"The Incredible Hulk" Sideshow (TV Episode 1980) Poster

(TV Series)

(1980)

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7/10
The Carnival
AaronCapenBanner20 November 2014
David Banner(Bill Bixby) is camping out in the woods when he happens to encounter a traveling carnival sideshow which hires him as their stage manager. He befriends their "psychic" Nancy(played by Judith Chapman) who develops romantic feelings for David, though she also is being stalked by an angry and vengeful man named Benedict(played by Robert Donner) who blames her for his sons death, and begins a campaign of slander and sabotage to ruin her life, not counting on the Hulk to emerge to save the day. Different locale this time is a nice change, otherwise this is acceptable if unremarkable, though it was nice to have Bill Bixby return after being absent the previous story.
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9/10
Eerily Prophetic
richard.fuller19 June 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Judith Chapman had apparently dated Robert Donner's son and his son committed suicide, so Donner blamed Chapman, who was a fortune teller at the local carnival.

Donner, perhaps best loved to a generation for his deranged comical nutcase Exedor on Mork and Mindy, is giving it the Bible-thumper approach here.

When the Hulk finally appears, Donner declares "tis the devil himself before me!" And how about the Hulk getting Donner down off that ferris wheel! One rather eerie bit was Bill Bixby listening to Donner talk about how it feels to have a child die.

Sadly, Bixby would go through this very tragedy with his own son.
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5/10
Sideshow Psychic
flarefan-819062 May 2017
It's been a while since David had an outright love interest. I still think David shouldn't be fooling around with women's hearts knowing all the while that he can't stay in one place for too long, but the fact that it hasn't happened much this season makes this occasion more acceptable. More importantly, this episode's damsel is more compelling than most.

See, Nancy is the "psychic" of a traveling circus sideshow, and the way she plies her craft is particularly intriguing. You have to watch the episode to really appreciate it. Her character in general is blessed with only average development but excellent writing. Except, well... During her act, Nancy not only "divines" her audience's secret problems, she tries to offer them solutions in the manner of an armchair psychologist. It's a sweet idea, and I appreciate the probably intentional parallel to the way David helps people, but I still feel like she's overstepping her bounds. She may have deduced a few facts about her audience members, but she certainly doesn't know them well enough to give them qualified advice.

The conflict comes from a stalker who blames Nancy for his son's suicide. It's implied that the boy was actually driven to suicide by the fundamentalist Christian upbringing his father gave him, and the plot in general leans uncomfortably towards a "Christians are evil" message, saved only by David quoting Psalm 145 in an attempt to persuade the stalker off the path of vengeance. Bixby's recitation of the passage is wonderfully eloquent.

While I have quibbles with both Nancy's character and her stalker, both aspects of the plot are captivating. It's not a perfect episode, but it appealed to me.
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