| Essential Rampaging Hulk, Vol. 1 (Marvel Essentials) | 
enlarge | Authors: Doug Moench, Jim Starlin, John Warner, Bill Mantlo, Walt Simonson, Keith Pollard, Herb Trimpe, Sal Buscema, Ron Wilson Publisher: Marvel Comics Category: Book
List Price: $16.99 Buy New: $11.55 You Save: $5.44 (32%)
New (29) Used (8) from $8.84
Avg. Customer Rating: 3 reviews Sales Rank: 113663
Media: Paperback Edition: Reprint Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 584 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.5 Dimensions (in): 9.9 x 6.6 x 1.5
ISBN: 0785126996 Dewey Decimal Number: 741.5973 EAN: 9780785126997 ASIN: 0785126996
Publication Date: June 25, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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| Customer Reviews:
A different take August 3, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
I bought this since I've enjoyed the other Hulk Essential books, but this is a different take on the Hulk. You start with stories which take place right after the original six issues of the Hulk as he and Rick Jones battle aliens trying to take over the earth. It's mildly entertaining, even if it's explained away as imaginary stories later. The last stories are more Hulkish as he wanders around finding trouble. I think Marvel found it too difficult to run two different Hulk series without becoming redundant.
Essentially Awful July 17, 2008 2 out of 4 found this review helpful
Although both were written by the usually capable Doug Moench, this series actually split into two separate magazines, "Rampaging Hulk" and "The Hulk!" Both are absolutely dreadful, but I'll review them separately because they're bad for different reasons.
I'm not sure if I should give away how Part One ends, except to say that the regular comicbook "Incredible Hulk" basically disavows these stories. (Despite the book description saying, "Not an imaginary story!", it's the Marvel equivalent.) Yes, these stories were so bad, they had to be disowned by the same company that produced them. At first, I was attracted to the quirkiness of the stories, which were written almost at a slapstick quality. Unfortunately, making the villains comic foils--for aliens that mastered intergalactic travel, we're supposed to believe that they're kind of stupid--drains out any sense of menace from them. Also, by issue #2, it's clear that Moench has no focus and the tone is all over the place, the stories are a mess, and even the portrayal of The Hulk seems confusing--sometimes he's like the "Hulk smash!" that we all know, while occasionally sounding more like The Thing from the Fantastic Four. As for the claim that this series pushes the envelope beyond what was then allowed under the comics code... I have NO idea what they're talking about. The code was pretty liberalized by that point, anyway. There's nothing here that's going to overwhelm you.
The second part of the series, "The Hulk!", is even worse. This was clearly written more in the vein of the Hulk TV series of the time, which means it's more of a schmaltzy melodrama than a Hulk story, with no supervillains to speak of (at most, just some robots and augmented strongmen), and heavy on abused children, sainted old ladies with cancer, etc. It has virtually no connection to the Marvel comicbook series at the time, other than that the Hulk can still talk--and, thank Heavens, he's still named "Bruce" rather than "David."
A word should be said about the art: Yes, there's some really nice art occasionally, esp. in the first few issues. But a lot of it is also sketchy and rough. Most of the best artwork are the covers, and they don't reproduce well in black and white.
As a kid, I couldn't afford these magazines in their original form and am still glad they made them available again for history's sake. But it's a shameful, hideous past, to be viewed only by those completists with a LOT of spare time on their hands.
Hulk Apocrypha July 9, 2008 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
This collection of stories from the Marvel magazine-size blaxk & white format title The Rampaging Hulk is a real find. The Hulk is more ornery than the now happily defunct Comics Code Authority would allow, and the art is fascinating, reminiscent of original pencil art but less sketchy. The effect is quite different from mere black and white reprints of color comics, the usual fare in the Marvel Essentials series. The stories are great fun, especially the prequel to Avengers # 1, in which Iron Man, Ant-Man, the Wasp, and Thor team up against the Hulk, finally enlisting his aid against alien invaders. Why didn't the others recall this when they (re)gathered in Avengers # 1 and its various retellings over the years? Simply because the last story in Rampaging Hulk retcons the adventures contained in this collection to the limbo of a set of CGI movies fabricated by one of the aliens for their equivalent of cable TV. So they never happened in official continuity. Well, to hell with that! This story, at least, ought to have been included on the "40 Years of Avengers" CD! But since it wasn't, it is certainly one's duty as an Avengers fan to add a copy of Essential Rampaging Hulk to one's library. Or, I suspect, Hulk will smash.
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