3.09.2015

Hulk 1978 - 1979


Here we are for the penultimate post in this series. Where did the time go? 

I don't know if it is accurate to say the American public was gripped in a state of Hulkmania in the last two years of the 70s, though I very much want to, but it is true that there was more Hulk product than ever. A magazine, a series, a super-group, and a hit television series with an animated show in the works. People were Hulk smashing all over the place. 

Let's start things off with -


THE TV SHOW 

Back Issue #70 has a nice write-up of the TV series by Glenn Greenberg, from which the below is excerpted:

"(The Incredible Hulk) launched on March 10, 1978, and would run for five seasons. (...) True, the Hulk of the TV series was not the character as portrayed in the comic books. The show was an adaptation in every sense of the word. The premise, the status quo, the character's strength level and abilities, and even the name of his alter ego were changed. (...) Executive Producer Kenneth Johnson - "

Left, with Bill Bixby, right.
" - definitely not an admirer of comic books, wanted to distance the show from its source material as much as possible. Thus nuclear physicist Dr. Robert Bruce Banner became research scientist Dr. David Bruce Banner. Bruce was single; David was recently widowed, his wife Laura having been killed in a car accident that David survived. Bruce became the Hulk after getting caught in the detonation of his own invention, the gamma bomb (...) while with David, it happened he accidentally overdosed on gamma radiation while trying to determine the connection between the presence of gamma and amazing displays of strength from otherwise normal human beings."

Also: the Hulk didn't speak, and he was drastically de-powered. (Indeed, when they decided to kill the character, he died from falling out of an airplane.)

So, basically, the TV Hulk is an entirely different character, with different enough powers to be an entirely different kind of superhero, grafted onto The Fugitive. The TV Hulk has its defenders; I am not one of them. I never saw it as a kid, so I have no childhood nostalgia for it. Many friends admire it, and I've come to appreciate aspects of it through them. Both Lou Ferrigno and Bill Bixby are perfectly fine in the role. But for my money - it just ain't the Hulk.

But it was an unqualified success, to be sure, and without it, it's entirely possible the Hulk might have slowly become a second-tier Marvel character.

Some merchandising from the late 70s.
Also starting in 1978 the Hulk received his very own newspaper strip:


Although it says "written by Stan Lee," the strip was actually written by first Larry Leiber and then Paul Kupperberg until its cancellation in 1982. I've never read any of these, but it looks like fun.

Next up: 

THE DEFENDERS

Issues 55 - 78
Writers: David Anthony Kraft, Chris Claremont, Gerry Conway, Ed Hannigan, Jim Shooter, Mary Jo Duffy, and Steven Grant
Artists: Carmine Infantino, Klaus Janson, George Tuska, Dave Cockrum, Dan Green, Ed Hannigan, Bob Lubbers, Jim Mooney, Sal Buscema, Don Perlin, Ernie Chan, Bruce D. Patterson, Herb Trimpe, Pablo Marcos, Al Milgrom, Mike Esposito, Jack Abel, Fred Kida, Steve Mitchell, and Chic Stone.
Issue 63.
Issue 69.
The Hulk doesn't have a whole lot to actually do in these stories, but it's not a bad run for everything else. Highlights include a Defenders membership drive where Hellcat goes boy-crazy.

Issue 62.
Poor Torpedo.
There's something very Henri Matisse about these three panels. Lest you think I'm just naming French painters to make myself seem more cultured than I am, a) I spent the morning getting re-acquainted with Dokken, so ain't no culture happening round these parts, and b) refer to the solid red contrasting sharply with the bright yellow and the sparse, essential linework.
Patsy Walker's previous life in Millie the Model comes into play.
Somewhat boiler-plate, but let's recall this for next time around, when Patsy is (spoiler alert) possessed by Satan.

Meanwhile, the Red Guardian continues to hang around:


and the Valkyrie brings the gang back to Asgard in a fun multi-parter. 


Omega the Unknown - the Steve Gerber-written cult series from earlier in the 70s - left several plotlines unresolved when it was cancelled. Defenders tidies up the loose ends - 

by killing 2/3ds of its cast.
I've got Omega the Unknown, and I've read it. But I couldn't make heads or tails of these issues because it's been 3 or 4 years since I looked it over. I don't think Gerber was too happy about all the deaths, but he had overall praise for Grant's conclusion.

What else? Some fun guest stars as always.

The Devil Slayer. A character re-purposed from the short-lived Atlas comic:
Also written by David Anthony Kraft.
This guy!
How much you want to bet these folks from issue 60 are actually David Kraft and the Defenders editors/ bullpen?
And there's this nifty Spider-Man statue from issue 61:


Let's move on to:

THE RAMPAGING HULK / HULK MAGAZINE


Writers: Doug Moench, David Anthony Kraft,
Artists: John Romita Jr., Keith Pollard, Jim Mooney, Herb Trimple, Sal Buscema, Alfredo Alcala, George Perez, Rudy Mesina, Marie Severin, Ron Wilson, Ricardo Villamonte, Fran Matera, Gene Colan, Tony DeZuniga, Ernie Chan, Bob McLeod, Bill Sienkiewicz, Joe Rubenstein, Rudy Nebres, Mike Zeck, John Tartaglione, Klaus Janson,
You know, I love the idea of the Hulk magazine. Painted color covers, expanded page count, editorials, interviews, characters without their own titles getting their own shots as the b-stories:

Such as Moon Knight, who would get his own title with the same creative team. (Moench and Sienkiewicz.)
If it had taken a more Batman Family approach with the character, making certain adjustments of course, I probably would have enjoyed it more. But what it added up to was just Too Much Hulk. 

 

The Bereet story from last time around wraps up in very surreal fashion:

This is one of the odder things I've seen on the comics page, I have to say.
Hulk is unimpressed.
There's a treasure trove of pin-ups and two-page spreads, though - here are a few examples:

Reminds me of Swamp Thing, actually.
And here's a moment of Hulk Zen:

Stupid Hulk.

THE INCREDIBLE HULK

Writers: Roger Stern, Len Wein, Jim Starlin, Peter Gillis, Elliot S. Maggin, David Michelinie,
Artists: Sal Buscema, Ernie Chan, Alfredo Alcala, Jim Starlin, Joe Rubinstein, Joe Sinnott, Klaus Janson, Bob McLeod, Mike Esposito, Jim Mooney, Bob Layton, Chic Stone, Jack Abel,
If you've been reading this series from the beginning, you may recall I began things by mentioning an old pen pal who always carried on about how 70s Hulk was under-appreciated. I agree in general. But overall, the Hulk's limited range of reactions and repeated dialogue -


becomes wearying. There's only so many times you can see him do and say the same things. In context of all 1970s comics, it's not so bad, but the content of Hulk's reiterations - "Hulk is the strongest one there is!" "Hulk... NOT FRIENDS?!" "Shut up!" etc. - don't lend themselves well to overuse. 

A couple of moments come up in this last stretch of The Incredible Hulk that made me appreciate the things I very much did enjoy, such as his bender-like crash periods, usually in odd places:

Issue 239. (The proportions are way off here, but hey.)
And there's a touch of the dimension-hopping approach at the tail end of Stern's run in '79, when he resurrects "They" for a storyline that sees the Hulk finding the lost city of El Dorado.


Placed against any other Marvel superhero title of the 70s, Incredible Hulk acquits itself well. Out of that decade? It drops rank considerably. But that's nothing against it, and certainly nothing against Stern's last few years on the book. (He left in early 1980.)

As for the Hulk's supporting cast:

The General's sidelined for most of it.
Betty barely appears. (And she's unrecognizable.)
Jim is revealed to be the nephew of Sam Wilson.
And the Hulk goes to college.


Not really. Doc Savage puts him under, and they travel into Hulk/ Banner's psyche to try and work out where the Hulk's anger management issues. Predictably with little success - Socrates in particular seems to really piss the Hulk off.


The Hulk has a point. How can he know himself? That's the whole problem. Is this some kind of Zen Koan? HULK HATE KOANS!

The Machine Man appears, and I'll mention it not only because I always liked this late-Kirby creation but because I plan on covering the 80s mini-series sooner or later - 

shameless plug in the Mighty Marvel Tradition!

Did I mention Sal Buscema fatigue? The man was some kind of insane workhorse. Every comic I pick up between 75 and 90 I seem to find this guy sooner or later. He is the Michelle Forbes of Marvel artists. No disrespect to his work, but because of this, I've become over-familiar with his bag of tricks - all effective, like the straight impact lines radiating from the action, or his stock facial expressions and action poses, etc. - and I need a break. The next 50 comics I look at must not include any Sal Buscema.

Well, except for the last post in this series, Defenders 90 - 101, if there's any in there. I don't think there is, but disclaimer just in case. Hope to see you then for a Hulk in the 70s coda.


3.07.2015

Friday Night Film Noir: Act of Violence (1948)


"They got all kinds of laws - they even got laws to help you out, too."

Frank Enley seems to have it made. A successful businessman, husband, father, WW2 veteran and survivor of a German POW camp, and respected member of the Santa Lisa, CA community.


Frank and Edith Enley.

Neither his wife nor the rest of the community know Frank's dark secret. When he was in the POW camp, he alerted the Nazi camp commander of an escape attempt. He was rewarded with food and assured his comrades' lives would be spared. They weren't. The Nazis set a trap and slaughtered them in the tunnel they built - all but one, Joe Parkson, who faked death until he could crawl away.

Who reads about his "war hero" friend Frank in the paper.
Frank never told his wife what really happened, nor that they moved from the east coast basically to get away from Parkson, who hates Enley for what he did.

Parkson finally tracks him down with the help of the war-hero article and the local phone book.
This leads to Parkson doing the whole calling up the Enley residence and hanging up business.

Apparently, the Enleys never upgraded their phone after the war. Tangent: I miss phones. I would totally go back to the phone Janet Leigh is holding. Enough's enough, planet Earth.
Not content to simply prank call, Joe follows Frank when he leaves for a fishing weekend at Redwood Lake.


 

I was genuinely surprised by Joe's readiness to kill here - he doesn't seem interested at all in confronting his former commanding officer, just straight-up assassinating him. Frank ends up taking a different route out of the cove and doesn't realize how close he came to death. He learns of Joe on his tail, though, and from this point on, things unravel.


Act of Violence is one of the first post-WW2 films to depict an unresolved trauma among veterans of the Great War Redux so recently ended. The specific plot details of Joe's and Frank's POW experience aside, it's an exploration of an anxiety a large portion of its 1948 audience knew all too well. It's an interesting title for those reasons - the "act of violence" isn't confined to Frank's actions at the POW camp. It's what was done to an entire generation of Americans. 

Not to mention non-Americans, of course. Director Fred Zinnemann came to America in 1938 to escape the Nazis; his parents weren't so lucky. They delayed leaving, then couldn't, then were murdered in the camps. Whether this impacted his directorial choices or not, Act of Violence is steeped in Survivor's Guilt.

The relationship between Edith and Frank - and the myth-shattering intrusion of Joe on their marriage - is worth looking at.

At first, he's preoccupied with her not finding out.
Once she forces the issue, he makes up a story and skips town.
Eventually she gets the whole truth from him, but he can't bear her knowing and skips out once again.
Throughout it all, kudos to Janet Leigh, who really anchors the movie with her performance.
Frank's descent into alcoholic despair is conveyed via a fantastic montage of skewed angles and long shadows, courtesy of:

Surtees has a helluva c.v.

It is during this descent that Frank meets Pat, an aging prostitute played by Mary Astor. She takes somewhat incredulous pity on him and introduces him to someone who can make his problems go away for a mere eight to ten grand.


As mentioned at Classic Film Review, "Astor turns in a weighty supporting performance as Pam, bringing a palpable sadness to the role. When she finds out what Frank's done, what he's running from, helping him is just another in a long series of failures for her."

Things unfold inexorably.
I'll refrain from spoiling the end.
What a film. On one hand it's the prototypical film noir, where the protagonist is caught in a downward spiral of effects from some causal action from the past. On the other, though, it stands apart - there's no real femme fatale, unless you count Mary Astor, which doesn't quite work, and there's no voice-over at all.


This is especially noticeable at the beginning, during Joe's cross-country bus journey to California.
I kept expecting some kind of "Here's what it is, see" voiceover from Robert Ryan.
Instead, he just looks weary and driven.
The only voice-over comes later, when Joe is flipping out and remembering both his complicity in hiring the hit man and the German loudspeakers. Very effective.
While we're here, when Joe lands in California, he's prevented from limping across the street by a passing parade of war heroes.
A very intelligent film, beautifully performed, and beautiful to look at. 

with a
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