Jennifer Connelly Movie:

Hulk Widescreen



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Jennifer Connelly Movie:
Hulk Widescreen



Movie
Hulk (Widescreen)
Hulk (Widescreen)
List Price: $12.98Label: Universal Studios

Salesrank: 122794

Released: September 16, 2008
Our Price: $5.72
Used Price: $1.98
MPAA Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Media: DVD

Features:

  • AC-3
  • Color
  • Dolby
  • Dubbed
  • DVD
  • Subtitled
  • Widescreen
  • NTSC
  • Starring:

  • Eric Bana
  • Jennifer Connelly
  • Jesse Corti
  • Reggie Davis
  • Sam Elliott
  • Editorial Review:
    Get ready for larger-than-life action as the Marvel Superhero bursts from comic book pages to the big screen in The Hulk!

    Eric Bana stars as David Banner, whose involvement in a freak lab accident exposes him to gamma radiation. As a result, whenever the mild-mannered man becomes angry, he transforms in to a huge, rampaging creature that destroys everything in this path. Banner’s ex-girlfriend Betty Ross (Academy Award winner Jennifer Connelly) believes that his father (Nick Nolte) may hold the answer o the desperate situation, but can she make the connection in time to save a terrified world?

    Directed by Academy Award winner Ang Lee, The Hulk is bursting with heart-pounding adventure and explosive special effects!

    Description of Hulk (Widescreen):
    When the Hulk gets angry, his movie gets good, so you wish he'd get angry more often. Accepting this challenge after the triumphant Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, director Ang Lee has created an ambitious film, based on the Marvel comic created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, that succeeds as a cautionary tale about mad science and traumatized children coping with legacies of pain. That's the Hulk's problem: After accidental exposure to gamma radiation, scientist Bruce Banner (Eric Bana) turns into the huge, green, and indestructible Hulk when provoked, and repressed childhood memories fuel his fury. Hobbled by the obligatory "origin story" (to acquaint neophytes with the character's Jekyll-and-Hyde-ish fate), there's room for little else in a sluggish film that struggles to reconcile Lee's stylistic flair (evident in his visual interpretation of comic-book technique) with the razzle-dazzle of a megabudget franchise. What's good is good (Jennifer Connelly essentially echoes her role from A Beautiful Mind, and Nick Nolte is righteously tormented as Banner's father), but the movie's schizoid intentions remain largely unclear. --Jeff Shannon










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