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Ebook , by Greg Pak

Ebook , by Greg Pak

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, by Greg Pak

, by Greg Pak


, by Greg Pak


Ebook , by Greg Pak

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, by Greg Pak

Product details

File Size: 521325 KB

Print Length: 416 pages

Publisher: Marvel (April 2, 2008)

Publication Date: September 29, 2011

Sold by: Marvel Entertainment US

Language: English

ASIN: B00AAJR0GI

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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#4,542 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)

I never have been a big fan of the Hulk. I read "The End" in another collection, and it was decent (it is contained in this collection, but the Maestro story arc in the separate collection is the better story), and I read "Hulk: Gray," more on the strength of the Daredevil and Spider-Man titles in Marvel's "colors" to retell iconic origins - and both of the other titles were more enjoyable. I had come to think of Hulk as little more than a retelling of Jekyll and Hyde, working okay in Avengers titles because it would be interesting to see how his rage and strength would be played against the strengths of the other characters, but Hulk wasn't compelling enough to want to read 24 pages on his own - much less 420. But the reviews for this were overwhelmingly positive, and the price was great.The reviews were right. This is the Hulk at his best.Not that it's the place to start. It's good to have some idea of who the Hulk is, how he is portrayed in other titles, because you need to understand how the rest of the Marvel Universe views Hulk to understand how he ends up on "Planet Hulk" (Sakaar) in the first place.But once he's there, he harnesses his strength, his disdain for everyone and everything, and he transforms the world. Gone are the tedious psychological dramas with Banner struggling with his Hulk identity; in the Planet Hulk issues, Banner appears once, and briefly. This is the Hulk's moment to shine, and he confuses the religious citizens who can't decide if he's the awaited Savior, the prophesied Worldbreaker, or both. It's the story of a slave uprising that becomes a revolution, of love found unexpectedly, of not being able to escape your past.The quality of the collection suffers when it strays from Planet Hulk. An issue of Amazing Stories is included because it has a short story with Amadeus Chi, who appears briefly in the Planet Hulk storyline. Giant-Sized Hulk is a little better, containing "Banner War," a short story which takes place in a dream during the Planet Hulk story; a random encounter with the Champions who misjudge Hulk/Banner's intentions; and finally "The End," which isn't a bad end to this volume. Finally, the Planet Hulk Guidebook is reprinted her, giving you all the information you could possibly want about Sakaar and it gladiators.This was a very enjoyable read, and despite the length, the story is so engaging that once you get into it, you'll read 2-3 issues in a sitting and finish it in no time, and wish that there could have been more. I'll be more open-minded about the Hulk in the future, and will be looking for more along these lines.

Probably the best thing about this hulk story is how self contained it it. You could hand this to someone who's never read hulk before, and as long as know who he is, the story will work. The story itself is also really good, if abit simple at face value. The hulk wakes up on a distant planet, and is drawn into a war against the evil king. That's perhaps overly simplistic, but it gets the general idea across. I really liked each of the supporting cast, and how each of them react to the hulk over the course of the book.This collection also has a good deal of other material after the actual planet hulk storey is over. There's an issue of an anthology series that gives the origin of Amadeus Cho, but dispute his being a supporting character for the hulk he has little to do with the planet hulk story, and the rest of that issue is random mini stories.

The Planet Hulk series itself was a smart, well-drawn, sharply-plotted story. The add-on comics that padded an extra 200 pages at the end of this collection were unnecessary. Some were even kind of dumb. I'm giving the book 4 stars based on the main Planet Hulk stories. My rating ignores the non-Hulk comics that come after the end of the "Planet Hulk" comics.

Planet Hulk is a fantastic story arc. The artwork is great and really takes you to that savage planet and its people. The Hulk in this story is the famous or infamous Green Scar or Worldbreaker hulk who truly becomes the hero as the story unfolds. He is not the savage child-like Hulk that comes to mind when you think of the character. This is a Hulk who can think, fight, reason, love, and sacrifice.If you love a tale of a reluctant hero fighting his way to the top, this story will do it for you. To complete the saga I would get World War Hulk as well, but Planet Hulk is worth it alone.

The series does a great job exploring the hulks character through his simplified views giving a much greater meaning to his title of worldbreaker. There are several filler comics that some have ancillary relation to the hulks storyline but do not really add anything. It feels like a chapter is missing between hulk leaving the red kings planet and the final days of Bannon on earth.

Poor Hulk, poor Banner. Forever misunderstood and too powerful for everyone else's good and safety. I picked this up actually thinking it was the future imperfect story line but quickly learned it was not. That being said I was quite presently surprised. I always want a happy ending for the Hulk, but it's just not possible. Read it if you saw the newest Thor and want to know where Hulk as gladiator came from our if you're a Hulk fan.

I'm not the biggest Hulk fan in the world, but this was an excellent story. Marvel's done the "send a strongman to another planet" thing before (with The Thing, in his own comic) but this is much better. The art is great, and the story, though derivative of many things (A Princess of Mars, Gladiator), has enough interesting twists to keep it interesting. Some of the pages seem choppy (was anything cut out from the original comics?) but that may be due to a limitation on pages and issues that the storyline could cover. And the world was created with a depth that you rarely see in comics--Sakaar has a detailed geography, cultures, mythos, and inhabitants. Everything works together wonderfully.My only real complaint is that each fight or battle usually lasts all of one panel. It used to be that Hulk slugfests with, say, Rhino or the Abomination, would go on for pages as each behemoth pummeled the other in an epic brawl. Now it's one big action shot and on to the next adventure. I don't want a comic to be nothing but violence, but it's hard to think that any fight has any real importance if it ends in one page.Still, overall, an awesome comics adventure.

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