cover version | artist | cover | Cover version | The Incredible Hulk | Hulk Hogan | The Incredible Hulk (1978 TV series) | Hulk | Hulk (comics) | Shaggy (artist) | National Artist of the Philippines | Young Artist Award | National Artist | That's Incredible! | Robert Irwin (artist) | comic book artist | Allan Ramsay (artist) | Cover Drive | Al Milgrom | The Artist (film) | The Artist | storyboard artist | Lo Nuestro Award for Tropical New Artist of the Year | John Duncan (artist) | A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man | William Keith (artist) | The Incredible String Band | Shakir Ali (artist) | Richard Hamilton (artist) | Prince (artist) |
Later, another scale model of the Pronto Cruizer was released by Maisto, this time having a theme from Marvel's Incredible Hulk.
The character next features in the story-line of "Dark Son" from writers Greg Pak and Scott Redd, which runs bi-weekly in Incredible Hulks #611-617, the renamed Incredible Hulk comic book (as it will feature Hulk, Red She-Hulk, Skaar, She-Hulk, A-Bomb and Korg), leading on from events in the "Fall of the Hulks" and "World War Hulks" storylines.
The Incredible Hulk Returns is a 1988 made-for-television film based on the Marvel comic books that serves as a continuation of the popular Incredible Hulk television series.
The show underwent a notable modification when broadcast on the BBC in the United Kingdom; because the BBC does not feature commercial breaks, the two shows that made up the Marvel Action Hour would actually only have totaled about forty minutes, and so episodes of the 1980s Incredible Hulk series were added between the two original shows to bring the whole bundle up to the promised hour in length.