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'Hulk' Smashes But Lacks Heart

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Published: June 12, 2008

The fan boys will probably be happy with the latest incarnation of "The Incredible Hulk." At least we can say that much for it - and that's something we most assuredly could not say about Ang Lee and James Schamus' somber, introspective and largely derided take in 2003 on the beloved Marvel Comics hero.

There's a lot more action this time around as you might expect from "Transporter" director Louis Leterrier - a deafening, endless amount by the colossal conclusion - as well as fond references both to the comic book series and to the television show it inspired starring Bill Bixby.

This version is indeed bigger-stronger-faster, which seems appropriate in telling the story of a guy who's been juicing.

But the inevitable comparisons to "Iron Man," Marvel Studios' first blockbuster this summer, serve as a glaring reminder of what this "Hulk" lacks: wit and heart. Despite the presence of Edward Norton, an actor capable of going just as deep as Robert Downey Jr., we don't feel a strong sense of Bruce Banner's inner conflict.

A lightning-quick title sequence wisely zips through Bruce's back story: As we know by now, Dr. Bruce Banner, belted by gamma rays, turns into the Hulk. We don't require further explanation. On the run but still seeking a cure to his radiation poisoning, Bruce lays low in a Brazilian favela, works at a bottling plant and tries to blend in by learning Portuguese from television. He's also taking martial arts classes in hopes of controlling his breathing - and his anger. Clearly, they're not working.

One day, longtime enemy Gen. "Thunderbolt" Ross (William Hurt) tracks him down with a team of soldiers, including the hungry and slightly crazed Emil Blonsky (Tim Roth). The subsequent chase, in and out of cramped alleyways, across rooftops and through hanging laundry, is thrilling. Worthy of a "Bourne" movie, it's probably the film's most compelling sequence, and it didn't even require all that complicated computer-generated imagery. The irony is that the faster he runs, the higher his heart rate climbs and the more likely it becomes that he'll transform into the Hulk.

Ross wants what's inside Bruce's body to replicate it and create a team of super soldiers - and Blonsky is all too happy to volunteer as Test Subject No. 1. Bruce must risk his safety and return to the lab where it all began to stop Ross and Blonsky. This means he also must run into his long-lost love, Dr. Betty Ross, played stiffly by Liv Tyler. Naturally, when they reunite in the pouring rain, she happens to be wearing a flimsy white blouse.

That's a rare delicate element of "The Incredible Hulk," though. From there, it's a series of increasingly bombastic showdowns and explosions leading up to the climactic battle between the Hulk and the 'roided-up beast Blonsky has become, known in the comic book series as The Abomination.

MOVIE REVIEW

The Incredible Hulk **½

MOVIE BOARD RATING: PG-13 (intense action violence, frightening sci-fi images, brief suggestive content)

STARS: Edward Norton, Liv Tyler, Tim Roth, Tim Blake Nelson, William Hurt

DIRECTOR: Louis Leterrier

LOCATION: See movie times, Page 9, for local showtimes.

PLOT SUMMARY: A scientist hunts for a cure to the gamma radiation that turns him into a raging green monster.

RUNNING TIME: 114 minutes

ON THE WEB: incrediblehulk.

marvel.com

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