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According to The Hollywood Reporter, a potential reason why Marvel has not reacquired the film distribution rights to the Hulk as they did with Paramount Pictures for the Iron Man, Thor, and Captain America films is that Universal holds the theme park rights to several Marvel characters that Marvel's parent company, Disney, wants for its own ...
Marvel then revealed that it had regained the film rights to the Hulk from Universal in February 2006, [56] in exchange for letting Universal own the distribution rights to The Incredible Hulk (2008) and the right of first refusal to pick up the distribution rights to any future Marvel Studios-produced Hulk films. [57]
Beginning with issue #102 (April 1968) the book was retitled The Incredible Hulk vol. 2, [23] and ran until 1999, when Marvel canceled the series and launched Hulk #1. Marvel filed for a trademark for "The Incredible Hulk" in 1967, and the United States Patent and Trademark Office issued the registration in 1970. [24]
While many a Marvel fan has surely wondered what became of Emil Blonsky, aka Abominable, over the course of 12 or 13 years following The Incredible Hulk, Tim Roth did not. “I never bothered to ...
The Marvel Cinematic Universe is bursting with cameos but the hardest one to film in Avengers: Endgame did not feature any big names. In fact, it concerned three children who happened to be ...
Hulk hit screens on the heels of two other non-Marvel Studios Marvel movies: Mark Steven Johnson's Daredevil and Bryan Singer's X2: X-Men United, both of which also play fast and loose with comic ...
The series titled Two-Gun Kid ran in two parts, from 1948–1949 and then from 1953–1977. Clay Harder debuted in Two-Gun Kid #1 (March 1948). [2] [3] He was Marvel's second continuing Western character, following the Masked Raider, who had appeared in Marvel Comics #1 / Marvel Mystery Comics #2–12 (October 1939 – Octctoer 1940). [4]
The civil suits claim these characters — including Spider-Man, Doctor Strange and Iron Man — were created for the company with no ownership interests for creators.