Yeah, the Ang Lee Hulk was bad. The only good part was the battle scene in the desert facility. That was spot on. I even liked the bright green Hulk, with purple pants. Loved when he walked towards the tank, holding the other Tank's cannon barrel in his hands. That brought back the comic book.
I remember the old Thor. While as far as the whole MCU is concerned, I understand leaving Blake out, but I always felt that was a strong point of the Marvel comics: in this case, making a God human. That was the draw of 60s-70s Marvel, the humanity of the heroes.
Originally Posted by papadee
the biggest problem with the Ang Lee "Hulk" was Nick Nolte. maybe Nolte needed a paycheck? for whatever reason Lee contrived a way for Nolte to be Banner's father and part of some secret project that was the reason for the Hulk. and Nolte eventually having similar powers. made for a nice father-son fight in the desert, but not much else.
needless to say most fans of the Hulk hated the "revisionist history".
Marvel comics created the Hulk first, as "the strongest mortal ever". so eventually Stan Lee and Jack Kirby needed someone strong enough to challenge the Hulk so rather than inventing another mortal they just "stole" Thor from classic pagan/Viking lore. Lee said it was perfect, a God to challenge Hulk, a mortal.
The Blake identity/concept was of course contrived by Lee and Kirby, largely as you say to humanize Thor and they needed an origin so they came up with the premise Blake as a mortal is "Worthy" of Thor's power. within a few years of course Lee and Kirby revealed Blake really is Thor and that it was some elaborate punishment by Odin to teach Thor humility.
in the early 1980's Marvel was considering dropping Thor as a title. the sales were low, the original Kirby artwork was very dated by then, and the comic, despite all the cosmic elements (Asgard, the 9 realms) had gotten stale.
enter Walt Simonson, easily one of the best free hand artists in comics then and now. Marvel offered complete control to Simonson, including a much needed redraw of the character.
this is Kirby's "Classic" Thor ..
this is Simonson's version.. in battle armor
Simonson initially used a updated Kirby look then evolved it into a more realistic look.
The problem The Green Lantern faces today is the same as Superman.
DC has split up their titles into so many variants it's impossible to follow. many are ALT world variants. there's classic 52 Superman, Earth 616 Superman, original Superman, etc. they've done the same with the Green Lantern, there's an entire Sinestro goes evil with a yellow ring story-line, several others.
some of these "might" make good source for a movie, some not. or they can just invent something new. fans of course want something they are familiar with, but like Superman the fans of the Green Lantern are are split into factions, try to appease one faction, offend the other.
DC is bringing out a new Superman (younger version than Cavill's version) because Superman is easily DC's most popular title. the Green Lantern not so much. it's unlikely James Gunn would consider a new standalone Green Lantern movie, it doesn't seem to fit what he's said is "his vision" to date. something about "Gods and Monsters". if Gunn tries a "Vampire" movie it'll flop. bahhaaaa
interestingly, the new Flash movie coming out soon (with that rather troubled flake Ezra Miller as Flash) is designed to "reset" everything in theory allowing James Gunn to ignore any prior movies and start fresh. we'll see how that works out.
while a new standalone Green Lantern (origin or not) movie is unlikely, there is some possibility Green Lantern will be in some new movie as part of some ensemble cast, most likely featuring Superman.