KillerMovies - Movies That Matter!

REGISTER HERE TO JOIN IN! - It's easy and it's free!
Home » Comic Book Forums » Comic Book Movies » Comic Books » Oh... get over it, people! There is no "Pak" Hulk....

Oh... get over it, people! There is no "Pak" Hulk....
Started by: FearOfBlood

Forum Jump:
Post New Thread    Post A Reply
Pages (2): « 1 [2]   Last Thread   Next Thread
Author
Thread
BUSTER1
Senior Member

Gender: Male
Location: United Kingdom

Re: Oh... get over it, people! There is no "Pak" Hulk....

quote: (post)
Originally posted by FearOfBlood
http://www.comicboards.com/comicbat...rd=080203004352

Interesting discussion in my opinion.


Comic books don't live by this Battle Board's "rules" about things (thank god). And long before Pak was assigned to scribe the Hulk, long before he wrote 'Planet Hulk', long before he dreamed up 'World War Hulk', Marvel has collectively portrayed THE Hulk as the strongest of all its characters & being capable of feats of power that, at times, dwarfed what other Marvel icons could do.

Hell, long before Pak was the writer of the Hulk, I'VE been on this board--and others--saying the very same damned things about the character (and given many in continuity references, from well before ol' Gregory's reign began) that Pak has said and shown during his stint on the title. Check the archives or ask Daveym if you doubt me.

The point is, absolutely everything that Pak has portrayed during his run is *straight* from Marvel's widespread continuity on the character. He didn't fabricate anything. He didn't use anything that hadn't already been established or demonstrated before. He simply crafted a tale that shone a light on it in a way & for a duration that was never explored before. But check the Jade Giant's history and you'll see that Pak was most certainly just writing "the" Hulk, not his Hulk.

Let's take a collective gander at some of the Hulk's pre-Pak exploits for direct evidence of this, shall we?

For instance, everybody's favorite red herring, the Onslaught saga. What do you naysayers make of that? Was that also just Pak-bias? When Bruce asked Jean Grey for help, did she somehow pre-cognitively summon "Pak's" Hulk to battle Onslaught, or perhaps, shall we just start a new conspiracy theory that Marvel Comics in general has a hidden agenda to portray the Hulk in a way that's inconsistent with how this board believes he should be?

'Cause that was an X-Men book, and an X-Men event. Directly speaking, it really wasn't about the Hulk at all. And yet, with virtually every member of the Marvel Universe present and absolutely failing to make a dent in Onslaught (including Thor), it was the Hulk that was shown accessing enough power to do the deed -- where no one else, or even everyone else combined, could.

(And, um, Thor was right there. Why didn't the writers/editors choose him?)

Now this is Onslaught, folks, a being of virtually unlimited power; the combined might of Magneto, Professor X and reality-warper Franklin Richards. He was said to be on par with a Celestial, and able to basically will himself to any level of efficacy he chose. With a thought, he was able to create a second sun on the outskirts of Earth. I mean, this guy was REALLY powerful.

And who did Marvel turn to when the chips were down to overpower this entity? Uh, yeah, an unleashed Hulk. An incredibly angry Hulk. Though a Hulk, purportedly, who was not as angry or strong as the Green Goliath from 'World War Hulk'. Does that say nothing to you people?

And yeah, I know, Jean Grey helped move Banner out of the way so the Hulk could access his anger. But what we have with 'World War Hulk' is something far scarier! We have a Bruce Banner who was angry with the Hulk, helping to fuel his rage & power to (obviously) previously unattained levels -- per every piece of descriptive literature about it.

And so, already there is precedence for the Hulk accessing levels of rage & strength that propel his power beyond the scope of virtually every mainstream Marvel character, yes, including Thor. Because the Hulk was very clearly more powerful than every other hero combined that day. And the whole Hulk-bias schtick this board likes to brandy about is not anywhere close to applicable for his showing against Onslaught, as it wasn't a Hulk writer nor a Hulk event. Or more to the point, Greg Pak didn't so much as touch it with a ten-foot-pole.

(sorry to remove that loophole for you guys who want to hold onto it)

The Hulk's power, since issue #1, folks, has been described as "limitless". Throughout the years, in so many ways, this has been said in continuity again & again. And while the Hulk didn't operate at that nigh-infinite state all the time, due to his power being tied to his mind/emotions, there have certainly been occasions which demonstrate his upward potential -- and how that potential escalates him beyond the realms of almost anybody else.

In the letters pages of 'The Incredible Hulk' #113, it is stated that only beings like Galactus, Odin, the Watcher and Eternity can equate with the Hulk's level of "everlasting" strength. In a later letters page it is specifically said that the Hulk is stronger than the Absorbing Man, Juggernaut, the Demolisher, the Destroyer (yes, the Asgardian one), Silver Surfer, Ego-Prime and even the Watcher.

He's overpowered near-Galactus-level Cosmic entities, the Stranger, Galaxy Master and Onslaught. He's grabbed and bent light with his bare hands. He overcame a force on his own that the combined might of Doctor Strange, Namor and the Silver Surfer could not defeat. He's stopped the unstoppable Juggernaut & the enchantment of Cyttorak. The Beyonder reeled from the Hulk in disgust, peering inside the child-monster and seeing that he had an "infinite" well of power that reminded the omnipotent entity of himself!

My point is, the Hulk has been shown to possess a capacity for power that is totally consistent with the levels of might Pak portrayed the Jade Giant as possessing during 'World War Hulk'. Only, whereas on these occasions before the elevation of such power was very temporary & brought about by the heat of the moment, the level of power displayed in 'World War Hulk' was uninterrupted -- due to his furiously righteous frame of mind.

And so, no one is saying that this is normative for the Hulk. In fact, I think Greg Pak went out of his way to say that it wasn't normative for the Jade Giant. He'd claim, while the Hulk has always been the strongest one there is, these heroes have never encountered him when he's this angry or this strong before. And Pak told a beautiful prelude to 'World War Hulk', called 'Planet Hulk', which clearly illustrates why the Hulk was operating at such high levels of rage & power.

But still, if ya take a glance at the Hulk's established (pre-Pak) history, you'll find the contiguous evidence that supports Pak's portrayal of the Hulk being so god-almighty powerful during 'World War Hulk'. And it's not because Pak is some Hulk fanboy who just wanted to paint his favorite character in an unrealistic way & have all the heroes job to him to get his jollies off, as this board likes to imply. It's that, under the right circumstances, as you'll see if you take more than a cursory glance through Marvel history, the Hulk can be just that damned powerful!

And Pak rather artistically, eloquently and empathetically portrayed (with 'Planet Hulk') just why the Hulk was angry and thus strong enough to plow through the Marvel Universe as he did. And there is plenty of precedence for his power escalating to such degrees at times when his emotional stress was "less" than what we see in 'World War Hulk' -- not even mentioning the last few pages of issue #5, where his anger & power went absolutely off-the-charts.

(he was going to 'inadvertently' break the world, he'd become so strong)

And so, please, I know the prevailing view of the character here is on the low side. But can we use our brains for a second & look at the evidence? No one is saying it's normative. No one is saying these are his usually functional levels. But there is unquestionably evidence from the Hulk's past that his power CAN and HAS escalated to levels that place him above virtually every other non-Abstract character in the Marvel Universe. And Pak had nothing to do with those other stories.

And so, let's dispense with this Pak-Hulk crapola. There is no Pak-Hulk. There's simply a writer named Greg Pak who took THE Hulk and put him through a tragic series of events that inspired the character to a level of rage that naturally, substantiated by history, propelled his might to a level that made him more powerful than most everyone and everything in the Marvel Universe. Much like he was shown to be against Onslaught.


This isn't some specialized, fanboyistic Pak-Hulk.

It's just THE Hulk, under special circumstances.


Good post- its sickening, the number of people who bitched about how the Hulk ploughed through all those heroes in WWH. He has been doing this for years. Alot of this critisism of WWH was really down to people who don't like he character, thinking "I don't like the Hulk so i don't want to see him repeatedly winning"
These people won't be happy until they see Hulk beaten up in a 1 on 1 fight with someone low powered, like Daredevil

Old Post Feb 3rd, 2008 12:26 PM
BUSTER1 is currently offline Click here to Send BUSTER1 a Private Message Find more posts by BUSTER1 Edit/Delete Message Reply w/Quote Quick Quote
janus77
Banana Genius

Gender: Male
Location: United Kingdom

it's true that people here do tend to hideously underrate and marginalise the Hulk but, at the same time it should be acknowledged that WWH did not present satisfactory on-panel fights with the big hitters.

Sentry was an ok brawl, decisively putting Hulk's powers far beyond anything Sentry could ever hope to summon, the BlackBolt showdown was pretty short and could have been fleshed out more. it's obvious that BlackBolt shouldn't ever pose a serious threat to a character like Hulk but still, that whole "Rhode Island" sized chunk of the moon getting blown off by BB should have been emphasised more... The fight with Juggernaut, which was not important to the story nor especially indicative of anything, was actually more entertaining than the BB fight no expression.

The Zom/Strange fight was a mess, though it was an impressive demonstration of Hulk's Godly-healing and durability, his damage-soak, they could have elaborated on the astral plain confrontation with strange, had Zom/Strange attack from there also, because it did look (and was, imo) very much of a stretch that Strange would choose to go toe-to-toe with the one mortal strong enough to stand up to Onslaught no.

apart from that, I don't think WWH showed a particularly impressive Hulk, until the his last few panels in #5. Planet Hulk was far more impressive, generally, the way he ascended to the throne, the way he would leap from the moon back to the planet, the way he held the planet together... those are the kind of upper-tier feats that you associate with the Incredible Hulk... ploughing through X-Men and decimating Ironman are just ... unremarkable.


__________________

Are you a Glinting Bastard?

Old Post Feb 3rd, 2008 12:37 PM
janus77 is currently offline Click here to Send janus77 a Private Message Find more posts by janus77 Edit/Delete Message Reply w/Quote Quick Quote
SpiderGauntlet
Not Gay!

Gender: Male
Location: You sir are a nver!

Lolz cow strike again Happy Dance


__________________

http://moglinville.myminicity.com/
I know you want to click it.

Old Post Feb 3rd, 2008 12:41 PM
SpiderGauntlet is currently offline Click here to Send SpiderGauntlet a Private Message Find more posts by SpiderGauntlet Edit/Delete Message Reply w/Quote Quick Quote
Tron
Shinigami Rep.

Gender: Male
Location: United States

Moderator

quote: (post)
Originally posted by FearOfBlood
http://www.comicboards.com/comicbat...rd=080203004352

Interesting discussion in my opinion.


Comic books don't live by this Battle Board's "rules" about things (thank god). And long before Pak was assigned to scribe the Hulk, long before he wrote 'Planet Hulk', long before he dreamed up 'World War Hulk', Marvel has collectively portrayed THE Hulk as the strongest of all its characters & being capable of feats of power that, at times, dwarfed what other Marvel icons could do.

Hell, long before Pak was the writer of the Hulk, I'VE been on this board--and others--saying the very same damned things about the character (and given many in continuity references, from well before ol' Gregory's reign began) that Pak has said and shown during his stint on the title. Check the archives or ask Daveym if you doubt me.

The point is, absolutely everything that Pak has portrayed during his run is *straight* from Marvel's widespread continuity on the character. He didn't fabricate anything. He didn't use anything that hadn't already been established or demonstrated before. He simply crafted a tale that shone a light on it in a way & for a duration that was never explored before. But check the Jade Giant's history and you'll see that Pak was most certainly just writing "the" Hulk, not his Hulk.

Let's take a collective gander at some of the Hulk's pre-Pak exploits for direct evidence of this, shall we?

For instance, everybody's favorite red herring, the Onslaught saga. What do you naysayers make of that? Was that also just Pak-bias? When Bruce asked Jean Grey for help, did she somehow pre-cognitively summon "Pak's" Hulk to battle Onslaught, or perhaps, shall we just start a new conspiracy theory that Marvel Comics in general has a hidden agenda to portray the Hulk in a way that's inconsistent with how this board believes he should be?

'Cause that was an X-Men book, and an X-Men event. Directly speaking, it really wasn't about the Hulk at all. And yet, with virtually every member of the Marvel Universe present and absolutely failing to make a dent in Onslaught (including Thor), it was the Hulk that was shown accessing enough power to do the deed -- where no one else, or even everyone else combined, could.

(And, um, Thor was right there. Why didn't the writers/editors choose him?)

Now this is Onslaught, folks, a being of virtually unlimited power; the combined might of Magneto, Professor X and reality-warper Franklin Richards. He was said to be on par with a Celestial, and able to basically will himself to any level of efficacy he chose. With a thought, he was able to create a second sun on the outskirts of Earth. I mean, this guy was REALLY powerful.

And who did Marvel turn to when the chips were down to overpower this entity? Uh, yeah, an unleashed Hulk. An incredibly angry Hulk. Though a Hulk, purportedly, who was not as angry or strong as the Green Goliath from 'World War Hulk'. Does that say nothing to you people?

And yeah, I know, Jean Grey helped move Banner out of the way so the Hulk could access his anger. But what we have with 'World War Hulk' is something far scarier! We have a Bruce Banner who was angry with the Hulk, helping to fuel his rage & power to (obviously) previously unattained levels -- per every piece of descriptive literature about it.

And so, already there is precedence for the Hulk accessing levels of rage & strength that propel his power beyond the scope of virtually every mainstream Marvel character, yes, including Thor. Because the Hulk was very clearly more powerful than every other hero combined that day. And the whole Hulk-bias schtick this board likes to brandy about is not anywhere close to applicable for his showing against Onslaught, as it wasn't a Hulk writer nor a Hulk event. Or more to the point, Greg Pak didn't so much as touch it with a ten-foot-pole.

(sorry to remove that loophole for you guys who want to hold onto it)

The Hulk's power, since issue #1, folks, has been described as "limitless". Throughout the years, in so many ways, this has been said in continuity again & again. And while the Hulk didn't operate at that nigh-infinite state all the time, due to his power being tied to his mind/emotions, there have certainly been occasions which demonstrate his upward potential -- and how that potential escalates him beyond the realms of almost anybody else.

In the letters pages of 'The Incredible Hulk' #113, it is stated that only beings like Galactus, Odin, the Watcher and Eternity can equate with the Hulk's level of "everlasting" strength. In a later letters page it is specifically said that the Hulk is stronger than the Absorbing Man, Juggernaut, the Demolisher, the Destroyer (yes, the Asgardian one), Silver Surfer, Ego-Prime and even the Watcher.

He's overpowered near-Galactus-level Cosmic entities, the Stranger, Galaxy Master and Onslaught. He's grabbed and bent light with his bare hands. He overcame a force on his own that the combined might of Doctor Strange, Namor and the Silver Surfer could not defeat. He's stopped the unstoppable Juggernaut & the enchantment of Cyttorak. The Beyonder reeled from the Hulk in disgust, peering inside the child-monster and seeing that he had an "infinite" well of power that reminded the omnipotent entity of himself!

My point is, the Hulk has been shown to possess a capacity for power that is totally consistent with the levels of might Pak portrayed the Jade Giant as possessing during 'World War Hulk'. Only, whereas on these occasions before the elevation of such power was very temporary & brought about by the heat of the moment, the level of power displayed in 'World War Hulk' was uninterrupted -- due to his furiously righteous frame of mind.

And so, no one is saying that this is normative for the Hulk. In fact, I think Greg Pak went out of his way to say that it wasn't normative for the Jade Giant. He'd claim, while the Hulk has always been the strongest one there is, these heroes have never encountered him when he's this angry or this strong before. And Pak told a beautiful prelude to 'World War Hulk', called 'Planet Hulk', which clearly illustrates why the Hulk was operating at such high levels of rage & power.

But still, if ya take a glance at the Hulk's established (pre-Pak) history, you'll find the contiguous evidence that supports Pak's portrayal of the Hulk being so god-almighty powerful during 'World War Hulk'. And it's not because Pak is some Hulk fanboy who just wanted to paint his favorite character in an unrealistic way & have all the heroes job to him to get his jollies off, as this board likes to imply. It's that, under the right circumstances, as you'll see if you take more than a cursory glance through Marvel history, the Hulk can be just that damned powerful!

And Pak rather artistically, eloquently and empathetically portrayed (with 'Planet Hulk') just why the Hulk was angry and thus strong enough to plow through the Marvel Universe as he did. And there is plenty of precedence for his power escalating to such degrees at times when his emotional stress was "less" than what we see in 'World War Hulk' -- not even mentioning the last few pages of issue #5, where his anger & power went absolutely off-the-charts.

(he was going to 'inadvertently' break the world, he'd become so strong)

And so, please, I know the prevailing view of the character here is on the low side. But can we use our brains for a second & look at the evidence? No one is saying it's normative. No one is saying these are his usually functional levels. But there is unquestionably evidence from the Hulk's past that his power CAN and HAS escalated to levels that place him above virtually every other non-Abstract character in the Marvel Universe. And Pak had nothing to do with those other stories.

And so, let's dispense with this Pak-Hulk crapola. There is no Pak-Hulk. There's simply a writer named Greg Pak who took THE Hulk and put him through a tragic series of events that inspired the character to a level of rage that naturally, substantiated by history, propelled his might to a level that made him more powerful than most everyone and everything in the Marvel Universe. Much like he was shown to be against Onslaught.


This isn't some specialized, fanboyistic Pak-Hulk.

It's just THE Hulk, under special circumstances.


How about you get over the fact that this isn't for the VS Forum?

Moved (be glad it wasn't closed)...

(And while amusing, can we drop the cat posts people, please?)


__________________


Visit my city, or die at the hands of my ninjas

Old Post Feb 3rd, 2008 01:09 PM
Tron is currently offline Click here to Send Tron a Private Message Find more posts by Tron Edit/Delete Message Reply w/Quote Quick Quote
FearOfBlood
Senior Member

Gender: Unspecified
Location: Morgland

Re: Re: Oh... get over it, people! There is no "Pak" Hulk....

quote: (post)
Originally posted by BUSTER1
Good post- its sickening, the number of people who bitched about how the Hulk ploughed through all those heroes in WWH. He has been doing this for years. Alot of this critisism of WWH was really down to people who don't like he character, thinking "I don't like the Hulk so i don't want to see him repeatedly winning"
These people won't be happy until they see Hulk beaten up in a 1 on 1 fight with someone low powered, like Daredevil


Quoted for truth. WWH best hulk story evah


__________________
In short, I’d say it’s pretty safe to say that no one could have stopped the Hulk at the end of "World War Hulk" if the Hulk hadn't wanted to be stopped. Greg Pak. WWH > Sentry all out > Galactus

Old Post Feb 3rd, 2008 01:48 PM
FearOfBlood is currently offline Click here to Send FearOfBlood a Private Message Find more posts by FearOfBlood Edit/Delete Message Reply w/Quote Quick Quote
Amp
Restricted

Gender: Male
Location:

Account Restricted

quote: (post)
Originally posted by FearOfBlood
http://www.comicboards.com/comicbat...rd=080203004352

Interesting discussion in my opinion.


Comic books don't live by this Battle Board's "rules" about things (thank god). And long before Pak was assigned to scribe the Hulk, long before he wrote 'Planet Hulk', long before he dreamed up 'World War Hulk', Marvel has collectively portrayed THE Hulk as the strongest of all its characters & being capable of feats of power that, at times, dwarfed what other Marvel icons could do.

Hell, long before Pak was the writer of the Hulk, I'VE been on this board--and others--saying the very same damned things about the character (and given many in continuity references, from well before ol' Gregory's reign began) that Pak has said and shown during his stint on the title. Check the archives or ask Daveym if you doubt me.

The point is, absolutely everything that Pak has portrayed during his run is *straight* from Marvel's widespread continuity on the character. He didn't fabricate anything. He didn't use anything that hadn't already been established or demonstrated before. He simply crafted a tale that shone a light on it in a way & for a duration that was never explored before. But check the Jade Giant's history and you'll see that Pak was most certainly just writing "the" Hulk, not his Hulk.

Let's take a collective gander at some of the Hulk's pre-Pak exploits for direct evidence of this, shall we?

For instance, everybody's favorite red herring, the Onslaught saga. What do you naysayers make of that? Was that also just Pak-bias? When Bruce asked Jean Grey for help, did she somehow pre-cognitively summon "Pak's" Hulk to battle Onslaught, or perhaps, shall we just start a new conspiracy theory that Marvel Comics in general has a hidden agenda to portray the Hulk in a way that's inconsistent with how this board believes he should be?

'Cause that was an X-Men book, and an X-Men event. Directly speaking, it really wasn't about the Hulk at all. And yet, with virtually every member of the Marvel Universe present and absolutely failing to make a dent in Onslaught (including Thor), it was the Hulk that was shown accessing enough power to do the deed -- where no one else, or even everyone else combined, could.

(And, um, Thor was right there. Why didn't the writers/editors choose him?)

Now this is Onslaught, folks, a being of virtually unlimited power; the combined might of Magneto, Professor X and reality-warper Franklin Richards. He was said to be on par with a Celestial, and able to basically will himself to any level of efficacy he chose. With a thought, he was able to create a second sun on the outskirts of Earth. I mean, this guy was REALLY powerful.

And who did Marvel turn to when the chips were down to overpower this entity? Uh, yeah, an unleashed Hulk. An incredibly angry Hulk. Though a Hulk, purportedly, who was not as angry or strong as the Green Goliath from 'World War Hulk'. Does that say nothing to you people?

And yeah, I know, Jean Grey helped move Banner out of the way so the Hulk could access his anger. But what we have with 'World War Hulk' is something far scarier! We have a Bruce Banner who was angry with the Hulk, helping to fuel his rage & power to (obviously) previously unattained levels -- per every piece of descriptive literature about it.

And so, already there is precedence for the Hulk accessing levels of rage & strength that propel his power beyond the scope of virtually every mainstream Marvel character, yes, including Thor. Because the Hulk was very clearly more powerful than every other hero combined that day. And the whole Hulk-bias schtick this board likes to brandy about is not anywhere close to applicable for his showing against Onslaught, as it wasn't a Hulk writer nor a Hulk event. Or more to the point, Greg Pak didn't so much as touch it with a ten-foot-pole.

(sorry to remove that loophole for you guys who want to hold onto it)

The Hulk's power, since issue #1, folks, has been described as "limitless". Throughout the years, in so many ways, this has been said in continuity again & again. And while the Hulk didn't operate at that nigh-infinite state all the time, due to his power being tied to his mind/emotions, there have certainly been occasions which demonstrate his upward potential -- and how that potential escalates him beyond the realms of almost anybody else.

In the letters pages of 'The Incredible Hulk' #113, it is stated that only beings like Galactus, Odin, the Watcher and Eternity can equate with the Hulk's level of "everlasting" strength. In a later letters page it is specifically said that the Hulk is stronger than the Absorbing Man, Juggernaut, the Demolisher, the Destroyer (yes, the Asgardian one), Silver Surfer, Ego-Prime and even the Watcher.

He's overpowered near-Galactus-level Cosmic entities, the Stranger, Galaxy Master and Onslaught. He's grabbed and bent light with his bare hands. He overcame a force on his own that the combined might of Doctor Strange, Namor and the Silver Surfer could not defeat. He's stopped the unstoppable Juggernaut & the enchantment of Cyttorak. The Beyonder reeled from the Hulk in disgust, peering inside the child-monster and seeing that he had an "infinite" well of power that reminded the omnipotent entity of himself!

My point is, the Hulk has been shown to possess a capacity for power that is totally consistent with the levels of might Pak portrayed the Jade Giant as possessing during 'World War Hulk'. Only, whereas on these occasions before the elevation of such power was very temporary & brought about by the heat of the moment, the level of power displayed in 'World War Hulk' was uninterrupted -- due to his furiously righteous frame of mind.

And so, no one is saying that this is normative for the Hulk. In fact, I think Greg Pak went out of his way to say that it wasn't normative for the Jade Giant. He'd claim, while the Hulk has always been the strongest one there is, these heroes have never encountered him when he's this angry or this strong before. And Pak told a beautiful prelude to 'World War Hulk', called 'Planet Hulk', which clearly illustrates why the Hulk was operating at such high levels of rage & power.

But still, if ya take a glance at the Hulk's established (pre-Pak) history, you'll find the contiguous evidence that supports Pak's portrayal of the Hulk being so god-almighty powerful during 'World War Hulk'. And it's not because Pak is some Hulk fanboy who just wanted to paint his favorite character in an unrealistic way & have all the heroes job to him to get his jollies off, as this board likes to imply. It's that, under the right circumstances, as you'll see if you take more than a cursory glance through Marvel history, the Hulk can be just that damned powerful!

And Pak rather artistically, eloquently and empathetically portrayed (with 'Planet Hulk') just why the Hulk was angry and thus strong enough to plow through the Marvel Universe as he did. And there is plenty of precedence for his power escalating to such degrees at times when his emotional stress was "less" than what we see in 'World War Hulk' -- not even mentioning the last few pages of issue #5, where his anger & power went absolutely off-the-charts.

(he was going to 'inadvertently' break the world, he'd become so strong)

And so, please, I know the prevailing view of the character here is on the low side. But can we use our brains for a second & look at the evidence? No one is saying it's normative. No one is saying these are his usually functional levels. But there is unquestionably evidence from the Hulk's past that his power CAN and HAS escalated to levels that place him above virtually every other non-Abstract character in the Marvel Universe. And Pak had nothing to do with those other stories.

And so, let's dispense with this Pak-Hulk crapola. There is no Pak-Hulk. There's simply a writer named Greg Pak who took THE Hulk and put him through a tragic series of events that inspired the character to a level of rage that naturally, substantiated by history, propelled his might to a level that made him more powerful than most everyone and everything in the Marvel Universe. Much like he was shown to be against Onslaught.


This isn't some specialized, fanboyistic Pak-Hulk.

It's just THE Hulk, under special circumstances.



You just overate him and it makes you look like idiots.

You fanboys ruin the Hulk. WWH wouldn't have been so bad if it wasn't for you lot. So nice job right there. thumb up


__________________

Last edited by Amp on Feb 3rd, 2008 at 02:13 PM

Old Post Feb 3rd, 2008 02:11 PM
Amp is currently offline Click here to Send Amp a Private Message Find more posts by Amp Edit/Delete Message Reply w/Quote Quick Quote
Bad Ash231
Harbinger of Dur

Gender: Male
Location: RIGHT here

Re: Re: Re: Oh... get over it, people! There is no "Pak" Hulk....

(please log in to view the image)


__________________

Sig by Inhuman

Old Post Feb 3rd, 2008 02:16 PM
Bad Ash231 is currently offline Click here to Send Bad Ash231 a Private Message Find more posts by Bad Ash231 Edit/Delete Message Reply w/Quote Quick Quote
Symmetric Chaos
Fractal King

Gender: Male
Location: Ko-ro-ba

Re: Oh... get over it, people! There is no "Pak" Hulk....

quote: (post)
Originally posted by FearOfBlood
http://www.comicboards.com/comicbat...rd=080203004352

Interesting discussion in my opinion.


Comic books don't live by this Battle Board's "rules" about things (thank god). And long before Pak was assigned to scribe the Hulk, long before he wrote 'Planet Hulk', long before he dreamed up 'World War Hulk', Marvel has collectively portrayed THE Hulk as the strongest of all its characters & being capable of feats of power that, at times, dwarfed what other Marvel icons could do.

Hell, long before Pak was the writer of the Hulk, I'VE been on this board--and others--saying the very same damned things about the character (and given many in continuity references, from well before ol' Gregory's reign began) that Pak has said and shown during his stint on the title. Check the archives or ask Daveym if you doubt me.

The point is, absolutely everything that Pak has portrayed during his run is *straight* from Marvel's widespread continuity on the character. He didn't fabricate anything. He didn't use anything that hadn't already been established or demonstrated before. He simply crafted a tale that shone a light on it in a way & for a duration that was never explored before. But check the Jade Giant's history and you'll see that Pak was most certainly just writing "the" Hulk, not his Hulk.

Let's take a collective gander at some of the Hulk's pre-Pak exploits for direct evidence of this, shall we?

For instance, everybody's favorite red herring, the Onslaught saga. What do you naysayers make of that? Was that also just Pak-bias? When Bruce asked Jean Grey for help, did she somehow pre-cognitively summon "Pak's" Hulk to battle Onslaught, or perhaps, shall we just start a new conspiracy theory that Marvel Comics in general has a hidden agenda to portray the Hulk in a way that's inconsistent with how this board believes he should be?

'Cause that was an X-Men book, and an X-Men event. Directly speaking, it really wasn't about the Hulk at all. And yet, with virtually every member of the Marvel Universe present and absolutely failing to make a dent in Onslaught (including Thor), it was the Hulk that was shown accessing enough power to do the deed -- where no one else, or even everyone else combined, could.

(And, um, Thor was right there. Why didn't the writers/editors choose him?)

Now this is Onslaught, folks, a being of virtually unlimited power; the combined might of Magneto, Professor X and reality-warper Franklin Richards. He was said to be on par with a Celestial, and able to basically will himself to any level of efficacy he chose. With a thought, he was able to create a second sun on the outskirts of Earth. I mean, this guy was REALLY powerful.

And who did Marvel turn to when the chips were down to overpower this entity? Uh, yeah, an unleashed Hulk. An incredibly angry Hulk. Though a Hulk, purportedly, who was not as angry or strong as the Green Goliath from 'World War Hulk'. Does that say nothing to you people?

And yeah, I know, Jean Grey helped move Banner out of the way so the Hulk could access his anger. But what we have with 'World War Hulk' is something far scarier! We have a Bruce Banner who was angry with the Hulk, helping to fuel his rage & power to (obviously) previously unattained levels -- per every piece of descriptive literature about it.

And so, already there is precedence for the Hulk accessing levels of rage & strength that propel his power beyond the scope of virtually every mainstream Marvel character, yes, including Thor. Because the Hulk was very clearly more powerful than every other hero combined that day. And the whole Hulk-bias schtick this board likes to brandy about is not anywhere close to applicable for his showing against Onslaught, as it wasn't a Hulk writer nor a Hulk event. Or more to the point, Greg Pak didn't so much as touch it with a ten-foot-pole.

(sorry to remove that loophole for you guys who want to hold onto it)

The Hulk's power, since issue #1, folks, has been described as "limitless". Throughout the years, in so many ways, this has been said in continuity again & again. And while the Hulk didn't operate at that nigh-infinite state all the time, due to his power being tied to his mind/emotions, there have certainly been occasions which demonstrate his upward potential -- and how that potential escalates him beyond the realms of almost anybody else.

In the letters pages of 'The Incredible Hulk' #113, it is stated that only beings like Galactus, Odin, the Watcher and Eternity can equate with the Hulk's level of "everlasting" strength. In a later letters page it is specifically said that the Hulk is stronger than the Absorbing Man, Juggernaut, the Demolisher, the Destroyer (yes, the Asgardian one), Silver Surfer, Ego-Prime and even the Watcher.

He's overpowered near-Galactus-level Cosmic entities, the Stranger, Galaxy Master and Onslaught. He's grabbed and bent light with his bare hands. He overcame a force on his own that the combined might of Doctor Strange, Namor and the Silver Surfer could not defeat. He's stopped the unstoppable Juggernaut & the enchantment of Cyttorak. The Beyonder reeled from the Hulk in disgust, peering inside the child-monster and seeing that he had an "infinite" well of power that reminded the omnipotent entity of himself!

My point is, the Hulk has been shown to possess a capacity for power that is totally consistent with the levels of might Pak portrayed the Jade Giant as possessing during 'World War Hulk'. Only, whereas on these occasions before the elevation of such power was very temporary & brought about by the heat of the moment, the level of power displayed in 'World War Hulk' was uninterrupted -- due to his furiously righteous frame of mind.

And so, no one is saying that this is normative for the Hulk. In fact, I think Greg Pak went out of his way to say that it wasn't normative for the Jade Giant. He'd claim, while the Hulk has always been the strongest one there is, these heroes have never encountered him when he's this angry or this strong before. And Pak told a beautiful prelude to 'World War Hulk', called 'Planet Hulk', which clearly illustrates why the Hulk was operating at such high levels of rage & power.

But still, if ya take a glance at the Hulk's established (pre-Pak) history, you'll find the contiguous evidence that supports Pak's portrayal of the Hulk being so god-almighty powerful during 'World War Hulk'. And it's not because Pak is some Hulk fanboy who just wanted to paint his favorite character in an unrealistic way & have all the heroes job to him to get his jollies off, as this board likes to imply. It's that, under the right circumstances, as you'll see if you take more than a cursory glance through Marvel history, the Hulk can be just that damned powerful!

And Pak rather artistically, eloquently and empathetically portrayed (with 'Planet Hulk') just why the Hulk was angry and thus strong enough to plow through the Marvel Universe as he did. And there is plenty of precedence for his power escalating to such degrees at times when his emotional stress was "less" than what we see in 'World War Hulk' -- not even mentioning the last few pages of issue #5, where his anger & power went absolutely off-the-charts.

(he was going to 'inadvertently' break the world, he'd become so strong)

And so, please, I know the prevailing view of the character here is on the low side. But can we use our brains for a second & look at the evidence? No one is saying it's normative. No one is saying these are his usually functional levels. But there is unquestionably evidence from the Hulk's past that his power CAN and HAS escalated to levels that place him above virtually every other non-Abstract character in the Marvel Universe. And Pak had nothing to do with those other stories.

And so, let's dispense with this Pak-Hulk crapola. There is no Pak-Hulk. There's simply a writer named Greg Pak who took THE Hulk and put him through a tragic series of events that inspired the character to a level of rage that naturally, substantiated by history, propelled his might to a level that made him more powerful than most everyone and everything in the Marvel Universe. Much like he was shown to be against Onslaught.


This isn't some specialized, fanboyistic Pak-Hulk.

It's just THE Hulk, under special circumstances.


Everyone knows the history. Nobody cares about your take on it. Get over yourself.


__________________



Graffiti outside Latin class.
Sed quis custodiet ipsos custodes?
A juvenal prank.

Old Post Feb 3rd, 2008 02:18 PM
Symmetric Chaos is currently offline Click here to Send Symmetric Chaos a Private Message Find more posts by Symmetric Chaos Edit/Delete Message Reply w/Quote Quick Quote
Nihilist
Senior Member

Gender: Male
Location:

quote: (post)
Originally posted by Peek
You just overate him and it makes you look like idiots.

You fanboys ruin the Hulk. WWH wouldn't have been so bad if it wasn't for you lot. So nice job right there. thumb up
quote: (post)
Originally posted by Symmetric Chaos
Everyone knows the history. Nobody cares about your take on it. Get over yourself.

i guess you get the picture.


__________________

Big thanks to Scythe

Old Post Feb 3rd, 2008 02:33 PM
Nihilist is currently offline Click here to Send Nihilist a Private Message Find more posts by Nihilist Edit/Delete Message Reply w/Quote Quick Quote
vlaaad12345
Senior Member

Gender: Male
Location: United States

You use pak hulk Ill use casey superman,sounds fair to me.

Old Post Feb 3rd, 2008 02:48 PM
vlaaad12345 is currently offline Click here to Send vlaaad12345 a Private Message Find more posts by vlaaad12345 Edit/Delete Message Reply w/Quote Quick Quote
Digi
Forum Leader

Gender: Unspecified
Location:

Moderator


__________________

Old Post Feb 3rd, 2008 03:29 PM
Digi is currently offline Click here to Send Digi a Private Message Find more posts by Digi Edit/Delete Message Reply w/Quote Quick Quote
Tron
Shinigami Rep.

Gender: Male
Location: United States

Moderator

Thanks, forgot about that one.


__________________


Visit my city, or die at the hands of my ninjas

Old Post Feb 3rd, 2008 10:20 PM
Tron is currently offline Click here to Send Tron a Private Message Find more posts by Tron Edit/Delete Message Reply w/Quote Quick Quote
All times are UTC. The time now is 10:45 PM.
Pages (2): « 1 [2]   Last Thread   Next Thread

Home » Comic Book Forums » Comic Book Movies » Comic Books » Oh... get over it, people! There is no "Pak" Hulk....

Email this Page
Subscribe to this Thread
   Post New Thread  Post A Reply

Forum Jump:
Search by user:
 

Forum Rules:
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
HTML code is OFF
vB code is ON
Smilies are ON
[IMG] code is ON

Text-only version
 

< - KillerMovies.com - Forum Archive - Forum Rules >


© Copyright 2000-2006, KillerMovies.com. All Rights Reserved.
Powered by: vBulletin, copyright ©2000-2006, Jelsoft Enterprises Limited.