Blu-ray - Wide Screen / DTS Learn more
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| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| DVD - Wide Screen / Subtitled / Dubbed | $12.99 |
| DVD - 2 Pack Widescreen / DOLBY | $14.99 |
| DVD - 2 Pack Full Frame / DOLBY | $14.99 |
| Blu-ray - Wide Screen / Subtitled / Dubbed | $21.59 |
Feature commentary with director Ang Lee; Deleted scenes; Evolution of The Hulk; The incredible Ang Lee; The dog fight scene; The making of Hulk; The unique style of editing Hulk
Full Product DetailsAng Lee's inventive direction and some state-of-the-art special effects help to rip the incredible Hulk -- a green giant who is anything but jolly -- from the pages of Stan Lee's Marvel comics of the 1960s. In reality (to the extent that "reality" is a workable concept in films like this one), he is geneticist Bruce Banner (Eric Bana), a troubled young man whose past holds terrible secrets he can never fully remember. Intense emotional stress turns him into the Hulk, a raging monster who smashes everything and everybody with whom he comes into contact. The lone exception, of course, is the lovely Betty Ross (Jennifer Connolly), Bruce's co-worker and the daughter of a hard-bitten general (Sam Elliott) overseeing top-secret government projects. Nick Nolte has a relatively small but showy supporting role as Bruce's father, a discredited scientist whose fall from grace has something to do with his son's deeply disturbed psyche. Resisting the temptation to fill the screen with live-action comic-book panels, Ang Lee alters the origin of the printed-page protagonist to include psychological complexities that even Stan Lee never anticipated for his troubled antihero. It takes a fairly long time for the Hulk to make his first significant appearance, but he does so in a dynamic, explosive manner. By rendering his leading character with computer graphics, Lee and the special-effects team enable the Hulk to perform feats that might look convincing in comics but would normally never pass muster in live-action movies. Hulk’s combination of larger-than-life action and intricate back-story made it an exceptionally ambitious undertaking, and the film succeeds on its own terms. Even if you've never read a Hulk comic book, you can enjoy this exceptionally well made thriller. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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