Hulk: The End - Synopsis

Synopsis

The story follows the narrative of Bruce Banner and the Hulk following a war which ended in a violent nuclear holocaust that only he could have survived.

Banner begins the story, talking to a camera left by a robot Vidbot- a floating camera hovering at a constant distance of ten feet away from him- belonging to a Recorder that discovered Bruce when analysing Earth, leaving the Vidbot to record the final fate of the last human to confirm that humanity was gone from the universe.

While Banner is forced to drown in sorrow as the last human alive on Earth, wandering for years across the ruins of the old cities and remembering what he can of the world before, the Hulk (in his Rampaging Hulk form) is angry at Banner, in that with Banner he is still not alone in the World. During one of Banner's walks, he is beset upon some gigantic cockroaches, mutated by the nuclear fallout, and it is the Hulk who gets up to try to stop them.

When Banner awakens later, he watches a video recording made by the alien camera of the cockroaches eating the Hulk alive before he heals.

The story is mainly fueled by the fact that Banner and the Hulk's desires, even at the end of the world, are still conflicted; whereas Hulk still stubbornly wishes to prove himself the strongest being on Earth, Banner merely wishes to die, attempting suicides that fail when he becomes the Hulk again.

Eventually, Banner falls asleep in an old cave, only to dream of a woman with the appearance of Betty Ross. In the dream, he becomes young again and they begin to make love amongst a paradise. However, when she begins to talk, saying that the two will eventually be 'like gods', Banner awakens violently.

Suffering a painful heart attack, Banner realizes how much his punishment resembles that of Prometheus, the Last Titan; condemned to stay forever alive even while animals devour him, speculating that the Hulk's suffering is Earth punishing him for humanity's sins as the embodiment of the nuclear wars that destroyed Earth. As he dies, the Hulk's persona arises in his mind. Banner pleads with the Hulk, begging him to simply let go of his conflicts, claiming that they are going to a paradise where all their dead friends are, where they will be happy. Hulk throws away this suggestion because, in his eyes, friends have always betrayed him. Amidst a thunderous storm, Hulk proclaims that all he wants is to be left alone.

The next morning, the Hulk somberly sits outside the cave, musing in his inner monologue: "Banner is gone...got rid of him last night." As he remembers the confrontation, he realizes that if he were ever to change back to Banner, he would die also. The Hulk is glad, because he does not need Banner, only for the truly tragic realization to come upon him: "Hulk...strongest one there is. Hulk...only one there is...Hulk feels...cold."

Hulk
Creators
  • Stan Lee
  • Jack Kirby
Supporting
characters
  • Amadeus Cho
  • Arabian Knight
  • Betty Ross
  • Bereet
  • Carmilla Black
  • Caiera
  • Marlo Chandler
  • Doc Samson
  • Hiro-Kala
  • Jarella
  • Pantheon
  • Rick Jones
  • Lyra
  • Sabra
  • She-Hulk
  • Skaar
  • Thundra
  • Warbound
    • Hiroim
    • Korg
    • Elloe Kaifi
    • No-Name of the Brood
    • Miek
    • Kate Waynesboro
  • Jim Wilson
Enemies
  • Abomination
  • Absorbing Man
  • Agamemnon
  • Ajax
  • Bi-Beast
  • Brian Banner/Devil Hulk
  • Enclave
  • Flux
  • Galaxy Master
  • Gamma Corps
  • Gargoyle
  • Glenn Talbot
  • Glob
  • Glorian
  • Gremlin
  • Halflife
  • Hulkbusters
  • Hulk Robot
  • Intelligencia
  • John Ryker
  • Juggernaut
  • Killer Shrike
  • Leader
  • Madman
  • Maestro
  • Mercy
  • Metal Master
  • Missing Link
  • Nightmare
  • Psyklop
  • Ravage
  • Rhino
  • The Red King
  • Ringmaster
  • Thunderbolt Ross/Red Hulk
  • Trauma
  • Tyrannus
  • U-Foes
  • Umar
  • Wendigo
  • Xemnu
  • Zeus
  • Zom
  • Zzzax
Television
Live action
  • The Incredible Hulk (1977–1982)
  • The Incredible Hulk Returns (TV film, 1988)
  • The Trial of the Incredible Hulk (TV film, 1989)
  • The Death of the Incredible Hulk (TV film, 1990)
Animation
  • The Marvel Super Heroes (1966)
  • The Incredible Hulk (1982–1983)
  • The Incredible Hulk (1996–1997) (episodes)
  • Hulk and the Agents of S.M.A.S.H. (2013)
Films
Live action
  • Hulk (2003)
  • The Incredible Hulk (2008)
Animation
  • Hulk Vs (2009)
  • Planet Hulk (2010)
Video games
  • Questprobe featuring the Hulk (1984)
  • The Incredible Hulk (1994)
  • The Incredible Hulk: The Pantheon Saga (1996)
  • Hulk (2003)
  • The Incredible Hulk: Ultimate Destruction (2005)
  • The Incredible Hulk (2008)
Titles
  • Superman and Spider-Man
  • Hulk: The End
  • Hulk: The Manga
  • Tales to Astonish
  • The Rampaging Hulk
  • 5 Ronin
Storylines
  • "Planet Hulk"
  • "World War Hulk"
  • "Fall of the Hulks"
  • "World War Hulks"
Related articles
  • Other versions
  • Hulk 2099
  • Hulk Hands
  • The Incredible Hulk (roller coaster)

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