David 'Bentzen' tries to help a young widow and her baby get away from a living with criminal hick brother in law.David 'Bentzen' tries to help a young widow and her baby get away from a living with criminal hick brother in law.David 'Bentzen' tries to help a young widow and her baby get away from a living with criminal hick brother in law.
Jack Colvin
- Jack McGee
- (credit only)
Art LaFleur
- Hugh
- (as Art La Fleur)
Ted Cassidy
- Narrator
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
Charles Napier
- Hulk
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaInstead of the familiar piano music at the end of end of every episode, this episode ended with the "Lonely Man" theme being played with a harmonica.
- GoofsIn the first hulk-out scene you can clearly see the split boots, but when David unhulks David is wearing boots
- Quotes
Rachel: You know, my whole life's in that suitcase. Some hand me downs, that's about all there is. Except for Danny. Pretty funny, huh?
Dr. David Bruce Banner: I don't know, awful lot of people who don't even have all that much.
Rachel: Are you one of those people?
- SoundtracksThe Lonely Man
End titles by Joe Harnell
Featured review
Who needs a gun when you've got a tractor?
This one gave me high hopes. It hooks you from the get-go as a bloodied young man is frantically running from two mysterious men with guns. Later, when the title character is introduced, the mother-and-child themes brought up are powerful ones.
Ultimately, though, there's very little to say about this episode. Early on the villain, Nat, is hinted to be an overbearing but ultimately well-meaning man who is on the wrong side of the law as a matter of chance and circumstance rather than inclination. About 1/3 of the way in he's suddenly cast as a mindless sociopath who does evil for the sake of doing evil, a jarring shift which makes him one-dimensional to the point of being outright silly. The silliness climaxes when Nat, rather than shooting the heroes, tosses aside his gun and go gets a tractor to slowly pile dirt on them. Seriously. And no, they are not unconscious at this point.
However, those looking for good unintentional laughs should look elsewhere. Whether it's the uncomfortable sight of Nat slapping around Danny's mom or the dreary feeling that just about everything here has already been done in previous episodes of The Incredible Hulk, it seems impossible to muster a laugh at "Danny".
The episode does stir up a few strong moments, particularly the scenes in which David drives with baby Danny (great work from Bixby once again), but ultimately it's enough to push it into "worth watching" territory.
Ultimately, though, there's very little to say about this episode. Early on the villain, Nat, is hinted to be an overbearing but ultimately well-meaning man who is on the wrong side of the law as a matter of chance and circumstance rather than inclination. About 1/3 of the way in he's suddenly cast as a mindless sociopath who does evil for the sake of doing evil, a jarring shift which makes him one-dimensional to the point of being outright silly. The silliness climaxes when Nat, rather than shooting the heroes, tosses aside his gun and go gets a tractor to slowly pile dirt on them. Seriously. And no, they are not unconscious at this point.
However, those looking for good unintentional laughs should look elsewhere. Whether it's the uncomfortable sight of Nat slapping around Danny's mom or the dreary feeling that just about everything here has already been done in previous episodes of The Incredible Hulk, it seems impossible to muster a laugh at "Danny".
The episode does stir up a few strong moments, particularly the scenes in which David drives with baby Danny (great work from Bixby once again), but ultimately it's enough to push it into "worth watching" territory.
helpful•21
- flarefan-81906
- Nov 29, 2017
Details
- Runtime48 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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