I used to watch Gore De Vol a few years ago when he had an Internet show. Maybe he still does, actually.Count Gore De Vol was the resident ghoul--erm--vampire in D.C. Lots of political humor as you might expect. Then too, William F. Buckley did play the harpsichord on Conan's show.
Not necessarily...once the Scheme of the Week had played itself out, he might have had a better chance to stay out of trouble in a steady environment...an idea reinforced by The Return of the Incredible Hulk, which established that he'd settled down in one place and managed to avoid Hulk-Out-triggering incidents for two years.
Just give him a hiatus where he doesn't have a quota to fill...and keep him away from hot coffee...and payphones...and taxicabs...and swingers....
Interesting detail: In the final shot just before fade-out, you can see a peacock perching on the stable roof above Kim. It's also visible in the end-credits freeze frame.
I wonder if a drunk David was upset enough to become the Hulk, would the alcohol's effect carry over to any degree?
it almost looked like reused shot from the conclusion of season one's "747"....hmm.
Well, if he hadn't needed to fill the requirements of a weekly series,
he certainly could have taken a more systematic approach to staying out of trouble and avoiding transformations, like Norton's Banner did in TIH film. I'm not sure David's problem is temper so much as an inherent recklessness...first the recklessness of his research that led to his becoming the Hulk...then choosing to jump into a Fugitive Premise lifestyle that could limit his ability to get a stable hold on his situation and focus on finding a cure...then being too eager to get involved in the problems and schemes of everyone he meets on the road....
I swear there must be a rule that every show has to have at least one horse racing episode.
I did notice one possible blooper during the scene in the barn. While the horse is rearing, it actually fell over backwards. luckily it must have been OK because it get right back onto it's feet. I couldn't help but wonder if that was actually supposed to happen.
In that scene was it just supposed to be that The Hulk was strong enough to control Rainbow's End, or was his presence supposed to have calmed him down all by itself?
Honestly, I don't think the problem is stimuli, I think the problem is David himself. For all that Bill Bixby seemed like an easygoing guy, it was established in the pilot that David Banner has always had difficulties controlling his temper. Certainly he's tried to learn self-control since then, but sometimes it doesn't take much to set him off.
Well, for one thing, he needs to earn a living in order to afford to search for a cure, and as a homeless drifter, he'd often end up having to take jobs in disreputable establishments, or take what he could get without being able to choose based on the temperament or character of his employers (cf. Harland in "The Antowuk Horror").
Also, he's a doctor and a basically good guy, so he can't turn his back on people in need. That's not recklessness so much as selflessness. That's pretty much inherent in the Fugitive Premise (Richard Kimble was a doctor too), but empathy over self-interest is what we want in our TV heroes, at least in the '70s and '80s.
The underground fight club thing is especially true for SFF shows. It's hard to come up with a long running SFF show that didn't do one.Back then, maybe. These days it's underground fight club episodes.
No Animals Were Harmed has been around since 1940, so I'm assuming as long as the show was filmed in the US, it would have been monitored.Yeah, I winced at that. I do hope the animal action was properly monitored. I think that was required by then, but still, that horse did a couple of rather alarming stunts (the other being the bucking that threw the jockey), and that one was particularly scary. (Assuming it was the same stunt horse in both shots.)
That was part of my point...he made a choice at the end of the pilot to let people believe that he was dead and take on such a lifestyle, which made sense as a weekly series premise, but wasn't necessarily the best thing that he could do in his situation at that point...not if he wanted to avoid stressful situations and focus on finding a cure.
I tend to agree on the general principle, but David isn't always very smart in the way that he jumps into people's situations, some of which would be way over his head if he were just an ordinary doctor, and should ideally be dealt with by the authorities. Sometimes it's like he's practically begging to put himself into situations that will inevitably result in Hulk-Outs.
The underground fight club thing is especially true for SFF shows. It's hard to come up with a long running SFF show that didn't do one.
No Animals Were Harmed has been around since 1940, so I'm assuming as long as the show was filmed in the US, it would have been monitored.
Okay, so what's the alternative there?
Maybe he could've tracked down a scientific colleague he trusted and gotten their help, but after just going through the tragic loss of Elaina, how willing would he have been to put another colleague in that position?
As he said here, he tries to avoid entanglements with the police.
Not wanting to put others in danger is a sensible reason for why he chose to go on the run solo, but he's trading away the option of putting himself in a stable environment in which Hulk-Out situations might have been less likely to occur.
Yeah, that's what he said...as I pointed out earlier, it conflicts with what he often does. He's often very quick to get in over his head with career criminals and other shady types. They could have written in the odd beat where he weighs not getting involved but chooses to do the right thing...but as written, it comes off as a bit reckless, given his condition and the likely consequences.
Basically you seem to be saying that he would've been better off being selfish and callous.
That's not what I'm saying at all...I went out of my way to indicate that I wasn't saying that. But as written, he does get into Hulk-Out-triggering situations with alarming frequency, and from an in-setting perspective, we can question if his choices are enabling Hulk-Outs rather than seeking to prevent them.
That's one reason I like the modern trend to have shorter seasons. Facing 13 life-threatening situations per year is still pretty extraordinary compared to real life, but it's marginally less implausible than facing 26.
That was part of my point...he made a choice at the end of the pilot to let people believe that he was dead and take on such a lifestyle, which made sense as a weekly series premise, but wasn't necessarily the best thing that he could do in his situation at that point...not if he wanted to avoid stressful situations and focus on finding a cure.
I tend to agree on the general principle, but David isn't always very smart in the way that he jumps into people's situations, some of which would be way over his head if he were just an ordinary doctor, and should ideally be dealt with by the authorities. Sometimes it's like he's practically begging to put himself into situations that will inevitably result in Hulk-Outs.
So I maintain that there's a pattern of recklessness rather than anger issues to David's behavior...plot-driven recklessness, but it is a through-line starting with the pilot.
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