Guilt Hulk

Guilt Hulk is a fictional supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character is depicted usually as an antagonist to the Hulk. Created by writer Peter David and artist Dale Keown, the character first appeared in The Incredible Hulk Vol. 2, #377 (January 1991) as a malevolent representation of Bruce Banner's abusive father Brian Banner that manifests itself in Banner's childhood memories.

Guilt Hulk
Guilt Hulk in The Incredible Hulk Vol. 3, #12 (March 2000)
Art by Ron Garney and Mike McKone
Publication information
First appearanceThe Incredible Hulk Vol. 2, #377 (January 1991)
Created byPeter David
Dale Keown
In-story information
Alter egoDoctor Robert Bruce Banner
SpeciesHuman Mutate
Place of originEarth
Supporting character ofHulk
Notable aliasesThe Beast
Brian Banner

Fictional character history

Guilt Hulk's original appearance in The Incredible Hulk Vol. 2, #377. Art by Dale Keown.

A malevolent alternate personality of Bruce Banner, the Guilt Hulk embodies all of Bruce's guilt, shame, and regrets. Existing within Bruce's mind, the entity seeks to manifest and run amok in the real world.[1]

In the 1991 storyline in which the Guilt Hulk first appears, Doc Samson employs the Ringmaster's expertise with hypnosis in an attempt to unify Banner's fractured mental state. This allows Banner to experience aspects of his own mind, including childhood memories, from both an objective and participatory viewpoint. During these hypnosis sessions, Banner interacts with his warring split personalities, the Savage Hulk and Joe Fixit. The Guilt Hulk interferes with the treatment, tormenting Bruce and the Hulks by replacing Bruce's abusive father Brian in traumatic memories. By confronting the source of his mental illness, Banner is able to banish the Guilt Hulk, and cause the emergence of the Professor, a more stable personality initially assumed to be a fusion of Banner, the Savage Hulk, and Fixit.[2]

The Guilt Hulk, possessing a slightly altered appearance, returns years later as Banner is dying of Lou Gehrig's Disease. Empowered by the dying Bruce blaming himself for the death of Betty Ross, the Guilt Hulk tries to overtake Banner's mind, a process made easier for it due the other Hulks being suppressed by Banner. Using a machine created by neuroscientist Angela Lipscombe, Banner enters his own subconscious, and frees Fixit and the Professor, though the two are outmatched by the Guilt Hulk until Banner seeks the aid of the Savage Hulk. Together, the three manage to overpower the Guilt Hulk.[1][3]

When Brian Banner is released from Hell during the 2010-2011 "Chaos War" storyline, he becomes a fusion of the Guilt Hulk and the Devil Hulk.[4]

Powers and abilities

While the Guilt Hulk has not manifested in the real world, in Banner's mind it was enormous in size, possessed claws and fangs, and was capable of fending off two other Hulks. In its debut, the Guilt Hulk was covered in spikes, could breathe fire, and torture Banner and the other personalities through Banner's memories.[2]

Other versions

In an issue of "What If?," Banner's initial confrontation with the Guilt Hulk ends with him "killing" the entity himself which leads to him gradually transforming into Maestro.[5]

gollark: ```haskelldata Burrito a = Burrito ainstance Monad Burrito where (Burrito x) >>= f = f x return = Burrito```
gollark: *awaits lecture from one of the Supreme Lambdas on how this is completely wrong and how I should be ashamed of this view of monads*
gollark: I consider them basically just containery things with `bind` and `return`.
gollark: Yes, exactly, that's why it's here...
gollark: No, I mean, the bad coloring.

References

  1. Paul Jenkins (w), Ron Garney and Mike McKone (p), Sal Buscema and Mark McKenna (i), Steve Buccellato (col), John Workman (let), Tom Brevoort (ed). "Snake Eyes, Part 1" The Incredible Hulk v2, #12 (March 2000), United States: Marvel Comics
  2. Peter David (w), Dale Keown (p), Bob McLeod (i), Glynis Oliver (col), Joe Rosen (let), Bobbie Chase (ed). "Honey, I Shrunk the Hulk" The Incredible Hulk #377 (January 1991), United States: Marvel Comics
  3. Paul Jenkins (w), Ron Garney (p), Sal Buscema (i), Jason Wright (col), John Workman (let), Tom Brevoort and Gregg Schigiel (ed). "Snake Eyes, Part 1" The Incredible Hulk v2, #13 (April 2000), United States: Marvel Comics
  4. Greg Pak (w), Paul Pelletier (p), Danny Miki (i), Paul Mounts (col), Simon Bowland (let), Mark Paniccia (ed). "Hell Break" The Incredible Hulks #619 (22 December 2010), United States: Marvel Comics
  5. James Felder (w), Gammill and Benes (p), Petrecca and Halblieb (i), Smith (col), Felix (let), McLaurin (ed). "What if the Hulk Got Himself Cured?" What If? v2, #80 (December 1995), United States: Marvel Comics
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.