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The Incredible Hulk (1977) (distributed in theaters in some countries) The Return of the Incredible Hulk (1977) (also shown overseas as a feature film); retitled Death in the Family for syndication; After the cancellation of the television series in 1982, Bill Bixby retained an interest in producing new adventures featuring the Hulk for television.
The following is a list of The Incredible Hulk episodes. The series began with two, two-hour made-for-TV movies on November 4 and 27, 1977. Regular one-hour episodes began on March 10, 1978 and ended on May 12, 1982. It was created by Kenneth Johnson, aired on CBS, and ran for 80 episodes.
The 1982 Incredible Hulk series featured accompanying narration by Hulk co-creator Stan Lee. Some of the same background music tracks were used for Dungeons & Dragons. Boyd Kirkland, who became a writer/director for Batman: The Animated Series and X-Men: Evolution, was one of the layout artists for The Incredible Hulk.
File:The Incredible Hulk film and TV series scene comparison.jpg; File:The Incredible Hulk Nintendo DS cover art.png; File:The Incredible Hulk Nintendo DS gameplay screenshot.png; File:The Incredible Hulk soundtrack cover.jpg; File:The Incredible Hulk video game cover art.png; File:The Incredible Hulk Windows gameplay screenshot.png
The Incredible Hulk (1977) - Pilot for the CBS series, written and directed by Kenneth Johnson (distributed in theaters in some countries). The Return of the Incredible Hulk (1977) – Pilot sequel directed by Alan J. Levi (also shown overseas as a feature film); retitled "Death in the Family" as a two-parter in syndication.
Characters featured included heroes such as Spider-Man, Hulk, Sub-Mariner, Captain America, Thor, and Iron Man, as well as villains such as Dr. Doom, the Vulture, Green Goblin, and Magneto. The intent was to keep going with the series until every available episode of the various series were released on tape.
In The Incredible Hulk #232 (February 1979), it is revealed that Jim Wilson is the nephew of Sam Wilson, the superhero Falcon. Though this revelation occurred when Roger Stern was writing the series, Stern says that earlier Incredible Hulk writer Len Wein came up with the idea that they were related and simply didn't get around to it during his ...
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