Another great place to shop for Bixby Lou products is Amazon. They have more than just books!
![Irma La Douce [VHS]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/517W3VGMKHL._SL160_.jpg) |
Irma La Douce [VHS]
List Price: $14.95
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In 1963, Billy Wilder's Irma La Douce was one of the biggest box-office hits of the year, grossing twice as much as The Great Escape and The Birds. Yet this popular movie has been almost completely forgotten by film history, even to fans of Wilder or stars Jack Lemmon and Shirley MacLaine (the same trio had made a masterpiece, The Apartment, three years earlier). It doesn't represent the best work of those legends, but Irma provides tart entertainment. At least some of the movie's popularity can be chalked up to its subject, which was pretty risqué for the time: Lemmon plays a Paris policeman who falls in love with a prostitute (MacLaine). The script was adapted from a stage musical, but Wilder decided to cut the songs, instead developing the humor and romance into his own blend of bittersweet perversity; this Technicolor-fantasy Paris is kind of a dark cousin to Gigi. Lemmon is in his prime period of hand-wringing self-doubt, and MacLaine is perfectly in tune with his rhythms, especially in scenes that add tenderness to the sometimes queasy mix of moods. Ironically--given the nixing of the songs--the film won its only Oscar for André Previn's adaptation of the stage play's music into a wordless orchestral score. --Robert Horton
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The Incredible Hulk: The Complete Series
List Price: $119.98
Sale Price: $32.90
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All 83 episodes of the series are featured in this 20-disc set. NOTE: This Title Is Out Of Print; Limit One Per Customer.
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The Death of the Incredible Hulk
List Price: $9.98
Sale Price: $4.39
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After years of uncontrollable "hulking out," Dr. David Banner has found work with a scientist who may have discovered a cure for his big green alter ego, but will the Hulk go away without a fight? Bill Bixby and Lou Ferrigno star in this feature-length adventure. 100 min. Standard; Soundtrack: English Dolby Digital mono.
Bill Bixby and Lou Ferrigno, stars of the late '70s, live-action television series The Incredible Hulk, cap a run of sporadic TV movies based on the old show with Death of the Incredible Hulk. The gloomy title says it all. Bixby's Dr. David Banner, spiritually exhausted after years of rage-induced transformations into a snarling, green monster, takes a last stab at finding a cure by posing as a retarded janitor in a government-funded research laboratory. His secret collaboration with a scientist (Philip Sterling) on "killing" the Hulk's genetic viability goes awry when a gorgeous foreign spy (Barbara Tarbuck) disrupts a crucial procedure and invites the wrath of brutal terrorists, the federal government, and, yes, the big man (Ferrigno) himself. With death chains rattling in the background, various ironies in the story become poignant: After years of isolation, Banner finds friendship and love just in time to risk it all for a lasting peace. --Tom Keogh
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The Incredible Hulk - The Television Series Ultimate Collection
List Price: $26.98
Sale Price: $10.18
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This six-disc collection of "fan faves" includes such jolly green gems as "Rainbow's End," "Another Path," "The Disciple," "Deep Shock," "The Harder They Fall," and "The Psychic." 14 1/2 hrs. total. Standard; Soundtrack: English Dolby Digital mono; Subtitles: French, Spanish. NOTE: This Title Is Out Of Print; Limit One Per Customer.
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Amazon.Com
Here are some more information for Bixby Lou:

Upon reading my sources about this up and coming movie, it appears they want this movie to more representative of the character(s) in the comic book with some instances of it being similar to the TV show which, as what Liv Tyler thought, represented the ""humanity and what (Banner) is going through".
Upon further reading, this film looks like it's going to follow around the same tonality as the T.V. series. There's even two photos comparing Ed Norton and Bill Bixby sitting in the similar machine/equipment.
I would probably enjoy this film, for one, I was an avid fan of the T.V. series, and didn't read the Hulk Comic, so I will have more a familiarity with the movie if this is the case. ( I wonder if at the end of the movie they'll show Bruce Banner walking down the road with his travel bag slung over his shoulder with the sad piano music playing in the background? LOL. That would simply make me nostalgic (actually that part of the TV Series was my favorite....the end.)Film makers have stated that Ed Norton was mostly chosen due to the fact that he reminded them of Dr. Bruce Banner. And Lou Ferrigno said Edward Norton looked similar to Bruce Banner in physique and personality.
Liv Tyler also liked the script because of the love story in the movie and she too was a fan of the TV series. She enjoyed being involved in the physical aspects of the movie. It was fun for her.
Then you have the enemy played by , portraying the character "Emil Blonsky". Typical villain, (sounds like some people I know) blaming Bruce Banner for his situation, and not himself. Apparently this guy exposes HIMSELF to gamma radiation, but problem is... once he's "changed," he cannot change back to human form.
AND FINALLY (and this is what really gets me excited), apparently, according to Wikipedia, Robert Downey Jr. will share a scene with General Ross played by William Hurt in "The Hulk" movie (wow, an IRON MAN Tie in?)
Man, this is exciting!
Anyways, hope you enjoyed my opinion!
To see more of my work on Sci-Fi and other Nerdom http://fanconventions.findthatout.com. Also see my blog for Paintballing at gunsandgear.cfl-paintball.com [http://gunsandgear.cfl-paintball.com] as well.
Comics For Extra Credit - Part 3
I've got Ironman to blame for catching the comic bug over the past few weeks. This weekend I went to see another Marvel character, The Incredible Hulk, be re-introduced to the public. This is the second Hulk movie in five years; the previous Hulk, directed by Ang Lee, more famous for Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon with its martial artistry and Yo Yo Ma soundtrack, was a complete flop.
The 2008 Hulk has far more promising; for one thing it has a stronger cast. Ed Norton plays scientist Bruce Banner, the main character, who as Hulkmaniacs know is pelted by gamma radiation that turns him into a huge green monster whenever he becomes angry. Liv Tyler, who I loved in Armageddon, plays Dr. Elizabeth Ross, Banner's scientific colleague and love interest. William Hurt plays her father, a black-ops style general who wants to use Banner's hulkiness to turn soldiers into more powerful fighting machines.
What makes this story work is not the special effects, but Norton's portrayal of Banner, who is struggling with science and inner demons to shake the monster out of him. He is more like the Banner played by Bill Bixby in the 1978 series: always on the run, always just shy of a cure, and always the hero. And the monster is a bit smarter in this movie; he quickly knows how to shield himself from flying debris by tearing cars and tanks in half. I don't remember previous Hulks being as resourceful. By the way, you'll catch glimpses of Bixby and Lou Ferrigno, his green alter ego, in the movie that you won't want to miss.
The Hulk is not the only hero in the Marvel universe who would prefer not to be a hero-monster; the Fantastic Four have Ben Grimm, The Thing, an astronaut who was also pelted by radiation and turned into something alien. But the Hulk is more famous because he came first and is not part of a super team. He's also the more interesting character because he's more complex. Ben takes advantage of his new physique, and shoots his big mouth when it's clobbering time. The Hulk merely mumbles and runs away to find new clothes and a lab to cure himself and suppress his anger. The new movie supports this by flashing Days Without Incident; the audience got a chuckle when that number dropped to 0 and 1.
There are some things to learn from The Hulk, as there were from Ironman. For one thing, it's obvious that a little knowledge can become dangerous in the wrong hands. For another, you see a struggle within a man who could use his strength for greed or ill-taken power - he can't harness it well enough to use it for good - but he only wants to be himself. The Hulk is not the only hero who would prefer to human, but he works harder to return to humanity than any one of them.
Ironman is the better movie, but The Incredible Hulk is worth your time if you're a Marvel fan. You'll even get another hint that these characters will come together in sequels. These characters are a franchise that has lasted 46 years, but the hits, starting with the first Spiderman, have been coming for only six. These comics, the Beatles and the Stones have been among the few cultural icons that my generation has passed on to the future. They may be fictional, but they are icons nonetheless.
About the Author
Contact Stuart Nachbar at
Educated Quest
, a blog on education politics, policy and technology or read about his first book, The Sex Ed Chronicle, a novel on education and politics in 1980 New Jersey, at
Sex Ed Chronicles
.
What are some of the references in the Incredible Hulk (2008) movie?
I don't know if I recognized all of them, but I wanna make sure. Here's the ones I know:
Nick Fury
Bill Bixby's Tv Show
Stan Lee
Lou Ferrgino
Tony Stark
Lonely Man
Purple Pants
Are there any other things that reference to other characters or the comics/series?
There's a boatload of other little references on the film's IMDb trivia page
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0800080/trivia
N N N Death Notices N N N N N N Death Notices N N N N N N Death Notices N N N
TULSA
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