The Incredible Hulk – The Complete First Season
Picture:
C+ Sound: C+ Extras: C Episodes: B
Marvel
Comics is having hit feature films left and right these days, but it was not
always this way. Of course, both Marvel
and DC Comics have been lucky to always have interesting animated series
produced based on their characters, but live-action has been another
story. Spider-Man did surface on The Electric Company (reviewed
elsewhere on this site) in Spidey Super Stories, but getting
the characters to come to life on film was another story. When Warner Bros. bought DC outright, Marvel
cut a deal at the time with Universal to license all their characters for film
purposes. Of all the shows launched,
none succeeded critically or commercially like The Incredible Hulk.
While
Nicholas Hammond’s Spider-Man was shooting ropes over webs and Reb Brown’s
Captain America was biking Evel Knievel-style into danger, the grossly
underrated producer Kenneth Johnson (The
Six Million Dollar Man, The Bionic
Woman) was not going to follow the same route. Instead, he designed the show to be more
psychologically complex than the great comic had been, with a great Fugitive-like set-up as a reporter
(Jack Colvin) is out to find the title beast thinking it has killed a female
scientist and Dr. David Banner (Bill Bixby).
However, Banner is very much alive and on the run from McGee (Colvin) as
he tries to find a cure for the almost fatal gamma radiation dose that has
instead unleashed The Hulk. Also
sporting shades of the sadly short-lived Christopher George series The Immortal, Johnson did not include
any of the comic villains like The Rhino or Dr. Doom.
Later,
some Hulk revival movies used other comic characters, but this series was more
interested in being a sort of character study and as a result, it holds up
pretty well. Though Richard Kiel was
originally cast, Lou Ferrigno was great and a huge hit as the creature, paving
the way for Arnold Schwarzenegger’s career in uncredited ways and Bill Bixby
was dead-on as Banner. The result is a
Superhero genre classic, especially with the amazing first TV movie on the
first of four DVDs in this set.
1)
Pilot telefilm (with Susan Sullivan and Eric
Server)
2)
A Death In The Family (second telefilm with guest star
William Daniels)
3)
The Final Round
4)
The Beast Within (with guest star Caroline
McWilliams)
5)
Of Guilt, Models & Murder (with guest star Loni Anderson)
6)
Terror In Times Square (with guest star Pamela Susan Shoop)
7)
747 (with guest star Brandon Cruz)
8)
The Hulk Breaks Las Vegas
9)
Never Give A Trucker An Even Break (with guest star Jennifer
Darling)
10) Life & Death (with guest stars Julie Adams and
Carl Franklin)
11) Earthquakes Happen (with guest stars Diane Markoff,
Kene Holliday and Laird Stuart)
12) The Waterfront Story (with guest star James B.
Sikking)
The other
shocker is how and why the first film with its small $1.3 Million budget is
much smarter, more involving, more clever and more interesting than most $100
Million+ theatrical films today and why it in particular holds up well against
the very troubled and problematic Ang Lee revival. The truth of the mater is that the series got
it right. Yes, Universal’s other Marvel
TV projects did not turn out well, though there are fans arguing for Rex
Smith’s Daredevil over the underappreciated Ben Affleck version. However, there is no arguing this
series. It is the definitive Hulk on
film and with a very different Hulk sequel feature being made by without
Universal for the first time ever by Marvel’s own studio, we’ll see if the new
cast and crew revert back to this series somehow. Until then, you get a solid Complete First Season set worth
revisiting.
The 1.33
X 1 image looks very good for its age.
As a matter of fact, the show has never looked so good and fans will be
surprised how well-shot and produced this really is. Color is decent, especially for 1978 as
visual standards and color standards were beginning to decline on TV. The TV broadcast copies look pale by
comparison. The Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono
is also good, with dialogue and music sounding fine for their age. Extras include a bonus episode from the
second season Stop The Presses, cool
lenticular cover where Banner becomes The Hulk just by moving the box around
and outstanding, must-hear audio commentary track on the TV movie by producer
Johnson. Anyone serious about film and
TV production, fans or filmmakers, will be impressed.
- Nicholas Sheffo