The un-credible ‘Hulk’
- Share via
Eric Bana stars as Bruce Banner, a research scientist who has a
predisposition to hulking out -- a tendency he inherited from his
homicidal father, David Banner (Nick Nolte). Bruce’s father conducted
medical regeneration experiments on himself prior to fathering Bruce,
and murdering Bruce’s mother. Thus, Bruce was raised in an adoptive
family and as an adult, is a research scientist like his father. .
Bruce befriends a fellow scientist, Betty Ross (Jennifer Connelly),
whose father, General Ross (Sam Elliot) just happened to be the man
who imprisoned Bruce’s forgotten father. In a fluke lab accident,
Bruce is bombarded with gamma radiation and an experimental
nano-technology that, like a light switch, turns on Bruce’s Hulking
abilities.
Josh Lucas plays Glenn Talbott, a caricature-rich researcher who
wishes to profit from Bruce’s abilities. Meanwhile, Bruce’s father,
released from prison, infiltrates Bruce’s lab posing as a janitor in
order to eventually siphon away some of his son’s hidden power.
Director Ang Lee (“Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon”) messes with
the comic mythos and attempts some artistic cinematography which
mostly comes up empty. The screenplay by James Schamus, John Turman
and Michael France, comes away sounding like it was written by three
different people with three different visions. The dialogue is beyond
stale, falling short of that which you might actually find in a comic
book. Lee spends more than two hours getting us through the origin of
the “Hulk.”
It seemed like we didn’t get to see the Hulk until half way
through the movie. When we did it was in the dark, as if the
filmmakers didn’t want us to see him for reasons other than
story-related. When we finally do see the Hulk, the CGI effects that
created him are actually well done. In fact, the Hulk’s “acting”
outshines that of Bana who is bland and not up to the task, and
Connelly, who is misused and mismatched.
When the film ended, a part of me was waiting for it to begin
while the rest of me was glad it was over.
Lee’s vision of using split screens and hard cuts to simulate a
comic book, fail miserably. In comic books, each box of art furthers
the story line. Not so in this film. Here, you can look forward to
seeing not one, but four simultaneous film angles of a helicopter
flying. Wow. There may be truth in the thought that when a director
begins to get creative with his editing that it is only to cover up
what lacks in his material. I wish I could say something good about
Josh Lucas or Sam Elliot’s performances, but they are unfortunate
casualties of the poor script. Unless you are fans of the “Hulk,” or
made a brief appearance as an Atheon Security Officer in a scene
where the Hulk is encased in latex foam (as did I - shameless plug),
I would not recommend this film. If you wait to rent it, you can at
least pause it and nap midway through the film as I wanted to.
* RAY BUFFER, 33, is a professional singer, actor and voice-over
artist.
‘Hulk’ attempts
to do too much
Rarely does a movie collapse under the weight of its own ambition
with as much blind faith as Ang Lee’s “Hulk.” Long considered to be
one of the most versatile directors in Hollywood, the genre-busting
Lee has finally hit a creative wall. His new film is about as
pretentious and self-indulgent as a film can possibly hope to be.
It’s not that Lee’s talent is a fluke, many of his films are
near-flawless classics -- “Sense and Sensibility,” “Crouching Tiger,
Hidden Dragon” and “The Ice Storm” to name a few -- it’s simply that
his directorial choices are so misguided that what has resulted is an
abysmal embarrassment to all involved.
Based on the Marvel comic, “The Incredible Hulk,” the film
chronicles the story of Bruce Banner (Eric Bana, “Black Hawk Down”),
an emotionally bottled-up scientist whose accidental exposure to
intense gamma rays causes him to transform into a Herculean mass of
green muscles every time his temper unleashes itself. His co-worker
and sometimes girlfriend, Betty Ross (Jennifer Connelly, an Oscar
winner for “A Beautiful Mind”), has become frustrated by her attempts
to unlock the hidden depths of the emotionally stunted Banner, who
himself has no idea what the source of his compressed rage is
catalyzed by. Once his accident happens, however, his fury manifests
itself in a very overtly aggressive fashion -- of the 10-feet tall,
1,000-pound variety.
“Hulk” desperately wants to be many different things, but doesn’t
settle on any one of them as a theme. It wants to be a dark
father/son story involving Bruce’s deranged scientist father (Nick
Nolte, looking very much like his recent mug shot, which is no
coincidence since he’d just come from the set when he was pulled over
by police), who reveals some nefarious reasons for why Bruce survived
an accident that should’ve killed him instantly. The film also wants
to be a love story where Betty’s affections can harness the Hulk’s
rage with more competence than guns and missiles. Last but not least,
“Hulk” throws in a little “Frankenstein” in for good measure -- the
obvious homage being every shot where the Hulk considers his
reflections in water.
Lee has stuffed so much overt symbolism into this two-hour film
that he cuts his foot off at every single turn. Lee has always been
artfully subtle in his past work, but here the dialogue is cartoonish
and loaded with obvious double meaning. “Bruce, you have something
special inside you just waiting to get out.” Things of this nature. I
understand this is a movie that is based on a comic and is therefore
trying to recreate that style. “Spider-Man” pulled that off to great
effect but “Hulk” also wants to portray an emotionally convincing
love story between Bana and Connelly. These are two completely
opposing tones that do not coexist well within the context of this
world. It can’t be “The Ice Storm” emotionally and “Spider-Man”
stylistically. It doesn’t work.
* ALLEN MacDONALD, 29, is working toward his master’s in
screenwriting from the American Film Institute in Los Angeles.
‘Alex & Emma’ fails to charms audience
Alex has 30 days to finish his novel or his loan shark will finish
him. Alex hires Emma, a court stenographer, to help transcribe and
type the book. When he starts dictating the book to Emma the story
comes alive on screen. The movie becomes a story within a story about
falling love with the right person.
But, Emma doesn’t always agree with Alex. When that happens the
audience is pulled into the writer and typist bantering about what
should happen next and what needs to be fixed. The result quickly
becomes repetitious as Alex first tells part of his story, then Emma
repeats what he said before describing her version, which causes Alex
to repeat what he originally said to defend his opinion.
Luke Wilson (“Old School”) and Kate Hudson (“10 Ways to Lose a
Guy”) have arrived at a point in their careers where repeatedly
playing the boy/girl next door has finally worn out it’s welcome. The
“Alex & Emma” characters are undeveloped. He lives like a messy
teenager in a run-down penthouse loft. She has mousey brown hair and
takes the bus. That’s really all the audience knows about them. Their
creative debates about the novel become the vehicle through which
they fall in love with each other. The phrase “talking heads” evolves
to “talky heads.”
Director Rob Reiner’s “Sleepless in Seattle” shows proof he has
the talent to make entertaining love stories. Unfortunately Rob
failed to apply his talents in making this movie. His cameo role in
the film as Alex’s publisher is one of the better moments of the
movie, but not enough to recommend seeing the film.
Some people fall asleep reading a book. See “Alex & Emma” and fall
asleep watching people talk about a book.
* PEGGY J. ROGERS, 39, produces commercial videos and
documentaries.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.