The Immortal Hulk Volume 4

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The Immortal Hulk Volume 4
The Immortal Hulk Volume 4 review
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  • North American Publisher / ISBN: Marvel - 978-1-3029-3128-5
  • Volume No.: 4
  • UPC: 9781302931285
  • Contains adult content?: no
  • Does this pass the Bechdel test?: no
  • Positive minority portrayal?: yes
  • CATEGORIES: Superhero

After the events of Immortal Hulk Volume 3 set the bar really high, it might be thought that Al Ewing could no longer surprise in the same way he has done earlier in the series. That’s emphatically not the case.

Something Ewing’s handled exceptionally well is recontextualising the Hulk’s frankly limited selection of viable villains, and that’s what happens twice in this content. White-furred alien giant Xemnu has rarely been much of a threat, but instead of exploiting his size, Ewing investigates the extent of his previously trivially used hypnotic abilities. It turns out he can hypnotise remotely and on a prodigious scale, which makes the Roxxon Corporation very happy. The other villain is best not disclosed, as it’s not really until the second half of the collection that they come into their own, although are used at their manipulative best. Never let it be said they can’t grasp a concept and run with it.

The same applies to artist Joe Bennett. He’s extremely good when it comes to the contrast between reality and fantasy as prompted by Xemnu, after which a succession of other artists take over for a while. That’s because Bennett draws the entire final five chapters. These feature a wild, knockdown battle in three connected locations, distortions aplenty and all sorts of gamma irradiated presences. The power simply pulsates from every page.

That’s not to suggest the other artist are disappointing. Butch Guice is always welcome, here illustrating an entire chapter giving the background to the major villain, while Nick Pitarra’s tour through the Hulk’s head and personalities is memorably wacky. Mike Hawthorne’s given a broader brief with a transitional chapter explaining a few things before all hell breaks loose. Javíer Rodriguez is good, but only supplies a few pages.

Something that’s perhaps passed by unnoticed is just how many recurring characters Ewing is juggling on a regular basis, and that’s not even including several of them just restricted to the Hulk himself. Several Hulks feature for extended periods as Ewing returns to an element introduced before and gives us a thrilling new perspective on it.

Only two missing chapters separate The Immortal Hulk Volume 4 from The Immortal Hulk Omnibus Vol. 3, or alternatively the stories are covered in the paperbacks Hulk is Hulk and The Keeper of the Door.

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