The Waterfront Story
- Episódio foi ao ar 31 de mai. de 1978
- TV-PG
- 49 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,9/10
269
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaDavid 'Barton' works in the kitchen of a tavern on the waterfront and helps the young widow who owns it to fight pushy union men.David 'Barton' works in the kitchen of a tavern on the waterfront and helps the young widow who owns it to fight pushy union men.David 'Barton' works in the kitchen of a tavern on the waterfront and helps the young widow who owns it to fight pushy union men.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
William 'Billy' Benedict
- Vic
- (as William Benedict)
Joseph V. Perry
- First Mate
- (as Joe Perry)
Tonyo Meléndez
- Trucker
- (as Tonyo Melendez)
Ted Cassidy
- Narrator
- (narração)
- (não creditado)
- …
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
This episode opens with the hulk running around on the waterfront in flash back. David is working at a tavern were Josie is a waitress. She wants to be in the union but the union men don't want her to become one of the leaders.
Normally we do see the girls who are a bit in love with David but here we do have a bit of romance. It's really for the first time that we see David with a girl (Josie) going to the beach fishing and eventually falling in each other arms when Josie is crying.
I was alwaus wondering how Lou Ferrigno could run on bare feet. Here we can spot a few times that he is wearing green shoes sadly with white soles. I never seen it in previous episodes. There are also a bit of beautiful shots made especially in when David and Josie are running towards the camera.
The hulk is present a few times and notable for holding a car by it's trunk. When he let it free the pick-up crashes.
I am also always surprised of the names being special guests. Here we do have Sheila Larken as Josie who did a lot of series most remembered as Margaret Scully in The X-Files (1994-2002) or Helen Page Camp as Sarah. You will recognise her typical face immediately.
The last episode in season 1 and no open ending.
Gore 0/5 Nudity 0/5 Effects 2,5/5 Story 3/5 Comedy 0/5
Normally we do see the girls who are a bit in love with David but here we do have a bit of romance. It's really for the first time that we see David with a girl (Josie) going to the beach fishing and eventually falling in each other arms when Josie is crying.
I was alwaus wondering how Lou Ferrigno could run on bare feet. Here we can spot a few times that he is wearing green shoes sadly with white soles. I never seen it in previous episodes. There are also a bit of beautiful shots made especially in when David and Josie are running towards the camera.
The hulk is present a few times and notable for holding a car by it's trunk. When he let it free the pick-up crashes.
I am also always surprised of the names being special guests. Here we do have Sheila Larken as Josie who did a lot of series most remembered as Margaret Scully in The X-Files (1994-2002) or Helen Page Camp as Sarah. You will recognise her typical face immediately.
The last episode in season 1 and no open ending.
Gore 0/5 Nudity 0/5 Effects 2,5/5 Story 3/5 Comedy 0/5
Now in Texas, David 'Barton' is working as a bartender for a widowed boss(Sheila Larkin). It turns out that the widow's late husband was murdered, because someone wanted to take control of a dock worker's union.
Of course, David learns of this after leaving the bartender job - he eavesdrops the conversation while the widow finds a tape record of her husband incriminating the bad guys. She's taken to the dock, to a warehouse, where the bad guys have plans for her. David heads there - and the Hulk will soon appear.
The line "You know, you kind of remind me of my second husband. The strong, silent type. Only talked when he had something to say. Except he wasn't usually green" cracked me up. Helen Page Camp as Sarah the waitress says this to the Hulk after he chucks the brawlers out. She's quite a lively character. The episode itself is a good one with a little romance for David Banner, but you know it won't end well. The poor guy lost so much relationship opportunities due to his green alter ego, who appears at the right time- good scene of him smashing through a wooden crate high on an elevated forklift. There's a little politics, a union thing - and a good twist in regard to the real bad guy.
Of course, David learns of this after leaving the bartender job - he eavesdrops the conversation while the widow finds a tape record of her husband incriminating the bad guys. She's taken to the dock, to a warehouse, where the bad guys have plans for her. David heads there - and the Hulk will soon appear.
The line "You know, you kind of remind me of my second husband. The strong, silent type. Only talked when he had something to say. Except he wasn't usually green" cracked me up. Helen Page Camp as Sarah the waitress says this to the Hulk after he chucks the brawlers out. She's quite a lively character. The episode itself is a good one with a little romance for David Banner, but you know it won't end well. The poor guy lost so much relationship opportunities due to his green alter ego, who appears at the right time- good scene of him smashing through a wooden crate high on an elevated forklift. There's a little politics, a union thing - and a good twist in regard to the real bad guy.
It only loses to 747 and terror in times square, but it's still an excellent episode Incridible episode and acting of Bill Bixby.
David Banner(Bill Bixby) is working in a kitchen at a waterfront tavern run by a woman named Josie(played by Shelia Larken) whose union endorsement is sought out by two men because of her late husbands involvement. She wants no part of it, but someone will go to extreme lengths to get it, as David once again gets involved with a young woman with romantic intentions caught up in criminal doings he must stop. James Sikking costars as one of the union officials. Standard episode at least makes effective use of its locations and setting, with the obligatory barroom brawl being an amusing diversion. Last episode of the first season.
Intriguingly, this episode opens with the sequence which most episodes of the series end with: The Hulk trashes some gangsters down at the docks, McGee shows up hot on his trail, and David realizes it's time to move on. It's a clever change-up in the formula which makes the reader wonder where the heck the episode can go from here. Unfortunately, the rest follows the standard formula, with the only impact of David's extended stay being a couple brief scenes of him ducking to avoid being seen by McGee.
Still, this is a solid episode with plenty of high points. The plot revolves around an election for the president of the local union. Both candidates desperately want the endorsement of the previous president's widow, Sophie. But she's not interested in politics, not since her husband died while investigating some smuggling going on at the docks.
I like how the episode leads the intelligent viewer to the conclusion that one of the candidates offed Sophie's husband without coming out and saying it. There's a decent plot twist by the end, and the moment in which Sophie discovers said twist is almost chilling. Perhaps my favorite bit, though, is the Hulk's face-off with the elderly barkeep. The actress who plays her does a splendid job of being scared out of her wits while trying to keep the big green monster as placid as possible. The episode has one hilariously stupid moment, though: David and Sophie are escaping a warehouse. They are spotted just as they step outside - and they flee **back into the warehouse**!
Still, this is a solid episode with plenty of high points. The plot revolves around an election for the president of the local union. Both candidates desperately want the endorsement of the previous president's widow, Sophie. But she's not interested in politics, not since her husband died while investigating some smuggling going on at the docks.
I like how the episode leads the intelligent viewer to the conclusion that one of the candidates offed Sophie's husband without coming out and saying it. There's a decent plot twist by the end, and the moment in which Sophie discovers said twist is almost chilling. Perhaps my favorite bit, though, is the Hulk's face-off with the elderly barkeep. The actress who plays her does a splendid job of being scared out of her wits while trying to keep the big green monster as placid as possible. The episode has one hilariously stupid moment, though: David and Sophie are escaping a warehouse. They are spotted just as they step outside - and they flee **back into the warehouse**!
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThe first episode that opened with The Hulk rather than David.
- Erros de gravaçãoHulk is clearly wearing green slippers at the end of the episode, while running in the shipyard.
- ConexõesFeatured in O Incrível Hulk: Mystery Man: Part II (1979)
- Trilhas sonorasThe Lonely Man
End titles by Joe Harnell
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Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Central de atendimento oficial
- Idioma
- Locações de filme
- Palisades Park, Santa Mônica, Califórnia, EUA(David and Josie take a walk here at the park.)
- Empresa de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
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