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词条 List of The Incredible Hulk (1978 TV series) episodes
释义

  1. Series overview

  2. Episodes

     Pilot movies (1977)  Season 1 (1978)  Season 2 (1978–79)  Season 3 (1979–80)  Season 4 (1980–81)  Season 5 (1981–82)  Reunion movies (1988–90) 

  3. References

  4. External links

{{italic title|string=The Incredible Hulk}}

The following is a list of The Incredible Hulk episodes. The series began with two, two-hour made-for-TV movies on November 4, 1977 and November 27, 1977. Regular one-hour episodes began on March 10, 1978 and ended on May 12, 1982. It was created by Kenneth Johnson, produced by CBS, and ran for 80 episodes.

The Incredible Hulk follows the story of David Banner (played by Bill Bixby), a physician/scientist who, traumatized by the loss of his wife, douses himself with dangerously high levels of gamma radiation. He metamorphosizes into a giant, green hulk (Lou Ferrigno) whenever he becomes angry. The series chronicles Banner's attempts to find a cure for himself, as he is pursued across the United States by investigative newspaper reporter Jack McGee (Jack Colvin). The series was loosely based on the Marvel comic book of the same name.

After the cancellation of the series, three television movies aired on NBC (1988, 1989 and 1990). On July 28, 2006, season one was officially released on DVD. Season two was released in the United States on July 17, 2007. Seasons three and four were released in June 2008 to coincide with the release of the 2008 Marvel Studios film The Incredible Hulk.

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Series overview

{{Series overview


| color0S = #006600
| link0S = #Pilot movies (1977)
| linkT0S = Pilot movies
| start0S = {{Start date|1977|11|4}}
| end0S = {{End date|1977|11|27}}
| network0S = CBS
| color1 = #1A6631
| link1 = #Season 1 (1978)
| episodes1 = 10
| start1 = {{Start date|1978|3|10}}
| end1 = {{End date|1978|5|31}}
| color2 = #035D8D
| link2 = #Season 2 (1978–79)
| episodes2 = 22
| start2 = {{Start date|1978|9|22}}
| end2 = {{End date|1979|5|25}}
| color3 = #AC1D27
| link3 = #Season 3 (1979–80)
| episodes3 = 23
| start3 = {{Start date|1979|9|21}}
| end3 = {{End date|1980|4|11}}
| color4 = #FFBF00
| link4 = #Season 4 (1980–81
| episodes4 = 18
| start4 = {{Start date|1980|11|07}}
| end4 = {{End date|1981|5|22}}
| color5 = #01645C
| link5 = #Season 5 (1981–82)
| episodes5 = 7
| start5 = {{Start date|1981|10|02}}
| end5 = {{End date|1982|5|12}}
| color5S = #4B0082
| link5S = #Reunion movies (1988–90)
| linkT5S = Movies
| start5S = {{Start date|1988|5|22}}
| end5S = {{End date|1990|2|18}}
| network5S = NBC

}}

Episodes

Pilot movies (1977)

{{Episode table |background=#006600|title=30 |writer=19 |director=15 |airdate=14 |episodes={{Episode list
|RTitle= The Incredible Hulk
|DirectedBy=Kenneth Johnson
|WrittenBy=Kenneth Johnson
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1977|11|4}}
|ShortSummary= An accidental overdose of gamma radiation creates a mutation in David Banner's (Bill Bixby) DNA, and, whenever he becomes angry, it causes him to metamorphose into a seven-foot-tall, 330-pound, green hulking creature (Lou Ferrigno). Tabloid newspaper reporter, Jack McGee (Jack Colvin) begins investigating claims of a giant creature; his investigation leads to the laboratory that Banner was using. An explosion in the lab kills Banner's associate and friend Dr. Elaina Marks (Susan Sullivan); McGee, who dubs the creature "the Hulk", believes it killed David too. Unable to explain the truth, nor control his transformations, David leaves to try to find a cure for himself.

Note: Originally a two-hour movie (aired on a Friday), is shown in two parts in syndication.


| LineColor = 006600
}}{{Episode list
|RTitle= Death in the Family
|RAltTitle= The Return of The Incredible Hulk
|DirectedBy=Alan J. Levi
|WrittenBy=Kenneth Johnson
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1977|11|27}}
|ShortSummary= David continues on the run from Jack McGee and the authorities, with everyone believing that he was killed along with Elaina. Still trying to find a cure, David 'Benton' accidentally finds himself in the middle of a plot to kill a young, crippled girl named Julie Griffith (Laurie Prange) so her unscrupulous family can inherit the fortune. He manages to save her life and provide her with help so that she can walk again.

Notes: Originally a two-hour movie (aired on a Sunday), is shown in two parts in syndication. Gerald McRaney makes his first of four guest appearances. William Daniels guest stars.


| LineColor = 006600
}}
}}

Season 1 (1978)

{{Episode table |background=#1A6631|overall=3 |season=3 |title=19 |writer=19 |director=15 |airdate=14 |episodes={{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=1
|EpisodeNumber2=1
|Title=Final Round
|DirectedBy=Kenneth Gilbert
|WrittenBy=Kenneth Johnson
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1978|3|10}}
|ShortSummary= David 'Benson' finds his way to Wilmington, Delaware, and into the friendship of Henry "Rocky" Welsh (Martin Kove), an aspiring boxer. David discovers that Henry, unknowingly, has been trafficking heroin for the boxing promoter. The promoter, in order to stay out of prison, arranges a deadly fight for Henry, whose high blood pressure will kill him.
| LineColor = 1A6631
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=2
|EpisodeNumber2=2
|Title=The Beast Within
|DirectedBy=Kenneth Gilbert
|WrittenBy=Karen Harris & Jill Sherman
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1978|3|17}}
|ShortSummary= David 'Bradburn' begins working at a zoo where research is being conducted on animal aggression. David learns that a corrupt zoo official has been smuggling diamonds, within the animals, into the zoo. A young scientist named Claudia Baxter (Caroline McWilliams) is framed for the animal deaths and David is locked in a cage with an aggressive gorilla.
| LineColor = 1A6631
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=3
|EpisodeNumber2=3
|Title=Of Guilt, Models and Murder
|DirectedBy=Larry Stewart
|WrittenBy=James D. Parriott
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1978|3|24}}
|ShortSummary= After waking up from a transformation at the crime scene of a murdered model, David 'Blaine' tries to piece together the events of the previous night. David is hired as a valet and personal assistant to James Joslin (Jeremy Brett), the employer of model Shiela Cantrell (Loni Anderson), and he uses his new job to investigate the other models who may be linked to the murder. The murder scene itself is re-enacted from three different perspectives.
| LineColor = 1A6631
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=4
|EpisodeNumber2=4
|Title=Terror in Times Square
|DirectedBy=Alan J. Levi
|WrittenBy=William Schwartz
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1978|3|31}}
|ShortSummary= David 'Blake' begins working in a New York amusement arcade and quickly develops a friendship with the owner and his daughter. When the owner refuses to pay any further protection fees, the crime boss decides to make an example of him.
| LineColor = 1A6631
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=5
|EpisodeNumber2=5
|Title=747
|DirectedBy=Sigmund Neufeld Jr.
|WrittenBy=Thomas E. Szollosi & Richard Christian Matheson
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1978|4|7}}
|ShortSummary= David 'Brown' boards a Boeing 747 plane in San Francisco to travel to Chicago in pursuit of a cure for his metamorphosis. The airline captain and a flight attendant have planned the theft of a priceless Egyptian exhibit from the plane's cargo hold. After dealing with the scheming couple, David is forced to land the plane in Denver during one of his transformations into the Hulk.

Notes: Brandon Cruz, Bill Bixby's co-star on The Courtship of Eddie's Father (1969–73), guest stars. Some of the plane scenes were taken from the movie Airport 1975. Jack Colvin does not appear.


| LineColor = 1A6631
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=6
|EpisodeNumber2=6
|Title=The Hulk Breaks Las Vegas
|DirectedBy=Larry Stewart
|WrittenBy=Justin Edgerton
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1978|4|21}}
|ShortSummary= When an investigative reporter is injured by the mafia for details about their illegal activities, casino worker David 'Benning' becomes his only chance at exposing them. David must deliver his evidence to Jack McGee who is still tracking the Hulk's movements across the country.
| LineColor = 1A6631
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=7
|EpisodeNumber2=7
|Title=Never Give a Trucker an Even Break
|DirectedBy=Kenneth Gilbert
|WrittenBy=Kenneth Johnson
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1978|4|28}}
|ShortSummary= In Nevada, a group of hijackers led by Ted (Frank Christi) and Mike (Grand L. Bush) steal a semi-truck from the father of a young woman named Joanie (Jennifer Darling) as she makes plans to steal it back. David 'Bradford' becomes mixed up in her plans, and is forced to transform into the Hulk to save both of their lives.

Note: Much of the footage from the chase scenes was taken from Steven Spielberg's TV movie Duel.[1] Jack McGee is not seen, but he is mentioned at the end of the episode as talking to people in the area who saw the Hulk.


| LineColor = 1A6631
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=8
|EpisodeNumber2=8
|Title=Life and Death
|DirectedBy=James D. Parriot
|WrittenBy=Jeffrey Hayden
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1978|5|12}}
|ShortSummary= While on his way to volunteer for a DNA experiment in "Marysville", Oregon, the pre-December 1853 name for Corvallis, David 'Bernard' meets a young pregnant woman who is also hitchhiking. Both share a ride to the same town where the young woman explains her plans to give up her newborn child for adoption. David learns the physician involved in the illegal adoption is the same one experimenting on him and that he, his nurse and assistants are selling the newborn babies on the black market. Guest stars: Julie Adams, Diane Cary, Carl Franklin and Andrew Robinson.
| LineColor = 1A6631
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=9
|EpisodeNumber2=9
|Title=Earthquakes Happen
|DirectedBy=Harvey Laidman
|WrittenBy=Jim Tisdale & Migdia Varela
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1978|5|19}}
|ShortSummary= A nuclear power plant in California contains powerful gamma radiation equipment, and David poses as a physics scientist named Dr. Robert Patterson to gain access to it. While experimenting with the machine, an earthquake occurs and causes massive cave-ins in the facility. With the reactor about to explode, David leads a group of survivors through the facility, before transforming into the Hulk and turning the cooling system on to cool the reactors.

Note: Footage from the 1974 film Earthquake was used.


| LineColor = 1A6631
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=10
|EpisodeNumber2=10
|Title=The Waterfront Story
|DirectedBy=Reza Badiyi
|WrittenBy=Paul M. Belous & Robert Wolterstorff
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1978|5|31}}
|ShortSummary= Now in Texas, David 'Barton' is working as a bartender for a widowed boss. It turns out that the widow's late husband was murdered, because someone wanted to take control of a dock worker's union. David manages to find the true murderer, but must still leave town to avoid being found by Jack McGee.
| LineColor = 1A6631
}}
}}

Season 2 (1978–79)

{{Episode table |background=#035D8D|overall=3 |season=3 |title=19 |writer=19 |director=15 |airdate=14 |episodes={{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=11
|EpisodeNumber2=1
|Title=Married
|AltTitle=Bride of the Incredible Hulk
|DirectedBy=Kenneth Johnson
|WrittenBy=Kenneth Johnson
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1978|9|22}}
|ShortSummary= David 'Benton' travels to Honolulu, Hawaii to meet Dr. Carolyn Fields (Mariette Hartley), a psychologist whose technique might help cure the Hulk. However, Dr. Fields is in the terminal stages of a incurable disease. With the pair working in close proximity, love begins to bloom with tragic results.

Notes: First aired as a two-hour special, is shown in two parts in syndication. Titled as Bride of the Incredible Hulk on some video releases. Mariette Hartley won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series for her performance.


| LineColor = 035D8D
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=12
|EpisodeNumber2=2
|Title=The Antowuk Horror
|DirectedBy=Sigmund Neufeld, Jr.
|WrittenBy=Nicholas Corea
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1978|9|29}}
|ShortSummary= After encountering handyman David 'Barton's' alter ego the Hulk, the citizens of a struggling resort town Antowuk, Utah invent their own "monster in the woods" as a tourist attraction, drawing the attention of Jack McGee and a merciless big game hunter.

Guest stars: Lance LeGault (known for Colonel Roderick Decker on The A-Team) and Bill Lucking.


| LineColor = 035D8D
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=13
|EpisodeNumber2=3
|Title=Ricky
|DirectedBy=Frank Orsatti
|WrittenBy=Jaron Summers
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1978|10|6}}
|ShortSummary= Race track utility worker David 'Beckman' befriends a mentally-challenged young man named "Ricky" (Mickey Jones) who is goaded into driving a defective car in a demolition derby in New Mexico.

Note: Gordon Jump (WKRP in Cincinnati) guest stars. Gerald McRaney makes his second appearance. Jack Colvin does not appear in this episode.


| LineColor = 035D8D
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=14
|EpisodeNumber2=4
|Title=Rainbow's End
|DirectedBy=Kenneth Gilbert
|WrittenBy=Karen Harris & Jill Sherman
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1978|10|13}}
|ShortSummary= David 'Bishop' travels to San Remos Race Track, a horse racetrack in the southwestern United States. While working at San Remos Race Track, he meets a Native American man (Ned Romero) whose medicinal herb brew helped calm troubled race horse Rainbow's End in the hope it can help him, but somebody does not want the horse to race.

Note:This is one of 2 episodes to share an episode title with the later Kenneth Johnson-produced series Walker, Texas Ranger.


| LineColor = 035D8D
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=15
|EpisodeNumber2=5
|Title=A Child in Need
|DirectedBy=James D. Parriott
|WrittenBy=Frank Dandrige
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1978|10|20}}
|ShortSummary= Working as a groundskeeper at Lincoln Elementary School, David 'Baxter' takes matters into his own hands to help Mark (Dennis Dimster), a young boy who he suspects of being abused by his father (Sandy McPeak). Sally Kirkland plays the mother.
| LineColor = 035D8D
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=16
|EpisodeNumber2=6
|Title=Another Path
|DirectedBy=Joseph Pevney
|WrittenBy=Nicholas Corea
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1978|10|27}}
|ShortSummary= David 'Braemer' meets a blind Chinese philosopher from San Francisco called Li Sung who may be able to help him control the creature, but encounters problems with a former student and friend of Li Sung who has perverted the old man's teachings.

Notes: This is the first time Banner refers to his alter ego as "the Hulk." Jack McGee does not appear in this episode but is mentioned. Mako makes his first guest appearance as Li Sung.


| LineColor = 035D8D
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=17
|EpisodeNumber2=7
|Title= Alice in Disco Land
|DirectedBy=Sigmund Neufeld, Jr.
|WrittenBy=Karen Harris & Jill Sherman
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1978|11|3}}
|ShortSummary= David 'Balon' gets a job at a Discothèque Club and meets a young dancer who is the daughter of a deceased colleague that is under the influence of alcohol.

Note: Donna Wilkes (Jaws 2) guest stars. Marc Alaimo (Gul Dukat on Deep Space Nine) makes his first guest appearance.


| LineColor = 035D8D
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=18
|EpisodeNumber2=8
|Title= Killer Instinct
|DirectedBy=Ray Danton
|WrittenBy={{StoryTeleplay|s=Richard H. Landau and William M. Whitehead & Joel Don Humphreys|t=William M. Whitehead & Joel Don Humphreys}}
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1978|11|10}}
|ShortSummary= David 'Burnett' becomes an assistant to a football trainer with success in curbing aggression and must help a "Los Angeles Cougars" player (Denny Miller) with a violent past.

Note: Film of Dick Butkus of the Chicago Bears was used for the football scenes. Some scenes filmed at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.


| LineColor = 035D8D
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=19
|EpisodeNumber2=9
|Title=Stop the Presses
|DirectedBy=Jeffrey Hayden
|WrittenBy={{StoryTeleplay|s=Susan Woollen|t=Karen Harris & Jill Sherman and Susan Woollen}}
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1978|11|24}}
|ShortSummary= While working as a dishwasher at an Italian restaurant in Chicago, David 'Bernard' discovers that his photograph has been taken and that it is going to be printed in the National Register. When the Hulk shows up at the restaurant, this catches the attention of Jack McGee who is prepared to hunt the Hulk down.Guest stars: Pat Morita (The Karate Kid trilogy), Mary Frann
| LineColor = 035D8D
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=20
|EpisodeNumber2=10
|Title=Escape from Los Santos
|DirectedBy=Chuck Bowman
|WrittenBy=Bruce Kalish & Philip John Taylor
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1978|12|1}}
|ShortSummary= David 'Brown' and a woman are wrongly accused of the murder of the woman's crime-fighting husband by a corrupt Sheriff in Arizona.

Guest stars: Shelly Fabares as Holly Cooper, W.K. Stratton as Deputy Munro, Lee de Broux as Mike Evans, Dana Elcar as Sheriff Harris


| LineColor = 035D8D
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=21
|EpisodeNumber2=11
|Title=Wildfire
|DirectedBy=Frank Orsatti
|WrittenBy=Brian Rehak
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1979|1|1}}
|ShortSummary= The oil rig which David 'Blakeman' is working on is set ablaze by a saboteur.Guest stars: John Anderson, Christine Belford and Billy "Green" Bush
| LineColor = 035D8D
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=22
|EpisodeNumber2=12
|Title=A Solitary Place
|DirectedBy=Jeffrey Hayden
|WrittenBy=Jim Tisdale & Migdia Varela
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1979|1|24}}
|ShortSummary= Hoping to avoid situations which leads to his transformation into the Hulk, David 'Bailey' isolates himself in a remote wilderness of Baja California, Mexico, and begins to live there temporarily. But his peaceful camping site is disturbed by the arrival of a female medical fugitive who was wrongly convicted of malpractice by the father of a girl who died in her care.
| LineColor = 035D8D
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=23
|EpisodeNumber2=13
|Title=Like a Brother
|DirectedBy=Reza Badiyi
|WrittenBy=Richard Christian Matheson & Thomas E. Szollosi
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1979|1|31}}
|ShortSummary= While working at a car wash in a black neighborhood, David 'Butler' befriends the younger brother of co-worker who is being exploited by a drug lord with a black panther as a pet.

Guest stars: Ernie Hudson (Ghostbusters) and Tony Burton (Rocky)


| LineColor = 035D8D
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=24
|EpisodeNumber2=14
|Title=Haunted
|DirectedBy=John McPherson
|WrittenBy={{StoryTeleplay|s=Karen Harris & Jill Sherman|t=Andrew Schneider}}
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1979|2|7}}
|ShortSummary= Mover David 'Barrett' helps a woman renovate her family's old house in New Hampshire. But strange events start to occur. Jack McGee does not appear in this episode.
| LineColor = 035D8D
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=25
|EpisodeNumber2=15
|Title=Mystery Man, Part 1
|DirectedBy=Frank Orsatti
|WrittenBy=Nicholas Corea
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1979|3|2}}
|ShortSummary= Caught in a car accident on his way to Santa Fe, New Mexico which badly injures his face and causes amnesia, a bandaged David is befriended by Jack McGee who's unaware of "John Doe's" real identity. McGee hires a plane to take the pair to a specialist in Los Angeles.
| LineColor = 035D8D
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=26
|EpisodeNumber2=16
|Title=Mystery Man, Part 2
|DirectedBy=Frank Orsatti
|WrittenBy=Nicholas Corea
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1979|3|9}}
|ShortSummary= With a slowly recovering David and McGee surviving a plane crash forty-eight miles from Eden, Arizona. They are forced to flee a forest fire and avoid a starving wolf pack. During their escape, David recovers his memory just in time to learn why McGee is so obsessed with capturing the Hulk.
| LineColor = 035D8D
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=27
|EpisodeNumber2=17
|Title=The Disciple
|DirectedBy=Reza Badiyi
|WrittenBy=Nicholas Corea & James G. Hirsch
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1979|3|16}}
|ShortSummary= In a follow-up to "Another Path," David 'Blaine' revisits Li Sung in San Francisco and must help his star pupil, a young police officer out for revenge after his father has been killed by a criminal.

Notes: Rick Springfield guest stars; Gerald McRaney makes his third appearance. Mako makes his second and final guest appearance as Li Sung. Jack McGee does not appear in this episode. The episode was a failed backdoor pilot for Springfield.


| LineColor = 035D8D
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=28
|EpisodeNumber2=18
|Title=No Escape
|DirectedBy=Jeffrey Hayden
|WrittenBy=Ben Masselink
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1979|3|30}}
|ShortSummary= After being arrested for vagrancy in Santa Maria, California, David 'Baron' encounters a mentally ill man (James Wainwright) who believe himself to be Ernest Hemingway. After accidentally freeing the man as the Hulk, David 'Baron' races to save him from hurting himself and others.

Note: Sherman Hemsley (The Jeffersons) guest stars. Jack Kirby, who co-created the Hulk character, has a cameo as a sketch artist.


| LineColor = 035D8D
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=29
|EpisodeNumber2=19
|Title=Kindred Spirits
|DirectedBy=Joseph Pevney
|WrittenBy=Karen Harris & Jill Sherman
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1979|4|6}}
|ShortSummary= David 'Barton' meets an old student working on an archaeological dig on a Navajo reservation in Arizona which has found evidence of a previous Hulk-like creature.

Guest stars: Kim Cattrall (Samantha Jones on Sex and the City), Whit Bissell and Don Shanks (The Revenge of Michael Myers).


| LineColor = 035D8D
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=30
|EpisodeNumber2=20
|Title=The Confession
|DirectedBy=Barry Crane
|WrittenBy=Deborah Davis
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1979|5|4}}
|ShortSummary= Jack McGee is unwillingly saddled with an inexperienced junior reporter (Markie Post), who discovers and writes a story about a small, timid man (Barry Gordon) claiming to be the Hulk in Santa Clara. Meanwhile, David 'Benton' works nearby as a janitor.

Note: This is the final episode in which Ted Cassidy voices the Hulk due to his death from complications following open heart surgery.


| LineColor = 035D8D
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=31
|EpisodeNumber2=21
|Title=The Quiet Room
|DirectedBy=Reza Badiyi
|WrittenBy=Karen Harris & Jill Sherman
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1979|5|11}}
|ShortSummary= David 'Balland' is working as an orderly at Valley View Sanatorium, when he discovers that a doctor is performing unethical experiments on the patients. Then, David is put in a straitjacket and locked up to keep him quiet.

Note: This is the first episode with Charles Napier voicing the Hulk.


| LineColor = 035D8D
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=32
|EpisodeNumber2=22
|Title=Vendetta Road
|DirectedBy=John McPherson
|WrittenBy={{StoryTeleplay|s=Justin Edgerton|t=Justin Edgerton and Michael McGreevey}}
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1979|5|25}}
|ShortSummary= David 'Brennan' encounters a "Bonnie and Clyde"-style couple in Arkansas enacting an explosive vendetta against a gas company.
| LineColor = 035D8D
}}
}}

Season 3 (1979–80)

{{Episode table |background=#AC1D27|overall=3 |season=3 |title=19 |writer=19 |director=15 |airdate=14 |episodes={{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=33
|EpisodeNumber2=1
|Title= Metamorphosis
|DirectedBy=Alan J. Levi
|WrittenBy={{StoryTeleplay|s=Frank Dandridge|t=Craig Buck}}
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1979|9|21}}
|ShortSummary= The audience at a rock concert thinks that it is part of the act when the Hulk takes center stage to save a troubled rock star.

Guest stars: Mackenzie Phillips (One Day at a Time) as rock star Lisa Swan; Gary Graham, who would star on another of creator Kenneth Johnson's TV series, Alien Nation (1989)


| LineColor = AC1D27
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=34
|EpisodeNumber2=2
|Title= Blind Rage
|DirectedBy=Jeffrey Hayden
|WrittenBy=Dan Ullman
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1979|9|28}}
|ShortSummary= An accident at a chemical warfare research station sends dry cleaner counterman David 'Blair' on a desperate search for an antidote that will save his friend's life.Guest star: Lee Bryant
| LineColor = AC1D27
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=35
|EpisodeNumber2=3
|Title= Brain Child
|DirectedBy=Reza Badiyi
|WrittenBy=Nicholas Corea
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1979|10|5}}
|ShortSummary= Fieldworker David 'Barnes' tries to reunite a gifted teenager who has run away from school with the mother who abandoned her.

Note:This is one of the 2 episodes to share an episode title with the later Kenneth Johnson-produced series Walker, Texas Ranger.

Guest stars: June Allyson and Robin Dearden
| LineColor = AC1D27
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=36
|EpisodeNumber2=4
|Title= The Slam
|DirectedBy=Nicholas Corea
|WrittenBy=Nicholas Corea
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1979|10|19}}
|ShortSummary= When he is arrested for vagrancy, David 'Brendan' is sent to a work camp in Jensen County where he becomes Prisoner #1124. While in the work camp, David witnesses corruption in the prison system by the prison warden and can't work on exposing him with Jack McGee nearby.

Note: Charles Napier makes his first guest appearance. Marc Alaimo (Gul Dukat on Deep Space Nine) makes his second guest appearance.


| LineColor = AC1D27
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=37
|EpisodeNumber2=5
|Title=My Favorite Magician
|DirectedBy=Reza Badiyi
|WrittenBy=Sam Egan
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1979|10|26}}
|ShortSummary= An aging magician who drafts David 'Barker' as his assistant for a benefit performance has some tricks up his sleeve that could prove to be deadly.

Note: Anne Schedeen (ALF) and Bill Bixby's co-star on My Favorite Martian (1963–66), Ray Walston, guest stars. The title combines two titles of series starring Bixby: My Favorite Martian and The Magician.


| LineColor = AC1D27
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=38
|EpisodeNumber2=6
|Title=Jake
|DirectedBy=Frank Orsatti
|WrittenBy=Chuck Bowman
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1979|11|2}}
|ShortSummary= While working with a rodeo in Gaston, Texas as a medic, David 'Benton' learns that the shows biggest star is performing with an illness that could cost him his life.
| LineColor = AC1D27
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=39
|EpisodeNumber2=7
|Title=Behind the Wheel
|DirectedBy=Frank Orsatti
|WrittenBy={{StoryTeleplay|s=Rick Rosenthal|t=Rick Rosenthal and Todd Susman & Andrew Schneider}}
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1979|11|9}}
|ShortSummary= The owner of a taxicab company in danger of being taken over by drug smugglers turns to taxicab driver David 'Barret' for help.

Guest star: Esther Rolle (Good Times)


| LineColor = AC1D27
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=40
|EpisodeNumber2=8
|Title=Homecoming
|DirectedBy=John McPherson
|WrittenBy=Andrew Schneider
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1979|11|30}}
|ShortSummary= At Thanksgiving, David reluctantly returns to his childhood home in Trevorton, Colorado when he learns that his father D.W. Banner (John Marley) may lose his land. Once there, David must fight a crop-destroying plague...and resolve a bitter emotional issue. Diana Muldaur also appears in this episode as Bruce's sister Helen.

Note: Fred Rogers of Mister Rogers' Neighborhood visited the set of this episode to show his viewers how the series was made and the transformations that Lou Ferrigno goes through to portray the Hulk.


| LineColor = AC1D27
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=41
|EpisodeNumber2=9
|Title=The Snare
|DirectedBy=Frank Orsatti
|WrittenBy=Richard Christian Matheson & Thomas E. Szollosi
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1979|12|7}}
|ShortSummary= After accepting a ride on a private plane, David 'Bennet' finds himself stranded on an island that is uninhabited with the exception of a psycho Michael Sutton (Bradford Dillman) who is a hunter of men.

Note: This episode is one of many adaptations of Richard Connell's classic short story, The Most Dangerous Game.


| LineColor = AC1D27
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=42
|EpisodeNumber2=10
|Title=Babalao
|DirectedBy=Richard Milton
|WrittenBy=Craig Buck
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1979|12|14}}
|ShortSummary= Clinic nurse David 'Beckman' helps a young New Orleans doctor (Louise Sorel) battle a con artist posing as a voodoo healer who has a strong hold on a superstitious community.
| LineColor = AC1D27
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=43
|EpisodeNumber2=11
|Title=Captive Night
|DirectedBy=Frank Orsatti
|WrittenBy=Sam Egan
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1979|12|21}}
|ShortSummary= During a robbery at Slater's Department Store in Philadelphia where he is working, stock room employee David 'Bishop' is forced to join the thieves as a way of protecting his colleagues.

Guest stars: Anne Lockhart (Lieutenant Sheba on Battlestar Galactica), Stanley Kamel and Parley Baer.


| LineColor = AC1D27
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=44
|EpisodeNumber2=12
|Title=Broken Image
|DirectedBy=John McPherson
|WrittenBy=Karen Harris & Jill Sherman
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1980|1|4}}
|ShortSummary= Apartment caretaker David 'Bowman' is a dead-ringer for a wanted criminal named Mike Cassidy and becomes the prey of a vengeful gang and the police. His attempt to leave town is hindered by Jack McGee who is shocked to discover that David Banner is still alive.

Note: Bill Bixby also plays the role of Mike Cassidy in a dual role.


| LineColor = AC1D27
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=45
|EpisodeNumber2=13
|Title=Proof Positive
|DirectedBy=Dick Harwood
|WrittenBy=Karen Harris & Jill Sherman
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1980|1|11}}
|ShortSummary= Jack McGee's new publisher at that National Register named Patricia Steinhauer (Caroline Smith) forbids him to continue his search for the Hulk, so the ace reporter decides to take matters into his own hands and travels to Gary, Indiana.

Note: David is portrayed by a stunt double and Bill Bixby only appears in footage from previous episodes. Bixby was unavailable for the episode due to scheduling conflicts with court dates relating to his divorce.


| LineColor = AC1D27
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=46
|EpisodeNumber2=14
|Title=Sideshow
|DirectedBy=Nicholas Corea
|WrittenBy=Len Jenkin
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1980|1|25}}
|ShortSummary= David 'Burns' gets hired as a stage manager for a carnival act and learns that the carnival's mind-reader (Judith Chapman) has been blamed for a series of misfortunes. Also guest stars Robert Donner
| LineColor = AC1D27
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=47
|EpisodeNumber2=15
|Title=Long Run Home
|DirectedBy=Frank Orsatti
|WrittenBy=Allan Cole & Chris Bunch
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1980|2|1}}
|ShortSummary= A motorcyclist decides to give David 'Beller' a lift, but the ride takes him straight into the heart of a risky biker gang conflict.
| LineColor = AC1D27
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=48
|EpisodeNumber2=16
|Title=Falling Angels
|DirectedBy=Barry Crane
|WrittenBy={{StoryTeleplay|s=Eric Kaldor & D.K. Krzemien|t=Eric Kaldor & D.K. Krzemien and James Sanford Parker}}
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1980|2|8}}
|ShortSummary= While working in a seemingly innocent orphanage in Florida, handyman David 'Bannister' discovers that some of the young inhabitants are involved in a reckless crime ring.Guest stars: Annette Charles, Deborah Morgan-Weldon and Cindy Fisher
| LineColor = AC1D27
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=49
|EpisodeNumber2=17
|Title=The Lottery
|DirectedBy=John McPherson
|WrittenBy={{StoryTeleplay|s=Dan Ullman|t=Allan Cole & Chris Bunch}}
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1980|2|15}}
|ShortSummary= Newsdealer David 'Becker' wins $250,000 through a lottery ticket while working in San Antonio, Texas, but he must find a way to collect his winnings without his secret coming to light. What he doesn't know is that the friend he made to go in his place is a former con artist who takes advantage of the lottery winnings to earn a huge profit.Guest star: Robert Hogan
| LineColor = AC1D27
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=50
|EpisodeNumber2=18
|Title=The Psychic
|DirectedBy=Barry Crane
|WrittenBy={{StoryTeleplay|s=Karen Harris & Jill Sherman and George Arthur Bloom|t=Karen Harris & Jill Sherman}}
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1980|2|22}}
|ShortSummary= A young psychic (Brenda Benet) in San Francisco has the ability to see the Hulk in grocery store worker David, but she puts him in a tough spot when she also predicts Jack McGee's death at the hands of a killer who killed a teenager.

Notes: Brenda Benet was Bill Bixby's wife at the time. In this episode, David never gives his alias last name.


| LineColor = AC1D27
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=51
|EpisodeNumber2=19
|Title=A Rock and a Hard Place
|DirectedBy=Chuck Bowman
|WrittenBy=Andrew Schneider
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1980|2|29}}
|ShortSummary= Caught between the FBI and a lethal gang in Atlantic City, handyman David 'Brennan' must play the part of both criminal and informant in order to survive.
| LineColor = AC1D27
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=52
|EpisodeNumber2=20
|Title=Deathmask
|DirectedBy=John McPherson
|WrittenBy=Nicholas Corea
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1980|3|14}}
|ShortSummary= Accused of being a serial killer in the college town of Prestonville, library assistant David 'Brent' is threatened by an enraged lynch mob, a disturbed police chief, and an ambitious mayor.

Guest stars: Marla Pennington (Small Wonder) and Gerald McRaney, who makes his fourth and final appearance.


| LineColor = AC1D27
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=53
|EpisodeNumber2=21
|Title=Equinox
|DirectedBy=Patrick Boyrivan
|WrittenBy=Andrew Schneider
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1980|3|21}}
|ShortSummary= Librarian David 'Beldon' is trapped at a spoiled heiress Vernal Equinox masquerade ball on a private island with the ultimate costume....the Hulk. His appearance gives McGee the perfect opportunity to use his tranquilizer gun.
| LineColor = AC1D27
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=54
|EpisodeNumber2=22
|Title=Nine Hours
|DirectedBy=Nicholas Corea
|WrittenBy=Nicholas Corea
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1980|4|4}}
|ShortSummary= In a race against time, orderly David 'Breck' must outwit a group of hit men in order to save the lives of a young boy and a reformed gangster.

Note: Marc Alaimo (Gul Dukat on Deep Space Nine) makes his third and final guest appearance. Dennis Haysbert has a small role credited as "Guard".


| LineColor = AC1D27
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=55
|EpisodeNumber2=23
|Title=On the Line
|DirectedBy=L.Q. Jones
|WrittenBy=Karen Harris & Jill Sherman
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1980|4|11}}
|ShortSummary= Sparks ignite when David 'Brown' comes under suspicion for starting a deadly forest fire and is dragged into being a volunteer firefighter in order to stop the forest fire. It is up to the Hulk to save his alter ego when he's trapped in the blaze.
| LineColor = AC1D27
}}
}}

Season 4 (1980–81)

{{Episode table |background=#FFBF00|overall=3 |season=3 |title=19 |writer=19 |director=15 |airdate=14 |episodes={{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=56
|EpisodeNumber2=1
|Title=Prometheus, Part 1
|DirectedBy=Kenneth Johnson
|WrittenBy=Kenneth Johnson
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1980|11|7}}
|ShortSummary= After being exposed to a radioactive meteorite, David finds himself trapped halfway into his metamorphosis to the Hulk while trying to help a young blind woman in Utah.

Note: Bodybuilder and professional wrestler Ric Drasin plays the half-transformed Hulk (uncredited).[2] This is Laurie Prange's second appearance in the series.


| LineColor = FFBF00
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=54
|EpisodeNumber2=2
|Title=Prometheus, Part 2
|DirectedBy=Kenneth Johnson
|WrittenBy=Kenneth Johnson
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1980|11|14}}
|ShortSummary= Still trapped in mid-transformation, David is an unwitting subject for study by government scientists at a secret research facility in Colorado. The scientists think the Hulk is an alien, but McGee tries to convince them he is actually a mutated human.
| LineColor = FFBF00
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=58
|EpisodeNumber2=3
|Title=Free Fall
|DirectedBy=Reza Badiyi
|WrittenBy=Chris Bunch & Allan Cole
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1980|11|21}}
|ShortSummary= Working for a traveling skydiving show, David 'Blake' finds himself caught up in a conflict between the owner and a corrupt politician which sees him falling {{convert|12000|ft|m}} without a parachute.
| LineColor = FFBF00
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=59
|EpisodeNumber2=4
|Title=Dark Side
|DirectedBy=John McPherson
|WrittenBy=Nicholas Corea
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1980|12|5}}
|ShortSummary= David 'Bernard's' self-experiments backfire and send him into a primitive state, creating danger for the family with whom he is boarding.
| LineColor = FFBF00
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=60
|EpisodeNumber2=5
|Title=Deep Shock
|DirectedBy=Reza Badiyi
|WrittenBy=Ruel Fischman
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1980|12|12}}
|ShortSummary= During an accident at a power plant that he works at, David 'Benton' is subjected to electrical trauma that allows him to foresee events in the immediate future. In addition at the time when some employees are getting layoffs, David befriends a co-worker with a heart condition.
| LineColor = FFBF00
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=61
|EpisodeNumber2=6
|Title=Bring Me the Head of the Hulk
|DirectedBy=Bill Bixby
|WrittenBy=Allan Cole & Chris Bunch
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1981|1|9}}
|ShortSummary= David 'Bedford' falls for an elaborate trap set to kill the Hulk orchestrated by a mercentary Le Font who is working for the publisher of the National Register's competition named Neil Hines. David receives help from an unlikely ally.

Note: This is Sandy McPeak's second guest appearance in the series.


| LineColor = FFBF00
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=62
|EpisodeNumber2=7
|Title=Fast Lane
|DirectedBy=Frank Orsatti
|WrittenBy=Reuben Leder
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1981|1|16}}
|ShortSummary= David 'Brendan' drives a car from Los Angeles to New York, not realizing that it contains hidden mob money that two sets of desperate criminals will do anything to get.
| LineColor = FFBF00
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=63
|EpisodeNumber2=8
|Title=Goodbye, Eddie Cain
|DirectedBy=Jack Colvin
|WrittenBy=Nicholas Corea
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1981|1|23}}
|ShortSummary= A private detective in Los Angeles named Eddie Cain (Cameron Mitchell) pegs David 'Benedict' as the prime suspect in a blackmailing case. Once his innocence is proven, the two join forces to find the real culprit.
| LineColor = FFBF00
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=64
|EpisodeNumber2=9
|Title=King of the Beach
|DirectedBy=Barry Crane
|WrittenBy=Karen Harris
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1981|2|6}}
|ShortSummary= A struggling restaurant worker and bodybuilder named Carl Molino (played by Lou Ferrigno) enters a "King of the Beach" contest and befriends fellow worker David 'Bennet'. Carl doesn't realize who his unscrupulous competitors will be.

Note: Ferrigno plays a dual role in this episode.


| LineColor = FFBF00
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=65
|EpisodeNumber2=10
|Title=Wax Museum
|DirectedBy=Dick Harwood
|WrittenBy=Carol Baxter
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1981|2|13}}
|ShortSummary= The Hulk feels right at home with the bizarre exhibits in a wax museum when David 'Beckwith' takes a job there, but a shifty relative (Max Showalter) of the owner could make the situation sticky.

Note: This is Christine Belford's second appearance in the series.


| LineColor = FFBF00
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=66
|EpisodeNumber2=11
|Title=East Winds
|DirectedBy=Jack Colvin
|WrittenBy=Jill Sherman
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1981|2|20}}
|ShortSummary= A baffled David 'Barrett' finds himself the unwilling recipient of a mail-order bride seeking something hidden in his apartment, dragging him into the conflict between a brutal Chinese gang and a gruff beat-cop.
| LineColor = FFBF00
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=67
|EpisodeNumber2=12
|Title=The First, Part 1
|DirectedBy=Frank Orsatti
|WrittenBy=Andrew Schneider
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1981|3|6}}
|ShortSummary= After hearing a legend about another Hulk, David 'Barr' searches in the town of Vissaria for Dr. Jeffrey Clive, the scientist who could have discovered an antidote for his condition. Instead, he meets Del Frye (Harry Townes), a bitter old man who had once been a Hulk and wants the power back.

Guest star: Billy Green Bush as Sheriff Carl Decker


| LineColor = FFBF00
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=68
|EpisodeNumber2=13
|Title=The First, Part 2
|DirectedBy=Frank Orsatti
|WrittenBy=Andrew Schneider
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1981|3|13}}
|ShortSummary= With David's unwitting aid, Frye uses the lab equipment to regain his Hulk power; but his bitter and aggressive personality makes his creature (Dick Durock) extremely dangerous, and David can only hope there's enough of Dr. Clive's cure left for both of them.
| LineColor = FFBF00
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=69
|EpisodeNumber2=14
|Title=The Harder They Fall
|DirectedBy=Mike Vejar
|WrittenBy=Nancy Faulkner
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1981|3|27}}
|ShortSummary= Paralyzed from the waist down after an auto accident, a torn David 'Blackwell' must weigh up accepting life in a wheelchair or whether to risk intentionally transforming into the Hulk whose incredible regenerative ability may repair the damage.Guest star: Denny Miller
| LineColor = FFBF00
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=70
|EpisodeNumber2=15
|Title=Interview with the Hulk
|DirectedBy=Patrick Boyriven
|WrittenBy=Alan Cassidy
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1981|4|3}}
|ShortSummary= Tracked down in Atlanta by a respected science reporter named Emerson Fletcher (Michael Conrad) who realizes his true identity, construction worker David 'Butler' reluctantly agrees to an interview about the Hulk unaware that the now disgraced and desperate reporter is reduced to working for the National Register and that Jack McGee is hot on his trail.Guest stars: Jan Sterling and Walter Brooke
| LineColor = FFBF00
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=71
|EpisodeNumber2=16
|Title=Half Nelson
|DirectedBy=Barry Crane
|WrittenBy=Andrew Schneider
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1981|4|17}}
|ShortSummary=It's a small world after all when David 'Benley' befriends Buster Caldwell (Tommy Madden), a midget wrestler in Baltimore, but a couple of crime syndicate enforcers could get in their way.Guest star: Elaine Joyce
| LineColor = FFBF00
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=72
|EpisodeNumber2=17
|Title=Danny
|DirectedBy=Mark A. Burley
|WrittenBy=Diane Frolov
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1981|5|15}}
|ShortSummary= David 'Betson' gets trapped with some conniving thieves when he and the Hulk step in to protect a young man, woman, and child from her abusive in-laws.Guest stars: Don Stroud and Robin Dearden
| LineColor = FFBF00
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=73
|EpisodeNumber2=18
|Title=Patterns
|DirectedBy=Nick Havinga
|WrittenBy=Reuben Leder
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1981|5|22}}
|ShortSummary= There is a major flaw in the story of a garment factory owner named Sam Brandes (Eddie Barth) who claims David 'Benson' is his business partner, and it is up to the Hulk to deal with the loan sharks who come calling for cash.
| LineColor = FFBF00
}}
}}

Season 5 (1981–82)

{{Episode table |background=#01645C|overall=3 |season=3 |title=19 |writer=19 |director=15 |airdate=14 |episodes={{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=74
|EpisodeNumber2=1
|Title=The Phenom
|DirectedBy=Bernard McEveety
|WrittenBy=Reuben Leder
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1981|10|2}}
|ShortSummary= David 'Bedigger' catches a ride to Florida with a promising young baseball pitcher, but it will take the strength of the Hulk to protect the young man from the dangers of an unscrupulous agent.Guest stars: Anne Lockhart and Robert Donner
| LineColor = 01645C
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=75
|EpisodeNumber2=2
|Title=Two Godmothers
|DirectedBy=Mike Vejar
|WrittenBy=Reuben Leder
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1981|10|9}}
|ShortSummary= A special delivery makes for an amazing escape when laundry truck driver David 'Bradley' is forced to help three prisoners from a women's prison including one who is nine months pregnant.
| LineColor = 01645C
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=76
|EpisodeNumber2=3
|Title=Veteran
|DirectedBy=Mike Vejar
|WrittenBy={{StoryTeleplay|s=Nicholas Corea|t=Reuben Leder and Nicholas Corea}}
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1981|10|16}}
|ShortSummary= David 'Barnes' anonymity is put in jeopardy when he tries to stop a disturbed man named Doug Hewitt (Paul Koslo) from assassinating a prominent politician named Harrison Cole (Bruce Gray) who was a former Vietnam War veteran.
| LineColor = 01645C
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=77
|EpisodeNumber2=4
|Title=Sanctuary
|DirectedBy=Chuck Bowman
|WrittenBy=Deborah Davis
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1981|11|6}}
|ShortSummary= While working as a caretaker at a convent, David Banner finds himself on a mission with a higher purpose when he impersonates a minister in order to save a young immigrant from some greedy smugglers.Guest stars: Diana Muldaur and Edie McClurg
| LineColor = 01645C
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=78
|EpisodeNumber2=5
|Title=Triangle
|DirectedBy=Mike Vejar
|WrittenBy=Andrew Schneider
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1981|11|13}}
|ShortSummary=Romance puts lumberjack David 'Beller' in a shaky situation when he competes with a powerful lumber baron for the attention of a beautiful local girl.

Notes: Charles Napier makes his second guest appearance. Jack McGee's last appearance in the series.


| LineColor = 01645C
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=79
|EpisodeNumber2=6
|Title=Slaves
|DirectedBy=John A. Liberti
|WrittenBy=Jeri Taylor
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1982|5|5}}
|ShortSummary= Exposing the Hulk may be the only option for escape when David 'Becker' is captured by an embittered ex-convict and imprisoned in an abandoned ghost town.

Guest star: Jeffrey Kramer (Jaws)


| LineColor = 01645C
}}{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=80
|EpisodeNumber2=7
|Title=A Minor Problem
|DirectedBy=Michael Preece
|WrittenBy=Diane Frolov
|OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1982|5|12}}
|ShortSummary= David 'Bradshaw' is in a race against time when he arrives in Rocksprings, an eerily deserted town that has been contaminated by a deadly bacterium. When he is also infected, David must find an antidote to cure himself and everyone in Rocksprings.Guest star: Linden Chiles
| LineColor = 01645C
}}
}}

Reunion movies (1988–90)

{{Episode table |background=#4B0082|title=30 |writer=19 |director=15 |airdate=14 |episodes={{Episode list
| RTitle = The Incredible Hulk Returns
| DirectedBy = Nicholas Corea
| WrittenBy = Nicholas Corea
| OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1988|5|22}}
| ShortSummary = It's been two years since his last transformation and David 'Banyon' has developed a new gamma transponder at the Joshua-Lambert institute that he hopes will cure him of his inner monster forever. But when a former student unearths the frozen tomb of an ancient Norse God the Mighty Thor is unleashed upon 20th century society. Can the Hulk end the rampage of this mead-crazed barbarian, or will the two raging beasts become allies to save both the transponder and the woman Banner loves?
| LineColor = 4B0082
}}{{Episode list
| RTitle = The Trial of the Incredible Hulk
| DirectedBy = Bill Bixby
| WrittenBy = Gerald DiPego
| OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1989|5|7}}
| ShortSummary = While trying to stop a subway mugging, David 'Belson' is arrested for assault and is defended by blind attorney Matt Murdock. But when the Hulk goes berserk and breaks out of jail, Murdock reveals his own secret to Banner: Blinded by toxic radiation, he stalks the night as the super-sensory acrobatic crimefighter Daredevil. Can two men with uncommon power now join forces to defeat an international crime syndicate led by Wilson Fisk, the Kingpin?
| LineColor = 4B0082
}}{{Episode list
| RTitle = The Death of the Incredible Hulk
| DirectedBy = Bill Bixby
| WrittenBy = Gerald DiPego
| OriginalAirDate = {{Start date|1990|2|18}}
| ShortSummary = Desperately trying to rid himself of his monster-like alter ego once and for all, janitor David 'Bellamy' sneaks into a government research lab run by Dr. Ronald Pratt hoping to find a solution. When Pratt discovers David's plight, he offers to help, but a beautiful spy who's out to steal Pratt's research for terrorists forces Banner to choose between love and loyalty, good and evil, and ultimately, life and death.
| LineColor = 4B0082
}}
}}

References

1. ^{{Cite book|title=Steven Spielberg: A Biography | last=Jackson |first=Kathi |page=18 |publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group |year=2007}}
2. ^The Incredible Hulk Television Series Page Website. Frequently Asked Questions. Who Played the Demi-Hulk? {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101216011720/http://incrediblehulktvseries.com/FAQ/HulkFAQ5.htm |date=2010-12-16 }} Retrieved on December 28, 2010.

External links

  • {{IMDb episodes|0077031|The Incredible Hulk}}
  • {{tv.com episodes|the-incredible-hulk|title=The Incredible Hulk}}
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20070318025925/http://www.incrediblehulktvseries.com/ IncredibleHulkTVseries.com]
{{Hulk}}{{Marvel Comics TV}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Incredible Hulk (1978 TV Series) Episodes, List Of}}

3 : The Incredible Hulk (1978 TV series)|Lists of American science fiction television series episodes|Lists of Marvel Comics television series episodes

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