I only saw "The Incredible Hulk" last week. Today, I turned out Ang Lee's version of "Hulk" for a bit of nostalgia.
In fact, Ang Lee did a good job, but he made simple things complicated.
In the 45th minute of the film, Banner began to transform, and the Hulk talent officially appeared. I have to say that Ang Lee's version of "The Hulk" is really verbose and cumbersome. The first 45 minutes were all conversations, experiments, and quarrels. The comic hero movie is just a picture of a hearty story. Why do you need to spend so much space to explain the big truth?
The final boss showdown in the film also becomes uninspiring and a bit anticlimactic. The boss showdown is a battle of grievances between Banner and his father. In fact, such an arrangement is somewhat unreasonable, and the plot is far-fetched. The underwater decisive battle did not understand what was going on. The Hulk Lao Tzu was defeated and turned into a gas molecule. . .
Very strange. Confused.
"Brokeback Mountain" and "Lust and Caution" after director Ang Lee have all achieved success, and his field may still be in the scope of feature films and ethical films.
Indeed, sci-fi movies are still somewhat unsuitable for Eastern directors.
Because we care too much about the evil and the right, too much about the narrative, too much about being realistic and following the truth, so we lack fantasy, lack boldness, and lack the courage to conquer our traditional thinking or the domineering power to win the box office of such movies.
Ang Lee's version of the Hulk complicates the simple. Directors are human too.
In fact, the same is true of us in life.
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