Other than the two-hour-pilot, though, did Bill Bixby ever NOT change into the Hulk in any episode's Act Two or Four? It made the plots too predictably clockwork for me.
In the third season's "Proof Positive", there was only one Hulk-out in act four. Of course, Bixby didn't even appear in this episode and the role of David Banner was played by series stuntman Frank Orsatti.
Was this a dialogue-free, back-of-the-head, clip show situation?
Me, too. Poor hitchhiking David. Did they use stock footage for this? Linus's lost blanket PEANUTS bummer remix is even worse. It literally propels you into despair.
Other than the two-hour-pilot, though, did Bill Bixby ever NOT change into the Hulk in any episode's Act Two or Four? It made the plots too predictably clockwork for me.
In the third season's "Proof Positive", there was only one Hulk-out in act four. Of course, Bixby didn't even appear in this episode and the role of David Banner was played by series stuntman Frank Orsatti.
Was this a dialogue-free, back-of-the-head, clip show situation?
Back in the broadcast days, you could literally set your clock by those transformations in most episodes...but there were a small few that broke the formula. One that comes to mind is the one with the psychic, when David was led to believe that the Hulk had killed a teenager. The creature actually appeared in the first scene!Other than the two-hour-pilot, though, did Bill Bixby ever NOT change into the Hulk in any episode's Act Two or Four? It made the plots too predictably clockwork for me.
I wouldn't say "silent"...but he is a man-monster of few words.The Hulk is also mostly silent in the movies too.
So somebody is rerunning it...I wonder if I get that channel.I got home the other day and caught an early season rerun on Esquire network.
Anybody old enough to remember pay phones must also remember the frustrations associated with them. In this case, though, those frustrations caused one of David's transformations, with his last coherent words being: "I don't HAVE EXACT CHANGE!"
THIS!I wish they would show it on MeTV or AntennaTV.
To be fair, it was supposed to be a trashy tabloid. The Hulk was the National Register's exclusive Sasquatch.A news paper paid Jack for 5 years, to almost write one story.
No wonder print media is a dying industry.
^That made me LOL!
The people who "missed out" on payphones also missed out on things like replacing the needle on their record player. Records! The dial-up internet squeel. Beta-max.
I feel old.![]()
Anyway, I loved the old Incredible Hulk show. Despite the predictable formula, it always managed to be entertaining. Probably the best comic-based show of its era.
An aside-- who was aware that Bill Bixby actually helped develop a proposal for a She-Hulk spin-off that never materialized?
Anybody old enough to remember pay phones must also remember the frustrations associated with them. In this case, though, those frustrations caused one of David's transformations, with his last coherent words being: "I don't HAVE EXACT CHANGE!"
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