Rick Jones serves as the Hulk's friend and sidekick in these early tales. The Hulk's archenemies are the ] and the ]. The Abomination is more monstrous-looking, twice as strong as the Hulk at normal levels (however, the Abomination's strength levels do not increase when ''he'' gets angry) and wreaks havoc for fun and pleasure. The Leader is a gamma-irradiated super-genius who has tried plan after plan to take over the world. | |||
===''The End''=== | |||
The '']'' ], set almost two hundred years into an alternative future, portrays Bruce Banner as the last human and the sole survivor of a nuclear war. In the aftermath of the war, Hulk retreats to a cave - emerging to find that the only other life left on earth is a swarm of monstrous mutant cockroaches. Banner, now extremely old due to having absorbed some of the Hulk's regenerative ability, has lost his will to live. As he suffers heart failure, Banner hallucinates the sight of all his loved ones, and embrace his demise. The Hulk, on the other hand, is not ready to die, and transforms himself as Banner finally passes, leaving the Hulk sitting on a deserted mountain as he reflects on how, at last, he is alone. | |||
== |
==Cultural impact== | ||
]]] | |||
]'' #5. Pencils by ].]] | |||
The Hulk character and the concepts behind it have been raised to the level of ] status by many within and outside the comic book industry. In 2003, '']'' claimed the character had "stood the test of time as a genuine icon of American ]."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.accessmylibrary.com/coms2/summary_0286-23626618_ITM |title=Smash! |access-date=March 23, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080612085443/http://www.accessmylibrary.com/coms2/summary_0286-23626618_ITM |archive-date=June 12, 2008 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}</ref> In 2008, the Hulk was listed as the 19th greatest comic book character by '']'' magazine.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.wizarduniverse.com/05230810thgreatestcharacters.html|title= The 200 Greatest Comic Book Characters of All Time|date= May 23, 2008|work= Wizard|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20080526115937/http://www.wizarduniverse.com/05230810thgreatestcharacters.html|archive-date= May 26, 2008|url-status= dead|quote= The one constant for this 'atomic Jekyll-and-Hyde,' as they used to say, remains Bruce Banner's eternal struggle to control the gamma-spawned half of his psyche. The green goliath never goes out of style: The Hulk is, undeniably, all the rage.}}</ref> '']'' magazine named him as the 14th-greatest comic-book character and the fifth-greatest Marvel character.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.empireonline.com/50greatestcomiccharacters/default.asp?c=14 | title=The 50 Greatest Comic Book Characters | work=] | date=December 5, 2006|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20131014074050/http://www.empireonline.com/50greatestcomiccharacters/default.asp?c=14|archive-date= October 14, 2013|url-status= live|access-date=April 27, 2010}}</ref> In 2011, the Hulk placed No. 9 on ]'s list of "Top 100 Comic Book Heroes",<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.ign.com/top/comic-book-heroes/9|title= Top 100 Comic Book Heroes|date= 2011|website= ]|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20150703185143/http://www.ign.com/top/comic-book-heroes/9|archive-date= July 3, 2015|url-status= live}}</ref> and fourth on their list of "The Top 50 Avengers" in 2012.<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.ign.com/top/avengers/4|title= The Top 50 Avengers|date= April 30, 2012|website= IGN|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20150309072434/http://www.ign.com/top/avengers/4|archive-date= March 9, 2015|url-status= live|access-date=July 28, 2015}}</ref> | |||
A version of the Hulk appears in the ] series, first in '']'' #2 (2001), written by ] and drawn by ]. "Ultimate Hulk" amplifies Banner's emotions, particularly ], seeking to destroy those who wrong Banner. He also exhibits extreme ]{{issue}}, ] ('']'' #1), and ]; several stories mention his devouring people (''Ultimate War'' #3). Ultimate Hulk has also been portrayed as being able to break ]. | |||
===Analysis=== | |||
In '']'', Banner works for ], attempting to re-create the super-soldier formula that created ]. When Captain America is recovered from a block of ice, Banner's funding seems likely to be cut. The team forms without Banner's input, but S.H.I.E.L.D. faces heavy criticism for its extensive budget and lack of purpose. Banner, ridiculed by members of the Ultimates and rejected and taunted by his ex-girlfriend ], combines Captain America's blood with the Hulk formula, and injects it into himself (''Ultimates'' #4). He then calls Betty to warn her, saying that his intention was to give the Ultimates a visible enemy, but then breaks down and admits that he "just missed being big". He becomes a grey-skinned Hulk that tracks down Betty Ross, destroying everything in his path and murdering hundreds of people. The Hulk overpowers the Ultimates until the ] fires her bio-electric sting directly into his brain, which changes the Hulk back into Banner, who is restrained and imprisoned in the S.H.I.E.L.D. base the ] - in a cell Banner himself has designed. | |||
The Hulk is often viewed as a reaction to war. As well as being a reaction to the ], the character has been a cipher for the frustrations the ] raised, and Ang Lee said that the ] influenced his direction.<ref name=GreshWeinberg/><ref>{{Cite magazine| title=Becoming the Hulk | magazine=] | date=June 30, 2003 | last=Lahr | first=John | page=72 | url = http://archives.newyorker.com/?iid=15295&startpage=page0000080}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news| title=The Clash of Symbols | newspaper=]|location=Glasgow, United Kingdom| date=December 23, 2007 | last=Phelan | first=Stephen | page=42}}</ref> In the ] edited edition of '']'', Stefanie Diekmann explored Marvel Comics' reaction to the ]. Diekmann discussed The Hulk's appearance in the 9/11 tribute comic ''Heroes'', claiming that his greater prominence, alongside ], aided in "stressing the connection between anger and justified violence without having to depict anything more than a well-known and well-respected protagonist."<ref>{{Cite news |last=Diekmann |first=Stefanie |url=http://arts.guardian.co.uk/guesteditors/story/0,14481,1201733,00.html |title=Hero and superhero |date=April 24, 2004 |location=London, United Kingdom |newspaper=The Guardian |access-date=March 23, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080612092926/http://arts.guardian.co.uk/guesteditors/story/0,14481,1201733,00.html |archive-date=June 12, 2008 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}</ref> In ''Marvel: Five Fabulous Decades of the World's Greatest Comics'', ] addresses the Hulk as an embodiment of cultural fears of radiation and nuclear science. He quotes Jack Kirby thus: "As long as we're experimenting with radioactivity, there's no telling what may happen, or how much our advancements in science may cost us." Daniels continues, "The Hulk became Marvel's most disturbing embodiment of the perils inherent in the ]."<ref name=DanielsMarvel>{{Cite book|last=Daniels|first=Les|author-link = Les Daniels|title= Marvel: Five Fabulous Decades of the World's Greatest Comics |publisher= ]|date= 1991|location= New York, New York|page= 89|isbn= 9780810938212}}</ref> | |||
In ''Comic Book Nation'', Bradford Wright alludes to Hulk's counterculture status, referring to a 1965 '']'' magazine poll amongst college students which "revealed that student radicals ranked ] and the Hulk alongside the likes of ] and ] as their favorite revolutionary icons." Wright goes on to cite examples of his anti-authority symbol status. Two of these are "The Ballad of the Hulk" by ], and the '']'' cover for September 30, 1971, a full color ] piece commissioned for the magazine.<ref name="Nation"/><ref>{{cite web |last=Goldberg |first=Jonah |url=http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=MDMyYTQ4NTc5ZTU1Y2U0ZDc4ZjhmZmIwMmRhZjNjNDg= |title=Spin City |date=May 7, 2002 |work=National Review Online |access-date=March 23, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080608015850/http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=MDMyYTQ4NTc5ZTU1Y2U0ZDc4ZjhmZmIwMmRhZjNjNDg= |archive-date=June 8, 2008 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}</ref> The Hulk has been caricatured in such ] as '']'',<ref name=IAmFuriousYellow>{{Cite episode |series= ]|title=] |airdate= April 28, 2002|season=13|number= 18|credits = ] (writer); ] (director)|network = ]}}</ref> '']'', and '']'',<ref>{{Cite episode | title= ]|series= ]|credits= ] (writer); ] (director)|network= Fox Broadcasting Company|airdate= April 18, 1999|season= 1|number=3}}</ref> and such ] ] as '']''.<ref>{{Cite episode |series=]|credits= ], ], and ] (writers); Posner, Geoff (director)|title= ]|series-no= 2|number= 6| airdate= June 19, 1984}}</ref> The character is also used as a cultural reference point for someone displaying anger or agitation. For example, in a 2008 '']'' review of an '']'' episode, a character is described as going "into Incredible Hulk mode, smashing up his flat."<ref>{{Cite news| title=We love telly: We love soaps | newspaper=] | location=London, United Kingdom | date=February 5, 2008 | last=Quigley | first=Maeve | page=1}}</ref> In September 2019, ] ] likened himself to The Hulk in an interview with the '']'', as political pressure built on him to request an extension to the date of ].<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.euronews.com/2019/09/15/boris-johnson-channeling-the-incredible-hulk-defiant-on-october-31-brexit|title=Boris Johnson, channelling the Incredible Hulk, defiant on October 31 Brexit|date=15 September 2019|work=]|access-date=15 September 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.theneweuropean.co.uk/top-stories/the-best-reactions-to-boris-johnson-comparing-himself-to-the-hulk-1-6270685|title=Boris Johnson compared himself to the Hulk and the internet reacted with scorn|last=Read|first=Jonathon|date=15 September 2019|work=]|access-date=15 September 2019|archive-date=June 10, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200610132603/https://www.theneweuropean.co.uk/top-stories/the-best-reactions-to-boris-johnson-comparing-himself-to-the-hulk-1-6270685|url-status=dead}}</ref> | |||
During the ] invasion, Captain America orders the incredulous Banner (dubbed the "Weapon of Last Resort") to be beaten and thrown from a helicopter into the battlefield fray below. Banner transforms into the Hulk before hitting the ground, and immediately assaults Captain America, who uses Banner's jealousy to divert the Hulk on the Chitauri commander, ], whom the Hulk obliterates and subsequently consumes. Captain America then redirects the Hulk to destroy the airborne Chitauri fleet, telling the Hulk that the aliens had previously referred to him as a "sissy-boy." | |||
The Hulk, especially his alter ego Bruce Banner, is also a common reference in ]. The term was represented as an analogue to marijuana in ]'s '']'',<ref>"" from '']''. ]. 1999.</ref> while more conventional references are made in ] and ]'s popular single "]".{{citation needed|date=November 2021}} | |||
Following the Chitauri invasion Banner is returned to his cell and resumes his work for the Ultimates with Hank Pym. One day, top-secret information regarding the Hulk/Banner connection is leaked to the press. Banner is convicted for the deaths of the more than 800 people who died in his New York City rampage and sentenced to death by ]. After consuming a sedative designed by Hank Pym, his unconscious body is left on a ship in the ocean. Just before the explosion, Banner wakes up and transforms into the Hulk. It is implied that Hank's sedative deliberately wore off too soon, and Bruce makes a secret phonecall to thank Hank Pym after the incident. | |||
The 2003 ]-directed '']'' film saw discussion of the character's appeal to ]s.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Marchetti |first=Gina |url=http://www.filmint.nu/?q=node/68 |title=Hollywood Taiwan |journal=Film International |volume=2 |issue=6 |date=November 2004 |pages=42–51 |issn=1651-6826 |doi=10.1386/fiin.2.6.42 |access-date=March 23, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070613204440/http://www.filmint.nu/?q=node/68 |archive-date=June 13, 2007 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}</ref> The Taiwanese-born Ang Lee commented on the "subcurrent of repression" that underscored the character of The Hulk, and how that mirrored his own experience: "Growing up, my artistic leanings were always repressed—there was always pressure to do something 'useful,' like being a doctor." Jeff Yang, writing for the '']'', extended this self-identification to Asian American culture, arguing that "the passive-aggressive streak runs deep among Asian Americans—especially those who have entered creative careers, often against their parents' wishes."<ref>{{cite web|last=Yang |first=Jeff |url=http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/gate/archive/2006/06/01/apop.DTL |title=Look ... Up in the sky! It's Asian Man! |date=June 1, 2006 |work=] |publisher=] |access-date=March 23, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080612155951/http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/gate/archive/2006/06/01/apop.DTL |archive-date=June 12, 2008 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}</ref> | |||
'']'' shows the aftermath of the assassination attempt, chronicling Banner's travels through France, Ireland and India, seeking a means to control the Hulk within. Bruce Banner finally arrives in Tibet, seeking the ] whom he hopes can reveal the true relationship behind Banner and the Hulk and the ability to control him. Nick Fury, now aware of Banner's existence, dispatches ] to assassinate Banner. During their initial battle, the Hulk overpowers Wolverine and tears him in half, severing his adamantium spinal column, and scatters his remains for miles across the Tibetan mountain range. | |||
There have been explorations about the real-world possibility of Hulk's gamma-radiation-based origin. In ''The Science of Superheroes'', Lois Grest and Robert Weinberg examined Hulk's powers, explaining the scientific flaws in them. Most notably, they point out that the level of ] Banner is exposed to at the initial blast would induce radiation sickness and kill him, or if not, create significant cancer risks for Banner, because hard radiation strips cells of their ability to function. They go on to offer up an alternate origin, in which a Hulk might be created by biological experimentation with ]s and ]. Charles Q. Choi from LiveScience.com further explains that, unlike the Hulk, gamma rays are not green; existing as they do beyond the visible spectrum, gamma rays have no color at all that we can describe. He also explains that gamma rays are so powerful (the most powerful form of electromagnetic radiation and 10,000 times more powerful than visible light) that they can even convert energy into matter – a possible explanation for the increased mass that Bruce Banner takes on during transformations. "Just as the Incredible Hulk 'is the strongest one there is,' as he says himself, so too are gamma-ray bursts the most powerful explosions known."<ref>{{cite web| last=Choi | first=Charles Q. | title=Gamma Rays: The Incredible, Hulking Reality | publisher=LiveScience | date=June 11, 2008 | url=http://www.livescience.com/strangenews/080611-incredible-hulk.html|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20140409043518/http://www.livescience.com/2590-gamma-rays-incredible-hulking-reality.html|archive-date= April 9, 2014|url-status= live|access-date=June 12, 2008}}</ref> | |||
In ''Ultimates 2'' #11, Bruce Banner appears in Washington D.C. He proclaims himself "in touch with inner sociopath" before allowing a Crimsom Dynamo robot to step on him. He immediately transforms into the Hulk and, with uncharacteristic wit, promptly rips the droid apart. He then continues to aid the Ultimates against the ] in issue #12, by dismembering, killing, and eating the ]. | |||
== |
==Other Marvel Comics characters called the Hulk== | ||
Prior to the debut of the Hulk in May 1962, Marvel had earlier monster characters that used the name the "Hulk", but had no direct relation. | |||
In the series '']'', set in an alternate world, the Hulk, like almost every other superbeing on the planet, has been affected by the zombification virus. Although he retains his strength and invulnerability, he no longer heals, does not feel pain and now craves human flesh. | |||
The zombie Hulk's transformations have been altered by the virus from being controlled by Banner's emotions to being controlled purely by his appetite — after feeding, he transforms back into Banner (also a zombie) until the hunger returns. As Banner is much smaller than the Hulk, one such transformation, following the Hulk's ingestion of a large object (Magneto's leg), causes his stomach to burst. | |||
* In '']'' #75 (June 1960), Albert Poole built an armor he called the Hulk. In modern-day reprints, the character's name was changed to ''Grutan''.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.marvunapp.com/Appendix4/poolealbertst.htm|title= The Hulk (Albert Poole)|first= Jeff|last= Christiansen|date= September 11, 2010 |publisher= The Appendix to the Handbook of the Marvel Universe|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20121120171213/http://www.marvunapp.com/Appendix4/poolealbertst.htm|archive-date=November 20, 2012 |url-status= live|access-date= February 12, 2011}}</ref> | |||
In the second issue, after devouring Magneto's leg, zombie Banner begs someone to hurt him to transform into zombie Hulk before his chest explodes from Magneto's leg. Thor hits him in the face with his "hammer", but since he can't feel pain, he can't tranform unless hungry, and this subsequently gives Banner difficulty speaking. Soon afterward, Magneto's femur bursts out of his chest. With subsequent transformations, he speaks and behaves as usual, though with the hole in his chest. | |||
* In '']'' #62 (Nov. 1960) was '']'', a huge, furry alien monster who went by the name of the Hulk.<ref>DeFalco "1960s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 79: "The lead story of issue #62, 'I Was a Slave of the Living Hulk', introduced a giant monster called the Hulk – similar in name only to the future Hulk."</ref> Coincidentally, the character's debut story was also illustrated by Jack Kirby. The character reappeared in issue #66 (March 1961). Since then the character has been a mainstay in the Marvel Universe, and was renamed ] the Living Titan.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.marvunapp.com/Appendix3/xemnuthetitan.htm|title= Xemnu the Titan|first= Jeff|last= Christiansen|date= March 15, 2012|publisher= The Appendix to the Handbook of the Marvel Universe|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20121120171435/http://www.marvunapp.com/Appendix3/xemnuthetitan.htm|archive-date=November 20, 2012 |url-status= live|access-date= January 23, 2013}}</ref> | |||
* A huge, orange, slimy monster called the Hulk was featured in a movie titled ''The Hulk'' in ''Tales to Astonish'' #21 (July 1961). In modern-day reprints, the character's name was changed to the ''Glop''.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.marvunapp.com/Appendix3/hulkgloptta.htm|title= Hulk (Glop)|first= Jeff|last= Christiansen|date= February 8, 2006|publisher= The Appendix to the Handbook of the Marvel Universe|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20121120171154/http://www.marvunapp.com/Appendix3/hulkgloptta.htm|archive-date=November 20, 2012 |url-status= live|access-date= February 12, 2011}}</ref> | |||
== Other versions == | |||
Hulk succeeds in killing the ] and is one of the zombies who devours the Surfer's corpse and absorbs some of its cosmic powers. The zombies then kill and consume ] himself, enhancing their powers further, though only the Hulk, ], ], ], ], and ] survive the battle. Cosmically enhanced, they takes Galactus' ship, leave Earth, and seek food elsewhere. Ravaging and devouring planets, the six zombies eventually become the cosmic threat known as '''The Galactus'''. | |||
A number of ]s and alternate timelines in Marvel Comics publications allow writers to introduce variations on the Hulk, in which the character's origins, behavior, and morality differ from the mainstream setting.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Harn |first=Darby |date=2021-07-10 |title=Marvel: 15 Strongest Versions Of The Hulk |url=https://screenrant.com/marvel-most-powerful-versions-hulk/ |access-date=2023-05-14 |website=ScreenRant |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Schedeen |first=Jesse |date=2014-07-23 |title=What Changes Are Coming to Marvel's Hulk Comic? |url=https://www.ign.com/articles/2014/07/23/what-changes-are-coming-to-marvels-hulk-comic |access-date=2023-05-14 |website=IGN |language=en}}</ref> In some stories, someone other than Bruce Banner is the Hulk. | |||
In some versions, the Hulk succumbs to the darker side of his nature: in "Future Imperfect" (December 1992), a future version of the Hulk has become the ], the tyrannical and ruthless ruler of a nuclear war-irradiated Earth,<ref name="AltMaestro"/> and in "]" (2008), an insane Hulk rules over a post-apocalyptic California and leads a gang of his inbred Hulk children created with his first cousin She-Hulk.<ref name="AltOML"/><ref name="AltOML2"/> | |||
===House of M=== | |||
In the altered reality of the ] company wide crossover '']'', Bruce Banner disappears in ], where he befriends an ] tribe, and attempts to control his dark side. When the mutant rulers of the Earth attack his tribe he retaliates, and eventually conquers Australia with the aid of ], most notably his former college girlfriend Monica Rappaccini, her daughter ], Dr Isaac Aaronson, and his son ]. | |||
=== |
===Age of Apocalypse=== | ||
In the ] alternative setting, Bruce Banner was never exposed to gamma radiation. Therefore, he did not become the Hulk. Instead he became a member of the Human High Council, where he was a scientist and became a weapons designer. However he also yearns to gain knowledge and power, something Apocalypse was willing to help with, and so Bruce sold himself to ], one of the ], to give him mutants as test subjects. He succeeds in his experiments and can now transform into a creature resembling the Grey Hulk. He was used as a mole in the council, but was discovered by ] and ] because the patterns of Bruce's injuries were identical to those sustained by the Hulk.<ref>''X-Universe'' #1-2</ref> | |||
In the '']'' setting David Banner is introduced as a courtier at the court of ]. When James becomes king of England, he sends Banner to the New World to kill Sir ], who has betrayed the crown by saving the "witchbreed" (]). In the same way as Bruce Banner saved Rick Jones, David dives in front of ] when the Anomaly that has affected the universe explodes. The radiation of the Anomaly transforms him into the Hulk. | |||
Later, Banner attempted to redeem himself by jumping out of the Human High Council ship in an effort to prevent it from getting struck by a gamma missile of his own creation. The missile detonated, allowing the Human High Council to escape ]. He fell back to Earth, landed in the Colosseum, and emerged as the Green Hulk. There were no further mentions of the Hulk in the Age of Apocalypse material.<ref>''Hulk: Broken Worlds Book 2''</ref> | |||
===2099=== | |||
{{main|Hulk 2099}} | |||
In ], the Hulk is John Eisenhart, a selfish film producer in "LotusLand" (future ]). He is inadvertently exposed to gamma radiation by the Knights of the Banner, who intend to create a Hulk of their own. As the Hulk, Eisenhart finds himself representing freedom to a closed-off society. | |||
===Age of |
===Age of X=== | ||
In the "]" reality, Bruce Banner was a scientist who was under contract from the United States government to build a device that would depower any mutant. However, during the testing phase one of the mutant volunteers began to panic. Her powers caused the machine to go off prematurely while still in the gamma spectrum. The mutants were killed and Banner was bombarded by gamma radiation. The combination of the radiation and the fact that some of the mutants' genes were imprinted on him as well, caused Banner to transform into the Hulk. Because of his exposure to mutant genes, Banner holds a deep murderous resentment for all mutants to the point that he volunteered for a suicide mission to detonate a chemical bomb that would destroy the entire mutant stronghold, forcing his former teammates to sacrifice their lives to detonate the bomb early. He was incinerated by his own bomb when one of his former teammates named Redback (this reality's ]) uses Steel Corpse's (this reality's ]) severed glove to destroy the bomb.<ref>''Age of X: Universe'' #1</ref> | |||
In the ], Banner was never exposed to gamma radiation, and never became the Hulk. Eventually he became a scientist for the Human High Council and one of its weapons designer. However, Banner sought to become more than human, thus offering his loyalty to ], one of the ], who supplied Banner with mutant test subjects. Thanks to his experiments, Banner was capable of transforming into ''The Thing'' (a being similar to the Grey Hulk). | |||
===Amalgam Comics=== | |||
'''The Skulk''' is a hero of the ] Universe. He is amalgamation of the Hulk and ]' ]. | |||
Bruce Banner was a scientist working with gamma rays. He was testing his gamma bomb out in the desert, but a tall figure walked out into the testing area. When Banner went out to see who it was, the man turned out to be Solomon Grundy. The bomb went off fusing Grundy and Banner together. When Banner gets angry he becomes Grundy, but the creature made a name for itself, calling itself Skulk.<ref>''Doctor Strangefate'' #1 (April 1996)</ref> | |||
===Breaker-Apart=== | |||
In a potential future, the One Below All is able to destroy Bruce Banner's soul and possesses the body of the Hulk. After which, it went on to kill Franklin Richards, Galactus, Mister Immortal, and many others until it was the only being left in the universe. Taking on Bruce's appearance, the One Below All encounters the Sentience of the Eighth Cosmos/Metatron and is able to trick and devour him, absorbing his powers. In the newly formed Ninth Cosmos, the One Below All used its newly acquired powers to transform Hulk into a Galactus-like being named the 'Breaker-Apart'. 10 billion years later, the Breaker-Apart has destroyed all light, all life, and all planets in the Multiverse. When Par%l tried to make contact and reason with it, the alien instead meets the abstract form of the One Below All which told hir it wanted to "Make all hollow as I, dark and dead as I" and killed Par%l and hir's planet, O%los.<ref>''Immortal Hulk'' #25 (October 23, 2019)</ref> | |||
===Bullet Points=== | |||
In the '']'' ], ] finds himself on the test site for a Gamma bomb and absorbs a large dose of gamma radiation, becoming the Hulk. In a further twist, later in the series, in an attempt to find a cure for Peter, Dr. Bruce Banner examines specimens taken from the test site and is bitten by a radioactive spider, becoming Spider-Man.<ref>''Bullet Points'' #4 (April 2007)</ref> Parker is killed by ] and Banner is killed by an Inheritor during the '']'' event. | |||
===Deadpool: Samurai (Earth-346)=== | |||
In the ''Deadpool: Samurai'' manga series, which takes place on Earth-346,<ref>Edge of Spider-Verse (Vol. 2) #3</ref> Bruce Banner removes a control collar from the singer Neiro Aratabi, who had been saved from a deranged fan by Deadpool. Banner then attempts to transform into the Hulk to help Deadpool stop HYDRA agents from retrieving the Gateway Controller, which had been hidden under the Tokyo Dome, but he was knocked unconscious by a piece of falling debris before he could finish his transformation.<ref>{{cite book |last=Kasama|first=Sanshiro|author-link= |date=March 31, 2022|title=Deadpool Samurai Volume One |url= |location=San Francisco|publisher=Viz Media |page= |isbn=978-1974725311}}</ref> Banner did gradually regain consciousness and he then completed transforming into the Hulk, but he was quickly defeated by Thanos, who had been summoned by the Hydra agents.<ref>{{cite book |last=Kasama|first=Sanshiro|author-link= |date=August 4, 2022|title=Deadpool Samurai Volume Two |url= |location=San Francisco|publisher=Viz Media |page= |isbn=978-1974732203}}</ref> | |||
===Earth X=== | ===Earth X=== | ||
The ] series featured a vastly different take on the character, one in which the Hulk and Bruce Banner have finally achieved separation. However, they still rely on each other with Banner becoming a blind child who sees through the Hulk's eyes. In an interview in ''Comicology Volume I: The Kingdom Come Companion'', ] said that the design of Earth-X Banner and Hulk was based on the appearance of ] and ].{{Volume needed|c=y|date=February 2013}} | |||
===Exiles=== | |||
In an interview in ''Comicology Volume I: The Kingdom Come Companion'', ] said that the design of Earth-X Banner and Hulk was based on the appearance of ] and ]. | |||
Numerous alternate versions of the Hulk have been present in the '']'' series. | |||
* A crazy version of the Hulk was seen attacking Canada. He was stopped by the Exiles and Alpha Flight. This battle featured the first appearance of the rogue reality jumpers known as Weapon X. The crazy Hulk was presumed dead after this encounter.<ref>''Exiles'' Vol 1 #5-6 (2001).</ref> | |||
==Parodies== | |||
* Another visually different Hulk appeared in this universe. This version had a long ponytail and wore a "Peace Out" costume, but he still retained his gamma-irradiated appearance, strength and his famous smashing abilities. He teamed up with an evil Firestar and was recruited by the Timebroker to stop an evil Hyperion.<ref>''Exiles'' #40 (2004).</ref> The plan succeeded and they both joined Weapon X. When Hyperion had gone even crazier than before, Hulk attacked and Weapon X began to fight with each other. This version of The Hulk was killed when Hyperion brutally fought him until he was in a weakened state, Hyperion then used his heat vision on The Hulk, melting and destroying him.<ref>''Exiles'' #43-44 (2004).</ref> His body is sent back to his reality, where his funeral is held. Some time after Hulk's death, Firestar committed suicide when she incinerates herself and a teammate. | |||
* A conqueror version of the Hulk, in his gladiator outfit, killed Annihilus, most of the superhumans, took full control of the Annihilation Wave, and decimated Earth. He has been apparently knocked unconscious by the Exiles. It is unknown if he survived this incident. This version is even more insane than the other alternate versions of the Hulk. While the Exiles had been dealing with Proteus, Hulk's Annihilation Wave killed many of the superhumans which should not have happened if not for Proteus. A new version of the Exiles have been present showing the surviving superhumans and they all have one goal: to stop Hulk and his Annihilation Wave, in which they apparently succeeded. | |||
===Hulk: Chapter One=== | |||
In '']'' episode ''Summer Holiday'', Neil (]) becomes angered after being insulted relentlessly by his housemates, and turns into the Hulk, throwing everyone about in slow motion. | |||
In the ''Hulk 1999 Annual'', writer ] revised the Hulk's origin, much like his '']''. In the revised origin, the Gamma Bomb that was being tested is now a gamma laser, and a ] was responsible for ]' presence on the base during the gamma test. The Skrull also disguised himself as Igor Rasminsky (Drenkov in the original stories), a fellow scientist working on the project. The contemporary setting removes the ] context of the original story, and serves as a tie-in to the '']'' maxi-series created by ] and Byrne, which also brought the origins of many Marvel characters out of the 1960s and into contemporary times.<ref>Hulk 1999 Annual.</ref><ref>Marvel: The Lost Generation, issues 12-1; 2000-2001.</ref> The storyline is currently designated as set on Earth-9992, and is not part of mainstream Marvel continuity (]). | |||
===The Last Avengers Story=== | |||
The television show '']'' uses the Hulk character in several ]. In the ], ] episode hosted by ], Lois Lane and Superman hold a dinner. One of the guests is the Incredible Hulk, played by ] as a rude and offensive boor. In the ], ] episode hosted by ], ] plays the Incredible Hulk in a sketch about ]'s ]. Farley's Hulk protests the suggestion of his giving a eulogy in broken English but then puts on a pair of glasses and delivers an erudite, impassioned farewell. In the ], ] hosted by ], ] appears as Bruce Banner, who repeatedly has laboratory accidents and then changes into the Hulk, played by Foreman, who proceeds to further trash the laboratory before asking for the sketch to end because of its boring repetition. | |||
In the 1995 Two Issues mini series '']'', Hulk was amongst those who joined '']'', '']'' and '']'' in a mysterious conflict known as the "Great Cataclysm" which threatened '']'' and '']''. The event ended with Hulk holding Hercules's golden mace and his skin temporarily turned grey, suggesting that the Hulk was the only survivor of this conflict. After the Event Hulk was recruited alongside '']'', '']'', '']'' and '']'' to fight '']'' However Hulk had been seemingly corrupted by the events of the Great Cataclysm, Hulk turned on his allies, ripping Tigra in half and puncturing Wonder Man, Wonder Man unleashed his energy against the Hulk, seemingly killing them both and accidentally blinding Hawkeye. Hulk is finally defeated by Thor, which ends the chaos. | |||
===House of M=== | |||
The character Russell in the ] '']'' has the most hulking figure of any character in the game, is the toughest character to take down during normal gameplay, has the mind of a small child, and even constantly refers to himself in the third person. Russell's catchphrase is "Russell smash!" | |||
In the '']'' reality, Bruce Banner disappears in ], where he befriends an ] tribe, and attempts to control his dark side. When the mutant rulers of the Earth attack his tribe he retaliates, and eventually conquers Australia with the aid of ].{{Volume needed|c=y|date=February 2013}} | |||
===Infernal Hulk=== | |||
The "]" sketch of '']'' follows three parody superheroes. One of them is a Hulk spoof, The Infraggable Krunk, an overgrown muscle-man with arrested mental development that has a purple skin and wears green pants - reference to Hulk's green skin and usual purple pants. Also in episode: 047 or Hunger Strikes, Dexter turns into a giant green monster and rampages through the town's grocery stores in search of greens when ever he cannot find any vegetables. In this episode, he also says Banner's classic line: "Your making me angry. You wouldn't like me when I'm angry", although he says "hungry" instead of "angry". | |||
In one alternative reality, Bruce Banner and the Hulk were magically separated. Bruce became the new ], and the Hulk was cast into hell. However, while in hell, the Hulk became corrupted by the demonic beings he encountered, transforming him into a demon himself. Now completely evil, he escaped from hell and attempted to kill Banner. With help from the mainstream Hulk, Banner tricked the "infernal" Hulk into shattering the Eye of Agamotto, causing him to be thrown back into hell.<ref>''Incredible Hulks Annual'' #1</ref> | |||
===Maestro=== | |||
In the television show '']'', the character Meatwad once dressed as "The Incredible Plum" for Halloween, painting himself completely purple, donning a purple hulk-like mask, and telling other characters they wouldn't like him when he's angry. | |||
{{main|Maestro (comics)}} | |||
Set in a post apocalyptic future, the Hulk has mutated into the dictator Maestro ruling the remains of humanity with an iron fist. Ruthless, sadistic, violent, and tyrannical, the Maestro was shown to be an example of what would happen if the Hulk ever embraced his darker roots. Maestro was known to be an enemy of the Hulk, as the two alternate versions fought each other on Maestro's world.<ref name="Imperfect"/> | |||
===Marvel 2099=== | |||
In an episode of '']'', Dr. John Dorion (J.D) has a daydream where he is checking a patients chart and suddenly gets really angry. His starts to turn green and his grow larger. His clothes also tear and he ends up being the Hulk inside the hospital. | |||
For the '']'' imprint, ] and ] created a new version of the character. First appearing in ''2099 Unlimited'' #1, John Eisenhart, a selfish film producer in "LotusLand" (future ]) is inadvertently exposed to gamma radiation by the Knights of the Banner (a cult worshipping the original Hulk) who intend to create a Hulk of their own. As the Hulk, Eisenhart finds himself representing freedom to a closed-off society. A '']'' series was published for 10 issues.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=February 2013}} | |||
The unified Marvel Noir reality of Earth-2099 featured a version of Hulk 2009. In addition, there was a 2099 version of Grey Hulk who was a member of the ] until he was among those who were killed by the ]. The 2099 version of Moon Knight survived the massacre and formed the ] with Hulk 2099 as one of its members as they avenged Grey Hulk 2099 and the fallen Avengers by defeating the Masters of Evil and having them remanded to a prison on the planet Wakanda.<ref>''Spider-Man 2099: Exodus'' #3. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
==In other media== | |||
===Television=== | |||
The Hulk started out in ] as part of the '']'' ] in ]. The 39 (10-minute) episodes were shown along with those featuring ], ], ], and the ] episodes based on early stories appearing in the ''Hulk'' and ''Tales to Astonish'' series. | |||
===Marvel Comics 2=== | |||
{{main|The Incredible Hulk (TV series)}} | |||
In another take, The Hulk is shown to still be active in the alternative future of the ] universe. There, he is shown as an amalgamation of his three main transformations; He has the strength of the Savage Hulk, the attitude of the Grey Hulk, and the intelligence of the Professor Hulk.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=February 2013}} | |||
The most famous TV adaptation is the ] '']'' ] and its spin-off ], starring ] as David Banner and ] as the Hulk. | |||
He's also shown to have fathered a son named David by an unknown spouse.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=February 2013}} | |||
After the live-action show ended in ], the Hulk returned to cartoon format with 13 episodes of '']'', which aired in a combined hour with '']''. The series featured more characters from the comics than the live-action series, including ], Betty Ross, and ]. | |||
He was later seen within the pages of '']'', where ] manipulated him into attacking the heroes. When he was freed of his manipulation he was critical in punishing Loki by forcing him into the voided dimension that ] had opened a rift into, Hulk informing Loki that he was ruined on Earth because of Loki's actions and he therefore had nothing to lose by ensuring that Loki would be punished for eternity.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=February 2013}} | |||
Typical of many superhero cartoons of the era,{{Fact|date=February 2007}} the show used stock transformation scenes which include Bruce Banner transforming back with his clothing somehow restored intact. The ] and the ] made an appearance in the show. This series featured ] as a narrator. Bruce Banner and the Hulk also appeared in the '']'' episode, "Spidey Goes Hollywood." | |||
===Marvel Zombies=== | |||
]'' TV series.]] | |||
====Marvel Zombies: Dead Days==== | |||
In ], ] and ] brought the Hulk back to animated form in the animated series '']'', with ] voicing Bruce Banner and ] providing the voice of the Hulk. The first season's stories are exceptionally dark, but in ], the show's name changed to ''The Incredible Hulk and She-Hulk'', and featured ] in several episodes with the Gray Hulk. In the episode "Mind Over Anti-Matter", Banner turns into a monstrous Dark Hulk. The series became much lighter during this season and was cancelled quickly. The show aired briefly on ] following the release of the live-action movie in ]. | |||
In the series '']'', the Hulk has been infected with a virus which makes him into an undead zombie (he is actually infected by the zombie Fantastic Four). Although he still retains his strength and invulnerability, he no longer heals, is losing weight because of his now-deteriorating tissue, does not feel pain and now craves human flesh. The zombie Hulk's transformations are physically controlled purely by his appetite — after feeding, he transforms back into Banner, who is also a zombie, until the hunger returns. When Hulk first transforms back into Banner, ]. He is directly responsible for killing the Silver Surfer by ]. Later he joins Spider-Man, Iron-Man, Giant-Man, Wolverine and Luke Cage as the Galacti after killing and consuming Galactus. | |||
====Marvel Zombies 2==== | |||
The Hulk also appeared in episodes of the ] and ] cartoons that also made up the Marvel Action Hour, although the character design for both Banner and Hulk were markedly different, with ] playing both roles. | |||
Forty years later, the zombie Hulk, along with the other zombies, had eaten or converted most of the universe, prompting them to return to Earth to try to recover the dimensional transporter. Although the other zombies managed to beat their hunger by going without food for a time, the Hulk's raw hunger was too great for him to be convinced to stop, resulting in him killing the zombified but "cured" ], ], ], and ]. Once he feeds and returns to Bruce Banner, he is finally killed by Spider-Man, Wolverine, and Giant-Man, recognizing that there is no other way to stop the Hulk from feeding again.<ref>''Marvel Zombies 2'' #5 (April 2008)</ref> | |||
====Marvel Zombies 3==== | |||
The Hulk appears in the 2006 '']'' episode entitled "Hard Knocks" with Bruce Banner voiced by ] and the Hulk voiced by ]. Bruce Banner came to see Reed Richards to help him find a cure for the Hulk transformation. The Fantastic Four also had to keep Agent Pratt from using the Hulk as their weapon upon other people. In some scenes, the Hulk battles Thing. In this show, he resembles the Ultimate version of Hulk. | |||
Hulk makes a cameo appearance in ''Marvel Zombies 3''' when Machine Man, Ultron, and Jocasta travel to Earth 2149, killing winged zombies (zombie Beak, Angel, Vulture, and Falcon altogether). He also makes another cameo appearance when ] explains to the 3 androids how the Silver Surfer died, and how the zombie ], who is, surprisingly, her husband, created a zombie empire forming a huge alliance. | |||
=== |
====Marvel Zombies Return==== | ||
A second Hulk appears in the reality the Marvel Zombies of the original series are teleported to, known as Earth-Z. This version's life appears identical to his core counterpart up until the events of World War Hulk. When he reaches the Moon to attack the Inhumans, he is infected by the zombie ], and his allies killed. Oddly hungry, he heads back to Earth and begins eating people, and ultimately infecting the ], who sets about forming a team of Zombie Avengers to eat humanity and wipe out any competition or resistance from other heroes, infected or otherwise dead. After the Sentry tries to kill Hulk to eliminate the competition as the two are the only creatures capable of challenging each other, Hulk is later cured of his hunger by the Zombie ] and joins his New Avengers. The team succeeds in killing the Zombie Avengers and ending their plan to eat the multiverse, sacrificing themselves in the process. Ultimately, the nanite infused Sandman killed Hulk.<ref>''Marvel Zombies Return'' #4-5</ref> | |||
{{main|Hulk (film)}} | |||
In ], ] directed a ] for ]. ] played Bruce Banner, and the Hulk was created with ]. Here, Banner's father, David Banner (played by ]), is partly responsible for the Hulk's origin as before Banner was born, he experiments on himself and passes his mutated genes onto his son. When Banner grows up, believing his real parents died (this is only half-true, as only his mother dies and his father is incarcerated for twenty years), he saves a co-worker from being killed by ] and takes the impact of the rays instead, mysteriously surviving the onslaught. | |||
===Old Man Logan=== | |||
The Hulk causes a lot of destruction, wounding Glenn Talbot, killing his father's mutated dogs in battle, makes a path of danger from the Desert Base to ], and finally in a final battle against his insane father who had morphed into an amorphous cloud of energy. ] decides to end the battle by having one of his soldiers drop a gamma bomb at the site of the battle, ending the confrontation. It ostensibly kills and disintegrates Banner, who we nonetheless later see living incognito as a secret doctor in ]. | |||
'']'' is set 50 years into an apocalyptic future. The world is in ruin and shadow following a massive conflict. A large coordinated force of super villains has killed a majority of the heroes and seized control of the ] splitting it into sections. Bruce Banner is said to have gone mad from radiation sickness, possibly from ] that may have been used during the conflict or this and other changes may be the long-term result of his famous gamma radiation accident. Bruce's personality and powers seem altered, in human form he now has little empathy and possesses superhuman strength. Banner and his cousin ] have mated and produced offspring that possess their green skin and a little of their strength. They form the ]-like "''']'''" that rule the entire west coast of the country dubbed "Hulkland", a domain formerly held by the Abomination until Banner killed him. Banner, along with his children and grandchildren, live in a collection of caves and trailers, forcing those that live on the west coast to pay them rent in order to be allowed to live. | |||
There were two versions of the Hulk that appear: | |||
The Hulk appears in the 2006 ] ] '']'', based on the comic book '']''. <!--Did the Hulk appear in the second one as well? Unclear: The second '']'' movie was released on August 8, 2006.--> | |||
====Earth-807128==== | |||
A second Hulk movie is in pre-production and scheduled for release on June 13, 2008. Titled '']'', it will be directed by ]. At the 2006 ] Hulk panel, Letterier revealed that the ], played by Tim Roth, will be the villain. According to ] ] has been cast as ].<ref>{{cite web | url=http://filmforce.ign.com/articles/720/720544p1.html | title=Comic-Con 2006: The Incredible Hulk Panel | author=Chris Carle | publisher=IGN | year=July 23, 2006 | accessdate=2006-08-16 }}</ref> | |||
"Pappy" Bruce Banner's family threaten Logan's family over rent due to the Banners. Logan accompanies ] on a cross country delivery to source the rent money. When Logan returns and finds the bodies of his family, killed by the Banners, he kills the Hulk Gang and attacks Pappy Banner who admits that he set all of this into motion because he missed their old brawls. Banner gets angry when Wolverine calls him a redneck SOB and drives his claws through his chest. He transforms into The Hulk. Hulk overpowers Logan and eats him. Logan's mutant healing factor then allows him to recover and slash his way out of Hulk's stomach, killing him. Logan spots Banner's son, '''Bruce, Jr.''' and spares him. Logan takes the boy to raise in an effort to someday help combat the various villains that still rule the country.<ref>''Wolverine: Old Man Logan Giant-Size'' #1</ref> | |||
Old Man Logan found that Pappy Banner's head was placed on a gamma-powered robot made from Adamantium by ]. He used it in his revenge on Old Man Logan. Before Old Man Logan can be finished off by Pappy Banner, he is suddenly attacked by Bruce Banner Jr. who separated Pappy Banner's head from the Adamantium armor. Rather than kill his head, Old Man Logan buried it and planted a tree over him so that its roots can slowly dig into his skull.<ref>''Wastelanders: Wolverine'' #1</ref> | |||
===Video games=== | |||
].]] | |||
{{wikibooks|Fighting Game Moves/Capcom/Hulk}} | |||
The Incredible Hulk appears in video games for many different systems, including the ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ] ], ], ], ], and ]. | |||
====Earth-21923==== | |||
*A Hulk game was going to be ''The Incredible Hulk'' for the ], but the game was never released to the public. | |||
Pappy Banner's history on Earth-21923's history was still intact up to his death at the hands of Old Man Logan. When Old Man Logan uses ]' help to return to this future to rescue Bruce Banner Jr., he finds that the time has been altered in which Maestro appears in the place of Pappy Banner.<ref>''Old Man Logan'' Vol. 2 #24</ref> This unidentified version of Maestro has rounded up the remaining members of the Hulk Gang as he makes plans to help them build a paradise for all Hulks on Earth-616. With help from the Cambria Banner, Logan and Hawkeye of Earth-616 were able to defeat Maestro and the surviving members of the Hulk Gang went their separate ways.<ref>''Old Man Logan'' Vol. 2 #25-30</ref> | |||
*The first released Hulk game was called ] ''featuring The Hulk'' for the PC,Commodore 64, and ZX Spectrum. It was followed by ], ], ] (which was loosely based on the 2003 film rather than the comic books), The Incredible Hulk for the Gamboy Advance, and finally ]. ], who voiced Bruce Banner in the 1996 ], reprises the role in '']''. In this game, the Hulk is so uncontrolled that he kills both the Desert Base soldiers and civilians in his path. Conversely, the Hulk also keeps the ] the ] from destroying a ] and the soldiers guarding it have safely evacuated. | |||
===Otto Banner=== | |||
In addition to his own games, the Hulk appears as a playable character in several games by ]. The first was a SNES game for the home consoles called ]. After this the Hulk appeared in several arcade fighting games, starting with '']'' in 1995, followed by ], ] and concluding with ]. In all of the Capcom games, Hulk's persona is that of his merger with Bruce Banner. | |||
During the "]" storyline, Doctor Octopus started forming his Superior Four that includes a Hulk that has four extra arms growing from his back.<ref>''Devil's Reign'' #2. Marvel Comics.</ref> His real name is Otto Banner of Earth-8816 and he was also abused by his Earth's version of ].<ref>''Devil's Reign: Superior Four'' #1. Marvel Comics</ref> | |||
===Ruins=== | |||
The Hulk also has a cameo in the ] for the PS and Sega Saturn | |||
In the ] series '']'', a dark flip to the ] tale '']'', the accidents, experiments and mutations that led to the creation of Super Heroes and super humans, instead led to terrible deformations and painful deaths. Here, Bruce Banner's story goes exactly the same as his 616 counterpart, but when he is caught in the middle of the gamma bomb explosion, instead of transforming into the Incredible Hulk, his whole body opens up from the gigantic tumors that appear inside it, pushing most of his organs and skull outside his body and giving Rick Jones cancer. He did not die, and was put in an underground vault by the CIA, codenamed "the Hulk".<ref>''Ruins'' #1 (Aug 1995)</ref> | |||
===Secret Wars (2015)=== | |||
The Hulk is also in a ] in the '']'' game for the ], ], and ]. | |||
During the '']'' storyline, different versions of Hulk reside in each ] domain. | |||
* The Battleworld domain of Greenland is filled with an assortment of Hulks ranging from '''Tribal Hulks''' (a group of Hulks that live like a tribe), '''Bull Hulks''' (a group of gamma-irradiated cattle), '''Sand Hulks''' (who evoke the traits of Hulk and ]), and a '''Sea Hulk'''. This land is a recreation of Earth-71612 where it was rendered into a Hulk-filled land by a gamma bomb strike by A.I.M. It was stated that Bruce Banner had started Bannertech Industries and his fate has not been mentioned since A.I.M.'s gamma bomb strike. In addition to the various type of Hulks and a variation of a ] that rules Greenland as the '''Red King'''", a variation of Steve Rogers that was sent into Greenland by God Emperor Doom and Sheriff Strange encountered another variation of Steve Rogers that operated as Doc Green.<ref>''Planet Hulk'' #1</ref> | |||
According to '''TK''', the Hulk is one of the first revealed characters in '']'', a ] (MMO) game for PC and ].{{Fact|date=February 2007}} | |||
* The Battleworld domain of Spider-Island that was based from the remnants of Earth-19919 told an alternate version of the '']'' storyline where Hulk was mutated into '''Spider-Hulk''' and served as one of ]'s minions. However, ] uses ]' Lizard Formula to mutate Hulk into a giant lizard monster, which broke him free from the Spider Queen's control.<ref>''Spider-Island'' #1-5</ref> | |||
* The Battleworld domain of Marville that was based from the remnants of Earth-71912 featured a child version of Hulk that is a member of the Avengers.<ref>''Giant-Size Little Marvel: AVX'' #4</ref> | |||
* The Battleworld domain of the Kingdom of Manhattan is based from the remnants of Earth-61610 where variations of characters from Earth-616 and Earth-1610 co-exist on the combined version of both reality's Manhattan. In this case, a variation of Hulk's Doc Green form co-exists with a variation of Earth-1610's Hulk.<ref>''Ultimate End'' #1-5</ref> | |||
* The Battleworld domain of Bug World that was based from the remnants of Earth-22312 features an anthropomorphic insect version of Hulk called '''Roly-Poly Hulk'''.<ref>''Secret Wars: Secret Love'' #1</ref> | |||
* The Battleworld domain of the Walled City of New York that was based from the remnants of Earth-21722 features a version of Hulk that is a member of the Avengers where they are allied with S.H.I.E.L.D.'s side of the Walled City of New York.<ref>''Hank Johnson, Agent of Hydra'' #1</ref> | |||
===Spider-Geddon=== | |||
Hulk was set to play a role in '']'',{{Fact|date=February 2007}} but had to be left out as a playable character because of the character's licensing agreement with ]. (Although as of April 2007 the Hulk and other heroes and villians will be available for download as playable characters for the Xbox 360 version of Marvel: Ultimate Alliance ) He makes an appearance as Bruce Banner (voiced by ] in the Xbox versions, and Arin Hanson in the PS3 and Wii versions.), working on ]'s gamma bomb project. Muscular green arms and legs are seen (with the torso and head under rubble) during a cutscene detailing Dr. Doom's defeat of many of Earth's heroes, perhaps implying that the Hulk was one of the heroes who failed to stop Doom. | |||
During the "]" storyline, a sequel to "]", '''Robbie Banner''' is a punk on Earth-138 who is allied with ] and can turn into the Hulk while listening to "Atomic Bomb" music. He helped Spider-Punk and ] fight the ] at the Hellfire Club, assisted Spider-Punk and M.C. Strange push the ] out of Queens, and fought Hydra on the streets. After obtaining the "Atomic Bomb" tape from Captain Anarchy, Spider-Punk visited Robbie to get his help, but the latter was reluctant to listen to the tape. When ] went on the attack, Robbie reluctantly listened to the tape and transformed into the Hulk to help Spider-Punk fight Kang.<ref>''Edge of Spider-Verse'' #1. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
===The End=== | |||
The Hulk will be in the upcoming ], for the various handheld consoles. | |||
In other tales, possible futures for the character have been shown. Using a post apocalyptic wasteland as a backdrop, the Peter David written '']'' ] features an elderly Bruce Banner as the last surviving inhabitant of Earth, the Hulk having hidden in a cave during a nuclear war until he was released by the Recorder sent to confirm humanity's demise. After Bruce has spent time traveling Earth, transforming into the Hulk at night and when attacked by the mutated ]es that are the only other surviving lifeforms on Earth, the story concludes with Banner dying of a heart attack, thus leaving the Hulk as the last living being on the planet, Hulk musing that he is now "the only one there is", having achieved his wish to be left alone, but aware that he will die if he turns back into Banner.<ref>''Hulk: The End'' (August 2002)</ref> | |||
=== |
===Ultimate Marvel=== | ||
In the ] universe, the Hulk first appears in '']'' #2 (2001), written by ] and drawn by ]. In the '']'' series, Bruce Banner works for ], attempting to re-create the super-soldier formula that created ]. | |||
Hulk-themed products include action figures, clothes, jewelry, video games, cards, pins, posters, cars, games, lunchboxes, toys, a ] , all types of collectibles and even the ] at ] in ]. | |||
Dr. Robert Bruce Banner was one of the leading scientists in the United States. He had a scientist named ] as his teacher.<ref>{{Cite comic|writer=Mark Millar|penciller=]|inker=]|story=Crime and Punishment, Part 2 of 6|title=]|volume=|issue=2|date=July 2010|publisher=Marvel Comics|page=|panel=}}</ref> | |||
==Bibliography== | |||
* ''The Incredible Hulk'' #1–6 (], May 1962–March 1963) | |||
* '']'' #59–101 (], September 1964–March 1968) | |||
* ''The Incredible Hulk'' #102–474 (], April 1968–March 1999) | |||
* ''The Incredible Hulk Annual'' #1–20 (], 1968–1994) | |||
* ''The Incredible Hulk'' #-1 (], July 1997, ISSN 0274-5275) | |||
* ''Hulk'' #1–11 (], April 1999–February 2000) | |||
* ''The Incredible Hulk'' #12–76, #77–present (], March 2000–September 2004, January 2005–present) | |||
* '']'' #1–69, ] title published between 1979–1981. Features new material produced by the likes of ] and ]. | |||
He was later among the scientists that are used to recreate the Super-Soldier Formula that created ]. Bruce Banner is shown to have been hired by the U.S. Government and General ] as part of a project to secretly recreate the Super Soldier Serum. At a covert lab in ], Bruce works alongside fellow scientists, Hank Pym, ], father of ] and ], and ], father of ].<ref>''Ultimate Origins'' #3. Marvel Comics.</ref> Bruce believes that he has come up with the correct formula for the serum, but needs to test it out. Eager to try his results on a human subject, Banner synthesizes his serum and injects himself with it. The serum turns him into the Hulk for the first time. Banner goes on a rampage inside the laboratory and eventually destroys the entire complex, nearly killing Richard Parker, along with his wife Mary, who had brought an infant Peter along with her to visit Richard.<ref>''Ultimate Origins'' #4</ref> Years later, Hulk laid waste to ] before he could be subdued by ] and taken into custody.<ref>''Ultimate Marvel Team-Up'' #2. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
'''Collections''' | |||
* ''Hulk Visionaries: Peter David Vol. 1'' Written by ]; Pencils & Cover by ]; collects ''Incredible Hulk'' #331-339 Vol. 1. | |||
Banner and ] were both hired by ] to create post-human soldiers for S.H.I.E.L.D.'s ''Ultimates'', with Banner focusing on the Super-Soldier formula responsible for Captain America, and Henry Pym experimenting with his Giant-Man formula. Whereas Pym found success and celebrity with "]", Banner found himself unable to crack the Super-Soldier formula. Classifying himself a failure and suffering ridicule at the hands of Pym, Banner took some of the recently rediscovered Captain America's blood, combined it with his Hulk formula, and injected it. Banner rationalized his decision by saying that turning himself into a monster gave the Ultimates a villain to fight, thereby justifying their existence at a time when they were accused of being an enormous multi-billion dollar waste of government resources. Before lapsing into unconsciousness however, Banner confessed that "honest-to-God truth of the matter" is that he simply "just missed being big".<ref>''Ultimates'' #3. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
* ''Hulk Visionaries: Peter David Vol. 2'' Written by ]; Penciled by ], ] & ]; collects ''Incredible Hulk'' #340-348 Vol. 1. | |||
* ''Hulk Visionaries: Peter David Vol. 3'' Written by ] & ]; Penciled by ], ] & ]; Collects ''Incredible Hulk'' #349-354 Vol. 1, ''Web of Spider-Man'' #44 and ''Fantastic Four'' #320. | |||
Shortly afterwards, Banner transformed into a sociopathic grey-skinned Hulk that channeled and amplified Banner's hidden emotions, unleashing the darkest depths of his ]. The Hulk proceeded to track down and pursue Betty Ross, the object of Bruce Banner's affection who, because of relationship problems with Banner, was courting the favor of Hollywood film star ] that night, and inadvertently boasted about it to Banner over the phone shortly before his transformation. During his rampage and cross-town pursuit of the fleeing Betty Ross, The Hulk informed Betty that he was "horny as Hell" and destroyed everything in his path, indiscriminately killing hundreds of people in the process. After rendering Giant-Man unconscious and overpowering ], ], and ], who were all dispatched to stop his rampage, The Hulk changed back into Banner after the ] entered his skull through the ear canal and fired her bio-electric sting directly into his brain. Upon regaining consciousness, Banner was promptly knocked unconscious, restrained and shuttled away to S.H.I.E.L.D., the connection between him and the Ultimate Hulk covered up. Later, after being subdued by the Ultimates, an examination on Banner's blood revealed that the latest Super-Soldier Formula he took has placed a more permanent effect on Banner. The "Hulk cells" were not disappearing like they did after the first time Banner transformed, showing that the new Super-Soldier Formula Banner took would forever keep the Hulk within him.<ref>''Ultimates'' #4. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
* ''Incredible Hulk: Dogs of War'' Written by ]; Penciled by ] and ]; collects ''Incredible Hulk'' #12-20 Vol. 2. | |||
* ''Incredible Hulk Vol. 1: Return of the Monster'' Written by ]; Penciled by ]; collects ''Incredible Hulk'' #34-39 Vol. 2. | |||
After his rampage, Banner spent a number of months in a cell specifically designed to withstand the Hulk's fury, with Anti-Hulk serum administered to him on a continuous basis. Amidst the ]'s assault on Earth and their takeover of S.H.I.E.L.D. and the ], General Fury quickly mobilized an army and attacked the alien base in ]. During his battle with ], a Chitauri agent capable of absorbing and administering enormous physical damage, Captain America, with all other tactical options exhausted, gave the order for "the Weapon of Last Resort" and gave "Permission to traumatize Banner", who was in a helicopter with a military escort hovering over the S.H.I.E.L.D. battlefield. The delicate procedure of traumatizing a 90-pound scientist simply amounted to throwing him out of the chopper in hopes that his anger would overcome the effects of the anti-Hulk serum coursing through his veins. The Hulk's first course of action was to bodyslam Captain America into the concrete to pay him back for breaking Banner's jaw after the first Hulk transformation in Manhattan. Captain America immediately pointed out Herr Kleiser, declaring that he had been "all over Betty" while Banner was in his solitary cell. Not one to be overshadowed by a skinny German Nazi, the Hulk promptly pounded Kleiser to a pulp and even ate him. While Hulk was dining on Kleiser, Captain America manipulated him once more by calling down to him, telling Hulk that the Chitauri alien fleet had called him a "sissy-boy" and asked if the Hulk intended to let the aliens get away with such an insult. In a most vigorous defense of his heterosexuality, Hulk leaped a mile into the air, ripping apart the entire airborne alien fleet that clouded the sky, all the while proclaiming that "Hulk no Sissy Boy...HULK STRAIGHT!" Even after destroying the entire fleet and saving what remained of the day, the Hulk was full of adrenaline and rage, and needed to be sedated. ], the marksman, was called in to take him down with an adamantium-tipped syringe full of anti-Hulk serum. Hawkeye did, but barely succeeded since Hulk seemed to be impervious to the antidote Hawkeye shot into Hulk before he finally passed out. While Banner returned to normal while in containment in S.H.I.E.L.D., his caretakers monitored him closely. Because of Herr Kleiser's ] abilities, Banner's ] were collected and properly disposed of after the battle, to rule out the possibility of Kleiser reconstituting himself in a cunning, if disgusting, way.<ref>''Ultimates'' #13. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
* ''Incredible Hulk Vol. 2: Boiling Point'' Written by ]; Penciled by ]; collects ''Incredible Hulk'' #40-43 Vol. 2. | |||
* ''Incredible Hulk Vol. 3: Transfer Of Power'' Written by ]; Penciled by ]; collects ''Incredible Hulk'' #44-49 Vol. 2. | |||
When ] attacked the Triskelion's lockup during the "]" series, power went down for the entire facility. The Hulk was said to have eaten six members of the nursing staff in the chaos.<ref>''Ultimate War'' #2. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
* ''Incredible Hulk Vol. 4: Abominable'' Written by ]; Penciled by ]; collects ''Incredible Hulk'' #50-54 Vol. 2. | |||
* ''Incredible Hulk Vol. 5: Hide In Plain Sight'' Written by ]; Penciled by ]; collects ''Incredible Hulk'' #55-59 Vol. 2. | |||
During the "]" miniseries, the Triskelion was attacked by ] and ], but Banner was later reported by Iron Man to have "fallen asleep reading a magazine" and was promptly sedated for a week just in case.<ref>''Ultimate Six'' #5. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
* ''Incredible Hulk Vol. 6: Split Decisions'' Written by ]; Penciled by ]; collects ''Incredible Hulk'' #60-65 Vol. 2. | |||
* ''Incredible Hulk Vol. 7: Dead Like Me'' Written ] & ]; Pencils by ] & ]; collects ''Incredible Hulk'' #65-69 Vol. 2, and ''Hulk Smash'' #1 and #2. | |||
Banner remained in his cell for a year, with very few Hulk episodes; during one such transformation, he sat on the couch and watched '']'' until he changed back. The few visitors he received included Hank Pym, demonstrating his new "Ant Man" technology. Shortly thereafter, he learned from the national news that somebody had leaked top-secret information to the press regarding the Hulk/Banner connection. S.H.I.E.L.D. hired lawyer ] to try to avoid the death penalty for 800-plus murder counts by bringing up the important things Banner had done in the interests of national security, and his work for the Ultimates. During jury deliberation, Banner received a visit from General Nick Fury, who told him that the case had been dismissed, and presented him with a bottle of champagne. Eagerly drinking his first drink as a free man, Banner passed out – the bottle had been drugged by Hank Pym at Fury's request – and awakened much later on the deck of an aircraft carrier, with a one-megaton nuclear weapon nearby. Fortunately for his well-being, he transformed into the Hulk right before the nuclear device was detonated. Later, Banner anonymously calls Pym from a public telephone to thank him for deliberately botching the dose before Banner decided to go into hiding. It is not clear if Pym deliberately botched the dose, or was merely incompetent in his research.<ref>''Ultimates 2'' #3. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
* ''Incredible Hulk Vol. 8: Big Things'' Written ]; Pencils by ]; collects ''Incredible Hulk'' #70-76 Vol. 2. | |||
* ''Hulk: Tempest Fugit'' Written by ]; Penciled by ] & ]; collects ''Incredible Hulk'' #77-82 Vol. 2. | |||
Bruce Banner later appears in Washington D.C. before one of the ]'s giant duplicates, letting it step on him, all the while muttering to himself about being "in touch with his inner sociopath". The Hulk appears in the next panel, lifting the robot with both hands and then ripping it in two, finishing the issue with a declaration of "NOW BRING IT ON!"<ref>''Ultimates 2'' #11. Marvel Comics.</ref> He then continues to aid the Ultimates against the Liberators by defeating, dismembering, and finally eating ].<ref>''Ultimates 2'' #12. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
* ''House Of M: Hulk'' Written by ]; Penciled by ] & ]; collects ''Incredible Hulk'' #83-87 Vol. 2. | |||
* ''Hulk: Planet Hulk Prelude'' Written by ]; Penciled by ] & ]; collects ''Incredible Hulk'' #88-91 Vol. 2. | |||
Some time after Banner's disappearance in the pages of "]", strange occurrences across Europe and Asia reported. General Fury started piecing together the evidence and concluded that despite their distance from one another, they were all related. The discovery of feces in Tibet belonging to Banner confirmed that he had survived his execution. Since S.H.I.E.L.D. was in charge of executing Banner in a very public way, they acted to cover up their error by contracting James "Logan" Howlett (]) to track Banner down and eliminate him. Logan arrives at a rural village in Tibet and discovers that all the women have been kidnapped. He eventually makes his way to a beautiful but derelict palace. The Hulk (decked in Tibetan robes and beads) has taken up residence here with the kidnapped women as his ]. The Hulk is annoyed at being interrupted and he and Wolverine fight. After an intense struggle, the Hulk physically rips Wolverine's body in half and hurls his legs four miles up a mountain, leaving Logan's torso to freeze in the snow.<ref>''Ultimate Wolverine vs. Hulk'' #1. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
Issue #2 reveals, in flashback, that Bruce Banner, after travelling through France, Ireland and India, finally treks to Tibet, to seek the wisdom of the ] who he hopes can reveal the true relationship behind Banner and the Hulk. It is here that the Hulk resides prior to Logan's intrusion.<ref>''Ultimate Wolverine vs. Hulk'' #2. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
He then appeared together with Iron Man in their own mini-series titled '']'', focusing on Bruce Banner approaching Tony Stark about the possibility of using the Iron Man nanites to control the Hulk transformations. ] is introduced as ], a scientist after the blood of both men, for use in the creation of a superhuman. This series depicts the Hulk's physiology as almost infinitely adaptive to adverse conditions, including simulations of hostile extraterrestrial environments such as the surface of the planet ]. It also described him as generating ] ]s in his skin structure, adding to his durability.<ref>''Ultimate Human'' #1. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
A naked Hulk comes into a restaurant demanding food. ] who is already at the restaurant fights and defeats the Hulk. After the fight, the two form a bond and go to another restaurant before renting a motel room and ].<ref>''Ultimate Hulk Annual'' #1. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
During the "]" storyline, the Hulk appears in New York and is convinced by Spider-Man to help him rescue people. When demons start appearing they go to the home of ], only to learn that his body had been possessed by ]. He then starts to torture them. Hulk in response heats the Orb of Acmantata, which causes an explosion.<ref>''Ultimate Spider-Man'' #132. Marvel Comics.</ref> He survives and is recruited by the remaining Ultimates and ] to stop Magneto. In Magneto's Citadel, he and ] are tasked with destroying some of the citadel's machinery. They try to stop ] and ] from escaping, but fail. Hulk survives Ultimatum and is later seen in ] in a ] as Bruce Banner in New York. He is convinced by ] to be their "enforcer" in a new team sponsored by former Director Nick Fury.<ref></ref><ref>''Ultimate X'' #5. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
During the European crisis involving the Children of Tomorrow, Hulk was convinced by S.H.I.E.L.D. ] to attack the Children of Tomorrow in exchange for the safety of Betty Ross, currently in custody. Hulk was unleashed in Children's base called The City, but the ] managed to calm him down and convince him that he was being used. In that moment, the US Government launched an ineffective nuclear attack on the City, and the Children detonate an anti-matter bomb in Washington, D.C. in retaliation. When the Ultimates finally turned the tide, the Maker injected the Hulk with the Giant-Man serum, turning him into a giant juggernaut, although he was defeated and put into sedated custody beneath the Triskelion once more.<ref>''Ultimate Comics Ultimates'' #12. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
Bruce was freed by the mysterious woman called ], and convinced him to steal the ] with which he battled the Ultimates. After the arrival of escapee Reed Richards, the heroes escaped, but Captain America decided to be left behind in order to stop the villains, although he was defeated by Thor.<ref>''Ultimate Comics Ultimates'' #25. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
When Maker merged all realities in order to help Eternity to fight the First Firmament, Hulk is among the Ultimates members that are revived.<ref>''Ultimates 2'' Vol. 2 #9. Marvel Comics.</ref> It was shown that Hulk did not retain his intelligence and referred to himself in the third person. When the ] arrived on ] to confront Maker for his actions, he had the Earth-1610 Ultimates fight the Earth-616 Ultimates where Hulk was thrown out of the building by ]. Eventually, Hulk and the rest of the Earth-1610 Ultimates decided that there was no reason to fight the Earth-616 Ultimates which resulted in Maker killing the Earth-1610 Captain America. After aiding the Earth-616 Ultimates into giving Eternity the power to defeat the First Firmament, Hulk and the rest of the Earth-1610 Ultimates left to pursue Maker.<ref>''Ultimates'' 2 #100. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
After Earth-1610 was restored, Hulk was seen with the Avengers where they help Spider-Man fight Green Goblin.<ref>''Spider-Men II'' #5. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
===Ultimate Universe=== | |||
During the "]" storyline, ] visits ] and remakes it into his own image. One of the things he could not succeed in was preventing the origin of Hulk, who would later find personal "enlightenment". He and his fellow monks of the Children of the Eternal Light would later attend an international event held by the Maker at the City in ] as part of his ].<ref>''Ultimate Invasion'' #2. Marvel Comics.</ref> Hulk and the Children of the Eternal Light are revealed to rule India and parts of Asia. | |||
While giving condolences to ] over the death of ], Hulk explains the artificial nature of the ] praticed by the Council's power blocs as Stark is appointed to rule the North American Union in Stane's former role.<ref>''Ultimate Invasion'' #3. Marvel Comics.</ref> Hulk and the other leaders later discuss about The City closing up for two years with Maker imprisoned inside. With Howard Stark being locked inside as well, Hulk and the others plan to divide up the Union among themselves.<ref>''Ultimate Invasion'' #4. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
Hulk and other members of the Council are later informed of ]'s raid on the Latverian repositories. While giving his condolences to Henri Duggary due to his wounds, Hulk states that Tony Stark "gave them America", as the group uses an orbiting ] satellite to conduct a ] attack on Stark Tower, causing thousands of casualties in a section of Manhattan. He suggests framing Stark and his allies as terrorists as they consolidate control over the Union's territories.<ref>''Ultimate Invasion'' #1. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
It is later shown that Banner was the director of the Castle Gamma project, creating the "Banner-] Gamma Bomb" and detonating it over an island in the Pacific, causing not only his transformation into the Hulk but also a mass contamination incident involving the island's inhabitants (mirroring the real-life events of ] and the fallout over the ]). It's stated that Banner might have deliberately planned the results, also trying to conceal the island to the rest of the world and make it impossible to reach in the current days. As the ] members Iron Lad, ], and ] make an agreement with a Gamma-powered native called ], Banner watches from a hidden camera feed as he orders his subordinates in the Children of the Eternal Light to assemble the ], as the team is starting to "make him angry".<ref>''The Ultimates'' Vol. 4 #3. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
Hulk later speaks with ] about the attacks on the different ] facilities which are part of Emmanuel's profile. Hulk calms Emmanuel down while stating that he considers the Ultimates an insurgency and that he will kill them once and for all.<ref>''The Ultimates'' Vol. 4 #5. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
Using a portal spell, Hulk has the Ultimates brought to ] which is one of Heaven's seven capital cities that he rules at the time when they were going to raid a Damage Control site that contained super-powered prisoners that were going to be executed the next day. With the aid of the Immortal Weapons who have taken their gamma injections, Hulk manages to outfight the Ultimates where he apparently killed Iron Lad and broke off She-Hulk's hand. Before things could get worse, Doom manages to teleport the Ultimates away after it took him awhile to locate them.<ref>''The Ultimates'' Vol. 4 #6. Marvel Comics.</ref> | |||
== In other media == | |||
{{Main|Hulk in other media}} | |||
The character has been played in live-action and animation by a variety of actors. The character was first played in live-action by ] and ] in the 1978 television series '']'' and its subsequent television films '']'' (1988), '']'' (1989), and '']'' (1990), and ] in the film '']'' (2003). In the ] (MCU), ] was first portrayed by ] in the film '']'' (2008), and then by ] in later appearances, including the films '']'' (2012), '']'' (2013), '']'' (2015), '']'' (2017), '']'' (2018), '']'' (2019), '']'' (2019), and '']'' (2021), and the television series '']'' (2022) and '']'' (2021). | |||
==Reception== | |||
The Hulk was ranked #1 on a listing of Marvel Comics' monster characters in 2015.<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.denofgeek.com/us/books-comics/marvel/250132/marvels-31-best-monsters/page/0/2|title= Marvel's 31 Best Monsters|first= Marc|last= Buxton|date= October 30, 2015|publisher= ]|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20170312224459/http://www.denofgeek.com/us/books-comics/marvel/250132/marvels-31-best-monsters/page/0/2|archive-date= March 12, 2017|url-status= live|df= mdy-all|quote= The Hulk is way more superhero than horror icon, but in the character's year history, there were plenty of times that this titanic creature was cast in the role of classic monster.}}</ref> | |||
In 2018, '']'' ranked The Thing (Bruce Banner) 2nd in their "Age Of Apocalypse: The 30 Strongest Characters In Marvel's Coolest Alternate World" list.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Lealos |first=Shawn S. |date=2018-09-16 |title=Age Of Apocalypse: The 30 Strongest Characters In Marvel's Coolest Alternate World |url=https://www.cbr.com/age-of-apocalypse-characters-ranked/ |access-date=2022-10-11 |website=CBR |language=en-US}}</ref> | |||
In 2022, '']'' included Hulk in their "10 Most Powerful Hercules Villains In Marvel Comics" list.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Harn |first=Darby |date=2022-07-17 |title=Thor: Love And Thunder — 10 Most Powerful Hercules Villains In Marvel Comics |url=https://screenrant.com/hercules-most-powerful-villains-thor-love-and-thunder/ |access-date=2022-10-24 |website=ScreenRant |language=en-US}}</ref> | |||
==See also== | |||
* ] | |||
{{Portal bar|United States|Comics|Speculative fiction}} | |||
== Notes == | |||
{{notelist}} | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{Reflist|30em|refs= | |||
<div class="references-small"> | |||
<!--See http://en.wikipedia.org/Wikipedia:Footnotes for an explanation of how to generate footnotes using the <ref(erences/)> tags--> | |||
<ref name="AltMaestro">{{cite web|first=Robin |last=Parrish |title=5 Storylines Marvel Should Use For a 'Hulk' Movie |url=http://www.techtimes.com/articles/49398/20150429/5-storylines-marvel-use-hulk-movie.htm |date=July 13, 2016 |access-date=October 2, 2016 |publisher=Tech Times |archive-url=https://archive.today/20161002131606/http://www.techtimes.com/articles/49398/20150429/5-storylines-marvel-use-hulk-movie.htm |archive-date=October 2, 2016 |url-status=live |df=mdy-all }}</ref> | |||
<references/> | |||
</div> | |||
<ref name="AltOML">{{cite web|first=Brendan |last=McGinley |title=The 5 Most Ridiculous Attempts to Reinvent Superheroes |url=http://www.cracked.com/blog/the-5-most-ridiculous-attempts-to-reinvent-superheroes_p2/ |date=June 19, 2013 |access-date=October 2, 2016 |publisher=] |archive-url=https://archive.today/20161002205450/http://www.cracked.com/blog/the-5-most-ridiculous-attempts-to-reinvent-superheroes_p2/ |archive-date=October 2, 2016 |url-status=live |df=mdy-all }}</ref> | |||
<ref name="AltOML2">{{cite web|first=Mark |last=Zambrano |title=11 Biggest WTF Things The Hulk Has Ever Done |url=http://screenrant.com/biggest-wtf-things-hulk-has-done/?view=all |date=June 6, 2016 |access-date=October 2, 2016 |website=Screen Rant |archive-url=https://archive.today/20161002205659/http://screenrant.com/biggest-wtf-things-hulk-has-done/?view=all |archive-date=October 2, 2016 |url-status=live |df=mdy-all }}</ref> | |||
<ref name="BioMarvel">{{cite web|url=http://marvel.com/characters/25/hulk |title=Hulk |publisher=] |access-date=September 24, 2016 |archive-url=https://archive.today/20160924154017/http://marvel.com/characters/25/hulk |archive-date=September 24, 2016 |url-status=live |df=mdy-all |quote=Height 5' 9{{citefrac|1|2}}" (Banner); 6'6" (gray Hulk); 7' – 8' (green/savageHulk); 7'6" (green/Professor Hulk) Weight 128 lbs. (Banner); 900 lbs. (gray Hulk); 1,040 – 1,400 lbs.(green/savage Hulk); 1,150 lbs. (green/Professor Hulk)}}</ref> | |||
<ref name="HulkIconic">{{cite web|first=Matt |last=Miller |title=Marvel Just Killed Off Another Iconic Superhero (But it Was the Worst One, Really) |url=http://www.esquire.com/entertainment/books/news/a46670/marvel-hulk-dead/ |date=July 13, 2016 |access-date=October 1, 2016 |work=] |archive-url=https://archive.today/20161001164754/http://www.esquire.com/entertainment/books/news/a46670/marvel-hulk-dead/ |archive-date=October 1, 2016 |url-status=live |df=mdy-all }}</ref> | |||
<ref name="HulkIconic2">{{cite web|first=Michael |last=Rothman |title=Marvel Kills Off Iconic 'Avenger' and 50-Year-Old Superhero |url=https://gma.yahoo.com/marvel-kills-off-iconic-avenger-50-old-superhero-083453409--abc-news-celebrities.html |date=July 13, 2016 |access-date=October 1, 2016 |publisher=] |work=] |archive-url=https://archive.today/20161001165040/https://gma.yahoo.com/marvel-kills-off-iconic-avenger-50-old-superhero-083453409--abc-news-celebrities.html |archive-date=October 1, 2016 |url-status=live |df=mdy-all }}</ref> | |||
<ref name="NerdistPowers">{{cite web|first=Kyle |last=Hill |title=Who Would Win In A Fight Between Superman And The Hulk? |url=http://nerdist.com/who-would-win-in-a-fight-between-superman-and-the-hulk/ |date=December 9, 2014 |access-date=October 3, 2016 |publisher=] |archive-url=https://archive.today/20150828072318/http://nerdist.com/who-would-win-in-a-fight-between-superman-and-the-hulk/ |archive-date=August 28, 2015 |url-status=live |df=mdy-all }}</ref> | |||
<ref name="NewsAramaPg2">{{cite news|title=Duo Dynamics: The Many Incarnations of HULK-BANNER Bond? (Page 2) |url=http://www.newsarama.com/15462-duo-dynamics-the-many-incarnations-of-hulk-banner-bond.html#s2 |date=December 23, 2015 |access-date=October 7, 2016 |work=] |archive-url=https://archive.today/20161007194404/http://www.newsarama.com/15462-duo-dynamics-the-many-incarnations-of-hulk-banner-bond.html%23s2 |archive-date=October 7, 2016 |url-status=live |df=mdy-all }}</ref> | |||
<ref name="NewsAramaPg3">{{cite news|title=Duo Dynamics: The Many Incarnations of HULK-BANNER Bond? (Page 3) |url=http://www.newsarama.com/15462-duo-dynamics-the-many-incarnations-of-hulk-banner-bond.html#s3 |date=December 23, 2015 |access-date=October 7, 2016 |work=] |archive-url=https://archive.today/20161007194305/http://www.newsarama.com/15462-duo-dynamics-the-many-incarnations-of-hulk-banner-bond.html%23s3 |archive-date=October 7, 2016 |url-status=live |df=mdy-all }}</ref> | |||
<ref name="NewsAramaPg5">{{cite news|title=Duo Dynamics: The Many Incarnations of HULK-BANNER Bond? (Page 5) |url=http://www.newsarama.com/15462-duo-dynamics-the-many-incarnations-of-hulk-banner-bond.html#s5 |date=December 23, 2015 |access-date=October 7, 2016 |work=] |archive-url=https://archive.today/20161007195729/http://www.newsarama.com/15462-duo-dynamics-the-many-incarnations-of-hulk-banner-bond.html%23s5 |archive-date=October 7, 2016 |url-status=live |df=mdy-all }}</ref> | |||
<ref name="NewsAramaPg9">{{cite news|title=Duo Dynamics: The Many Incarnations of HULK-BANNER Bond? (Page 9) |url=http://www.newsarama.com/15462-duo-dynamics-the-many-incarnations-of-hulk-banner-bond.html#s9 |date=December 23, 2015 |access-date=October 8, 2016 |work=] |archive-url=https://archive.today/20161008100548/http://www.newsarama.com/15462-duo-dynamics-the-many-incarnations-of-hulk-banner-bond.html%23s9 |archive-date=October 8, 2016 |url-status=live |df=mdy-all }}</ref> | |||
}} | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
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{{wikiquotepar|Hulk_(comics)}} | |||
* {{marvelwiki|Hulk|Hulk}} | |||
* | |||
* {{Comicbookdb|type=character|id=397|title=Hulk}} | |||
* ] - Marvel Database Project | |||
* {{gcdb|type=character|search=Hulk|title=Hulk}} | |||
* Article on the Incredible Hulk's Popularity | |||
* on ] | |||
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* {{Marveldatabase|Bruce Banner (Earth-616)|Bruce Banner}} | |||
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{{Hulk}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 22:02, 26 December 2024
Marvel Comics Character "Bruce Banner", "The Hulk", and "The Incredible Hulk" redirect here. For the Marvel Cinematic Universe character, see Bruce Banner (Marvel Cinematic Universe). For other uses, see Hulk (disambiguation) and The Incredible Hulk (disambiguation).Comics character
Bruce Banner Hulk | |
---|---|
Cover art for the comic book issue The Immortal Hulk #20 (July 2019) Art by Dale Keown and Peter Steigerwald | |
Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | The Incredible Hulk #1 (May 1962) |
Created by | Stan Lee Jack Kirby |
In-story information | |
Full name |
|
Species | Human mutate |
Team affiliations | Avengers Defenders Horsemen of Apocalypse Fantastic Four Pantheon Warbound S.M.A.S.H. Secret Avengers |
Partnerships | She-Hulk |
Notable aliases | Joe Fixit, World-Breaker, Devil Hulk, Jade Giant, Jade Jaws, Doc Green, Guilt Hulk/Guilt, War |
Abilities | As Bruce Banner/Doc Green:
As Hulk/Joe Fixit:
|
The Hulk is a superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by writer Stan Lee and artist Jack Kirby, the character first appeared in the debut issue of The Incredible Hulk (May 1962). In his comic book appearances, the character, who has dissociative identity disorder (DID), is primarily represented by the alter ego Hulk, a green-skinned, hulking, and muscular humanoid possessing a limitless degree of physical strength, and the alter ego Dr. Robert Bruce Banner, a physically weak, socially withdrawn, and emotionally reserved physicist, both of whom typically resent each other.
Following his accidental exposure to gamma rays while saving the life of Rick Jones during the detonation of an experimental bomb, Banner is physically transformed into the Hulk when subjected to emotional stress, at or against his will. This transformation often leads to destructive rampages and conflicts that complicate Banner's civilian life. The Hulk's level of strength is usually conveyed proportionate to his anger level. Commonly portrayed as a raging savage, the Hulk has been represented with other alter egos, from a mindless, destructive force (War) to a brilliant warrior (World-Breaker), a self-hating protector (the Devil Hulk), a genius scientist in his own right (Doc Green), and a gangster (Joe Fixit).
Despite Hulk and Banner's desire for solitude, the character has a large supporting cast. This includes Banner's love interest Betty Ross, his best friend, Rick Jones, his cousin She-Hulk, and therapist and ally Doc Samson. In addition, the Hulk alter ego has many key supporting characters, like his co-founders of the superhero team the Avengers, his queen Caiera, fellow warriors Korg and Miek, and sons Skaar and Hiro-Kala. However, his uncontrollable power has brought him into conflict with his fellow heroes and others. Despite this, he tries his best to do what's right while battling villains such as the Leader, the Abomination, the Absorbing Man, and more.
Lee stated that the Hulk's creation was inspired by a combination of Frankenstein and Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Although the Hulk's coloration has varied throughout the character's publication history, the usual color is green.
One of the most iconic characters in popular culture, the character has appeared on a variety of merchandise, such as clothing and collectable items, inspired real-world structures (such as theme park attractions), and been referenced in several media. Banner and the Hulk have been adapted into live-action, animated, and video game incarnations. The character was first played in live-action by Bill Bixby and Lou Ferrigno in the 1978 television series The Incredible Hulk and its subsequent television films The Incredible Hulk Returns (1988), The Trial of the Incredible Hulk (1989), and The Death of the Incredible Hulk (1990). In the film, the character was played by Eric Bana in Hulk (2003). In the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), the character was first portrayed by Edward Norton in the film The Incredible Hulk (2008) and then by Mark Ruffalo in later appearances in the franchise.
Publication history
Further information: List of Hulk titlesConcept and creation
The Hulk first appeared in The Incredible Hulk #1 (cover dated May 1962), written by writer-editor Stan Lee, penciled and co-plotted by Jack Kirby, and inked by Paul Reinman. Lee cites influence from Frankenstein and Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde in the Hulk's creation:
It was patently apparent that Thing was the most popular character in Fantastic Four. ... For a long time, I'd been aware of the fact that people were more likely to favor someone who was less than perfect. ... It's a safe bet that you remember Quasimodo, but how easily can you name any of the heroic, handsomer, more glamorous characters in The Hunchback of Notre Dame? And then there's Frankenstein ... I've always had a soft spot in my heart for the Frankenstein monster. No one could ever convince me that he was the bad guy. ... He never wanted to hurt anyone; he merely groped his torturous way through a second life trying to defend himself, trying to come to terms with those who sought to destroy him. ... I decided I might as well borrow from Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde as well—our protagonist would constantly change from his normal identity to his superhuman alter ego and back again.
Kirby also stated the Frankenstein inspiration stating, "I did a story called "The Hulk"– a small feature, and it was quite different from the Hulk that we know. But I felt that the Hulk had possibilities, and I took this little character from the small feature and I transformed it into the Hulk that we know today. Of course, I was experimenting with it. I thought the Hulk might be a good-looking Frankenstein. I felt there's a Frankenstein in all of us; I’ve seen it demonstrated. And I felt that the Hulk had the element of truth in it, and anything to me with the element of truth is valid and the reader relates to that. And if you dramatize it, the reader will enjoy it." Kirby also commented upon his influences in drawing the character, and recalled the inspiration of witnessing the hysterical strength of a mother lifting a car off her trapped child.
Lee has also compared Hulk to the Golem of Jewish mythology. In The Science of Superheroes, Gresh and Weinberg see the Hulk as a reaction to the Cold War and the threat of nuclear attack, an interpretation shared by Weinstein in Up, Up and Oy Vey. This interpretation corresponds with other popularized fictional media created during this time period, which took advantage of the prevailing sense among Americans that nuclear power could produce monsters and mutants.
In the debut, Lee chose grey for the Hulk because he wanted a color that did not suggest any particular ethnic group. Colorist Stan Goldberg, however, had problems with the grey coloring, resulting in different shades of grey, and even green, in the issue. After seeing the first published issue, Lee chose to change the skin color to green. Green was used in retellings of the origin, with even reprints of the original story being recolored for the next two decades, until The Incredible Hulk vol. 2, #302 (December 1984) reintroduced the grey Hulk in flashbacks set close to the origin story. An exception is the early trade paperback, Origins of Marvel Comics, from 1974, which explains the difficulties in keeping the grey color consistent in a Stan Lee-written prologue, and reprints the origin story keeping the grey coloration. Since December 1984, reprints of the first issue have displayed the original grey coloring, with the fictional canon specifying that the Hulk's skin had initially been grey.
Lee gave the Hulk's alter ego the alliterative name "Bruce Banner" because he found he had less difficulty remembering alliterative names. Despite this, in later stories he misremembered the character's name and referred to him as "Bob Banner", an error which readers quickly picked up on. The discrepancy was resolved by giving the character the official full name "Robert Bruce Banner."
The Hulk got his name from a comic book character named The Heap who was a large green swamp monster.
Series history
The Hulk's original series was canceled with issue #6 (March 1963). Lee had written each story, with Kirby penciling the first five issues and Steve Ditko penciling and inking the sixth. The character immediately guest-starred in The Fantastic Four #12 (March 1963), and months later became a founding member of the superhero team the Avengers, appearing in the first two issues of the team's eponymous series (Sept. and Nov. 1963), and returning as an antagonist in issue #3 and as an ally in #5 (Jan.–May 1964). He then guest-starred in Fantastic Four #25–26 (April–May 1964), which revealed Banner's full name as Robert Bruce Banner, and The Amazing Spider-Man #14 (July 1964).
Around this time, co-creator Kirby received a letter from a college dormitory stating the Hulk had been chosen as its official mascot. Kirby and Lee realized their character had found an audience in college-age readers.
A year and a half after The Incredible Hulk was canceled, the Hulk became one of two features in Tales to Astonish, beginning in issue #60 (Oct. 1964).
This new Hulk feature was initially scripted by Lee, with pencils by Steve Ditko and inks by George Roussos. Other artists later in this run included Jack Kirby (#68–87, June 1965 – Oct. 1966); Gil Kane (credited as "Scott Edwards", #76, (Feb. 1966)); Bill Everett (#78–84, April–Oct. 1966); John Buscema (#85–87); and Marie Severin. The Tales to Astonish run introduced the super-villains the Leader, who would become the Hulk's nemesis, and the Abomination, another gamma-irradiated being. Marie Severin finished out the Hulk's run in Tales to Astonish. Beginning with issue #102 (April 1968) the book was retitled The Incredible Hulk vol. 2, and ran until 1999, when Marvel canceled the series and launched Hulk #1. Marvel filed for a trademark for "The Incredible Hulk" in 1967, and the United States Patent and Trademark Office issued the registration in 1970.
Len Wein wrote the series from 1974 through 1978, working first with Herb Trimpe, then, as of issue #194 (December 1975), with Sal Buscema, who was the regular artist for ten years. Issues #180–181 (Oct.–Nov. 1974) introduced Wolverine as an antagonist, who would go on to become one of Marvel Comics' most popular characters. In 1977, Marvel launched a second title, The Rampaging Hulk, a black-and-white comics magazine. This was originally conceived as a flashback series, set between the end of his original, short-lived solo title and the beginning of his feature in Tales to Astonish. After nine issues, the magazine was retitled The Hulk! and printed in color.
In 1977, two Hulk television films were aired to strong ratings, leading to an Incredible Hulk TV series that aired from 1978 to 1982. A huge ratings success, the series introduced the popular Hulk catchphrase "Don't make me angry. You wouldn't like me when I'm angry", and broadened the character's popularity from a niche comic book readership into the mainstream consciousness.
Bill Mantlo became the series' writer for five years beginning with issue #245 (March 1980). Mantlo's "Crossroads of Eternity" stories (#300–313 (Oct. 1984 – Nov. 1985)) explored the idea that Banner had suffered child abuse. Later Hulk writers Peter David and Greg Pak have called these stories an influence on their approaches to the character. Mantlo left the series for Alpha Flight and that series' writer John Byrne took over The Incredible Hulk. The final issue of Byrne's six issue run featured the wedding of Bruce Banner and Betty Ross. Writer Peter David began a 12-year run with issue #331 (May 1987). He returned to the Roger Stern and Mantlo abuse storylines, expanding the damage caused, and depicting Banner as suffering dissociative identity disorder (DID).
In 1998, David killed off Banner's long-time love Betty Ross. Marvel executives used Ross' death as an opportunity to pursue the return of the Savage Hulk. David disagreed, leading to his parting ways with Marvel. Also in 1998, Marvel relaunched The Rampaging Hulk as a standard comic book rather than as a comics magazine. The Incredible Hulk was again cancelled with issue #474 of its second volume in March 1999 and was replaced with a new series, Hulk the following month, with returning writer Byrne and art by Ron Garney. New series writer Paul Jenkins developed the Hulk's multiple dissociative identities, and his run was followed by Bruce Jones with his run featuring Banner being pursued by a secret conspiracy and aided by the mysterious Mr. Blue. Jones appended his 43-issue Incredible Hulk run with the limited series Hulk/Thing: Hard Knocks #1–4 (Nov. 2004 – Feb. 2005), which Marvel published after putting the ongoing series on hiatus. Peter David, who had initially signed a contract for the six-issue Tempest Fugit limited series, returned as writer when it was decided to make that story the first five parts of the revived (vol. 3). After a four-part tie-in to the "House of M" storyline and a one-issue epilogue, David left the series once more, citing the need to do non-Hulk work for the sake of his career.
Writer Greg Pak took over the series in 2006, leading the Hulk through several crossover storylines including "Planet Hulk" and "World War Hulk", which left the Hulk temporarily incapacitated and replaced as the series' title character by the demigod Hercules in the retitled The Incredible Hercules (Feb. 2008). The Hulk returned periodically in Hulk, which then starred the new Red Hulk. In September 2009, The Incredible Hulk was relaunched as The Incredible Hulk (vol. 2) #600. The series was retitled The Incredible Hulks with issue #612 (Nov. 2010) to encompass the Hulk's expanded family, and ran until issue #635 (Oct. 2011) when it was replaced with The Incredible Hulk (vol. 3) (15 issues, Dec. 2011 – Dec. 2012) written by Jason Aaron with art by Marc Silvestri. As part of Marvel's 2012 Marvel NOW! relaunch, a series called Indestructible Hulk (Nov. 2012) debuted under the creative team of Mark Waid and Leinil Yu. This series was replaced in 2014 with The Hulk by Waid and artist Mark Bagley.
A new series titled The Immortal Hulk, written by Al Ewing and drawn by Joe Bennett, was launched in 2018 and ran for 50 issues. The series had a spin-off one-shot Immortal She-Hulk and a spin-off series about Gamma Flight in June 2021.
In November 2021, Donny Cates became the new writer of Hulk, with Ryan Ottley joining as artist. In May 2022, the series did a crossover with the Thor series, also written by Cates, entitled Hulk vs Thor: Banner of War. The series ran for 14 issues, with Ottley taking over as writer for the last 4 issues afters Cates left the book.
In March 2023, it was announced that a new volume of The Incredible Hulk would launch in June 2023, written by Philip Kennedy Johnson and drawn by Nic Klein.
Characterization
Fictional character biography
Robert Bruce Banner's psyche was profoundly affected by his troubled childhood, in which his father, Brian Banner, regarded him as a monster due to his seemingly unnatural intellect from a young age. These experiences caused Bruce to develop a dissociative identity disorder and repress his negative emotions as a coping mechanism. After Brian killed Bruce's mother in a fit of rage, Bruce lived with several relatives up until his high school years, when his intelligence caught the attention of the United States Army. Banner was recruited to develop nuclear weapons under the authority of General Thaddeus "Thunderbolt" Ross, and soon developed a relationship with the General's daughter Betty Ross.
During the experimental detonation of a gamma bomb, Banner saves teenager Rick Jones, who was dared onto the testing field; Banner pushes Jones into a trench to save him, but is hit with the blast, absorbing massive amounts of gamma radiation. He awakens later seemingly unscathed, but he begins transforming into a powerful and destructive creature upon nightfall, which a pursuing soldier describes as a "hulk". Banner's attempts to cure himself of these transformations alter their conditions, causing Banner to transform as a response to rage or fear. The Hulk is a founding member of the Avengers, but quickly leaves the group due to their distrust of him. Banner maintains the secret of his dual identity with Rick's aid, but Rick reveals his secret following his assumed death to Major Glenn Talbot who subsequently informed his superiors, forcing Banner to become a fugitive upon returning from the future where he was actually thrown to.
Psychiatrist Doc Samson captures the Hulk and manages to physically separate Banner and the Hulk, allowing Banner to marry Betty. However, Banner and the Hulk's molecular structure destabilized and threatened to kill them, requiring Samson to reunite them with the aid of Vision. Samson is later able to merge elements of Banner's fractured psyche to create Professor Hulk, an intelligent but egocentric variation of the Hulk. Professor Hulk soon becomes a key member of the Pantheon, a secretive organization of superpowered individuals. His tenure with the organization brings him into conflict with a tyrannical alternate future version of himself called the Maestro, who rules over a world where many heroes are dead. The Professor Hulk construct ultimately proves unstable, and Banner's psyche eventually splinters once more.
In "Planet Hulk", the Illuminati decide the Hulk is too dangerous to remain on Earth and send him away by rocket ship which crashes on Planet Sakaar. The Hulk finds allies in the Warbound and marries alien queen Caiera, a relationship that bears him two sons: Skaar and Hiro-Kala. After the Illuminati's ship explodes and kills Caiera, the Hulk returns to Earth with his superhero group Warbound and declares war on the planet in "World War Hulk". However, after learning that Miek, one of the Warbound, had actually been responsible for the destruction, the Hulk allows himself to be defeated, with Banner subsequently redeeming himself as a hero as he works with and against the new Red Hulk to defeat the new supervillain team the Intelligencia.
Later, the Hulk turns to Doctor Doom to physically separate himself and Banner, with Doom surgically extracting the elements of the Hulk's brain uniquely belonging to Banner and inserting them into a clone body. Banner eventually re-combines with the Hulk when his cloned body is destroyed in an attempt to recreate his original transformation. Following this, Bruce willingly joins the spy organization S.H.I.E.L.D., allowing them to use the Hulk as a weapon in exchange for providing him with the means and funding to create a lasting legacy for himself. When Banner is shot in the head by an assassin, Tony Stark saves him with a variant of the Extremis virus. This procedure creates a new intelligent persona named Doc Green, who concludes that the world is in danger by Gamma Mutates and thus need to be depowered. He creates a cure and depowers A-Bomb, Skaar and Red Hulk. Eventually, Doc Green's intellect fades and his normal Hulk form is restored.
When the vision of the Inhuman Ulysses shows a rampaging Hulk standing over the corpses of many superheroes, Banner gives Hawkeye special arrows capable of killing him during a transformation, which Hawkeye accomplishes. The Hulk was first revived by the Hand, then by Hydra, and finally by the Challenger for a contest against the Grandmaster.
Personality
Like other long-lived characters, the Hulk's character and cultural interpretations have changed with time, adding or modifying character traits. The Hulk is typically seen as a hulking man with green skin, hair, and eyes, wearing only a pair of torn purple pants that survive his physical transformation as the character progressed. As Bruce Banner, the character is about 5 ft 9 in (1.75 m) tall and weighs 128 lbs (58.05 kg), but when transformed into the Hulk, the character stands between 7 and 8 ft (2.13 - 2.43 m) tall and weighs between 1,040 and 1,400 lbs (471.73 - 635.02 kg). The Gray Hulk stands 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) tall and weighs 900 lbs (408.23 kg); the Merged Hulk stands 7 ft 6 in (2.28 m) tall and weighs 1,150 lbs (521.63 kg); the Green Scar stands 8 ft 8 in (2.64 m) tall and weighs 2,400 lbs (1.08 ton). The Devil Hulk is roughly the same size as Sasquatch, standing around 9 or 10 ft (2.74 / 3.04 m) tall and weighing roughly 2,000 lbs (907.18 kg). Following his debut, Banner's transformations were triggered at nightfall, turning him into a grey-skinned Hulk. In Incredible Hulk #2, the Hulk started to appear with green skin, and in Avengers #3 (1963) Banner realized that his transformations were now triggered by surges of adrenaline in response to feelings of fear, pain or anger. Incredible Hulk #227 (1978) established that the Hulk's separate identity was not due to the mutation affecting his brain, but because Banner was suffering from dissociative identity disorder, with the savage Green Hulk representing Banner's repressed childhood rage and aggression, and the Grey Hulk representing Banner's repressed selfish desires and urges.
Identities
Bruce Banner
During his decades of publication, Banner has been portrayed differently, but common themes persist. Banner, a physicist who earned his Ph.D. in nuclear physics from the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), is sarcastic and seemingly very self-assured when he first appears in Incredible Hulk #1, but is also emotionally withdrawn. Banner designed the gamma bomb that caused his affliction, and the ironic twist of his self-inflicted fate has been one of the most persistent common themes. Arie Kaplan describes the character thus: "Robert Bruce Banner lives in a constant state of panic, always wary that the monster inside him will erupt, and therefore he cannot form meaningful bonds with anyone." As a child, Banner's father Brian often got mad and physically abused both Banner and his mother, creating the psychological complex of fear, anger, and the fear of anger and the destruction it can cause that underlies the character. Banner has been shown to be emotionally repressed, but capable of deep love for Betty Ross, and for solving problems posed to him. Under the writing of Paul Jenkins, Banner was shown to be a capable fugitive, applying deductive reasoning and observation to figure out the events transpiring around him. On the occasions that Banner controlled the Hulk's body, he applied principles of physics to problems and challenges and used deductive reasoning. It was shown after his ability to turn into the Hulk was taken away by the red Hulk that Banner has been extremely versatile as well as cunning when dealing with the many situations that followed. When he was briefly separated from the Hulk by Doom, Banner became criminally insane, driven by his desire to regain the power of the Hulk, but once the two recombined he came to accept that he was a better person with the Hulk to provide something for him to focus on controlling rather than allowing his intellect to run without restraint against the world.
Hulk
The traditional Hulk, often called "Savage Hulk", was originally shown as grey and average in intelligence. He roamed aimlessly and became annoyed at "puny" humans who took him for a dangerous monster. Shortly after becoming the Hulk, his transformation continued turning him green, coinciding with him beginning to display primitive speech. By Incredible Hulk #4, radiation treatments gave Banner's mind complete control of the Hulk's body. While Banner relished his indestructibility and power, he was quick to anger and more aggressive in his Hulk form. He became known as a hero alongside the Avengers, but his increasing paranoia caused him to leave the group. He was convinced that he would never be trusted.
Originally, the Hulk was shown as simple-minded and quick to anger. The Hulk generally divorces his identity from Banner's, decrying Banner as "puny Banner." From his earliest stories, the Hulk has been concerned with finding sanctuary and quiet. He is often shown to quickly react emotionally to situations. Grest and Weinberg call Hulk the "dark, primordial side of Banner's psyche." Even in the earliest appearances, Hulk spoke in the third person. Hulk retains a modest intelligence, thinking and talking in full sentences. Lee even gives the Hulk expository dialogue in issue #6, allowing readers to learn just what capabilities Hulk has, when the Hulk says, "But these muscles ain't just for show! All I gotta do is spring up and just keep goin'!" In the 1970s, Hulk was shown as more prone to anger and rage, and less talkative. Writers played with the nature of his transformations, briefly giving Banner control over the change, and the ability to maintain control of his Hulk form. Artistically and conceptually, the character has become progressively more muscular and powerful in the years since his debut.
Joe Fixit
Originally, Stan Lee wanted the Hulk to be grey. Due to ink problems, Hulk's color was changed to green. This was later changed in the story to indicate that the Grey Hulk and the Savage Hulk are separate dissociative identities or entities fighting for control in Bruce's subconscious. The Grey Hulk incarnation can do the more unscrupulous things that Banner could not bring himself to do, with many sources comparing the Grey Hulk to the moody teenager that Banner never allowed himself to be. While the grey Hulk still had the-madder-he-gets, the-stronger-he-gets part that is similar to the Savage Hulk, it is on a much slower rate. It is said by the Leader that the Grey Hulk is stronger on nights of the new moon and weaker on nights of the full moon. Originally, the night is when Bruce Banner became the Grey Hulk and changed back by dawn. In later comics, willpower or stress would have Banner turn into the Grey Hulk. During one storyline where he was placed under a spell to prevent him turning back into Bruce Banner and publicly presumed dead when he was teleported away from a gamma bomb explosion that destroyed an entire town, the grey Hulk adopted a specific name as Joe Fixit, a security expert for Las Vegas casino owner Michael Berengetti, with the grey Hulk often being referred to as Joe after these events. Joe Fixit later gained the ability to transform into his version of Red Hulk form when in the Below-Place.
Merged Hulk
Convinced that unaided, the Banner, Green Hulk, and Grey Hulk identities would eventually destroy each other, Doc Samson uses hypnosis to merge the three to create a new single identity combining Banner's intelligence with the Grey Hulk's and Banner's attitudes and the Green Hulk's body. This new Merged Hulk, Professor Hulk, or simply The Professor, considered himself cured and began a new life, but the merger was not perfect, and the Hulk sometimes still considered Banner a separate person, and when overcome with rage the Merged Hulk would transform back into Banner's human body while still thinking himself the Hulk. The Merged Hulk is the largest of the three primary Hulk incarnations. While in a calm emotional state, the Merged Hulk is stronger than Savage Hulk when he is calm. Unlike the Savage Hulk and the Grey Hulk, Banner subconsciously installed a type of safeguard within this incarnation. The safeguard is that when the Merged Hulk gets angry, he regresses back to Banner with the mind of the Savage Hulk.
Doc Green
A variation of the Merged Hulk identity takes on the name Doc Green as the result of Extremis fixing Hulk's brain, becoming powerful enough to destroy Tony Stark's mansion with one thunderclap. This form was also known as Omega Hulk. It was theorized by Doc Green that this form was an earlier incarnation of his possible future form Maestro.
The Devil Hulk
The Devil Hulk, or simply the Devil, is the result of the Hulk needing a father figure. While the character's physical appearance varies, he is always depicted as having glowing red eyes and reptilian traits. The new form of the Devil Hulk is the result of Banner and Hulk having been through different deaths and rebirths. This incarnation is articulate, smart, and cunning, and does merciless attacks on those who do harm. Unlike the other Hulk incarnations, the Devil Hulk is content with waiting inside Bruce. If Bruce is injured by sunset, the Devil Hulk will emerge with his transformation being limited to night-time. Thanks to the Devil Hulk side and Banner working together, the Devil Hulk can maintain his form in sunlight.
Other identities
The Gravage Hulk is the result of Banner using the Gamma Projector on himself which merged his Savage Hulk and Grey Hulk identities. This form possesses the raw power of the Savage Hulk and the cunning intellect of the Grey Hulk. While he does not draw on anger to empower him, the Gravage Hulk identity draws on dimensional nexus energies to increase his strength.
The Dark Hulk identity is the result of Hulk being possessed by Shanzar. This form has black skin and is viciously strong.
The Guilt Hulk is a malevolent representation of Banner's abusive father, Brian Banner, that manifests itself in Banner's childhood memories.
The Green Scar identity is unleashed on Sakaar and is an enraged version of the Gravage Hulk. In addition, he is an expert in armed combat like the use of swords and shields. Green Scar is also a capable leader and an expert strategist.
Kluh is a personality of Hulk who is described as the "Hulk's Hulk". This form sports a white mohawk, black skin, and red lines on him.
Titan is a more monstrous and malicious form of Hulk who stands at 30 ft., has black skin, rock-like spikes on his shoulders, and possesses the ability to shoot lasers from his eyes. This personality was born when it was planted in Hulk by D'Spayre.
Powers and abilities
Bruce Banner
Considered to be one of the greatest scientific minds on Earth, Banner possesses "a mind so brilliant it cannot be measured on any known intelligence test." Norman Osborn estimates that he is the fourth most-intelligent person on Earth. Banner holds expertise in biology, chemistry, engineering, medicine, physiology, and nuclear physics. Using this knowledge, he creates advanced technology dubbed "Bannertech", which is on par with technological development from Tony Stark or Doctor Doom. These technologies include a teleporter and a force field that can protect him from the attacks of Hulk-level entities.
After becoming a fugitive from the law, Banner is forced to go on the run and over the years learns various skills in order to both survive and remain under radar of those who are hunting him. Banner's most frequent method of travel includes hitchhiking, train hopping or simply just walking as he is unable to travel legally via planes, passenger ships or buses due to being in several travel watchlists. Banner is generally on the move and rarely ever stays in one place for very long and only does so if there's a possibility of curing himself. He will only ever stay in one place for an extended period of time if it provides him with complete solitude and privacy where the Hulk can do little to no harm.
To avoid being tracked, Banner does not use cell phones, debit or credit cards and will only use payphones or cash. He will often use fake identities when staying at motels or working jobs that require identification. Having been on the run for years, Banner can normally tell when he is being followed and will generally make a run for it when he is discovered. Having traveled across the globe, Banner is able to sneak over borders without being detected and can get by, by either knowing or learning the local language. Often traveling light, Banner has little to no possessions that he carries in either a satchel or backpack. Often losing everything he owns after transforming into the Hulk, Banner avoids keeping anything of personal value to him so that he can easily replace the items and clothes that were lost or destroyed.
To support himself financially, Banner will work quick part-time jobs and will only accept payments in cash. These jobs have varied from simply working in low pay diners to working as local doctor. Banner's work ethic as well as his vast knowledge and skillset in science, medicine and engineering often help him get hired rather quickly. Unless desperate, Banner will generally avoid jobs that are high stress due to the potential danger of transforming into the Hulk.
Banner has little to no memories of the Hulk's actions aside from his initial transformation which he described as being extremely painful. Banner's lack of memories often terrifies him as he has often transformed back to witness the devastating aftermath of the Hulk's battles which both saddens and encourages him to find a way to understand his condition so that he won't cause anymore destruction or harm. During his travels, Banner has developed several different techniques to help suppress or control his transformations when he becomes a little angry or upset. Among the techniques he has learned over the years include meditation and hypnotherapy. While they have helped him to better understand and suppress his transformations, none of techniques Banner has learned have helped him to gain full control over the Hulk.
The Hulk
The Hulk possesses the potential for seemingly limitless physical strength that is influenced by his emotional state, particularly his anger. This has been reflected in the repeated comment "The madder Hulk gets, the stronger Hulk gets." The cosmically powerful entity known as the Beyonder once analyzed the Hulk's physiology, and claimed that the Hulk's potential strength had "no finite element inside." Hulk's strength has been depicted as sometimes limited by Banner's subconscious influence; when Jean Grey psionically "shut Banner off", Hulk became strong enough to overpower and destroy the physical form of the villain Onslaught. Writer Greg Pak described the Worldbreaker Hulk shown during World War Hulk as having a level of physical power where "Hulk was stronger than any mortal—and most immortals—who ever walked the Earth" and depicted the character as powerful enough to completely destroy entire planets. His strength allows him to leap into lower Earth orbit or across continents, and he has displayed superhuman speed. Exposure to radiation has also been shown to make the Hulk stronger. It is unknown how he gains biomass during transformation but it may be linked to the One-Below-All.
His durability, regeneration, and endurance also increase in proportion to his temper. Hulk is resistant to injury or damage, though the degree to which varies between interpretations, but he has withstood the equivalent of solar temperatures, nuclear explosions, and planet-shattering impacts. Despite his remarkable resiliency, continuous barrages of high-caliber gunfire can hinder his movement to some degree while he can be temporarily subdued by intense attacks with chemical weapons such as anesthetic gases, although any interruption of such dosages will allow him to quickly recover. He has been shown to have both regenerative and adaptive healing abilities, including growing tissues to allow him to breathe underwater, surviving unprotected in space for extended periods, and when injured, healing from most wounds within seconds, including, on one occasion, the complete destruction of most of his body mass. His future self, the "Maestro", was even eventually able to recover from being blown to pieces. As an effect, he has an extremely prolonged lifespan.
He also possesses less commonly described powers, including abilities allowing him to "home in" to his place of origin in New Mexico; resist psychic control, or unwilling transformation; grow stronger from radiation or dark magic; punch his way between separate temporal or spatial dimensions; and to see and interact with astral forms. Some of these abilities were in later years explained as being related; his ability to home in on the New Mexico bomb site was due to his latent ability to sense astral forms and spirits, since the bomb site was also the place where the Maestro's skeleton was and the Maestro's spirit was calling out to him in order to absorb his radiation. He is also shown to have a separate memory to Bruce Banner - when Spider-Man has the knowledge of his secret identity erased during Spider-Man: One More Day, the Hulk later asks how Peter is doing, not Spider-Man; upon questioning, he enigmatically states "Banner forgot. But I don't forget."
In the first Hulk comic series, "massive" doses of gamma rays would cause the Hulk to transform back to Banner, although this ability was written out of the character by the 1970s.
Supporting characters
Main article: List of Hulk supporting charactersOver the long publication history of the Hulk's adventures, many recurring characters have featured prominently, including his best friend and sidekick Rick Jones, love interest and wife Betty Ross and her father, the often adversarial General "Thunderbolt" Ross. Both Banner and Hulk have families created in their respective personas. Banner is son to Brian, an abusive father who killed Banner's mother while she tried to protect her son from his father's delusional attacks, and cousin to Jennifer Walters, the She-Hulk, who serves as his frequent ally. Banner had a stillborn child with Betty, while the Hulk has two sons with his deceased second wife Caiera Oldstrong, Skaar and Hiro-Kala, and his DNA was used to create a daughter named Lyra with Thundra the warrior woman.
The Fantastic Four #12 (March 1963), featured the Hulk's first battle with the Thing. Although many early Hulk stories involve Ross trying to capture or destroy the Hulk, the main villain is often a radiation-based character, like the Gargoyle or the Leader, along with other foes such as the Toad Men, or Asian warlord General Fang. Ross' daughter Betty loves Banner and criticizes her father for pursuing the Hulk. General Ross' right-hand man, Major Glenn Talbot, also loves Betty and is torn between pursuing Hulk and trying to gain Betty's love more honorably. Rick Jones serves as the Hulk's friend and sidekick in these early tales. The Hulk's archenemies are the Abomination and the Leader. The Abomination is more monstrous-looking, twice as strong as the Hulk at normal levels (however, the Abomination's strength levels do not increase when he gets angry) and wreaks havoc for fun and pleasure. The Leader is a gamma-irradiated super-genius who has tried plan after plan to take over the world.
Cultural impact
The Hulk character and the concepts behind it have been raised to the level of iconic status by many within and outside the comic book industry. In 2003, Official U.S. PlayStation Magazine claimed the character had "stood the test of time as a genuine icon of American pop culture." In 2008, the Hulk was listed as the 19th greatest comic book character by Wizard magazine. Empire magazine named him as the 14th-greatest comic-book character and the fifth-greatest Marvel character. In 2011, the Hulk placed No. 9 on IGN's list of "Top 100 Comic Book Heroes", and fourth on their list of "The Top 50 Avengers" in 2012.
Analysis
The Hulk is often viewed as a reaction to war. As well as being a reaction to the Cold War, the character has been a cipher for the frustrations the Vietnam War raised, and Ang Lee said that the Iraq War influenced his direction. In the Michael Nyman edited edition of The Guardian, Stefanie Diekmann explored Marvel Comics' reaction to the September 11 attacks. Diekmann discussed The Hulk's appearance in the 9/11 tribute comic Heroes, claiming that his greater prominence, alongside Captain America, aided in "stressing the connection between anger and justified violence without having to depict anything more than a well-known and well-respected protagonist." In Marvel: Five Fabulous Decades of the World's Greatest Comics, Les Daniels addresses the Hulk as an embodiment of cultural fears of radiation and nuclear science. He quotes Jack Kirby thus: "As long as we're experimenting with radioactivity, there's no telling what may happen, or how much our advancements in science may cost us." Daniels continues, "The Hulk became Marvel's most disturbing embodiment of the perils inherent in the atomic age."
In Comic Book Nation, Bradford Wright alludes to Hulk's counterculture status, referring to a 1965 Esquire magazine poll amongst college students which "revealed that student radicals ranked Spider-Man and the Hulk alongside the likes of Bob Dylan and Che Guevara as their favorite revolutionary icons." Wright goes on to cite examples of his anti-authority symbol status. Two of these are "The Ballad of the Hulk" by Jerry Jeff Walker, and the Rolling Stone cover for September 30, 1971, a full color Herb Trimpe piece commissioned for the magazine. The Hulk has been caricatured in such animated television series as The Simpsons, Robot Chicken, and Family Guy, and such comedy TV series as The Young Ones. The character is also used as a cultural reference point for someone displaying anger or agitation. For example, in a 2008 Daily Mirror review of an EastEnders episode, a character is described as going "into Incredible Hulk mode, smashing up his flat." In September 2019, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson likened himself to The Hulk in an interview with the Mail On Sunday, as political pressure built on him to request an extension to the date of the UK's withdrawal from the European Union.
The Hulk, especially his alter ego Bruce Banner, is also a common reference in hip hop music. The term was represented as an analogue to marijuana in Dr. Dre's 2001, while more conventional references are made in Ludacris and Jermaine Dupri's popular single "Welcome to Atlanta".
The 2003 Ang Lee-directed Hulk film saw discussion of the character's appeal to Asian Americans. The Taiwanese-born Ang Lee commented on the "subcurrent of repression" that underscored the character of The Hulk, and how that mirrored his own experience: "Growing up, my artistic leanings were always repressed—there was always pressure to do something 'useful,' like being a doctor." Jeff Yang, writing for the San Francisco Chronicle, extended this self-identification to Asian American culture, arguing that "the passive-aggressive streak runs deep among Asian Americans—especially those who have entered creative careers, often against their parents' wishes."
There have been explorations about the real-world possibility of Hulk's gamma-radiation-based origin. In The Science of Superheroes, Lois Grest and Robert Weinberg examined Hulk's powers, explaining the scientific flaws in them. Most notably, they point out that the level of gamma radiation Banner is exposed to at the initial blast would induce radiation sickness and kill him, or if not, create significant cancer risks for Banner, because hard radiation strips cells of their ability to function. They go on to offer up an alternate origin, in which a Hulk might be created by biological experimentation with adrenal glands and GFP. Charles Q. Choi from LiveScience.com further explains that, unlike the Hulk, gamma rays are not green; existing as they do beyond the visible spectrum, gamma rays have no color at all that we can describe. He also explains that gamma rays are so powerful (the most powerful form of electromagnetic radiation and 10,000 times more powerful than visible light) that they can even convert energy into matter – a possible explanation for the increased mass that Bruce Banner takes on during transformations. "Just as the Incredible Hulk 'is the strongest one there is,' as he says himself, so too are gamma-ray bursts the most powerful explosions known."
Other Marvel Comics characters called the Hulk
Prior to the debut of the Hulk in May 1962, Marvel had earlier monster characters that used the name the "Hulk", but had no direct relation.
- In Strange Tales #75 (June 1960), Albert Poole built an armor he called the Hulk. In modern-day reprints, the character's name was changed to Grutan.
- In Journey into Mystery #62 (Nov. 1960) was Xemnu the Living Hulk, a huge, furry alien monster who went by the name of the Hulk. Coincidentally, the character's debut story was also illustrated by Jack Kirby. The character reappeared in issue #66 (March 1961). Since then the character has been a mainstay in the Marvel Universe, and was renamed Xemnu the Living Titan.
- A huge, orange, slimy monster called the Hulk was featured in a movie titled The Hulk in Tales to Astonish #21 (July 1961). In modern-day reprints, the character's name was changed to the Glop.
Other versions
A number of alternate universes and alternate timelines in Marvel Comics publications allow writers to introduce variations on the Hulk, in which the character's origins, behavior, and morality differ from the mainstream setting. In some stories, someone other than Bruce Banner is the Hulk.
In some versions, the Hulk succumbs to the darker side of his nature: in "Future Imperfect" (December 1992), a future version of the Hulk has become the Maestro, the tyrannical and ruthless ruler of a nuclear war-irradiated Earth, and in "Old Man Logan" (2008), an insane Hulk rules over a post-apocalyptic California and leads a gang of his inbred Hulk children created with his first cousin She-Hulk.
Age of Apocalypse
In the Age of Apocalypse alternative setting, Bruce Banner was never exposed to gamma radiation. Therefore, he did not become the Hulk. Instead he became a member of the Human High Council, where he was a scientist and became a weapons designer. However he also yearns to gain knowledge and power, something Apocalypse was willing to help with, and so Bruce sold himself to Mikhail Rasputin, one of the Horsemen of Apocalypse, to give him mutants as test subjects. He succeeds in his experiments and can now transform into a creature resembling the Grey Hulk. He was used as a mole in the council, but was discovered by Susan Storm and Ben Grimm because the patterns of Bruce's injuries were identical to those sustained by the Hulk.
Later, Banner attempted to redeem himself by jumping out of the Human High Council ship in an effort to prevent it from getting struck by a gamma missile of his own creation. The missile detonated, allowing the Human High Council to escape Earth. He fell back to Earth, landed in the Colosseum, and emerged as the Green Hulk. There were no further mentions of the Hulk in the Age of Apocalypse material.
Age of X
In the "Age of X" reality, Bruce Banner was a scientist who was under contract from the United States government to build a device that would depower any mutant. However, during the testing phase one of the mutant volunteers began to panic. Her powers caused the machine to go off prematurely while still in the gamma spectrum. The mutants were killed and Banner was bombarded by gamma radiation. The combination of the radiation and the fact that some of the mutants' genes were imprinted on him as well, caused Banner to transform into the Hulk. Because of his exposure to mutant genes, Banner holds a deep murderous resentment for all mutants to the point that he volunteered for a suicide mission to detonate a chemical bomb that would destroy the entire mutant stronghold, forcing his former teammates to sacrifice their lives to detonate the bomb early. He was incinerated by his own bomb when one of his former teammates named Redback (this reality's Spider-Woman) uses Steel Corpse's (this reality's Iron Man) severed glove to destroy the bomb.
Amalgam Comics
The Skulk is a hero of the Amalgam Universe. He is amalgamation of the Hulk and DC Comics' Solomon Grundy.
Bruce Banner was a scientist working with gamma rays. He was testing his gamma bomb out in the desert, but a tall figure walked out into the testing area. When Banner went out to see who it was, the man turned out to be Solomon Grundy. The bomb went off fusing Grundy and Banner together. When Banner gets angry he becomes Grundy, but the creature made a name for itself, calling itself Skulk.
Breaker-Apart
In a potential future, the One Below All is able to destroy Bruce Banner's soul and possesses the body of the Hulk. After which, it went on to kill Franklin Richards, Galactus, Mister Immortal, and many others until it was the only being left in the universe. Taking on Bruce's appearance, the One Below All encounters the Sentience of the Eighth Cosmos/Metatron and is able to trick and devour him, absorbing his powers. In the newly formed Ninth Cosmos, the One Below All used its newly acquired powers to transform Hulk into a Galactus-like being named the 'Breaker-Apart'. 10 billion years later, the Breaker-Apart has destroyed all light, all life, and all planets in the Multiverse. When Par%l tried to make contact and reason with it, the alien instead meets the abstract form of the One Below All which told hir it wanted to "Make all hollow as I, dark and dead as I" and killed Par%l and hir's planet, O%los.
Bullet Points
In the Bullet Points mini-series, Peter Parker finds himself on the test site for a Gamma bomb and absorbs a large dose of gamma radiation, becoming the Hulk. In a further twist, later in the series, in an attempt to find a cure for Peter, Dr. Bruce Banner examines specimens taken from the test site and is bitten by a radioactive spider, becoming Spider-Man. Parker is killed by Galactus and Banner is killed by an Inheritor during the Spider-Verse event.
Deadpool: Samurai (Earth-346)
In the Deadpool: Samurai manga series, which takes place on Earth-346, Bruce Banner removes a control collar from the singer Neiro Aratabi, who had been saved from a deranged fan by Deadpool. Banner then attempts to transform into the Hulk to help Deadpool stop HYDRA agents from retrieving the Gateway Controller, which had been hidden under the Tokyo Dome, but he was knocked unconscious by a piece of falling debris before he could finish his transformation. Banner did gradually regain consciousness and he then completed transforming into the Hulk, but he was quickly defeated by Thanos, who had been summoned by the Hydra agents.
Earth X
The Earth X series featured a vastly different take on the character, one in which the Hulk and Bruce Banner have finally achieved separation. However, they still rely on each other with Banner becoming a blind child who sees through the Hulk's eyes. In an interview in Comicology Volume I: The Kingdom Come Companion, Alex Ross said that the design of Earth-X Banner and Hulk was based on the appearance of Moon-Boy and Devil Dinosaur.
Exiles
Numerous alternate versions of the Hulk have been present in the Exiles series.
- A crazy version of the Hulk was seen attacking Canada. He was stopped by the Exiles and Alpha Flight. This battle featured the first appearance of the rogue reality jumpers known as Weapon X. The crazy Hulk was presumed dead after this encounter.
- Another visually different Hulk appeared in this universe. This version had a long ponytail and wore a "Peace Out" costume, but he still retained his gamma-irradiated appearance, strength and his famous smashing abilities. He teamed up with an evil Firestar and was recruited by the Timebroker to stop an evil Hyperion. The plan succeeded and they both joined Weapon X. When Hyperion had gone even crazier than before, Hulk attacked and Weapon X began to fight with each other. This version of The Hulk was killed when Hyperion brutally fought him until he was in a weakened state, Hyperion then used his heat vision on The Hulk, melting and destroying him. His body is sent back to his reality, where his funeral is held. Some time after Hulk's death, Firestar committed suicide when she incinerates herself and a teammate.
- A conqueror version of the Hulk, in his gladiator outfit, killed Annihilus, most of the superhumans, took full control of the Annihilation Wave, and decimated Earth. He has been apparently knocked unconscious by the Exiles. It is unknown if he survived this incident. This version is even more insane than the other alternate versions of the Hulk. While the Exiles had been dealing with Proteus, Hulk's Annihilation Wave killed many of the superhumans which should not have happened if not for Proteus. A new version of the Exiles have been present showing the surviving superhumans and they all have one goal: to stop Hulk and his Annihilation Wave, in which they apparently succeeded.
Hulk: Chapter One
In the Hulk 1999 Annual, writer John Byrne revised the Hulk's origin, much like his Spider-Man: Chapter One. In the revised origin, the Gamma Bomb that was being tested is now a gamma laser, and a Skrull was responsible for Rick Jones' presence on the base during the gamma test. The Skrull also disguised himself as Igor Rasminsky (Drenkov in the original stories), a fellow scientist working on the project. The contemporary setting removes the Cold War context of the original story, and serves as a tie-in to the Marvel: The Lost Generation maxi-series created by Roger Stern and Byrne, which also brought the origins of many Marvel characters out of the 1960s and into contemporary times. The storyline is currently designated as set on Earth-9992, and is not part of mainstream Marvel continuity (Earth-616).
The Last Avengers Story
In the 1995 Two Issues mini series The Last Avengers Story, Hulk was amongst those who joined Thor, The Thing and Hercules in a mysterious conflict known as the "Great Cataclysm" which threatened Olympus and Asgard. The event ended with Hulk holding Hercules's golden mace and his skin temporarily turned grey, suggesting that the Hulk was the only survivor of this conflict. After the Event Hulk was recruited alongside Mockingbird, Tigra, Wonder Man and Hawkeye to fight Ultron However Hulk had been seemingly corrupted by the events of the Great Cataclysm, Hulk turned on his allies, ripping Tigra in half and puncturing Wonder Man, Wonder Man unleashed his energy against the Hulk, seemingly killing them both and accidentally blinding Hawkeye. Hulk is finally defeated by Thor, which ends the chaos.
House of M
In the House of M reality, Bruce Banner disappears in Australia, where he befriends an Aborigine tribe, and attempts to control his dark side. When the mutant rulers of the Earth attack his tribe he retaliates, and eventually conquers Australia with the aid of Advanced Idea Mechanics (A.I.M.).
Infernal Hulk
In one alternative reality, Bruce Banner and the Hulk were magically separated. Bruce became the new Sorcerer Supreme, and the Hulk was cast into hell. However, while in hell, the Hulk became corrupted by the demonic beings he encountered, transforming him into a demon himself. Now completely evil, he escaped from hell and attempted to kill Banner. With help from the mainstream Hulk, Banner tricked the "infernal" Hulk into shattering the Eye of Agamotto, causing him to be thrown back into hell.
Maestro
Main article: Maestro (comics)Set in a post apocalyptic future, the Hulk has mutated into the dictator Maestro ruling the remains of humanity with an iron fist. Ruthless, sadistic, violent, and tyrannical, the Maestro was shown to be an example of what would happen if the Hulk ever embraced his darker roots. Maestro was known to be an enemy of the Hulk, as the two alternate versions fought each other on Maestro's world.
Marvel 2099
For the Marvel 2099 imprint, Gerard Jones and Dwayne Turner created a new version of the character. First appearing in 2099 Unlimited #1, John Eisenhart, a selfish film producer in "LotusLand" (future Hollywood) is inadvertently exposed to gamma radiation by the Knights of the Banner (a cult worshipping the original Hulk) who intend to create a Hulk of their own. As the Hulk, Eisenhart finds himself representing freedom to a closed-off society. A Hulk 2099 series was published for 10 issues.
The unified Marvel Noir reality of Earth-2099 featured a version of Hulk 2009. In addition, there was a 2099 version of Grey Hulk who was a member of the 2099 version of the Avengers until he was among those who were killed by the 2099 version of the Masters of Evil. The 2099 version of Moon Knight survived the massacre and formed the 2099 version of the New Avengers with Hulk 2099 as one of its members as they avenged Grey Hulk 2099 and the fallen Avengers by defeating the Masters of Evil and having them remanded to a prison on the planet Wakanda.
Marvel Comics 2
In another take, The Hulk is shown to still be active in the alternative future of the MC2 universe. There, he is shown as an amalgamation of his three main transformations; He has the strength of the Savage Hulk, the attitude of the Grey Hulk, and the intelligence of the Professor Hulk.
He's also shown to have fathered a son named David by an unknown spouse.
He was later seen within the pages of Last Hero Standing, where Loki manipulated him into attacking the heroes. When he was freed of his manipulation he was critical in punishing Loki by forcing him into the voided dimension that Thor had opened a rift into, Hulk informing Loki that he was ruined on Earth because of Loki's actions and he therefore had nothing to lose by ensuring that Loki would be punished for eternity.
Marvel Zombies
Marvel Zombies: Dead Days
In the series Marvel Zombies, the Hulk has been infected with a virus which makes him into an undead zombie (he is actually infected by the zombie Fantastic Four). Although he still retains his strength and invulnerability, he no longer heals, is losing weight because of his now-deteriorating tissue, does not feel pain and now craves human flesh. The zombie Hulk's transformations are physically controlled purely by his appetite — after feeding, he transforms back into Banner, who is also a zombie, until the hunger returns. When Hulk first transforms back into Banner, his stomach starts to burst. He is directly responsible for killing the Silver Surfer by biting off his head. Later he joins Spider-Man, Iron-Man, Giant-Man, Wolverine and Luke Cage as the Galacti after killing and consuming Galactus.
Marvel Zombies 2
Forty years later, the zombie Hulk, along with the other zombies, had eaten or converted most of the universe, prompting them to return to Earth to try to recover the dimensional transporter. Although the other zombies managed to beat their hunger by going without food for a time, the Hulk's raw hunger was too great for him to be convinced to stop, resulting in him killing the zombified but "cured" Iron Man, Jean Grey, Hawkeye, and Firelord. Once he feeds and returns to Bruce Banner, he is finally killed by Spider-Man, Wolverine, and Giant-Man, recognizing that there is no other way to stop the Hulk from feeding again.
Marvel Zombies 3
Hulk makes a cameo appearance in Marvel Zombies 3' when Machine Man, Ultron, and Jocasta travel to Earth 2149, killing winged zombies (zombie Beak, Angel, Vulture, and Falcon altogether). He also makes another cameo appearance when Vanessa Fisk explains to the 3 androids how the Silver Surfer died, and how the zombie Kingpin, who is, surprisingly, her husband, created a zombie empire forming a huge alliance.
Marvel Zombies Return
A second Hulk appears in the reality the Marvel Zombies of the original series are teleported to, known as Earth-Z. This version's life appears identical to his core counterpart up until the events of World War Hulk. When he reaches the Moon to attack the Inhumans, he is infected by the zombie Giant-Man, and his allies killed. Oddly hungry, he heads back to Earth and begins eating people, and ultimately infecting the Sentry, who sets about forming a team of Zombie Avengers to eat humanity and wipe out any competition or resistance from other heroes, infected or otherwise dead. After the Sentry tries to kill Hulk to eliminate the competition as the two are the only creatures capable of challenging each other, Hulk is later cured of his hunger by the Zombie Spider-Man and joins his New Avengers. The team succeeds in killing the Zombie Avengers and ending their plan to eat the multiverse, sacrificing themselves in the process. Ultimately, the nanite infused Sandman killed Hulk.
Old Man Logan
Old Man Logan is set 50 years into an apocalyptic future. The world is in ruin and shadow following a massive conflict. A large coordinated force of super villains has killed a majority of the heroes and seized control of the United States splitting it into sections. Bruce Banner is said to have gone mad from radiation sickness, possibly from nuclear weapons that may have been used during the conflict or this and other changes may be the long-term result of his famous gamma radiation accident. Bruce's personality and powers seem altered, in human form he now has little empathy and possesses superhuman strength. Banner and his cousin Jennifer Walters have mated and produced offspring that possess their green skin and a little of their strength. They form the hillbilly-like "Hulk Gang" that rule the entire west coast of the country dubbed "Hulkland", a domain formerly held by the Abomination until Banner killed him. Banner, along with his children and grandchildren, live in a collection of caves and trailers, forcing those that live on the west coast to pay them rent in order to be allowed to live.
There were two versions of the Hulk that appear:
Earth-807128
"Pappy" Bruce Banner's family threaten Logan's family over rent due to the Banners. Logan accompanies Clint Barton on a cross country delivery to source the rent money. When Logan returns and finds the bodies of his family, killed by the Banners, he kills the Hulk Gang and attacks Pappy Banner who admits that he set all of this into motion because he missed their old brawls. Banner gets angry when Wolverine calls him a redneck SOB and drives his claws through his chest. He transforms into The Hulk. Hulk overpowers Logan and eats him. Logan's mutant healing factor then allows him to recover and slash his way out of Hulk's stomach, killing him. Logan spots Banner's son, Bruce, Jr. and spares him. Logan takes the boy to raise in an effort to someday help combat the various villains that still rule the country.
Old Man Logan found that Pappy Banner's head was placed on a gamma-powered robot made from Adamantium by Tinkerer. He used it in his revenge on Old Man Logan. Before Old Man Logan can be finished off by Pappy Banner, he is suddenly attacked by Bruce Banner Jr. who separated Pappy Banner's head from the Adamantium armor. Rather than kill his head, Old Man Logan buried it and planted a tree over him so that its roots can slowly dig into his skull.
Earth-21923
Pappy Banner's history on Earth-21923's history was still intact up to his death at the hands of Old Man Logan. When Old Man Logan uses Asmodeus' help to return to this future to rescue Bruce Banner Jr., he finds that the time has been altered in which Maestro appears in the place of Pappy Banner. This unidentified version of Maestro has rounded up the remaining members of the Hulk Gang as he makes plans to help them build a paradise for all Hulks on Earth-616. With help from the Cambria Banner, Logan and Hawkeye of Earth-616 were able to defeat Maestro and the surviving members of the Hulk Gang went their separate ways.
Otto Banner
During the "Devil's Reign" storyline, Doctor Octopus started forming his Superior Four that includes a Hulk that has four extra arms growing from his back. His real name is Otto Banner of Earth-8816 and he was also abused by his Earth's version of Brian Banner.
Ruins
In the Warren Ellis series Ruins, a dark flip to the Kurt Busiek tale Marvels, the accidents, experiments and mutations that led to the creation of Super Heroes and super humans, instead led to terrible deformations and painful deaths. Here, Bruce Banner's story goes exactly the same as his 616 counterpart, but when he is caught in the middle of the gamma bomb explosion, instead of transforming into the Incredible Hulk, his whole body opens up from the gigantic tumors that appear inside it, pushing most of his organs and skull outside his body and giving Rick Jones cancer. He did not die, and was put in an underground vault by the CIA, codenamed "the Hulk".
Secret Wars (2015)
During the Secret Wars storyline, different versions of Hulk reside in each Battleworld domain.
- The Battleworld domain of Greenland is filled with an assortment of Hulks ranging from Tribal Hulks (a group of Hulks that live like a tribe), Bull Hulks (a group of gamma-irradiated cattle), Sand Hulks (who evoke the traits of Hulk and Sandman), and a Sea Hulk. This land is a recreation of Earth-71612 where it was rendered into a Hulk-filled land by a gamma bomb strike by A.I.M. It was stated that Bruce Banner had started Bannertech Industries and his fate has not been mentioned since A.I.M.'s gamma bomb strike. In addition to the various type of Hulks and a variation of a Red Hulk that rules Greenland as the Red King", a variation of Steve Rogers that was sent into Greenland by God Emperor Doom and Sheriff Strange encountered another variation of Steve Rogers that operated as Doc Green.
- The Battleworld domain of Spider-Island that was based from the remnants of Earth-19919 told an alternate version of the Spider-Island storyline where Hulk was mutated into Spider-Hulk and served as one of Spider-Queen's minions. However, Agent Venom uses Curt Connors' Lizard Formula to mutate Hulk into a giant lizard monster, which broke him free from the Spider Queen's control.
- The Battleworld domain of Marville that was based from the remnants of Earth-71912 featured a child version of Hulk that is a member of the Avengers.
- The Battleworld domain of the Kingdom of Manhattan is based from the remnants of Earth-61610 where variations of characters from Earth-616 and Earth-1610 co-exist on the combined version of both reality's Manhattan. In this case, a variation of Hulk's Doc Green form co-exists with a variation of Earth-1610's Hulk.
- The Battleworld domain of Bug World that was based from the remnants of Earth-22312 features an anthropomorphic insect version of Hulk called Roly-Poly Hulk.
- The Battleworld domain of the Walled City of New York that was based from the remnants of Earth-21722 features a version of Hulk that is a member of the Avengers where they are allied with S.H.I.E.L.D.'s side of the Walled City of New York.
Spider-Geddon
During the "Spider-Geddon" storyline, a sequel to "Spider-Verse", Robbie Banner is a punk on Earth-138 who is allied with Spider-Punk and can turn into the Hulk while listening to "Atomic Bomb" music. He helped Spider-Punk and Captain Anarchy fight the U-Foes at the Hellfire Club, assisted Spider-Punk and M.C. Strange push the Universal Church of Truth out of Queens, and fought Hydra on the streets. After obtaining the "Atomic Bomb" tape from Captain Anarchy, Spider-Punk visited Robbie to get his help, but the latter was reluctant to listen to the tape. When Kang the Conglomerator went on the attack, Robbie reluctantly listened to the tape and transformed into the Hulk to help Spider-Punk fight Kang.
The End
In other tales, possible futures for the character have been shown. Using a post apocalyptic wasteland as a backdrop, the Peter David written Incredible Hulk: The End one-shot features an elderly Bruce Banner as the last surviving inhabitant of Earth, the Hulk having hidden in a cave during a nuclear war until he was released by the Recorder sent to confirm humanity's demise. After Bruce has spent time traveling Earth, transforming into the Hulk at night and when attacked by the mutated cockroaches that are the only other surviving lifeforms on Earth, the story concludes with Banner dying of a heart attack, thus leaving the Hulk as the last living being on the planet, Hulk musing that he is now "the only one there is", having achieved his wish to be left alone, but aware that he will die if he turns back into Banner.
Ultimate Marvel
In the Ultimate Marvel universe, the Hulk first appears in Ultimate Marvel Team-Up #2 (2001), written by Brian Michael Bendis and drawn by Phil Hester. In the Ultimates series, Bruce Banner works for S.H.I.E.L.D., attempting to re-create the super-soldier formula that created Captain America.
Dr. Robert Bruce Banner was one of the leading scientists in the United States. He had a scientist named Leonard Williams as his teacher.
He was later among the scientists that are used to recreate the Super-Soldier Formula that created Captain America. Bruce Banner is shown to have been hired by the U.S. Government and General Nick Fury as part of a project to secretly recreate the Super Soldier Serum. At a covert lab in Dover, New Jersey, Bruce works alongside fellow scientists, Hank Pym, Franklin Storm, father of Sue and Johnny Storm, and Richard Parker, father of Peter Parker. Bruce believes that he has come up with the correct formula for the serum, but needs to test it out. Eager to try his results on a human subject, Banner synthesizes his serum and injects himself with it. The serum turns him into the Hulk for the first time. Banner goes on a rampage inside the laboratory and eventually destroys the entire complex, nearly killing Richard Parker, along with his wife Mary, who had brought an infant Peter along with her to visit Richard. Years later, Hulk laid waste to Chelsea Piers before he could be subdued by Spider-Man and taken into custody.
Banner and Henry Pym were both hired by S.H.I.E.L.D. to create post-human soldiers for S.H.I.E.L.D.'s Ultimates, with Banner focusing on the Super-Soldier formula responsible for Captain America, and Henry Pym experimenting with his Giant-Man formula. Whereas Pym found success and celebrity with "Giant-Man", Banner found himself unable to crack the Super-Soldier formula. Classifying himself a failure and suffering ridicule at the hands of Pym, Banner took some of the recently rediscovered Captain America's blood, combined it with his Hulk formula, and injected it. Banner rationalized his decision by saying that turning himself into a monster gave the Ultimates a villain to fight, thereby justifying their existence at a time when they were accused of being an enormous multi-billion dollar waste of government resources. Before lapsing into unconsciousness however, Banner confessed that "honest-to-God truth of the matter" is that he simply "just missed being big".
Shortly afterwards, Banner transformed into a sociopathic grey-skinned Hulk that channeled and amplified Banner's hidden emotions, unleashing the darkest depths of his id. The Hulk proceeded to track down and pursue Betty Ross, the object of Bruce Banner's affection who, because of relationship problems with Banner, was courting the favor of Hollywood film star Freddie Prinze, Jr. that night, and inadvertently boasted about it to Banner over the phone shortly before his transformation. During his rampage and cross-town pursuit of the fleeing Betty Ross, The Hulk informed Betty that he was "horny as Hell" and destroyed everything in his path, indiscriminately killing hundreds of people in the process. After rendering Giant-Man unconscious and overpowering Iron Man, Captain America, and Thor, who were all dispatched to stop his rampage, The Hulk changed back into Banner after the Wasp entered his skull through the ear canal and fired her bio-electric sting directly into his brain. Upon regaining consciousness, Banner was promptly knocked unconscious, restrained and shuttled away to S.H.I.E.L.D., the connection between him and the Ultimate Hulk covered up. Later, after being subdued by the Ultimates, an examination on Banner's blood revealed that the latest Super-Soldier Formula he took has placed a more permanent effect on Banner. The "Hulk cells" were not disappearing like they did after the first time Banner transformed, showing that the new Super-Soldier Formula Banner took would forever keep the Hulk within him.
After his rampage, Banner spent a number of months in a cell specifically designed to withstand the Hulk's fury, with Anti-Hulk serum administered to him on a continuous basis. Amidst the Chitauri's assault on Earth and their takeover of S.H.I.E.L.D. and the United States Armed Forces, General Fury quickly mobilized an army and attacked the alien base in Arizona. During his battle with Herr Kleiser, a Chitauri agent capable of absorbing and administering enormous physical damage, Captain America, with all other tactical options exhausted, gave the order for "the Weapon of Last Resort" and gave "Permission to traumatize Banner", who was in a helicopter with a military escort hovering over the S.H.I.E.L.D. battlefield. The delicate procedure of traumatizing a 90-pound scientist simply amounted to throwing him out of the chopper in hopes that his anger would overcome the effects of the anti-Hulk serum coursing through his veins. The Hulk's first course of action was to bodyslam Captain America into the concrete to pay him back for breaking Banner's jaw after the first Hulk transformation in Manhattan. Captain America immediately pointed out Herr Kleiser, declaring that he had been "all over Betty" while Banner was in his solitary cell. Not one to be overshadowed by a skinny German Nazi, the Hulk promptly pounded Kleiser to a pulp and even ate him. While Hulk was dining on Kleiser, Captain America manipulated him once more by calling down to him, telling Hulk that the Chitauri alien fleet had called him a "sissy-boy" and asked if the Hulk intended to let the aliens get away with such an insult. In a most vigorous defense of his heterosexuality, Hulk leaped a mile into the air, ripping apart the entire airborne alien fleet that clouded the sky, all the while proclaiming that "Hulk no Sissy Boy...HULK STRAIGHT!" Even after destroying the entire fleet and saving what remained of the day, the Hulk was full of adrenaline and rage, and needed to be sedated. Hawkeye, the marksman, was called in to take him down with an adamantium-tipped syringe full of anti-Hulk serum. Hawkeye did, but barely succeeded since Hulk seemed to be impervious to the antidote Hawkeye shot into Hulk before he finally passed out. While Banner returned to normal while in containment in S.H.I.E.L.D., his caretakers monitored him closely. Because of Herr Kleiser's shapeshifting abilities, Banner's stool were collected and properly disposed of after the battle, to rule out the possibility of Kleiser reconstituting himself in a cunning, if disgusting, way.
When Magneto attacked the Triskelion's lockup during the "Ultimate War" series, power went down for the entire facility. The Hulk was said to have eaten six members of the nursing staff in the chaos.
During the "Ultimate Six" miniseries, the Triskelion was attacked by Electro and Green Goblin, but Banner was later reported by Iron Man to have "fallen asleep reading a magazine" and was promptly sedated for a week just in case.
Banner remained in his cell for a year, with very few Hulk episodes; during one such transformation, he sat on the couch and watched Curb Your Enthusiasm until he changed back. The few visitors he received included Hank Pym, demonstrating his new "Ant Man" technology. Shortly thereafter, he learned from the national news that somebody had leaked top-secret information to the press regarding the Hulk/Banner connection. S.H.I.E.L.D. hired lawyer Matt Murdock to try to avoid the death penalty for 800-plus murder counts by bringing up the important things Banner had done in the interests of national security, and his work for the Ultimates. During jury deliberation, Banner received a visit from General Nick Fury, who told him that the case had been dismissed, and presented him with a bottle of champagne. Eagerly drinking his first drink as a free man, Banner passed out – the bottle had been drugged by Hank Pym at Fury's request – and awakened much later on the deck of an aircraft carrier, with a one-megaton nuclear weapon nearby. Fortunately for his well-being, he transformed into the Hulk right before the nuclear device was detonated. Later, Banner anonymously calls Pym from a public telephone to thank him for deliberately botching the dose before Banner decided to go into hiding. It is not clear if Pym deliberately botched the dose, or was merely incompetent in his research.
Bruce Banner later appears in Washington D.C. before one of the Crimson Dynamo's giant duplicates, letting it step on him, all the while muttering to himself about being "in touch with his inner sociopath". The Hulk appears in the next panel, lifting the robot with both hands and then ripping it in two, finishing the issue with a declaration of "NOW BRING IT ON!" He then continues to aid the Ultimates against the Liberators by defeating, dismembering, and finally eating Abomination.
Some time after Banner's disappearance in the pages of "Ultimate Wolverine Vs. Hulk", strange occurrences across Europe and Asia reported. General Fury started piecing together the evidence and concluded that despite their distance from one another, they were all related. The discovery of feces in Tibet belonging to Banner confirmed that he had survived his execution. Since S.H.I.E.L.D. was in charge of executing Banner in a very public way, they acted to cover up their error by contracting James "Logan" Howlett (Wolverine) to track Banner down and eliminate him. Logan arrives at a rural village in Tibet and discovers that all the women have been kidnapped. He eventually makes his way to a beautiful but derelict palace. The Hulk (decked in Tibetan robes and beads) has taken up residence here with the kidnapped women as his concubines. The Hulk is annoyed at being interrupted and he and Wolverine fight. After an intense struggle, the Hulk physically rips Wolverine's body in half and hurls his legs four miles up a mountain, leaving Logan's torso to freeze in the snow.
Issue #2 reveals, in flashback, that Bruce Banner, after travelling through France, Ireland and India, finally treks to Tibet, to seek the wisdom of the Panchen Lama who he hopes can reveal the true relationship behind Banner and the Hulk. It is here that the Hulk resides prior to Logan's intrusion.
He then appeared together with Iron Man in their own mini-series titled Ultimate Human, focusing on Bruce Banner approaching Tony Stark about the possibility of using the Iron Man nanites to control the Hulk transformations. The Leader is introduced as Pete Wisdom, a scientist after the blood of both men, for use in the creation of a superhuman. This series depicts the Hulk's physiology as almost infinitely adaptive to adverse conditions, including simulations of hostile extraterrestrial environments such as the surface of the planet Venus. It also described him as generating carbon Fullerenes in his skin structure, adding to his durability.
A naked Hulk comes into a restaurant demanding food. Princess Zarda who is already at the restaurant fights and defeats the Hulk. After the fight, the two form a bond and go to another restaurant before renting a motel room and having sex.
During the "Ultimatum" storyline, the Hulk appears in New York and is convinced by Spider-Man to help him rescue people. When demons start appearing they go to the home of Doctor Strange, only to learn that his body had been possessed by Nightmare. He then starts to torture them. Hulk in response heats the Orb of Acmantata, which causes an explosion. He survives and is recruited by the remaining Ultimates and X-Men to stop Magneto. In Magneto's Citadel, he and Colossus are tasked with destroying some of the citadel's machinery. They try to stop Mystique and Sabretooth from escaping, but fail. Hulk survives Ultimatum and is later seen in Ultimate Comics: X in a soup kitchen as Bruce Banner in New York. He is convinced by Karen Grant to be their "enforcer" in a new team sponsored by former Director Nick Fury.
During the European crisis involving the Children of Tomorrow, Hulk was convinced by S.H.I.E.L.D. Agent Flumm to attack the Children of Tomorrow in exchange for the safety of Betty Ross, currently in custody. Hulk was unleashed in Children's base called The City, but the Maker managed to calm him down and convince him that he was being used. In that moment, the US Government launched an ineffective nuclear attack on the City, and the Children detonate an anti-matter bomb in Washington, D.C. in retaliation. When the Ultimates finally turned the tide, the Maker injected the Hulk with the Giant-Man serum, turning him into a giant juggernaut, although he was defeated and put into sedated custody beneath the Triskelion once more.
Bruce was freed by the mysterious woman called Kang, and convinced him to steal the Infinity Gems with which he battled the Ultimates. After the arrival of escapee Reed Richards, the heroes escaped, but Captain America decided to be left behind in order to stop the villains, although he was defeated by Thor.
When Maker merged all realities in order to help Eternity to fight the First Firmament, Hulk is among the Ultimates members that are revived. It was shown that Hulk did not retain his intelligence and referred to himself in the third person. When the Ultimates of Earth-616 arrived on Counter-Earth to confront Maker for his actions, he had the Earth-1610 Ultimates fight the Earth-616 Ultimates where Hulk was thrown out of the building by Blue Marvel. Eventually, Hulk and the rest of the Earth-1610 Ultimates decided that there was no reason to fight the Earth-616 Ultimates which resulted in Maker killing the Earth-1610 Captain America. After aiding the Earth-616 Ultimates into giving Eternity the power to defeat the First Firmament, Hulk and the rest of the Earth-1610 Ultimates left to pursue Maker.
After Earth-1610 was restored, Hulk was seen with the Avengers where they help Spider-Man fight Green Goblin.
Ultimate Universe
During the "Ultimate Invasion" storyline, Maker visits Earth-6160 and remakes it into his own image. One of the things he could not succeed in was preventing the origin of Hulk, who would later find personal "enlightenment". He and his fellow monks of the Children of the Eternal Light would later attend an international event held by the Maker at the City in Latveria as part of his Council. Hulk and the Children of the Eternal Light are revealed to rule India and parts of Asia.
While giving condolences to Howard Stark over the death of Obadiah Stane, Hulk explains the artificial nature of the war economy praticed by the Council's power blocs as Stark is appointed to rule the North American Union in Stane's former role. Hulk and the other leaders later discuss about The City closing up for two years with Maker imprisoned inside. With Howard Stark being locked inside as well, Hulk and the others plan to divide up the Union among themselves.
Hulk and other members of the Council are later informed of Iron Lad's raid on the Latverian repositories. While giving his condolences to Henri Duggary due to his wounds, Hulk states that Tony Stark "gave them America", as the group uses an orbiting Stark/Stane satellite to conduct a false flag attack on Stark Tower, causing thousands of casualties in a section of Manhattan. He suggests framing Stark and his allies as terrorists as they consolidate control over the Union's territories.
It is later shown that Banner was the director of the Castle Gamma project, creating the "Banner-Ulam Gamma Bomb" and detonating it over an island in the Pacific, causing not only his transformation into the Hulk but also a mass contamination incident involving the island's inhabitants (mirroring the real-life events of Castle Bravo and the fallout over the Marshall Islands). It's stated that Banner might have deliberately planned the results, also trying to conceal the island to the rest of the world and make it impossible to reach in the current days. As the Ultimates members Iron Lad, Thor, and Sif make an agreement with a Gamma-powered native called Lejori Zakaria, Banner watches from a hidden camera feed as he orders his subordinates in the Children of the Eternal Light to assemble the Immortal Weapons, as the team is starting to "make him angry".
Hulk later speaks with Emmanuel da Costa about the attacks on the different Roxxon facilities which are part of Emmanuel's profile. Hulk calms Emmanuel down while stating that he considers the Ultimates an insurgency and that he will kill them once and for all.
Using a portal spell, Hulk has the Ultimates brought to K'un-L'un which is one of Heaven's seven capital cities that he rules at the time when they were going to raid a Damage Control site that contained super-powered prisoners that were going to be executed the next day. With the aid of the Immortal Weapons who have taken their gamma injections, Hulk manages to outfight the Ultimates where he apparently killed Iron Lad and broke off She-Hulk's hand. Before things could get worse, Doom manages to teleport the Ultimates away after it took him awhile to locate them.
In other media
Main article: Hulk in other mediaThe character has been played in live-action and animation by a variety of actors. The character was first played in live-action by Bill Bixby and Lou Ferrigno in the 1978 television series The Incredible Hulk and its subsequent television films The Incredible Hulk Returns (1988), The Trial of the Incredible Hulk (1989), and The Death of the Incredible Hulk (1990), and Eric Bana in the film Hulk (2003). In the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), the character was first portrayed by Edward Norton in the film The Incredible Hulk (2008), and then by Mark Ruffalo in later appearances, including the films The Avengers (2012), Iron Man 3 (2013), Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015), Thor: Ragnarok (2017), Avengers: Infinity War (2018), Captain Marvel (2019), Avengers: Endgame (2019), and Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings (2021), and the television series She-Hulk: Attorney at Law (2022) and What If...? (2021).
Reception
The Hulk was ranked #1 on a listing of Marvel Comics' monster characters in 2015.
In 2018, CBR.com ranked The Thing (Bruce Banner) 2nd in their "Age Of Apocalypse: The 30 Strongest Characters In Marvel's Coolest Alternate World" list.
In 2022, Screen Rant included Hulk in their "10 Most Powerful Hercules Villains In Marvel Comics" list.
See also
Portals:Notes
- ^ In Marvel comics, the term "mutate" is used as a noun to designate characters that received superpowers from an external source, as opposed to Marvel's mutants.
References
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Lee began referring (for more than a couple of months) to the Incredible Hulk's alter ego as 'Bob Banner' rather than the 'Bruce Banner' that he was originally named. Responding to criticism of the goof, Stan Lee, in issue #28 of the Fantastic Four, laid out how he was going to handle the situation, 'There's only one thing to do-we're not going to take the cowardly way out. From now on his name is Robert Bruce Banner-so we can't go wrong no matter WHAT we call him!'
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one of the Hulk comic books' artists, Jack Kirby, has said he was inspired by seeing a woman rescue her child from beneath a trapped car.
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KIRBY: The Hulk I created when I saw a woman lift a car. Her baby was caught under the running board of this car. The little child was playing in the gutter and he was crawling from the gutter onto the sidewalk under the running board of this car — he was playing in the gutter. His mother was horrified. She looked from the rear window of the car, and this woman in desperation lifted the rear end of the car.
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Jack Kirby witnessed a woman lift a car to get her child out from under it. The moment helped inspire one of his most famous creations: the Incredible Hulk.
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Height 5' 9⁄2" (Banner); 6'6" (gray Hulk); 7' – 8' (green/savageHulk); 7'6" (green/Professor Hulk) Weight 128 lbs. (Banner); 900 lbs. (gray Hulk); 1,040 – 1,400 lbs.(green/savage Hulk); 1,150 lbs. (green/Professor Hulk)
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External links
- Hulk at Marvel.com
- Hulk at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)
- Hulk at the Grand Comics Database
- Hulk on IMDb
- Bruce Banner on Marvel Database, a Marvel Comics wiki
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