Table of Contents

The Immortal Hulk

Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary

Part 2: Origin and Evolution

Publication History and Creation

The Immortal Hulk persona, as a fully realized concept, burst onto the scene in The Immortal Hulk #1, published in June 2018. The series was a cornerstone of Marvel's “Fresh Start” initiative, intended to bring core characters back to their roots while pushing them in bold new directions. The creative team, writer Al Ewing and primary artist Joe Bennett, with inker Ruy José and colorist Paul Mounts, were instrumental in defining the character's unique tone and aesthetic. Ewing drew heavily from the Hulk's earliest appearances in the 1960s, where Stan Lee and Jack Kirby depicted the creature as a monstrous, nocturnal entity more akin to Frankenstein's Monster or Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. He combined this with a modern, sophisticated approach to body horror, citing influences from filmmakers like David Cronenberg and literary works of gothic horror. The series was an immediate critical and commercial success, lauded for its intelligent writing, psychological depth, and genuinely disturbing artwork. It moved the Hulk firmly out of the traditional superhero genre and into psychological and cosmic horror, asking profound questions about life, death, trauma, and the nature of evil. The 50-issue run is widely considered one of the greatest and most definitive stories in the character's history.

In-Universe Origin Story

The origin of the Immortal Hulk is not a single event but a retcon and re-contextualization of Bruce Banner's entire history with gamma radiation. It posits that this persona, the “Devil,” has always existed.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

The foundation for the Immortal Hulk was laid long before his 2018 debut. This persona is, in fact, the “Devil Hulk,” a malevolent, serpentine figure that existed within Banner's subconscious, representing the abusive and hateful influence of his father, Brian Banner. This persona occasionally surfaced in past storylines, notably in writer Paul Jenkins' run on The Incredible Hulk, where it was depicted as a purely evil figure wanting to destroy the world Banner loved. Al Ewing's run redefined this persona. The “Devil” was no longer purely malevolent but a fiercely protective, albeit ruthless, father figure for the entire Hulk “system” (including the child-like Savage Hulk and the cynical Joe Fixit). His true origin is tied to the very nature of gamma radiation in the Marvel Universe. It is revealed that gamma is not merely a scientific phenomenon but a form of quasi-mystical energy linked to a metaphysical barrier known as the Green Door. This door leads to the Below-Place, a hellish dimension ruled by the ultimate embodiment of nihilism and destruction, a cosmic entity known as the_one_below_all. When Bruce Banner was caught in the gamma bomb explosion, it didn't just mutate his body; it “painted” his soul with gamma energy, permanently connecting him to the Green Door. This is the source of his immortality. Whenever Banner or any Hulk persona “dies,” his soul passes through the Green Door into the Below-Place, only to be violently resurrected in his physical body on Earth the next time the sun sets. The Immortal Hulk is the persona most aware of this connection and most capable of channeling its power. His modern emergence was directly triggered by his recent deaths. During the event civil_war_ii, Bruce Banner was killed by an arrow fired by Clint Barton. He was later temporarily resurrected by the Hydra-affiliated organization The Hand and then died again. These successive deaths and resurrections strengthened his connection to the Green Door, allowing the powerful and intelligent Devil/Immortal persona to finally take control as the dominant personality during the night. His new mission: to end the “human world” of corrupt institutions and unchecked power that had tormented him for so long.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

To be unequivocally clear, the Immortal Hulk persona does not exist in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. The MCU has followed a distinctly different trajectory for Bruce Banner and his alter ego. The MCU's Bruce Banner, portrayed by Mark Ruffalo, began as a man terrified of the “other guy,” the traditional Savage Hulk. This Hulk was a being of pure, uncontrollable rage, as seen in The Avengers and Avengers: Age of Ultron. His evolution took a major turn in Thor: Ragnarok, where he spent two years as the Hulk, developing a slightly more advanced, toddler-like personality and vocabulary. The trauma of his defeat at the hands of thanos at the beginning of Avengers: Infinity War caused a psychological block, with the Hulk refusing to emerge to help Banner. The resolution to this internal conflict was revealed in Avengers: Endgame. During the five-year “Blip,” Banner did not discover a hellish cosmic entity or a cycle of resurrection. Instead, he spent 18 months in a gamma lab merging his two personas. As he explains, he stopped viewing the Hulk as a disease and instead saw him as the cure. The result was Smart Hulk (often referred to by fans and creatives as Professor Hulk). This version is a stable, permanent fusion of Banner's intellect and the Hulk's physique. The key differences are philosophical and functional:

The adaptation of a true Immortal Hulk in the MCU would require a significant tonal shift towards dark, psychological horror, something the franchise has only begun to explore in projects like Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness and Werewolf by Night.

Part 3: Abilities, Equipment & Personality

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

The Immortal Hulk is arguably the most powerful incarnation of the character ever depicted. His abilities are an extreme amplification of the Hulk's classic powers, infused with a supernatural, horrific element.

Personality

The Immortal Hulk's personality is a complex and chilling blend of intelligence, rage, and purpose.

Abilities

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

As the Immortal Hulk does not exist in the MCU, we analyze the powers of his closest analogue, Smart Hulk.

Personality

Smart Hulk's personality is the polar opposite of the Immortal Hulk's. He is balanced, approachable, and integrated. He possesses Banner's gentle nature, brilliant mind, and dry wit, combined with the Hulk's confidence and physical presence. He is a public figure who takes selfies with fans and works collaboratively with the Avengers. There is no trace of the menace, rage, or psychological complexity that defines the Immortal Hulk.

Abilities

Smart Hulk's powers are a straightforward combination of Banner's mind and Hulk's body, without any of the supernatural elements from the comics.

Part 4: Key Relationships & Network

Core Allies

The Immortal Hulk is a solitary figure, but he forms several crucial, if often tense, relationships.

Arch-Enemies

Affiliations

The Immortal Hulk is fundamentally an outsider and rejects most formal affiliations. His primary “group” is the internal system of Hulk personas. For a time, he becomes the de facto leader of Gamma Flight, directing their efforts against their common enemies like the Roxxon Energy Corporation and the Leader. He briefly collaborates with the avengers during the War of the Realms and Absolute Carnage events, but these are alliances of pure necessity. He views organizations like the Avengers and S.H.I.E.L.D. as part of the broken “human world” he seeks to dismantle.

Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines

The story of the Immortal Hulk is a single, continuous 50-issue epic. The following are key arcs within that run.

"Or Is He Both?" (//The Immortal Hulk// #1-5)

This opening arc re-establishes the Hulk in the Marvel Universe. It introduces the core concept: Bruce Banner is dead, but a new, intelligent, and terrifying Hulk emerges every night. The story is told from the perspective of people who encounter him, framing the Hulk as an urban legend and a figure of inescapable, righteous vengeance. It introduces reporter Jackie McGee and sets the body-horror tone of the series, culminating in a gruesome confrontation with Sasquatch, revealing that other gamma mutates are also connected to the Green Door.

"The Green Door" (//The Immortal Hulk// #6-10)

This arc delves deep into the mythology of the new status quo. The Hulk is captured by the US government's “Shadow Base,” a new anti-Hulk operation led by General Fortean. While imprisoned, the Hulk has a metaphysical journey into his own mindscape, confronting the memory of his abusive father, Brian Banner. It is here that the concepts of the Green Door and the One Below All are fully explained, revealing that Brian Banner's soul is a pawn of the entity, forever tormenting Bruce from beyond the grave. This arc firmly establishes the story's psychological and cosmic horror roots.

"Breaker of Worlds" (//The Immortal Hulk// #25)

A landmark, standalone issue that jumps billions of years into the far future of the Ninth Cosmos. It depicts the final moments of the universe, where the only sentient life left is a cosmically powerful, lonely Hulk, now known as the “Breaker of Worlds.” He is the final defense against the One Below All, which seeks to kill the nascent sentience of the next universe. This issue cemented the cosmic stakes of the story, showing the ultimate endgame of the Hulk's immortality and his eternal war against the ultimate darkness.

The Final Arc (//The Immortal Hulk// #45-50)

The culmination of the entire series. The Leader's grand plan comes to fruition. He severs the Hulk's connection to the Green Door, traps him in the Below-Place, and assumes a god-like form. The story becomes a metaphysical quest as the Hulk personas—Savage, Joe Fixit, and the Immortal/Devil—must journey through the hellish landscape of the Below-Place to confront the Leader, the One Below All, and their own personal demons. The arc resolves the central conflicts of the series, establishes a new, more balanced internal system for Banner, and provides a powerful, definitive conclusion to one of Marvel's most acclaimed modern runs.

Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions

While the Immortal Hulk is a specific persona of the Earth-616 Hulk, his characteristics of intelligence and extreme power can be compared to other notable Hulk incarnations from across the multiverse.

See Also

Notes and Trivia

1) 2) 3) 4) 5) 6)

1)
The Immortal Hulk series by Al Ewing is deeply rooted in psychoanalytic theory, specifically concepts of Dissociative Identity Disorder. Each major Hulk persona is presented as a fragment of Banner's psyche formed to deal with a specific childhood trauma, with the Devil/Immortal Hulk being the protective father figure Bruce never had.
2)
Artist Joe Bennett's depiction of the Hulk's transformations and regeneration are heavily influenced by the body horror seen in films like John Carpenter's The Thing and the works of David Cronenberg.
3)
The concept of a “Devil Hulk” was not new. It was first introduced by writer Paul Jenkins and artists Ron Garney and Sal Buscema in Incredible Hulk (Vol. 2) #13 (2000), though he was portrayed as a more straightforwardly demonic and malevolent figure than Ewing's later reinterpretation.
4)
The One Below All is retroactively established as being connected to many of Marvel's darkest cosmic events and hell dimensions, serving as a unifying “source” of ultimate evil.
5)
Throughout the series, the opening page of each issue features a thematic quote, often from literary sources like Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, John Milton's Paradise Lost, or the works of Carl Jung, reinforcing the series' gothic and psychological themes.
6)
The series won the 2019 Eisner Award for Best Continuing Series, a prestigious honor in the American comic book industry, cementing its critical legacy.