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  4. The Incredible Hulk In Hindi 720p
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  42. A cure is in reach for the world's most primal force of fury: THE INCREDIBLE HULK. We find scientist Bruce Banner, living in shadows, scouring the planet for an antidote. But the warmongers who dream of abusing his powers won't leave him alone, nor will his need to be with the only woman he has ever loved, Betty Ross. Upon returning to civilization, our brilliant doctor is ruthlessly pursued by The Abomination -- a nightmarish beast of pure adrenaline and aggression whose powers match The Hulk's own. A fight of comic-book proportions ensues as Banner must call upon the hero within to rescue New York City from total destruction. One scientist must make an agonizing final choice -- accept a peaceful life as Bruce Banner or the creature he could permanently become: THE INCREDIBLE HULK.
  43. Bruce Banner, a scientist on the run from the U.S. Government, must find a cure for the monster he turns into, whenever he loses his temper.
  44. Take a deep breath when you enter the cinema to see this one because it&#39;s just downright breathtaking. THE INCREDIBLE HULK is an amazing summer blockbuster movie. This reboot has made Ang Lee&#39;s Hulk back in 2003 seem like it never existed. Edward Norton&#39;s version portrays what Hulk is supposed to be… on the big screen. Do not bootleg this one, do not wait til it hit DVD, Go watch it in the theaters because I guarantee you it is worth every penny. This movie is spectacular and superb in every way. It&#39;s a rock &#39;em smash &#39;em, jaw dropping thrill ride.<br/><br/>Let&#39;s just start with the acting, what a perfect cast ensemble. Edward Norton is a better Bruce Banner than Eric Bana because Edward looks more convincing as a skinny nerd scientist. He embodies the pain and the struggle that his character has to go through. Always running, always hiding, always trying to come up with ways to get rid of the monster in him. William Hurt and Tim Roth have no problem being the bad guys, having played so many other bad guys in many other movies in the past. Tim Blake Nelson giving us hints that he&#39;ll become the next arch nemesis The Leader is pretty cool. Liv Tyler is so damn cute. That girl can melt your heart.<br/><br/>Now to the best part. The category that makes this movie a winner is its awesome CGI visual effects. Bravo to the brains behind this brilliant technological accomplishment. When Hulk breaks a cop car into half and uses each part as boxing globes, that&#39;s just plain badass! The images are so much better and more believable,.. the timing could not have been more right to revamp this character. The storyline helps us understand the characters and their development as they progress but it wastes no time at all on any boring moment.<br/><br/>Magnificent stuntwork as well, especially the chase scene in the small town in Brazil. The whole jumping from one roof to another at high speed with bodies bumping into walls or falling down from a considerable height. I have much respect for the stunt people who broke their bones daily for this movie.<br/><br/>The story has three main long action packed sequences and the last fight scene is just phenomenal. They weren&#39;t kidding when they said that it would last for 26 minutes. Hulk punches Abomination, Abomination, kicks Hulk, Hulk strangles Abomination, Abomination slams Hulk onto a couple of buildings.. Your inner kid will be happy.<br/><br/>All the elements of this movie have but one purpose only… to entertain your senses to the fullest extent. Your sight and hearing will be treated with the utmost incredible experience of your lifetime. You will find yourself cheering at how great this movie is.<br/><br/>The cameo by Stan Lee and Lou Ferrigno, who plays Hulk in the old TV series are memorable. The plot also has some punch lines here and there that are silly funny but effective. I&#39;m glad Lou Ferrigno got to voice the Hulk because I can&#39;t think of anyone else more perfect for the job. The movie even includes the main theme song from the old TV series starring the late Bill Bixby. What a heartfelt nostalgic tribute.<br/><br/>The teaser at the end when Tony Stark meets Gen. Thunderbolt Ross, that part is a show stopper. Director Louise Leterrier and his crew deserves a standing ovation for successfully making an excellent superhero movie which some people thought was going to be as bad as the first Hulk movie. Well, Louise has proved them wrong. Summer 2008 may quite possibly be the best summer movie season ever.
  45. Action without story is boring.<br/><br/>A film with a bad script is boring, it can even be painful and anger-inducing...;-) A film with mostly good actors in it (good in other films..!!) that of course cannot save the film, as the script is so baaaaaaaaad!!! I like Ed Norton and I liked him in this, little as there was...<br/><br/>I rejoiced at seeing Bill Bixby, Stan Lee and Lou Ferrigno, nice touch for fans, of course not important for the film.<br/><br/>Chase scene through favela - watch City of God. Though at that point I was still interested, nice cinematography, okay plot.<br/><br/>Then they shoot the dog - bad move in my book, I&#39;m annoyed.<br/><br/>Then they chase Bruce in the factory....and chase....and chase...oops, I thought - you&#39;re losing me!! THEN they don&#39;t really show the Hulk - what, like we don&#39;t know that Bruce turns into him? Like, trying to make it more exciting, he&#39;s like Alien on the spaceship? At that point I started to be bored.<br/><br/>Sadly, nothing much interesting happened after that. In fact, totally dim-witted things happened after that. Tim Roth: Military man with long hair. William Hurt (whom I adore!): Almost more stupid than that military guy in Avatar. Liv Tyler: Unconvincing, looking over-concerned and distressed or soppy.<br/><br/>The most intelligent pieces of dialogue were the computer chats...;-))) Why don&#39;t they talk about the last five years AT ALL? Oh, he&#39;s there, oh, I&#39;m shocked and happy, oh, you come with me. But we only chitchat.<br/><br/>Too much military for me. Mostly quickly coming out of bushes exactly when needed, sadly totally useless...oh my...<br/><br/>No, this was not for me. I had thought this really might be about how Bruce learns to harness his powers, but that is only hinted at. The scene in the lab is just stupid.<br/><br/>3 points because I really like Ed. I even like the Hulk, but not this one.
  46. A straightforward actioner that delivers the goods with no unnecessary frills or digressions.
  47. The Incredible Hulk is based on a fictional character created by American comic book artists and writers Stan Lee and Jack Kirby for a Marvel Comics comic book series of the same name. The Incredible Hulk #1 first appeared in May 1962. Yes and no. Depending on how you look at it, this can be a &quot;reboot&quot; of the Hulk movie franchise, much like <a href="/title/tt0372784/">Batman Begins (2005)</a> (2005) was to the Batman film franchise. However, there are references to the previous film. For example, The Incredible Hulk begins in Brazil, which is where <a href="/title/tt0286716/">Hulk (2003)</a> (2003) leaves off. This is because the script that was used for The Incredible Hulk was originally supposed to be a sequel, until Marvel decided against it, and Edward Norton reworked the script to firmly establish it as a &quot;reboot&quot;. So basically, it is a sequel in that it continues from where Hulk ended. The flashback to the character&#39;s origin is slightly different to what happened in Hulk, meaning retroactive continuity. The reason for the &quot;reboot&quot; hoopla seems to stem from Norton&#39;s inability to take over another actor&#39;s role without it being considered sloppy seconds or the studio&#39;s wanting to separate itself from the wrongly criticized 2003 film, thus the idea that it&#39;s the first of a series instead of a sequel. We could also look at the &quot;new origin&quot; as Banner actually returning after the main events of the first film so that Betty and he could try to get rid of &quot;it&quot;, unwittingly unleashing it again, hurting Betty, with General Ross pissed more than ever after giving him another chance. While the filmmakers and cast felt that the contributions Edward Norton made to the screenplay were significant, the WGA felt differently and gave sole credit to Zak Penn. The WGA tends to favor plot and structure, rather than dialogue and character changes, much to many screenwriters&#39; chagrin. It&#39;s also possible that Norton requested not to be credited, as he has done uncredited rewrites on quite a few of his films, most notably(1998). The opening montage of The Incredible Hulk takes place prior to the events of <a href="/title/tt1228705/">Iron Man 2 (2010)</a> (2010) . The latter half of Iron Man 2 runs concurrent to the first half of The Incredible Hulk as the news report for the aftermath of the Hulk&#39;s battle on the university campus is on the news near the end of Iron Man 2. The final scene of The Incredible Hulk takes place after the events of Iron Man 2 as Tony Stark is just joining the Avengers by the end of the second Iron Man film. The obvious. Bruce Banner / The Hulk (main character) and Emil Blonsky / The Abomination (main Villain).<br/><br/>The not-so-obvious. Tony Stark makes a cameo appearance at the end of the film to talk to General Ross about the &quot;Avenger Initiative.&quot; Stark Industries products are all over this film as well. Nick Fury&#39;s name appears briefly during the opening credits on a government document, hinting that, like in the comic books, he is behind the Hulk task force.<br/><br/>Sequel hints. Samuel Sterns / The Leader tries to help Banner cure his condition. Sterns&#39; transformation into the Leader begins to happen when Banner&#39;s blood drips into an open cut on Stern&#39;s forehead. His head begins to pulse and grow, setting up a sequel with The Leader as the superintelligent supervillain.<br/><br/>Allusions. (1) Captain America when Ross talks to Blonsky about the super-soldier serum that was tested in WWII and was put on ice. There is a scene that didn&#39;t make the cut where Banner goes to Antarctica to kill himself. When he attempts to shoot himself, he becomes the Hulk and smashes an iceberg—the same iceberg which is supposed to contain Captain America. (2)Doc Samson: The psychiatrist whom Banner talks to about his &quot;problem&quot; (i.e., the Hulk transformations). In the comics, Dr. Samson is a long-time supporting character and becomes a superhero in his own right when he attempts to cure Banner by draining out the gamma radiation that turns Bruce into the Hulk and bombards himself with it. He has a cameo. He tells General Ross that they are assembling a team, which we all know to be the Avengers. He knows about it because in Iron Man, Nick Fury visits him at the end. These links turned out to be part of a trend in the certain Marvel movies published from 2008 onward. Marvel Studios gained the rights back to Iron Man, Hulk, Captain America, Thor and Ant-Man. These characters, along with Wasp, were the classic line-up of the Avengers. Marvel Studios&#39; plan was and is to make the individual movies (which reference each other and establish that these characters all live in the same world), then cross them over into a multi-superhero epic (<a href="/title/tt0848228/">The Avengers</a> (2012)), and has already done so for the classic members of the Avengers. In the end of the <a href="/title/tt0458339/">Captain America: The First Avenger (2011)</a> (2011), it shows that Nick Fury, director of SHIELD, already started the Avengers initiative, and the Hulk had already been recruited. In Marvel One-Shot: The Consultant, it is shown that Stark was sent by Agent Coulson of SHIELD to retrieve the Abomination from Ross for the Avengers. But, unbeknownst to both Stark and Ross, the real reason Stark was sent was because Coulson knew that Stark would irritate Ross so much that there would be no chance that Ross would give them Blonsky. Yes. In Hulk, he was 15 to 25 feet tall, becoming taller the more angry he became. In The Incredible Hulk, he will not grow over nine feet tall, which is closer to his comic book counterpart&#39;s height of seven feet. Read more here. • A whole subplot with Betty and Leonard, implying that they live together, his implication on the attack on the Hulk in the Campus, his relationship with Betty and his feelings towards Bruce Banner.<br/><br/>• Blonsky describes the Hulk to General Greller: &quot;eight foot, fifteen hundred pounds easy... and green. Or grey, sir. Greenish grey.. It was very dark, I couldn&#39;t tell.&quot;<br/><br/>• General Greller gets angry about General Ross&#39;s &quot;bioforce project&quot;.<br/><br/>• Banner walks along a snowy hillside where he is going to attempt suicide.<br/><br/>• Banner delivers pizza. Louis Leterrier said, &quot;all of the footage will be on the DVD&quot;, so most likely there will not be a director&#39;s cut. According to Kevin Feige, due to positive reactions to Mark Ruffalo&#39;s Banner in The Avengers, a sequel will be made after &quot;Avengers 2&quot; (the working title for <a href="/title/tt2395427/">Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015)</a> (2015)). No, but there is one scene prior to the end credits that actually was meant to play after the credits. Tony Stark finds General Ross in a bar and asks for his help about a &quot;special team [they are] putting together&quot;. Only some of them. All cinematic material made under the Marvel Studios banner, e.g., <a href="/title/tt0371746/">Iron Man (2008)</a> (2008), The Incredible Hulk (2008), <a href="/title/tt0800369/">Thor (2011)</a> (2011) and(2011), are all set in the same universe (known as the Marvel Cinematic Universe), with the characters crossing over (most notably SHIELD personnel—Fury, Coulson, Romanoff or Barton), culminating in <a href="/title/tt0848228/">The Avengers (2012)</a> (2012) which ties these films together. Marvel Studios also owns/owned The Punisher and Blade, however <a href="/title/tt0330793/">The Punisher (2004)</a> (2004), <a href="/title/tt0450314/">Punisher: War Zone (2008)</a> (2008), <a href="/title/tt0120611/">Blade (1998)</a> (1998), <a href="/title/tt0187738/">Blade II (2002)</a> (2002) and <a href="/title/tt0359013/">Blade: Trinity (2004)</a> (2004) are/were not in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU). Other Marvel-based films owned by other studios are not set in the MCU, due to differing ownership. This includes, for example: <a href="/title/tt0145487/">Spider-Man (2002)</a> (2002) and <a href="/title/tt0259324/">Ghost Rider (2007)</a> (2007) (both owned by Sony); <a href="/title/tt0120903/">X-Men (2000)</a> (2000), <a href="/title/tt0120667/">Fantastic Four (2005)</a> (2005), and <a href="/title/tt0287978/">Daredevil (2003)</a> (2003) (all owned by Fox). a5c7b9f00b
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