The Show
Second only to The Dark Knight, Ironman rules the comic book/superhero genre. This movie was so well thought out, superbly directed, and perfectly acted that it took an historical performance by Heath Ledger to top it. That’s how good Ironman is, and that’s how good Robert Downey Jr. is in it.
Downey Jr. has had a huge comeback, and Tony Stark was the perfect role for him. Not only did he get to play a narcissistic, sarcastic playboy billionaire; he also got to be a narcissistic, sarcastic superhero.
As a war profiteer, Tony Stark made his fortune in weapons. He’s so cocky and sure of himself, but at the same time so naïve as to what kind of catastrophes his weapons really cause. Joking, but being dead serious at the same time, he says “…Yeah, peace. I love peace. I'd be out of a job for peace.”
After his convoy is attacked by terrorists, who are ironically using the very weapons Stark created, they kidnap him. The terrorists force Stark to rebuild his newest and most destructive weapon, the Jericho missile.
Stark, being a mechanical genius, has other plans. After creating a giant metal suit to escape his captors, he vows to vanquish evil. He declares that his company will not build any more weapons.
After perfecting his suit of iron, Tony becomes a vigilante flying halfway across the world to fight the terrorists who once kept him captive.
The problem with a lot of superhero movies is the wrong people are directing them (Ang Lee the first Hulk movie). Here we have Jon Favreau, self-proclaimed geek. It’s about getting the people who will stick close to the source material and Favreau does that here. He makes a fun, fast-paced film that still has room for deep characters. He eschews CGI as much as possible, only using it when it’s absolutely necessary, creating a far more realistic feel.








Article comments
1 - Chris Beaumont
Looks good! I'll be picking this up.