Something went wrong
Try again later.
The Incredible Hulk (2008)
Bruce Banner, a scientist on the run from the U.S. Government must find a cure for his unique condition, which causes him to turn into a giant green monster under emotional stress. Banner then must fight a soldier whom unleashes himself as a threat stronger than him.
16 December 1969, New York City, New York, USA
2 August 1968, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
28 May 1962, Bakersfield, California, USA
4 April 1965, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA
22 May 1981, Bronx, New York, USA
9 November 1951, Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA
January 19, 2015
Before his initial transformation inside the bottling plant where he works, Banner warns, "Something bad is about to happen." He's right.May 15, 2012
A very standard summer actioner that delivers reasonably well, if straight down the middle, on audience expectations.July 06, 2010
It won't change your life but you'll walk away smiling.July 14, 2011
An impressive blockbuster that does exactly what it says.October 18, 2008
Rather than go to the trouble of crafting a dramatically satisfying conclusion, The Incredible Hulk" blows the audience off and takes the air out of its previous solid work by ending with what is essentially a shameless trailer for the next Marvel movie.November 18, 2011
A more satisfactory adaptation of the spirit of Stan Lee's Marvel character.July 18, 2008
In close-up the Hulk is more cartoonish than scary, but when he's ripping armed vehicles to shreds? Kewl.October 18, 2008
There's not an excess of exposition, and the pricey CGI Hulk at his disposal is more angrily expressive than the mute one employed by Lee.October 14, 2012
It's disposable fun, best summed up by Banner himself when asked how he feels during his transformation: "There's just too much noise... it's difficult to remember anything at all."December 19, 2010
Bloodier action than other comic book adventures.April 14, 2013
The climax is a bit of a yawn, but most of what precedes it is vigorous and sharp.May 04, 2012
Norton makes for a wiry, curious Bruce Banner. But you can tell from the film's tedium-inducing smackdowns that a different philosophy prevailed: the artificial Zen of video-game playing.