Wednesday, August 16, 2023

Hulk: Grand Design- Treasury Edition

The idea of Marvel's Grand Design books is rather brilliant. You take about 50 years of comic book history and you formulate it into a cohesive biography of some of your favorite Marvel heroes. This time around it's the big, bad Incredible Hulk and it's rather appreciated by me that he was given the Grand Design treatment.

With the Hulk coming in varying colors of green and gray; not to mention dozens of multiple personalities such as Joe Fixit and the Maestro, this is a character the fans most deserved a chronicle of their extremely confusing history. Don't expect all of your favorite Hulk moments to be here. That time the Hulk joined the Ringmaster's circus is not covered. Neither is the time Hulk and 3 others became the New Fantastic Four. Also don't expect to have a lot of time devoted to your favorite Hulk moments if they do happen to make the cut. Hulk's first meeting with a certain Canadian super-hero is the subject of only one fair-sized panel.

The writer and artist of this treasury sized collection of Hulk history is Jim Rugg. Originally published as a set of 2 one-shots (Hulk: Grand Design Monster and Hulk: Grand Design Madness), there's a clear separation of quality. But I don't think Jim Rugg is to blame. Monster ends after a New York City rampage that leads the Avengers and Doctor Strange to believe that the Hulk is dead. Instead, we find out in Madness that Hulk was transported to a micro-universe before returning to save his heroic colleagues from the collapse of a gigantic mountain during the first Secret War. After this event, it seems that the writers and artists of the Hulk decided to got bat-crap crazy.

Sometime around 1984, Bruce Banner's psyche just could no longer deal with the monster within. After the death of several lady loves, Banner blames his alter ego and the Hulk connives to destroy puny Banner. Friends and allies will try to cure Banner, first with therapy performed by Doc Samson and then with overloads of gamma radiation by just about any and all members of the Marvel universe that is able to access a nuclear powered gadget. These cures work for about 1-2 issues and then the past trauma of an abusive father who killed Banner's mother right in front of him as a child, comes to light and the cycle begins all over again. Only now, the result is a bigger, badder and much more insane version of the Hulk. Heck, we've even had Berserker Banner on more than one occasion. 

The second half of Hulk history just isn't as interesting to me as his early days. Though, the Immortal Hulk has recaptured my interest. Some people might like a psychologically damaged Hulk. I prefer a Bruce Banner who is haunted by the antics of his dark side much like Jekyll & Hyde. It just seems criminal to put poor Bruce Banner through the wringer like that year after year.

What is indeed criminal is how few properties have been given the Grand Design treatment. First it was the Fantastic Four, which I read and loved despite Tom Scoli's microscopic artwork and then Ed Piskor's account of X-Men lore, which I have not read yet. I would love for Marvel to really get behind these projects and offer histories of characters such as Thor, Black Panther and Doctor Strange. Grand Designs are great reads, even when the source material might lag at times. 

Worth Consuming!

Rating: 8 out of 10 stars. 


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