‘She Hulk 1 × 09’: Skaar, the son of the Hulk, explained


    If you did not know that the Hulk has and has had children, not just one child, throughout the history of comics, it is normal to be introduced to Skaar (Wil Deusner, whom you have already seen in star girl) in episode 1×07 of she-hulk, Whose series is this?, and take it for good, surprising you, as is logical, by the mere fact that Mark Ruffalo’s character has an offspring, suddenly, like a soap opera. It’s a good attitude, seriously, congratulations; is what it has to be. If you are of a curious nature you may have googled what is the name of the woman in the hulk, how many children does the hulk have (We do not recommend that you do this search because you are going to get quite involved, because you are going to get more than two and more than three, and on top of that you are going to read things like that he has a daughter with his ex’s niece and you will to exploit the coconut tree), what is the name of the son of the hulk (because you didn’t find out in the chapter) and what is the name of hulk’s daughter (I understand that this is not exactly a search for neophytes, but for people who have a memory like mine).

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    The first is the best question, the rest not so much anymore. Returning to the character of Skaar that introduces she-hulk… In the comics, Skaar’s mother has always been Caiera, a fabulous shadow fighter from the planet Sakaar who played first on the wrong side, who falls in love with the Hulk and Banner (it’s reciprocal) and who dies before she is born his offspring. Caiera was the bodyguard of the Red King, a badass leader whom the Hulk overthrows (and incidentally becomes Emperor, no less than the Green King). Neither of these two characters ever appeared in the Sakaar that taught us thor ragnarok, so we don’t have the slightest idea who the mother is in the MCU because they can’t include this story line now, they have to find another origin. And the Skaar we knew from the comics was fierce and seemed infinitely older than this acne-ridden teen whose bangs someone in the cutting room decided to chop off. If you’ve read the comics you must be as confused as we are right now because you don’t understand anything about this version. Light of the character, well, first. This is the actor who brings him to life:

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    Hulk in the MCU is off Earth for a relatively short time (less than three years) and part of the grace of his relationship with his son is that at first they don’t exactly get along. We see this Skaar very calm and quite harmless. Not to mention that it’s not exactly any intelligent Hulk that first meets him in the comics. The series points out that although they can fight, the father-son meeting is going to resemble in part the Banner-Jennifer Walters meeting, with a lot of reasoning involved. Skarr doesn’t seem to have that hatred that comes from thinking that your father abandoned you on a wild planet (nothing to do with Sakaar from Ragnarok), from Galactus destroying his planet and from blaming your father for all the horrors you’ve suffered in your life. short life. We understand that the MCU is going to skip that part. We know where the Hulk has been all the time since Ragnarok, and we know that he was on Sakaar for two years before the events of the movie. The conception of his offspring had to take place at that time, not later, so this son has been on the loose in the MCU for eight years without us knowing anything about him and without him going to look for his father on Earth to adjust accounts.

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    By dates, we mean the official dates of the MCU: thor ragnarok takes place in 2017 (Marvel time) and she-hulk in 2025, after moon knight and before that mrs marvel. Don’t look at the boy’s age because Skaar doesn’t have a conventional birth: he is born from an egg incubated in lava (if it isn’t a conventional egg) and when he comes out he is already a good six-seven years old and strong as a bull (and He has a rage that I won’t even tell you). What does not block us so much is everything that happens afterwards. Summarizing the story, which is much more complex, Skaar, a kind of beast boy, finds himself on a drifting planet in which the effects of the Red King’s dictatorship, already deceased before the Hulk leaves without knowing that he is his father, fights against all kinds of warlords, sees how his planet is destroyed and goes out to find his father. And they meet. Well if they meet. It’s an epic encounter, between an adult son (yes, he grows up weird, like fantasy fiction) and his father, who is strong and not particularly smart. Skaar was waiting for his father, bigger than him, stronger… The fact is that the two fight… next to a nuclear power plant! And it’s good old Korg (yes, that Korg, played by Taika Waititi in the Thor movies) who mediates between them. The version of the Hulk at that time does not recognize him, although he does think he sees his mother’s eyes in Skaar, the son gets angry, realizes that the Hulk is not right in the head, sticks a sword into him (as if you or I stick a splinter in our finger) and they separate. When they meet again, Hulk is Banner again and no longer suffers from the effects of Gamma radiation. It’s clear that the MCU is going to simplify, but Skaar without the inner rage, he kind of looks like a light version.

    This does not mean that this new version has to be bad. It is curious that this episode, precisely this episode, affects the Kevin-Jennifer Walters conversation on the subject of paternal trauma: enough of paternal trauma, that we have seen in Iron Man, in Thor, in Loki and in Star-Lord … And he’s right. Will this dialogue be a wink for those who may come to protest the decaffeinated version of the Hulk-Skaar relationship? Probably, although don’t tell me it wouldn’t have been better to introduce him later and have pitted father and son in a fabulous fight. Although, yes, with a Skaar with less character face than Afterclass.

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‘She Hulk 1 × 09’: Skaar, the son of the Hulk, explained