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24Nov/073

War is Over, If You Want It

Ladies and gentlemen, World War Hulk.

The final issue off the stands and in my hot little hands, I actually felt I needed time to digest the conclusion and take in everything that went down. 'Cause, boy did it ever. It's like they took all the RARGH FIGHT! that was supposed to be in Thor and shot it directly into the eyeball of World War Hulk.

And, despite appearances, the Sentry just didn't show up to mop things up.  He was there to crank things to 11, though really you've seen NYC get pulverized once this year, you've seen it all.  Once the Sentry had done his bit for King and country and had his agoraphobic butt handed to him (tangent for a moment:  does it bother anyone else as it does me that they everyone constantly refers to the Sentry's agoraphobia in those exact words.  'But, my agoraphobia-" and "he's agoraphobic" to name a couple of rather generic examples, it just seems that everyone just learned that word and want to use it as much as possible.  Jenkins didn't tell, he showed us why Bob distrusts the outside, but yet everyone including the Sentry himself constantly refer to his DSMIV status.  Anyway...), the book still isn't done with us.  A villain emerges!  Another battle happens where the Hulk takes out his frustrations on the actual planet!  We're cranking it to 12 here people!  It's like we finally have our title as it seems as if we're going to lose a good chunk of the eastern seaboard when Tony Stark nukes the Hulk from orbit.

Well, it's the only way to be sure.

And it's over and everyone goes back to their homes and we join their books, already in progress.  It's a big ending, don't get me wrong and probably the best thing I've read from Greg Pak yet but... it feels empty.  Less like Tony Stark saved the world (again), and more like the Hulk just stuck out his chin t take one for the team.  I mean, after all that destruction and chaos and large explosions... that's it?  Something that feels like they could have done it four issues ago?  I'm not saying they could (Tony was very busy at the time), but ...  ehn.

It seems to me (and a very good friend of mine) that World War Hulk ended because the Hulk wanted it to.  He was tired of being used, he was tired of being angry, he was just tired.  So he let Tony get in his orbital shot and let go.

Personally, I hope that the red Hulk isn't Banner.  That they let him rest in his little SHIELD torpedo tube and that he gets a break to rest, recover and return a hero, a misunderstood monster with a frightening past that could be anyone one just one bad day.  In my perfect world sans Bruce Jones, his little pod doo-dad would rest next to Betty Banner's and together, they could sleep and find peace where they could not find it in life.

Comments (3) Trackbacks (0)
  1. It’s Greg Pak, not Daniel Way, isn’t it? I think you’re onto something, suggesting the Hulk let them win. He did say something about stopping him before he broke the world, didn’t he? It’s like he was incredibly angry, but also, as you said, tired of being angry. Tired of betrayal, and never being able to have some peace, so he just wanted it all to stop for awhile.

    I have no idea who Red Hulk is. Loeb is writing that series isn’t he? And Loeb, if “Hush” and his Wolverine story were any indication, likes to introduce characters and make them really important to the hero, past and present. So who could he introduce to be Red Hulk. Or maybe it’s that guy from his Wolverine arc, Romulus? You never know.

  2. It was! I just hit publish and walked back to work and nearly kicked myself in the street for that. Yikes and fixed.

    And to be honest, I think we were all kind of tired by that point. I mean, all the other books had gone on and forgotten WWH, why were we still here? The ending was a forgone conclusion no matter how or who he fought with little consequence for the rest of the Marvel Universe. And now? We move on.

    I don’t trust Leob further than I can throw him and pretty much expect his usual. On the other hand, Hulk: Gray was FANTASTIC.

  3. Red Hulk: Probably Igor Drenkov from the first Hulk story (just a guess). Get it…RED Hulk? Sure…not too subtle…but “subtle” is never something Jeph Loeb’s been accused of. ;)


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