The incredible current volume of the Hulk swirls from Cyclopier to Surreal, embracing both Gore and Body Horror, falling into prehistoric times before jumping to the present day, along with the idol town city.
It’s hard to imagine such a book could do all of those things well, but even then, somehow, the incredible Hulk excels with its diverse approach to horror. The idol market begins with a much more travelling past to tell the story of Enkidu, a precursor to the Hulk’s Bible. The story has a slightly darker fantasy to it, touching the sword and magical energy of the good, cold Conan story, becoming 11 people, replacing the snake and magician with dead gods and grotesque violent angels.
The book tells the story with the same courage and energy as the story of a pack of Las Vegas werewolves. Both concepts are handled with a complete commitment to style. This is handled in many ways with previous entries of the incredible Hulk committed to Man-Thing or Ghost Rider.
Amazing
What makes the incredible Hulk so incredible is its commitment to a kind of heartfelt episodic care. The streets of each strange new story are carefully considered and incredible artistic craftsmanship is applied to highlight Grotes Kelly. In this volume, Danny Earls takes on the rage of the child priest’s bones, while Nick Krien leaps towards bloody change and flesh hatred.
Amazing
Author Philip Kennedy Johnson highlights the vastness of fear by never completely ruining the lid on the Hulk and the banner itself. Hulk may be a monster, but monster monsters are merely selfish men.
The central thrust of the story was Charlie, but she may not have been there. This volume features a fight for her soul, even as Banner and Hulk watch their souls torment. Charlie’s role in things has always felt a bit tenuous. At the beginning of the series, she appeared to merely work as a Doctor Who Style peer. It shifted to a child maiden in the soul cage. City of Idols offers us a new, more active role. It’s the monster itself.
Amazing
It’s a compelling turn and an attractive cliffhanger for volume. What do monsters do as monster partners?
The book also presents some of the Hulk adjacent backup stories of the Hulk Landmark 800th issue, and they live here as almost as a form while being created by incredible creators.
Incredible Hulk vol. 4: Idol City continues to place the Hulk in a broader context of fear. This series is not just about Hulk, but about a world with enough fear to make excuses for monsters. From ancient dead gods to packs of werewolves, the incredible Hulk creates a world where it makes you feel that evil and everything else easily and easily.
‘Incredible Hulk vol. 4: Idols City continues to expand its horrible range
Incredible Hulk vol. 4: Idol City
From the past, we continue to build a world of incredible context around our central monsters.
Intense, surreal and terrifying artwork.
Create a much darker Marvel universe around the central figure.
It develops internal conflicts as well as external.
In all that darkness, we occasionally saw our hero.
