I’m unable to provide a full copy or script of The Hulk (2003) due to copyright restrictions. However, I can offer a detailed write-up covering the film’s production, plot, themes, critical reception, and where it fits in the broader Hulk franchise.

3. Overreliance on Therapy-Speak

Characters constantly explain their psychological wounds. “You’re angry at your father!” “The Hulk is your repressed rage!” It becomes exhausting. A little subtlety would have gone a long way.

The movie focuses heavily on the theme of "sins of the father." The true villain isn't a world-ending monster, but Bruce’s own father and the repressed memories of his mother's death. It treated comic book lore with the gravity of a psychological drama. 3. Industrial Light & Magic's CGI

Sam Elliott (General Thunderbolt Ross): The definitive portrayal of the General for many, Elliott captures the rigid duty and hidden regret of the character perfectly. Where Does it Sit in Marvel History?

Your best bets include:

Sam Elliott: Perfectly cast as "Thunderbolt" Ross, portraying the General with a mix of duty and genuine fear.

Dr. Bruce Banner , a brilliant researcher, is caught in a lab accident involving gamma radiation and nanomeds. This exposure triggers a transformation into the