The Incredible
Hulk
Dir: Kenneth Johnson
1977
***
By the late seventies TV studios had finally discovered the
popularity of comics and realized the potential of Superheroes. The kids who
grew up watching the early serials of Superman, Batman, The Shadow etc had
grown up. Marvel were doing very well and Universal Television (now known as
NBC) purchased the rights of several of their characters. At first, writer
Kenneth Johnson refused the original offer to pick any character he wanted to
develop but soon changed his mind and decided to write a Hulk show. When asked
what it was that changed his mind he said he was inspired by Les Miserables and
the similarities Hulk had with the story. I'm not sure I see where he was
coming from, the character Jack McGee (that I always thought was a little bit
pointless) is supposedly based on the character of Javert in Les Mis but I
don't quite see it myself, still the man did good. Spider-man and Captain America hadn't quite got it right in the late seventies but
DC's Wonder Woman had shown the way somewhat and of all the characters on offer
Hulk was probably the most interesting but also one of the hardest to get
right. Johnson stated his dislike for the comics (amazing he got the job
really) but Stan Lee was ever the gent and allowed him to make necessary
changes without argument. Lee agreed that Hulk should no longer be able to talk
and understood why he should have a reduction in strength. Johnson's simplistic
and lower-key origin story was far more intelligent and believable than in the
comic, even though it was as nonsensical. Lee praised the changes and credited
Johnson in making an adult show that teenagers could also enjoy. However, Lee,
Lou Ferrigno and others at Marvel were a little disappointed that CBS changed
the name of Bruce Banner to David Banner because they said openly that they
thought the name Bruce sounded 'too gay' and bit their collective tongue when
no other character from the comics appeared in the script but they put their
foot down when Johnson wrote the Hulk as being bright red ('a more human
colour' as he put it) rather than classic green. It worked, and 1977's feature
length original pilot episode was a huge hit that pretty much stands up today.
Bill Baxby was first choice for Banner and he played the part brilliantly.
Arnold Schwarzenegger was rejected after auditioning as he was seen as being
far too short and Richard Kiel was hired. However, Johnson's son is said to
have persuaded his dad to sack him as he clearly didn't look
anything like the character from the comics. What a brat. Kiel didn't mind so
much though as he said that the contact lens worn for the part hurt
his eyes and he could never get scrub the green paint off at the end of
the day. Lou Ferrigno was hired (although Kiel's Hulk can be seen in
certain scenes of the original episode) and it is now impossible to see anyone
else in the part. The series wasn't always perfect with episodes ranging from
amazing to absolutely diabolical but the original feature length
episode isn't too shabby at all.
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