The Incredible Hulk (1996)

Overview
When research scientist Bruce Banner is blasted with a gamma ray bomb during an experiment gone wrong, he develops a dangerous alter ego -- a mean, green monster known as the Incredible Hulk -- who emerges when he gets angry.
Starring Cast
Where to watch
Bias Dimensions
Overview
When research scientist Bruce Banner is blasted with a gamma ray bomb during an experiment gone wrong, he develops a dangerous alter ego -- a mean, green monster known as the Incredible Hulk -- who emerges when he gets angry.
Starring Cast
Where to watch
Detailed Bias Analysis
Primary
The film primarily focuses on the individual's struggle for self-control and the ethical implications of scientific experimentation and military pursuit, rather than explicitly promoting or critiquing a specific political ideology. The core conflict and its resolution are largely apolitical, centering on universal themes of power and responsibility.
The film features a predominantly white main cast, aligning with the traditional portrayals of its comic book characters. Its narrative centers on the protagonist's internal conflict and external pursuit, without explicitly critiquing traditional identities or emphasizing diversity, equity, and inclusion themes.
Secondary
The 1996 animated series 'The Incredible Hulk' does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The series primarily focuses on Bruce Banner's struggle with his alter ego and conflicts with various adversaries, without incorporating queer identities or storylines into its narrative.
The animated series features She-Hulk, a superpowered character who engages in physical combat against male opponents. However, her victories are consistently achieved through her superhuman strength and durability, which are superpowers, rather than skill or non-superpowered physical prowess. No other female characters engage in direct physical combat against male opponents.
The 1996 animated series "The Incredible Hulk" faithfully adapts its core characters from Marvel Comics, including Bruce Banner, Betty Ross, and General Ross, all of whom retain their established genders from the source material. No canonical characters were portrayed with a different gender.
The 1996 animated series adapts established Marvel Comics characters. All major and legacy characters, such as Bruce Banner, Betty Ross, and General Ross, maintain their canonically established racial depictions from the source material.
Viewer Rating Breakdown
Viewer Rating
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources
User Ratings


Critic Ratings


More Like This


















