The Incredible Hulk
"Babalao"--
New Orleans--during the period of Mardi Gras, a frightened woman visits the home of former inmate Tony--now Antoine Moray, the local
Babalao (
Priest of Ifá). The woman begs for help in escaping encounters with her employer--a politician named Dufarge (implied to be a sexual bondage situation). Mixed in Moray's "help" are reminders that only he possesses the power to help her, using such objects as the
Gris-gris and concocting a mojo in connection with spirits that will free her at the right time. Topping off his hokum, Moray dramatically guarantees that he is the only one who can protect her from the spirit of death (the Devil, he alleges). As this is going on, Luke--Moray's henchman--returns, grinning as he overhears Moray conning yet another hapless local.
...of course, the woman leaves $50 in exchange for the Babalao's help...
Moray (and fellow former inmate) Luke see the woman's plight as the opportunity of a lifetime, as a few select photos of Dufarge with the woman promises a sizable payday. All is not well in scam-land, as one of their once loyal suckers--Selene--has taken her grandson to see Dr. Renee DuBois...and her new assistant, David. Moray plans to turn up the heat on DuBois (and his hooked followers) as he fears her medical reality will end his profitable, hand-waving fakery.
At Dr. DuBois' clinic, she tends to the grandson in question--Louie--playing into his beliefs by pretending to ward off an "evil spirit" while he receives a injection to treat rabies (from the bite from a rat). Dr. DuBois uses Selene's superstition--stating the ceremony is only temporary--as a means to get her to bring Louie back for another session. Dr. David Banner is clearly not a fan of her practices...
DuBois: "Alright David, I saw the look that you gave me in there, now you're new around here, and the way i practice medicine might seem a little unusual--"
David: "Medicine? You told Louie voodoo was curing his rabies."
DuBois: "Because they believe in that around here--for blacks and whites alike. Voodoo is a way of life. I use it to attract business...like a pediatrician puts on a clown suit to make the kids feel more comfortable--I'm doing the same thing, David--only its a different costume."
David: "But don't you think by comforting them with myth and superstition you're keeping them from the truth?"
DuBois: "Look, I grew up around here...I've lived in this neighborhood all my life..I've seen people die from a simple voodoo hex--"
David: "Wouldn't you call that um...psychosomatic?"
DuBois: "As a doctor, yes, but tell that to them, and we'll never see another patient. don't you understand, David? Their belief is that strong. Now, I may do some things that seem dishonest, but I've got to win their belief no matter what it takes, or they'll go elsewhere for treatment, and then more will die, like Louie's brother Paul--under the hands of the Babalao."
David: "The Babalao?"
DuBois: "The Babalao is a voodoo priest...with legendary powers. Now, when Paul died of a rat bite, the Babalao told Selene that her grandson was cursed with an evil Loa--"
David: "Loa??"
DuBois: "Spirits--either good or bad. Selene believes that we put Loa in that syringe, not vaccine. What difference does it make if it saves Louie's life? Now they will believe in me, David. Not the Babalao..and then I'll teach them the truth. You understand?"
David: "Yes, I think I do. I'll help as much as I can."
Luke catches Selena and Louie leaving the clinic, and spins a tale of how the Babalao is not too pleased with their seeing a doctor. Selena & Louie are rattled by the lie, but Selena chides him about his role in the death of her other grandson, Paul. Luke is backed off when David shows up with another "mojo" intended for the next treatment session.
At the Babalao's home, Luke suggests they kill Dr. DuBois, but the magic man is not interested in a murder rap...which he quickly points out would be Luke's alone. Instead, Moray will use his "powers" to cause enough trouble to end the threat posed by Renee...and her nurse.
David and Renee return from shopping, noticing several residents hiding away from them as the duo pass by; Renee explains that they are reacting to fears of her challenge to the Babalao, but--as seen earlier--uses her own common magic tricks to attract/comfort potential patients. David wonders why the law cannot be brought against the Babalao, but voodoo
is also protected by the Constitution, so anyone is free to practice the religion no matter dubious the practitioner. Soon, DuBois debunks Moray and Luke's scare tactics once preventing the locals from visiting her (including Selena and Louie).
During the continuing Mardi Gras celebrations, David & Renee take in the sights--but as David leaves her side for refreshments, Luke (in a pirate costume) kidnaps the doctor, while a man in a gorilla costume kicks David under a parade float's wheels--triggering a Hulk out. The creature bursts through the float, spots the man in the gorilla costume fearfully climbing a light pole, and pushes it over & through a restaurant window before running off.
After David returns, he discovers Renee's clinic ransacked, gets no help from the police, or the frightened Selene. Elsewhere, McGee arrives, but is disappointed when a local calls out a green "John" far different than one he was expecting...
David moves from one closed door to another--everyone buying into the threats from the Babalao, until he corners Louie, begging for help in finding Renee. Returning to Selene's, David makes one final appeal--
David: "Your grandson's life was in her hands. She saved him. Now Renee's life is in your hands. What will you do for her?"
Speaking of Renee, the doctor is bound to a table at Moray's home, with the charlatan preparing to inject her with a paralyzing drug; He predicts she will be drummed out of business once the locals see her seemingly "cursed" condition. That evening, several residents (including Selena) are in attendance at Moray's ceremonial room, chanting for their Babalao's appearance; thanks to Luke's rigged pyrotechnics and other effects, the Babalao magically appears in front of the captive attendees, instantly exposing the inert body of Dr. DuBois. With that action, the Babalao dramatically begins what is intended to be a ceremony to save DuBois from the
Papa LaBas by midnight.
Outside, David and Louie hide in the brush, with David promising to combat the Babalao with reason instead of superstition; inside, the Babalao's scheme for DuBois to "magically" shake off the effects of the drug are not working as scheduled, so he enlists Selene to draw blood from Renee to move things along. As Selene is pressured, David enters the room, openly challenging the Babalao--
David: "Don't listen to him! He has no power over those that defy him!!
Babalao: "Luke--"
David: "Oh--is he your power?!? The great Babalao who commands the spirits needs a guard?? (To the onlookers)
You all believe in the power of the Babalao...alright! (Back to Moray)
I defy you! Show us your strength--NOW! Right here! Summon the spirits and cast a spell upon me now!"
Moray jerks his arm at a beam, rigged to sparkle...
David: "I'm unharmed."
Babalao: "The power of the Loa cast evil on you, non-believer!
David: "Is that your power? Fireworks? Is that the curse of the spirits, because if it is, WE HAVE NOTHING TO FEAR!! BECAUSE HE BOUGHT HIS POWER AS YOU CAN BUY HIS POWER IN A MAGIC STORE!!"
The onlookers are agitated...
David: "If he has no faith in himself, why should we have faith in him??"
Luke and another henchman toss a black sheet over David, hustling him to the lobby; Moray--desperate to rebuild his influence, demands Selene stab DuBois to death, to rid them of her "evil," or else he will kill Louie. In the lobby, the restrained David can take no more, and rapidly Hulks out, tossing the henchman through the room, Luke through a window. Avoiding being run through by Moray, the creature sends the fraud crashing into a wall, knocking him out. The Hulk rescues Renee, and as a final act of destruction, kicks Moray's altar through the house's brick foundation.
Days later, the recovered DuBois packs up the voodoo paraphernalia in her office, informing Selene & Louie that Moray and his cronies were arrested for blackmail and fraud. Selene and Louie simply accept Renee for her medical skill sans any voodoo titles or theatrics. As usual, David says his goodbyes, and hits the road.
NOTES:
This is not a cure-related episode.
The story made a point of Dr. DuBois remaking that both black
and white residents believe in voodoo (in the wake of her treating Selena and her grandson), which was clearly the episode not wanting to have its guest star come off like a white doctor/heroine "talking down" to minority patients by "string-pulling" their own beliefs.
Breaking/exposing false religions/cults scam artists is curiously one of the most used plot devices in TV history--so much that it is practically a legitimate sub-genre, yet it has not been studied as much as others. As an example, there's been more print & digital pages dedicated to Captain Kirk using logic and a speech to destroy powerful computers than this plot device that in one way or another, has lived through every decade of televised entertainment.
For the second time in his career, Bill Bixby finds himself performing in an episode where the dark arts are practiced. Before butting heads with the Babalao, he worked as a translator for Vincent Price in the
Night Gallery episode
"Return of the Sorcerer"--
GUEST CAST:
Louise Sorel's (
Dr. Renee DuBois) fantasy credits, started in the Final Frontier--
- Star Trek (NBC, 1969) - "Requiem for Methuselah" - as Rayna Kapec
- Rod Serling's Night Gallery (NBC, 1970/'71) - "The Dead Man" (the 1st regular series episode) & "Pickman's Model" opposite Bradford ("The Snare") Dillman
- Search (NBC, 1972) - "Live Men Tell Tales"
- Circle of Fear (NBC, 1973) - "The Ghost of Potter's Field"
- The Wide World of Mystery (ABC, 1973) - "Nightmare Step"
- The Mark of Zorro (ABC, 1974)
- Cliffhangers (NBC, 1979) - "The Curse of Dracula" (developed by Kenneth Johnson)
- Mazes and Monsters (CBS, 1982)
Bill Henderson (
Moray/Babalao)--
- The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension (20th Century Fox, 1984)
- The Twilight Zone (CBS, 1985) - "Night of the Meek"
- Timecop (ABC, 1997) - "Public Enemy"
- Beyond Belief: Fact or Fiction (FOX, 1998) - "Blind Man's Dog"
Jarrod Johnson (
Louie)--
- The Lost Saucer (ABC, 1975-76) - series regular as Jerry
Pauline Myers (
Selene)--
- Target (Syndicated, 1958) - "Five Hours to Live"
- Tarzan's Fight for Life (MGM, 1958)
- How to Make a Monster (AIP, 1958) with Gary (Land of the Giants) Conway
- The Alfred Hitchcock Hour (NBC, 1964) - "Bed of Roses"
- Shadow on the Land AKA It Can't Happen Here (Screen Gems, 1968). NOTE: Kenneth Johnson adapted the Sinclair Lewis novel as a screenplay (as Storm Warnings) in 1982. He pitched the concept to NBC, but after reworking the plot the network considered "too cerebral" (where have we heard that before?), the sociopolitical theme and somewhat inflammatory character elements were altered, ultimately becoming the alien antagonists of Johnson's landmark miniseries, V (NBC, 1983).
- Kolchak: The Night Stalker (ABC, 1974) - "The Zombie"
- The Invisible Man (NBC, 1975) - "Go Directly to Jail"
Michael Swan (
Luke)--
- The Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew Mysteries (ABC, 1977) - "The Disappearing Floor"
- Man from Atlantis (NBC, 1978) - "Scavenger Hunt"
- Cliffhangers (NBC, 1979) - "The Girl Who Saved the World" (developed by Kenneth Johnson)
- Galactica 1980 (ABC, 1980) - "The Super Scouts: Part Two"
- The Incredible Hulk (CBS, 1980) - "Free Fall"
- Voyagers! (NBC, 1983) - "All Fall Down"
- V (NBC, 1983) - Part One & Two
- J.O.E. and the Colonel (Universal Television, 1985)
- Shadow Chasers (ABC, 1985) - "The Middle of Somewhere"
- Jason Lives: Friday the 13th Part VI (Paramount, 1986)
- Aliens Gone Wild (Click Productions, 2007)
- Midnight Movie (Bigfoot Entertainment, 2008)
- Dinocroc vs. Supergator (New Horizons Pictures, 2010)
- Camel Spiders (Concorde / New Horizons, 2011)
- Captain America: The First Avenger (Paramount, 2011) - as Dodgers Announcer
- Piranhaconda (New Horizons, 2012)
- Lizard Man (2012)