Incredible Hulk 2 Everything We Know About Ed Nortons Scrapped Plans

Incredible Hulk 2: Everything We Know About Ed Norton’s Scrapped Plans

Edward Norton’s The Incredible Hulk 2 is a missed opportunity for the MCU. Here’s what it would have been about, and why didn’t it happen.



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Edward Norton originally planned to make a sequel to 2008’s The Incredible Hulk, and while it ultimately didn’t come to fruition, a few details have come out over the years to reveal what it would have been about. After over a decade of record-breaking superhero blockbusters, it’s easy to assume the MCU was a guaranteed success. Rewind to 2008, though, and in truth it was something of a gamble. Marvel was a rookie film studio who had previously only worked alongside others, with no proven track record of their own, and nobody had ever tried to make a shared cinematic universe quite like the MCU before.

Phase 1 actually had quite a few missteps. The modern Marvel Studios may have a reputation for long-term planning, but during Phase 1 they were frequently course-correcting. That’s particularly evident if you cast a critical eye over the Phase 1 post-credits scenes because in the end only one of them actually contributed to the overarching narrative. Marvel literally produced their first one-shot in order to retcon The Incredible Hulk’s post-credits scene. But, of course, Marvel’s Hulk plans changed even more radically than that.

The first Hulk actor was Edward Norton, and over the years he’s revealed he was originally signed up for a two-film deal with a very specific character arc for Bruce Banner. Unfortunately, it wasn’t meant to be.

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Ed Norton’s Hulk Plan

Incredible Hulk 2 Everything We Know About Ed Nortons Scrapped Plans

Edward Norton first became involved with The Incredible Hulk back in 2007, and he didn’t expect to just be an actor. The screenplay was actually unfinished when Norton came on board because writer Zak Penn had left the project to work on The Grand. As a result, one of the reasons Norton got the part was he was a writer as well as an actor, and he was delighted at the opportunity to work on the final draft. Norton had grown up loving the Hulk comics, and he believed he could do with the Hulk what Christopher Nolan had done with Batman, making it “Long, dark, and serious,” drawing inspiration from the Dark Knight trilogy. “If there was ever a thing that I thought had that in it, it was the Hulk. It’s literally a Promethean myth.” This may seem like something of an odd fit for the MCU, but it’s important to remember back then Marvel Studios was yet to develop its house style. The first film was to portray Bruce as a victim, the second as what Norton called the “conscious dreamer” who had learned to live through the transformation.

Notice the ending of The Incredible Hulk is quite ambiguous. Bruce Banner is attempting to control the transformation, and his eyes snap open; has he succeeded, or has he failed? The ambiguity was deliberate because Norton and director Louis Leterrier had no way of knowing if The Incredible Hulk 2 would come out before or after The Avengers. There’s even some evidence Marvel was toying with the idea of using the Hulk as the villain in The Avengers, a concept lifted straight from their Ultimate comic book range.

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What We Know About the Sequel

Incredible Hulk 2 Everything We Know About Ed Nortons Scrapped Plans

Norton has only made a few comments about The Incredible Hulk 2, usually focused on Banner’s role as what he calls “the conscious dreamer, the guy who can handle the trip.” There are hints of this in the first film, with Bruce Banner experiencing flashes of memory that suggest he has indeed experienced what the Hulk has done; in fact, some of it has clearly caused him great psychological trauma. Thus in The Incredible Hulk 2, Banner would have learned to remain conscious through the transformation, experiencing it as a lucid dream, exerting an influence over the Hulk persona. Conceptually it’s similar to some ideas comic book writer Peter David toyed with in his iconic Incredible Hulk run, although it’s a far cry from the personality integration seen in Avengers: Endgame.



In an interview with Norton has referred to The Incredible Hulk as “Chapter 1” in a multiple-part story, which is key to understanding The Incredible Hulk 2, because it means the film was probably going to build on everything that had been set up in the first movie. Secondary characters like Betty Ross and her father “Thunderbolt” Ross would presumably return, and Dr. Samuel Sterns, aka the Leader, would most likely have been the main villain. Tim Blake Nelson confirmed he had signed a multi-picture contract with Marvel for precisely that purpose. Ty Burrell was also expecting to return as Doc Samson.

Why The Incredible Hulk 2 Didn’t Happen

The relationship between Norton and Marvel Studios, unfortunately, soured during editing of The Incredible Hulk because it became clear the actor and studio had very different visions. A lot of character development was cut, and director Louis Leterrier believed there could be up to 70 minutes of deleted scenes. Norton wasn’t happy, and a meeting with Marvel execs turned into a shouting match.

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Making matters worse, details leaked to the press. It didn’t take long for speculation to begin circling that Norton wouldn’t be reprising the role of Bruce Banner; members of the cast were literally fielding questions about this during The Incredible Hulk’s press tour. In 2010, shortly before filming began on The Avengers, Marvel confirmed they had parted ways with Norton. Even that wasn’t particularly amicable, with their statement containing what seemed to be a parting shot aimed directly at him, saying their decision was”rooted in the need for an actor who embodies the creativity and collaborative spirit of our other talented cast members.”

Meanwhile, in 2009, Marvel Studios was purchased by Disney, virtually ending any chance of another solo Hulk film in the MCU as the distribution rights to Hulk films sit with Universal. Back in 2008, that was a good thing for Marvel, because they lacked any distribution network of their own. When they were acquired by Disney, though, they gained the House of Mouse’s own distribution channels. And there was no way Disney would pay to produce The Incredible Hulk 2, but allow Universal to profit from the distribution. Even Edward Norton’s replacement, Mark Ruffalo, has conceded there is now no chance of another Hulk solo movie.

Link Source : https://screenrant.com/incredible-hulk-sequel-cancelled-plans-norton/


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