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Iron Man

Iron Man is a superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Co-created by writer and editor Stan Lee, developed by scripter Larry Lieber, and designed by artists Don Heck and Jack Kirby, the character first appeared in Tales of Suspense #39 in 1963, and received his own title with Iron Man #1 in 1968. Shortly after his creation, Iron Man was a founding member of a superhero team, the Avengers, with Thor, Ant-Man, Wasp and the Hulk. Iron Man stories, individually and with the Avengers, have been published consistently since the character's creation.

Tony Stark
Iron Man
Variant cover of
Tony Stark: Iron Man #2 (July 2018)
Art by Mark Brooks
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceTales of Suspense #39
(March 1963)
Created by
In-story information
Full nameAnthony Edward Stark
Place of originLong Island, New York
Team affiliations
Partnerships
AbilitiesPowered armor suit

Iron Man is the superhero persona of Anthony Edward "Tony" Stark, a businessman and engineer who runs the company Stark Industries. Beginning his career as a weapons manufacturer, he is captured in a war zone, and his heart is severely injured by shrapnel. To sustain his heart and escape his captors, he builds a technologically advanced armor. After escaping, he continues using the armor as a superhero, creating more advanced models that grant him superhuman strength, flight, energy projection, and other abilities. The character was used to explore political themes, and early Iron Man stories were set in the Cold War. Later stories explored other themes, such as civil unrest, technological advancement, corporate espionage, alcoholism, and governmental authority.

Major Iron Man stories include Demon in a Bottle (1979), Armor Wars (1987–1988), Extremis (2005), and Iron Man 2020 (2020). He is also a leading character in the company-wide stories Civil War (2006–2007), Dark Reign (2008–2009), and Civil War II (2016). Iron Man's supporting cast has produced additional superhero characters, including James Rhodes as War Machine, Pepper Potts as Rescue, and Riri Williams as Ironheart as well as reformed villains Black Widow and Hawkeye. Iron Man's list of enemies includes his archenemy, the Mandarin, as well as many supervillains of communist origin and many that double as business rivals for Stark.

Robert Downey Jr. portrayed Tony Stark in Iron Man (2008), the first film of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, and continued to portray the character until his final appearance in Avengers: Endgame (2019). Downey's portrayal popularized the character, elevating Iron Man as one of Marvel's most recognizable superheroes.

Publication history

Creation and premiere

Following the success of the Fantastic Four in 1961 and the subsequent revival of superhero comic books, Marvel set about creating new superhero characters.[1] During this time, Stan Lee developed the initial concept for Iron Man.[1] Lee was interested in making an unlikeable character likeable, saying that he "thought it would be fun to take the kind of character that nobody would like, none of [Marvel's] readers would like, and shove him down their throats and make them like him".[2] Iron Man was created in the years after a permanent arms industry developed in the United States, and this was incorporated into the character's backstory.[3] The character was introduced as an active player in the Vietnam War. Lee described the national mood toward Vietnam in which Iron Man was created as "a time when most of us genuinely felt that the conflict in that tortured land really was a simple matter of good versus evil".[4]

As superhero comics became more popular, Marvel began replacing its previous comic book lines with superheroes. The monster-themed anthology series Tales of Suspense began running Iron Man stories alongside more traditional science-fiction and horror stories, featuring Iron Man on each cover.[5][6] Iron Man's first appearance, "Iron Man is Born!", was in Tales of Suspense #39, released in December 1962 with a cover date of March 1963. In 1964, the science-fiction and horror stories were removed entirely, with the series running only Iron Man and Captain America stories.[6]

Larry Lieber developed Iron Man's origin and wrote the first Iron Man story, while Jack Kirby and Don Heck were responsible for the initial design.[1][7] Kirby initially drew Iron Man as a "round and clunky gray heap", and the design was modified by Heck to incorporate gadgets such as jets, drills, and suction cups. Heck continued as the primary Iron Man artist until 1965, as Kirby had obligations to other Marvel properties.[5][8] Heck later said that when designing Tony Stark, he was attempting to create "an Errol Flynn type".[9] Though the Iron Man armor was gray in its first appearance, it was quickly changed to gold due to issues with printing.[7] Lee briefly delegated the writing to other creators at Marvel, but he felt that their work was substandard; as with his other characters, Lee again took control of Iron Man so he could write the stories himself.[10]

1960s

When Marvel's distributor allowed them more monthly releases, The Avengers was developed as a new comic book series.[11] Iron Man was one of the five characters that formed the titular superhero team.[12] By 1965, the difficulty of maintaining continuity between The Avengers with heroes' solo comics prompted Lee to write the original cast out of The Avengers, including Iron Man.[13]

As part of a shuffling to match artists with the characters they were most suited for, Steve Ditko became the artist for Iron Man.[14] Ditko was responsible for only three issues in late 1963, but in this time he had Iron Man's suit redesigned with the red and gold color scheme that became the character's primary image.[15] Iron Man's recurring nemesis, the Mandarin, first appeared shortly after in Tales of Suspense #50.[16]

Growing opposition to the American involvement in Vietnam prompted a shift in Iron Man's characterization at this time as part of a larger push by Marvel to be more apolitical.[4][17] Lee shifted the focus of Iron Man stories to espionage and domestic crime, incorporating the intelligence agency S.H.I.E.L.D. into these stories. They also incorporated the villains of other Marvel heroes, avoiding Iron Man's primarily communist rogues' gallery. Some of Iron Man's villains were given new motivations without their communist allegiances.[18]

Previously relegated to short stories in an anthology series, Iron Man was one of several characters to receive a full length dedicated series in 1968.[19] The final issues of Tales of Suspense and Sub-Mariner's Tales to Astonish were combined as a one-shot special, Iron Man and Sub-Mariner.[20] Iron Man then began its run under writer Archie Goodwin.[21] Political themes were reintroduced slowly over the following years, with a focus on domestic issues like racial conflict and environmentalism rather than geopolitics.[22]

1970s

I don't feel Tony Stark is a dinosaur, a creature unable to change before the weight of time crushes him aside. Yeah, it is hard in 1977 to praise a millionaire industrialist, playboy and former munitions-manufacturer—but it isn't impossible to change that image. Which is what I plan to do.

Bill Mantlo, Iron Man #100[23]

Over the years, the letters to the editor column in several issues saw extensive political debate.[24] When Goodwin was made editor-in-chief, assigned Gerry Conway as the writer for Iron Man.[25] Conway began a four-year-long effort to reform Iron Man in 1971 with stories that directly addressed the character's history as a weapons manufacturer.[26] These stories were especially prominent during a run by Mike Friedrich, in which corporate reform of Stark Industries was a recurring subplot.[27]

Iron Man was one of several Marvel characters that declined in popularity during the 1970s, and the series went for a period of time without a dedicated writer until Bill Mantlo took over in 1977.[28] The following year, David Michelinie and Bob Layton took charge of the series beginning with issue #116.[29][30] While inking the series, Layton used issues of GQ, Playboy, and electronics catalogues as visual references,[31] and they stayed informed on developments in real world technology so that the Iron Man armor would always be a more advanced version of what existed.[30] Layton was inspired by the vast collection of specialized outfits used by Batman when designing Iron Man's various armors.[32]

In Iron Man #117 and #118, Michelinie and Layton replaced many elements that had developed in the series: they removed Iron Man's romantic interest, they removed the Life Model Decoys that served as robotic doubles of Tony Stark, and they had him move to a different home.[33] Iron Man's new romantic interest, Bethany Cabe, was introduced as a feminist character who worked as Tony Stark's bodyguard.[34] The largest change they made was making Iron Man an alcoholic.[33] This was unprecedented for a major comic book hero,[35] and for much of popular fiction.[36] This began the Demon in a Bottle story arc that ran from #120 to #128.[37] At the same time, they introduced the character of Justin Hammer, who became the main backer of several Iron Man villains.[38]

1980s and 1990s

The 1980s saw increased focus on Iron Man as a businessman reflecting the economic changes associated with Reaganomics, and many of his challenges involved threats to his company.[39] Denny O'Neil was put in charge of Iron Man beginning with issue #158. His run explored Tony Stark's psychology, having the character again fall into his alcoholism and suffer at the hands of business rival Obadiah Stane.[32] O'Neil eventually wrote Tony Stark out of the role entirely, having him temporarily retire as Iron Man and replacing him with his ally James Rhodes.[40] The 1987 Armor Wars story arc blends the superhero and businessman aspects of Iron Man more directly when Tony Stark seeks legal recourse for rivals stealing the Iron Man technology.[39] Michelinie and Layton returned to the series with issue #211, and they again began experimenting with different variations on the Iron Man armor.[41]

In 1990, Michelinie and Layton stopped writing for Iron Man, and the series was given to John Byrne, one of the most highly regarded comic book writers of the time. His run consisted of three story arcs across twenty issues: Armor Wars II (which had already been announced by Michelinie and Layton), The Dragon Seed Saga, and War Games. He did not have further interest in the series by 1992, as his collaborators John Romita Jr. and Howard Mackie had moved on to other projects. During his run, Byrne rewrote Iron Man's origin to remove references to communism and the Vietnam War.[42] Iron Man's supporting character War Machine was spun off into his own comic book series in 1994.[43]

As part of a company-wide reorganization, Marvel's major characters, including Iron Man, were given to former Marvel writers Jim Lee and Rob Liefeld in a profit-sharing agreement. Lee and Liefeld were given charge of the 1996 Heroes Reborn branding that renumbered Marvel's long-running periodicals at #1.[44] This new iteration, labeled volume two, was set in an alternate universe created during the Onslaught event. It ran for thirteen issues, written by Lee and Scott Lobdell and drawn by Whilce Portacio.[45][46] The following year, Marvel introduced the Heroes Return event to bring the characters back from the alternate universe, which again reset characters such as Iron Man to issue #1.[47][48] This was labeled volume three, which was taken on by writer Kurt Busiek and artist Sean Chen.[45][49]

21st century

When the Ultimate Marvel imprint was created with reimagined versions of Marvel's characters, an alternate Iron Man appeared in 2002 with the Ultimates, the imprint's adaptation of The Avengers.[50] A five issue limited series, Ultimate Iron Man, was released featuring this character in 2005.[51]

In 2004, Iron Man was a major character in the Avengers Disassembled event and subsequently became a founding member of The New Avengers.[52] Volume four of Iron Man began in 2005.[45] This new run was written by Warren Ellis and drawn by Adi Granov, and its first story arc, Extremis sees Iron Man upgrade his body directly through the Extremis virus, giving him direct control over a biological armor.[51] The first fourteen issues of volume four carried the Iron Man title, while issues #15–32 were titled Iron Man: Director of S.H.I.E.L.D.[45] Iron Man was the leader of the "pro-registration" faction during the 2006 Civil War crossover event by Mark Millar and Steve McNiven.[53] After the character was rebranded as "Director of S.H.I.E.L.D.", he also appeared with The Mighty Avengers in 2007.[54]

Coinciding with the release of the first Iron Man film, Marvel restarted Iron Man's comic book run with Invincible Iron Man, written by Matt Fraction and drawn by Salvador Larroca. This series ran for sixty issues alongside the character's standalone film appearances, ending shortly before Iron Man 3 was set to be released.[55] The series reverted to the original numbering in 2011, when the overall 500th issue was published as Iron Man #500.[45] Iron Man was then one of several characters whose series was relaunched at issue #1 with the Marvel Now! branding following the 2012 Avengers vs. X-Men event.[56] The 2014 AXIS event led into the Superior Iron Man series, featuring an amoral Iron Man.[57]

Iron Man was again a leader of one faction during the 2016 Civil War II event by Brian Michael Bendis.[58] As part of a broader trend by Marvel Comics to substitute its main characters with a diverse cast of original characters in the 2010s, Iron Man was then temporarily replaced by Ironheart, an African-American teenage girl who reverse engineered the Iron Man armor.[59] At the same time, the series Infamous Iron Man was created with Dr. Doom becoming Iron Man. Invincible Iron Man was renumbered to #593 with the 2017 Marvel Legacy branding, and this issue reintroduced Tony Stark.[60][61]

The series Tony Stark: Iron Man premiered in 2018 with the Fresh Start branding, written by Dan Slott and drawn by Valerio Schiti.[62] In 2020, Iron Man was relaunched in a new series, written by Christopher Cantwell and illustrated by CAFU, following the Iron Man 2020 event. This series was written as a "back to basics" project that reverted the character to a more traditional superhero following the developments of previous series.[63] The character was relaunched again in 2022 with Invincible Iron Man, written by Gerry Duggan and illustrated by Juan Frigeri.[64]

Characterization

Fictional character biography

 
Tales of Suspense #39 (March 1963): Iron Man debuts. Cover art by Jack Kirby and Don Heck.
 
Tales of Suspense #48 (December 1963), the debut of Iron Man's first red-and-gold suit of armor. Cover art by Jack Kirby and Sol Brodsky.

Tony Stark inherited his family's business, Stark Industries, after his parents were killed in a car crash.[65] Developing equipment for the U.S. military, he travels to a war zone to conduct a weapons test when he triggers a booby trap. His heart is critically injured by shrapnel, and he is captured by the communist Wong-Chu, who demands that Stark build him a weapon. Stark instead builds a suit of armor that sustains his heart, becoming Iron Man.[15][5] The war zone that Stark visits has been changed multiple times by different writers to correspond with the character's age, which is explained by a "sliding scale of continuity" in which the timing of significant events in the world of Marvel may change. For the first decades of Iron Man's publication history, the conflict is the Vietnam War.[66] This was changed retroactively in the 1990s to an unnamed Southeast Asian country,[67] and a conflict in the fictional country of Siancong was eventually established to justify the inconsistency.[68]

Iron Man returns to the United States and becomes a superhero, convincing the public that Iron Man is Tony Stark's bodyguard.[65] When he is called to stop Hulk and learns that Loki is behind Hulk's attack, he joins forces with Hulk, Thor, Ant-Man, and Wasp to defeat Loki, and they agree to form a superhero team, the Avengers.[12] At the same time, he helps found the intelligence agency S.H.I.E.L.D., providing the organization with equipment.[65] As Iron Man comes to regret his involvement in weapons manufacturing, Stark Industries is changed to Stark International, an electronics company that emphasizes environmentalism and ending world hunger.[69][65] S.H.I.E.L.D. attempts to take over the business and revert it back to weapons manufacturing. At the same time, Iron Man is framed for murder. These stresses cause him to begin drinking heavily, and he develops alcoholism.[70] Though he gets sober, he later relapses back into alcoholism as part of a plot by Obadiah Stane.[65] Iron Man briefly loses his company to Stane, passes the mantle of Iron Man to his ally James Rhodes,[71] and becomes homeless.[72] After he recovers, Stane adopts an armored suit and becomes the Iron Monger before being defeated. Iron Man then founds a space technology company, Stark Enterprises. When Iron Man learns that Justin Hammer had acquired the Iron Man armor's technology, he seeks out all of the other armors. The resulting fights leave Iron Man a fugitive, leading him to fake his death and then describe himself as a new Iron Man.[65]

Iron Man had previously undergone surgery to replace the damaged portions of his heart, eliminating the need for his prosthetic chest plate.[72] But when he is shot in the spine and paralyzed, he develops a new prosthesis that grants him mobility. This prosthesis is hacked and controlled remotely, causing neurological damage that appears for a time to kill him.[73] During this time, James Rhodes takes the Iron Man armor. After returning, Iron Man falls under the control of Immortus, turning him evil. The Avengers bring an alternate Tony Stark from another reality to help defeat him. Iron Man is killed, and the alternate Tony Stark becomes the new Iron Man. The original Iron Man and the alternate Iron Man are merged into a single being by Franklin Richards when he rewrites reality. His company had been bought out, so he starts a consulting firm, Stark Solutions. His secret identity is revealed to the public shortly afterward. He is then appointed Secretary of Defense until Scarlet Witch alters his mind, causing him to embarrass himself and leave in disgrace.[65] When Mallen becomes a threat through the Extremis project, Iron Man has himself injected with the Extremis virus, giving him a biological armor that he can control with his mind.[74]

Iron Man serves as the enforcer of the Superhero Registration Act upon its enactment, creating a schism between superheroes, with Iron Man leading proponents of registration against a group of resistors led by Captain America.[53] At the end of the conflict, Iron Man is appointed head of S.H.I.E.L.D.[75] When the Earth is invaded by Skrulls, S.H.I.E.L.D. is dismantled, but Iron Man refuses to turn over the list of registered heroes to its corrupt successor agency H.A.M.M.E.R.[76] This is eventually dismantled as well, and Iron Man organizes the Avengers to replace these intelligence agencies.[65] He founds a clean energy company, Stark Resilient, and he fakes his death so his enemies would not threaten it. He joins the Guardians of the Galaxy for a time, and upon returning to Earth, he discovers that he had actually been adopted by the Starks so their real son could be hidden.[77] When a man is discovered who can see the future, the superhero community undergoes another schism, and Iron Man leads a team of heroes opposed to a system of predetermined justice using his ability.[58] The battle ends with Iron Man in a coma. A reformed Victor von Doom becomes Iron Man, while an artificial intelligence backup of Stark's mind guides a new armored superhero, Ironheart, until the technology in Stark's body allows him to heal.[77]

Personality and motivations

We really thought about how we needed to give him a weakness. It wasn't hip to have him running out of energy and looking for a light socket every few pages, or having a heart attack every time Ultimo was fighting him. So we discussed it and we thought that we would give him the corporate man's disease [alcoholism]. Something that would always haunt him.

Bob Layton[78]

Iron Man is a businessman and an entrepreneur who constantly seeks to innovate and improve his technology.[79] Stan Lee modeled Iron Man after businessman Howard Hughes.[80][79] The character shares many traits with Hughes, including a similar business, his reputation as an arrogant playboy, and a physical resemblance.[79] As a businessman, Tony Stark is motivated to create and develop technology both for personal benefit and for the benefit of society.[81][82] His belief in progress sometimes manifests as opposition to the press and politicians, whose attempts to keep him accountable hamper his efforts as a superhero.[83] Iron Man was created at a time when comic book characters were first depicted struggling with real life problems, and his heart injury was an early example of a superhero with a physical disability.[84] This injury was prominent in his early characterization, making him misanthropic so as not to reveal the nature of his injury or his secret identity,[8] thereby threatening his autonomy and his masculinity.[85] As real world medical technology made heart injuries less fatal, Iron Man's physical maladies extended to neurological damage.[86] Iron Man was given a mental illness as well when he was written as an alcoholic.[87]

When his stories frequently invoked the Cold War during his first years of publication, Iron Man stood for liberal capitalism, fighting against communism in the name of democracy and capitalism.[88] In the early 1970s, Iron Man became more self-doubting, questioning when the use of force is justified against communism,[89] and he responded by becoming a philanthropist.[90] The 1990s saw Iron Man reject broader ideology in favor of individualism, and his allegiance to American democracy was replaced by his own personal values. He remains anti-communist, however, reiterating his support for democracy and refusing to do business in China following the Tiannamen Square Massacre.[91] Iron Man is portrayed as an archetype of how masculinity is seen in the United States,[92] with his success in business and his playboy characterization allowing the character to symbolize a masculine image of the country during the Cold War.[93] This characterization also manifests in negative traits that were prominent in early Iron Man stories, including belligerence, negligence, and misogyny.[94]

Iron Man prefers machines to humans, believing that machines can be more easily controlled and repaired.[65] Writer Dennis O'Neil described the Iron Man armor as "a psychological crutch preventing him from dealing with his own inner demons".[32] He identifies with the Iron Man armor as an extension of himself. He believes that the image it presents is his own image, and he considers himself responsible any time someone uses the technology.[95] In the 2008 story The Five Nightmares, Iron Man narrates his five greatest fears: relapse into alcoholism, reproduction of the Iron Man technology, other people becoming Iron Man, the technology becoming disposable, and that someone else would be distributing this technology. Besides the danger that such scenarios pose, they all represent fear of Iron Man losing power over himself or his technology.[96]

Themes and motifs

Politics

Iron Man was more overtly political than other Marvel characters of the Silver Age.[97] Stan Lee wished to create the "quintessential capitalist", developing him as an industrialist that manufactures weapons to fight communism.[98] From 1963 to 1968, Iron Man represented capitalism and the United States in allegories for the Cold War, particularly in reference to the Vietnam War.[4][99] Though anti-communist sentiments were present throughout Marvel Comics, they appeared most prominently in Iron Man stories.[100] This dynamic allowed Iron Man to examine the perspectives of both the individual inventor and of the bureaucracy of governments and corporations.[101] After Marvel shifted away from addressing foreign conflicts, Iron Man was portrayed as a liberal who was skeptical of the U.S. government while also opposing radicalism associated with the counterculture of the 1960s. By 1975, Iron Man was an opponent of the Vietnam War.[102] John Bryne's run revisited communism at the end of the Cold War in the early 1990s, but it was shown as less threatening.[103] The absence of Cold War politics was not immediately replaced by another theme, and post-Cold War Iron Man stories often visited different ideas regarding technology for a short time before moving on.[104] When terrorism became more prominent in the public mind, Iron Man became a symbol of anti-terrorism rather than anti-communism.[105]

Iron Man was one of the two main characters of the 2006 Civil War event, an allegory for the Patriot Act and government surveillance. While Captain America represented liberal opposition to government surveillance in the name of individualism, Iron Man represented conservative support for government surveillance in the name of security.[106] In this story, Iron Man represented an attempt to define what a superhero was in the 21st century following the September 11 attacks, implicitly likening the fear of terrorism to the fear of unregulated super-powered beings.[107] While Marvel was neutral between the characters, readers overwhelmingly saw Iron Man as the villain, being the stronger force that the underdog had to overcome.[108][109] A second Civil War event in 2016 portrayed Iron Man as an advocate of free will against Captain Marvel's determinism.[58]

Technology

Technology and its influence on society is a common theme in Iron Man stories,[110][111] and Iron Man has been emphasized as a technological marvel since his earliest appearances.[112] Depictions of technology in Iron Man stories have often endorsed the use of technology to alter the natural world.[113] This is in contrast with other Marvel superheroes of the time, when scientific advances—and radiation in particular—are portrayed as having unintended effects.[82][114] Iron Man's business, Stark Industries, is depicted as a force for good that advances scientific knowledge through capitalist innovation.[82] Reflecting his characterization as a businessman, Iron Man stories often invoke themes of economic competition, seeing him face characters that try to develop better versions of the Iron Man armor.[115] Likewise, many of Iron Man's challenges involve corrupt business rivals and corporate espionage.[103] The technological nature of the character means that he may also be seen as something that could possibly exist in the real world.[116] Iron Man's position within the suit allow for discussion regarding automation versus human oversight of technology.[117] These technological themes are explored through a modern lens during the Extremis story arc, which incorporates the idea of human enhancement through biotechnology.[118][119]

Armor

 
The Bleeding Edge Armor, like the Extremis Armor before it, is stored in Stark's bones, and can be assembled and controlled by his thoughts.

In most depictions, Iron Man does not have any superhuman abilities. He instead derives his strength from powered armor of his own design.[120] In addition to protecting the wearer with its durability, it allows the wearer to fly.[121] As of 2010, Marvel Comics described Iron Man's armor as being able to lift 100 tons and to fly at Mach 8. The armor is also equipped with various weapons, which typically include particle beam "repulsor rays" in each palm that project energy as well as a stronger "unibeam" on his chest.[76] From its first appearance, the armor is linked to the brainwaves of the wearer to allow movement.[122] It must be calibrated to the user, and Iron Man has to design the armor specifically for who will be using it, whether it be himself or an ally.[123] It typically has some method of being shrunk down or made more portable when not being used.[124]

When it was first developed, the armor was described as using transistors to function.[15] This was replaced with integrated circuits as real world technology advanced.[125] Its primary function was to produce a magnetic field that protected his heart from the shrapnel in his body, and his efforts to keep it charged and to keep it secret sometimes drove the story's plot in early years.[126] A contrast is made between the armor's strength and the vulnerability of the human inside it.[127][126] The armor protects Iron Man externally from attacks, but it also protects him internally as it keeps his heart beating.[122] This point is emphasized by the form-fitting design of many Iron Man armors, which incorporates a clear human-like element in an otherwise robotic-looking character.[88]

The armor was gray in its first appearance, but Iron Man gave it gold plating in the subsequent issue, and a few issues thereafter it was replaced by the red and gold look that the character became identified with.[128] The character constantly seeks to develop newer, more advanced variations on the armor, and he frequently designs specialized models for specific purposes.[129] These include the space armor, the stealth armor, and the deep sea armor,[130] as well as the Hulkbuster armor to engage in combat with the Hulk.[129] Developments in the armor's design often reflect real world advances in technology as well as trends in science fiction.[131] The use of a technological suit of armor has allowed artists to frequently make changes to the character's appearance without controversy.[111]

During the Extremis story arc, Iron Man developed a biotechnological armor that was embedded in his DNA and stored in his bones, allowing him to summon the armor from within his body and control it with his mind, effectively giving him superhuman abilities. This reduced the input lag between him and his armor, allowed him to mentally interface with technology, and gave him the focus to engage in several unrelated tasks at once.[132][133] The Extremis technology also converted Iron Man's mind into a digital storage device: this allowed him to create a back up of his memories. He uses this back up after wiping his mind to destroy any record of the superhero registry, but he loses access to the Extremis armor in the process. He then develops the similar Bleeding Edge armor based on nanotechnology, but he gives this up as well after being unfit to pilot it during a period of alcoholism. He has subsequently used other armors that incorporate nanotechnology.[134]

Supporting characters

Allies

Pepper Potts is an employee of Stark Industries that Tony Stark promoted to his executive assistant. As he had little interest in running the business, much of the management was handled by her.[135] When Stark became Iron Man and began taking responsibility for his company, she taught him how to manage the business.[65] When Potts is injured by an explosion and receives a heart injury similar to Iron Man's, he installs the arc reactor technology in her.[136] She eventually becomes the CEO of Stark Industries.[137] Iron Man built her a set of armor in secret, and after finding it she became the superhero Rescue.[138]

James Rhodes is an employee of Tony Stark's that became the superhero War Machine.[105] He first appeared in 1979 and was developed as a supporting character in 1981.[139] He briefly took on the role of Iron Man while Tony Stark was relapsing on alcoholism.[71] Later on, when Stark was near death, he gave Rhodes his corporation and the War Machine Armor.[140] After Stark returned, he had Rhodes keep the armor.[141] Rhodes' dependency on Iron Man for his armor often constrains him as a supporting character to Stark, even in solo War Machine stories.[142]

Happy Hogan was hired as Tony Stark's chauffeur after saving his life, and Hogan later deduced that Tony Stark was Iron Man.[143] Edwin Jarvis is the butler for the Stark family and for the Avengers. Through Iron Man's membership in the Avengers, he has worked extensively with many of his fellow heroes, including Captain America and Thor, among others.[144] His association with S.H.I.E.L.D. sees him working with its agents and leadership, including Nick Fury and Maria Hill.[137] He has also taken on other heroes as sidekicks, including Spider-Man and Jack of Hearts.[65]

Iron Man has had many romantic interests, most of which only last a short time.[65] In Iron Man's original Tales of Suspense run, a love triangle was established in which Tony Stark and Happy Hogan both had romantic interest in Pepper Potts.[145][8] Hogan eventually married Potts.[143] Roxie Gilbert, the sister of the villain Firebrand, was introduced as a romantic interest in the early 1970s. She was a foil for both Iron Man and Firebrand, representing non-violent activism.[146] Whitney Frost was Iron Man's romantic interest later in the decade until she turned against him as the villain Madame Masque.[33] She was replaced by Bethany Cabe as part of an overhaul of Iron Man's supporting cast, and Cabe was Iron Man's romantic interest during his alcoholism.[70] She left Iron Man after he saved her husband, who had been presumed dead. Iron Man later partnered with Rumiko Fujikawa, the daughter of a businessman who took over Stark Enterprises.[65] He eventually began a relationship with his long time ally Janet van Dyne.[77] A story arc in September 2023 saw Iron Man married to X-Men member Emma Frost.[147]

Villains

Iron Man's earliest villains were often affiliated with the Soviet government or otherwise associated with communism.[148] In the first three years after Iron Man was created, one-third of his villains were communists.[149] Some of these enemies were Soviet counterparts of Iron Man, such as Titanium Man[97] and Crimson Dynamo,[150] while others were leadership of communist states, such as the Red Barbarian and the real-life Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev.[148] Khrushchev, like most communists in the series, was drawn in caricature style as a brute who only sought power.[151] Multiple communist villains, such as Crimson Dynamo, were reformed and became heroes loyal to the United States to present Iron Man and liberal capitalism as more appealing and morally superior.[152] Two prominent Marvel heroes, Soviet spy Black Widow[153] and American street criminal Hawkeye, were introduced as Iron Man villains before reforming as heroes.[13]

The Mandarin was introduced as a Chinese villain, initially incorporating racist Yellow Peril themes and stereotypes regarding China.[154][155] Though he is also an allegory for autocracy,[156] the Mandarin was not created as another communist villain.[157] Instead, any work he does with the Chinese government is purely in self-interest.[158] Later on, the Mandarin was retroactively established as the man behind the kidnapping of Tony Stark that created Iron Man.[67] The Mandarin contrasts with Iron Man in that he is associated with magic and mysticism rather than science and technology,[159][158] and in that he was born into nobility unlike Iron Man, who is a self-made man in line with American ideals.[156]

Beginning in the 1970s, Iron Man faced villains that represented social conflict and unrest, such as the anarchist Firebrand and the corrupt businessman Guardsman.[160] Villains representing concerns about technology emerged at the same time, including Ultimo.[161] The business aspect of Iron Man's character has invited several supervillains who oppose Stark Industries rather than just Iron Man.[141] These villains became prominent in the 1980s,[162] and they were amplified by the backlash to the decade's consumerism that emerged in the 1990s.[103] Some of these villains wish to compete with the corporation and steal trade secrets, such as Spymaster, Whiplash, and Beetle. Others oppose the corporation on ideological grounds, such as Atom-Smasher.[141] Other such villains include Obadiah Stane,[71] Justin Hammer,[65] Shockwave, the Controller, the Mauler, and Stilt-Man.[162] A focus on terrorism brought villains such as Zeke Stane, who carried out terrorist attacks using suicide bombers.[163]

Alternate versions

Other characters in the Marvel Universe have taken on the role of Iron Man besides Tony Stark, including James Rhodes,[71] Victor von Doom,[77] and Arno Stark.[164]

Several other versions of Iron Man exist in other universes as part of Marvel's multiverse.

In the Ultimate Universe, an alternate version of Iron Man exists as a member of the Ultimates, the universe's counterpart of the Avengers.[165]

Other variations include:[166][167]

Cultural impact and legacy

Iron Man's appearances in the 1960s saw mixed reception from readers, many of whom criticized the character for his association with the United States military and the controversial Vietnam War.[4][24] In response, Marvel rewrote the character to moderate his image and to have him directly reflect on his culpability in the harms caused by war.[26][89] Iron Man became widely popular following the success of the film Iron Man, which made him one of Marvel's most recognizable characters,[1] and Iron Man is credited with redefining the superhero film genre.[176][177] The relatively realistic nature of the character and the fact that he had no history of poor adaptations are factors in Iron Man's capacity to renew the interest of general audiences in superhero fiction.[178][179] Since then, many publishers have listed Iron Man in the top ten in best Marvel character and best superhero lists.[180][181][182][183] Iron Man's portrayal of futuristic technology has affected public image of how these technologies may develop. Heavy use of augmented reality interfaces by Iron Man, in his helmet's heads-up display and elsewhere, has informed public awareness of the technology.[184] In 2019, a statue representing the character in his Iron Man armor was erected in Forte dei Marmi, Italy.[185][186]

In other media

 
Iron Man was portrayed by Robert Downey Jr. in the Marvel Cinematic Universe

In 2008, a film adaptation titled Iron Man was released, starring Robert Downey Jr. as Tony Stark and directed by Jon Favreau. Iron Man was met with positive reviews from film critics,[187] grossing $318 million domestically and $585 million worldwide, and became the first in the long-running Marvel Cinematic Universe.[188] Downey's casting was praised, as was his portrayal of the character; Downey's own recovery from substance abuse was seen as creating a personal connection with the character.[189] Downey reprises his role in Iron Man 2 (2010), Marvel's The Avengers (2012), Iron Man 3 (2013), Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015), Captain America: Civil War (2016), Spider-Man: Homecoming (2017), Avengers: Infinity War (2018), and Avengers: Endgame (2019).[190][191] Downey's character was retired following his appearance in Avengers: Endgame, but Iron Man supporting characters continue in their own Marvel Cinematic Universe titles, Ironheart and Armor Wars.[191]

Iron Man's first animated appearance was in a seven-minute segment of the 1966 series The Marvel Super Heroes, and has since been featured in the animated series Iron Man (1994–1996) and Iron Man: Armored Adventures (2009–2012). He has also made many appearances in other Marvel animated programs, particularly those featuring the Avengers, and there have been multiple Iron Man direct-to-video releases.[192][193]

Iron Man has featured in several video games, including Iron Man (2008) and Iron Man 2 (2010), which were released as adaptations of his Marvel Cinematic Universe films. He also featured in the PlayStation VR game Iron Man VR (2020). An Iron Man action-adventure game was announced in 2022 to be developed by Motive Studio. Iron Man has also appeared in many other Marvel video games, such as those featuring the Avengers.[194]

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Darowski 2015, p. 1.
  2. ^ McGuire, Liam (July 5, 2021). "Stan Lee Admitted He Created Iron Man to be Completely Unlikable". ScreenRant. Retrieved September 4, 2023.
  3. ^ Cooley & Rogers 2015, p. 78.
  4. ^ a b c d Mills 2013, p. 123.
  5. ^ a b c Howe 2012, p. 43.
  6. ^ a b Patton 2015, pp. 5–6.
  7. ^ a b Gilbert 2008, p. 91.
  8. ^ a b c Patton 2015, p. 7.
  9. ^ Coates, John (2014). Don Heck: A Work of Art. Raleigh, North Carolina: TwoMorrows Publishing. p. 41. ISBN 978-1605490588.
  10. ^ Howe 2012, p. 45.
  11. ^ Gilbert 2008, p. 94.
  12. ^ a b Friedenthal 2021, pp. 30–31.
  13. ^ a b Howe 2012, p. 56.
  14. ^ Howe 2012, p. 50.
  15. ^ a b c Patton 2015, p. 8.
  16. ^ Gilbert 2008, p. 99.
  17. ^ Wright 2001, pp. 222–223.
  18. ^ Henebry 2015, pp. 100–101.
  19. ^ Howe 2012, p. 89.
  20. ^ Gilbert 2008, p. 130.
  21. ^ Henebry 2015, p. 101.
  22. ^ Henebry 2015, pp. 102–105.
  23. ^ Henebry 2015, p. 116.
  24. ^ a b Henebry 2015, p. 110.
  25. ^ Howe 2012, p. 188.
  26. ^ a b Henebry 2015, p. 111.
  27. ^ Henebry 2015, p. 112.
  28. ^ Sacks 2015, p. 138.
  29. ^ Sacks 2015, p. 139.
  30. ^ a b Ridout 1992, p. 6.
  31. ^ Howe 2012, p. 223.
  32. ^ a b c Ridout 1992, p. 7.
  33. ^ a b c Sacks 2015, p. 140.
  34. ^ Gilbert 2008, p. 187.
  35. ^ Sacks 2015, p. 142.
  36. ^ Sacks 2015, p. 144.
  37. ^ Sacks 2015, pp. 141–142.
  38. ^ Gilbert 2008, p. 189.
  39. ^ a b Zanco 2015, pp. 165–166.
  40. ^ Howe 2012, p. 255.
  41. ^ Ridout 1992.
  42. ^ Darowski, Joseph J. 2015, pp. 171–173.
  43. ^ Gilbert 2008, p. 269.
  44. ^ Howe 2012, p. 373.
  45. ^ a b c d e Zehr 2011, p. 181.
  46. ^ Gilbert 2008, p. 280.
  47. ^ Howe 2012, p. 394.
  48. ^ Gilbert 2008, p. 285.
  49. ^ Gilbert 2008, p. 289.
  50. ^ Gilbert 2008, p. 311.
  51. ^ a b Gilbert 2008, p. 325.
  52. ^ Gilbert 2008, pp. 323–324.
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  54. ^ Gilbert 2008, p. 335.
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  68. ^ Friedenthal 2021, pp. 74–75.
  69. ^ Henebry 2015, pp. 95–96.
  70. ^ a b Sacks 2015, p. 141.
  71. ^ a b c d Chambliss 2015, p. 152.
  72. ^ a b Mulligan 2015, p. 209.
  73. ^ Mulligan 2015, pp. 210–211.
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  75. ^ Friedenthal 2021, p. 86.
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  77. ^ a b c d Fentiman 2019, p. 195.
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  79. ^ a b c Zanco 2015, p. 167.
  80. ^ Cooley & Rogers 2015, p. 77.
  81. ^ Zanco 2015, pp. 164–167.
  82. ^ a b c Cooley & Rogers 2015, p. 80.
  83. ^ Cooley & Rogers 2015, pp. 81–82.
  84. ^ Mills 2013, p. 106.
  85. ^ Genter 2007, p. 968.
  86. ^ Mulligan 2015, pp. 205–206.
  87. ^ Sacks 2015, p. 137.
  88. ^ a b Patton 2015, p. 15.
  89. ^ a b Cooley & Rogers 2015, p. 88.
  90. ^ Henebry 2015, p. 103.
  91. ^ Darowski, Joseph J. 2015, pp. 176–177.
  92. ^ Michálek 2015, p. 193.
  93. ^ Alaniz 2015, p. 58.
  94. ^ Michálek 2015, p. 201.
  95. ^ Hogan 2009, p. 205.
  96. ^ Michálek 2015, p. 196.
  97. ^ a b Wright 2001, p. 222.
  98. ^ This 2015, p. 17.
  99. ^ Alaniz 2015, p. 52.
  100. ^ Patton 2015, p. 10.
  101. ^ Genter 2007, pp. 967–968.
  102. ^ Wright 2001, pp. 241–243.
  103. ^ a b c Darowski, Joseph J. 2015, p. 175.
  104. ^ Mulligan 2015, p. 218.
  105. ^ a b Chambliss 2015, p. 148.
  106. ^ Friedenthal 2021, p. 83.
  107. ^ Darowski, John 2015, p. 189.
  108. ^ Darowski, John 2015, p. 181.
  109. ^ Friedenthal 2021, p. 85.
  110. ^ Vohlidka 2015, p. 121.
  111. ^ a b Hogan 2009, p. 201.
  112. ^ Patton 2015, p. 14.
  113. ^ Alaniz 2015, pp. 58–59.
  114. ^ Zanco 2015, p. 164.
  115. ^ Zanco 2015, p. 168.
  116. ^ Zehr 2011, p. 154.
  117. ^ Mulligan 2015, pp. 206–207.
  118. ^ Michálek 2015, pp. 194–195.
  119. ^ Hogan 2009, p. 210.
  120. ^ Vohlidka 2015, p. 132.
  121. ^ Zehr 2011, p. xi.
  122. ^ a b Hogan 2009, p. 203.
  123. ^ Zehr 2011, p. 78.
  124. ^ Zanco 2015, pp. 164–165.
  125. ^ Ridout 1992, p. 5.
  126. ^ a b Mulligan 2015, p. 208.
  127. ^ Zehr 2011, p. 166.
  128. ^ Zehr 2011, pp. 8–10.
  129. ^ a b Zehr 2011, p. 6.
  130. ^ Ridout 1992, pp. 6–7.
  131. ^ Mulligan 2015, p. 205.
  132. ^ Mulligan 2015, pp. 213–214.
  133. ^ Zehr 2011, pp. 37–38.
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  135. ^ Hoskin 2010, Pepper Hogan.
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  137. ^ a b Michálek 2015, p. 198.
  138. ^ Hoskin 2010, Rescue.
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  140. ^ Chambliss 2015, p. 153.
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  142. ^ Chambliss 2015, p. 158.
  143. ^ a b Hoskin 2010, Happy Hogan.
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  151. ^ Alaniz 2015, pp. 61–63.
  152. ^ Alaniz 2015, p. 65.
  153. ^ Howe 2012, p. 106.
  154. ^ Iadonisi 2015, p. 39.
  155. ^ Henebry 2015, p. 98.
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References

  • Darowski, Joseph J., ed. (2015). The Ages of Iron Man: Essays on the Armored Avenger in Changing Times. McFarland. ISBN 978-1-4766-2074-9.
  • Fentiman, David (2019). Marvel Encyclopedia (New ed.). DK Books. ISBN 978-1-4654-7890-0.
  • Friedenthal, Andrew J., ed. (2021). "Iron Man". The World of Marvel Comics. Routledge. pp. 192–195. ISBN 978-1-000-43111-7.
  • Genter, Robert (2007). "'With Great Power Comes Great Responsibility:' Cold War Culture and the Birth of Marvel Comics". The Journal of Popular Culture. Hoboken, New Jersey: Wiley-Blackwell. 40 (6): 953–978 and 965–969. doi:10.1111/j.1540-5931.2007.00480.x.
  • Gilbert, Laura, ed. (2008). Marvel Chronicle: A Year By Year History. DK Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7566-4123-8.
  • Hogan, Jon (2009). "The Comic Book as Symbolic Environment: The Case of Iron Man". ETC: A Review of General Semantics. 66 (2): 199–214. ISSN 0014-164X. JSTOR 42578930.
  • Hoskin, Michael (2010). Iron Man Iron Manual Mark 3. Marvel Comics.
  • Howe, Sean (2012). Marvel Comics: The Untold Story. Harper Collins. ISBN 978-0-06-221811-7.
  • O'Sullivan, Mike, ed. (2015). Secret Wars: Official Guide to the Marvel Multiverse. Marvel Comics.
  • Mills, Anthony (2013). American Theology, Superhero Comics, and Cinema: The Marvel of Stan Lee and the Revolution of a Genre. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-01437-7.
  • Ridout, Cefn (1992). "Introduction". The Many Armors of Iron Man. Marvel Comics. pp. 4–9. ISBN 0-87135-926-X.
  • Wright, Bradford W. (2001). Comic Book Nation: The Transformation of Youth Culture in America. JHU Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-6514-5.
  • Yockey, Matt (2017). Make Ours Marvel: Media Convergence and a Comics Universe. University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-1-4773-1250-6.
    • Minett, Mark; Schauer, Bradley. "Reforming the 'Justice' System". In Yockey (2017).
    • Overpeck, Deron. "Breaking Brand". In Yockey (2017).
  • Zehr, E. Paul (2011). Inventing Iron Man: The Possibility of a Human Machine. JHU Press. ISBN 978-1-4214-0488-2.

Further reading

  • Tom DeFalco, Avengers: The Ultimate Guide, Dorling Kindersley, 2005. ISBN 978-0-7566-1461-4
  • Mark D. White (ed.), Iron Man and Philosophy: Facing the Stark Reality, Wiley-Blackwell, 2010. ISBN 978-0-4704-8218-6

External links

  • Iron Man at the Marvel Universe wiki
  • at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)
  • "Stark Reality: A Different Hero for Different Times" by Ian Chant – PopMatters.com
  • (fanzine)
  • Iron Man Library December 23, 2018, at the Wayback Machine
  • Tony Stark on Marvel Database, a Marvel Comics wiki

iron, this, article, about, fictional, character, 2008, film, based, character, 2008, film, other, uses, disambiguation, tony, stark, redirects, here, film, character, tony, stark, marvel, cinematic, universe, superhero, appearing, american, comic, books, publ. This article is about the fictional character For the 2008 film based on the character see Iron Man 2008 film For other uses see Iron Man disambiguation Tony Stark redirects here For the film character see Tony Stark Marvel Cinematic Universe Iron Man is a superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics Co created by writer and editor Stan Lee developed by scripter Larry Lieber and designed by artists Don Heck and Jack Kirby the character first appeared in Tales of Suspense 39 in 1963 and received his own title with Iron Man 1 in 1968 Shortly after his creation Iron Man was a founding member of a superhero team the Avengers with Thor Ant Man Wasp and the Hulk Iron Man stories individually and with the Avengers have been published consistently since the character s creation Tony StarkIron ManVariant cover ofTony Stark Iron Man 2 July 2018 Art by Mark BrooksPublication informationPublisherMarvel ComicsFirst appearanceTales of Suspense 39 March 1963 Created byStan LeeLarry LieberDon HeckJack KirbySteve DitkoIn story informationFull nameAnthony Edward StarkPlace of originLong Island New YorkTeam affiliationsAvengersDepartment of DefenseNew AvengersGuardians of the GalaxyIlluminatiMighty AvengersS H I E L D Stark IndustriesPartnershipsHappy HoganIronheartPepper PottsWar MachineAbilitiesPowered armor suitIron Man is the superhero persona of Anthony Edward Tony Stark a businessman and engineer who runs the company Stark Industries Beginning his career as a weapons manufacturer he is captured in a war zone and his heart is severely injured by shrapnel To sustain his heart and escape his captors he builds a technologically advanced armor After escaping he continues using the armor as a superhero creating more advanced models that grant him superhuman strength flight energy projection and other abilities The character was used to explore political themes and early Iron Man stories were set in the Cold War Later stories explored other themes such as civil unrest technological advancement corporate espionage alcoholism and governmental authority Major Iron Man stories include Demon in a Bottle 1979 Armor Wars 1987 1988 Extremis 2005 and Iron Man 2020 2020 He is also a leading character in the company wide stories Civil War 2006 2007 Dark Reign 2008 2009 and Civil War II 2016 Iron Man s supporting cast has produced additional superhero characters including James Rhodes as War Machine Pepper Potts as Rescue and Riri Williams as Ironheart as well as reformed villains Black Widow and Hawkeye Iron Man s list of enemies includes his archenemy the Mandarin as well as many supervillains of communist origin and many that double as business rivals for Stark Robert Downey Jr portrayed Tony Stark in Iron Man 2008 the first film of the Marvel Cinematic Universe and continued to portray the character until his final appearance in Avengers Endgame 2019 Downey s portrayal popularized the character elevating Iron Man as one of Marvel s most recognizable superheroes Contents 1 Publication history 1 1 Creation and premiere 1 2 1960s 1 3 1970s 1 4 1980s and 1990s 1 5 21st century 2 Characterization 2 1 Fictional character biography 2 2 Personality and motivations 3 Themes and motifs 3 1 Politics 3 2 Technology 3 3 Armor 4 Supporting characters 4 1 Allies 4 2 Villains 5 Alternate versions 6 Cultural impact and legacy 7 In other media 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksPublication historyFurther information List of Iron Man titles Creation and premiere Following the success of the Fantastic Four in 1961 and the subsequent revival of superhero comic books Marvel set about creating new superhero characters 1 During this time Stan Lee developed the initial concept for Iron Man 1 Lee was interested in making an unlikeable character likeable saying that he thought it would be fun to take the kind of character that nobody would like none of Marvel s readers would like and shove him down their throats and make them like him 2 Iron Man was created in the years after a permanent arms industry developed in the United States and this was incorporated into the character s backstory 3 The character was introduced as an active player in the Vietnam War Lee described the national mood toward Vietnam in which Iron Man was created as a time when most of us genuinely felt that the conflict in that tortured land really was a simple matter of good versus evil 4 As superhero comics became more popular Marvel began replacing its previous comic book lines with superheroes The monster themed anthology series Tales of Suspense began running Iron Man stories alongside more traditional science fiction and horror stories featuring Iron Man on each cover 5 6 Iron Man s first appearance Iron Man is Born was in Tales of Suspense 39 released in December 1962 with a cover date of March 1963 In 1964 the science fiction and horror stories were removed entirely with the series running only Iron Man and Captain America stories 6 Larry Lieber developed Iron Man s origin and wrote the first Iron Man story while Jack Kirby and Don Heck were responsible for the initial design 1 7 Kirby initially drew Iron Man as a round and clunky gray heap and the design was modified by Heck to incorporate gadgets such as jets drills and suction cups Heck continued as the primary Iron Man artist until 1965 as Kirby had obligations to other Marvel properties 5 8 Heck later said that when designing Tony Stark he was attempting to create an Errol Flynn type 9 Though the Iron Man armor was gray in its first appearance it was quickly changed to gold due to issues with printing 7 Lee briefly delegated the writing to other creators at Marvel but he felt that their work was substandard as with his other characters Lee again took control of Iron Man so he could write the stories himself 10 1960s When Marvel s distributor allowed them more monthly releases The Avengers was developed as a new comic book series 11 Iron Man was one of the five characters that formed the titular superhero team 12 By 1965 the difficulty of maintaining continuity between The Avengers with heroes solo comics prompted Lee to write the original cast out of The Avengers including Iron Man 13 As part of a shuffling to match artists with the characters they were most suited for Steve Ditko became the artist for Iron Man 14 Ditko was responsible for only three issues in late 1963 but in this time he had Iron Man s suit redesigned with the red and gold color scheme that became the character s primary image 15 Iron Man s recurring nemesis the Mandarin first appeared shortly after in Tales of Suspense 50 16 Growing opposition to the American involvement in Vietnam prompted a shift in Iron Man s characterization at this time as part of a larger push by Marvel to be more apolitical 4 17 Lee shifted the focus of Iron Man stories to espionage and domestic crime incorporating the intelligence agency S H I E L D into these stories They also incorporated the villains of other Marvel heroes avoiding Iron Man s primarily communist rogues gallery Some of Iron Man s villains were given new motivations without their communist allegiances 18 Previously relegated to short stories in an anthology series Iron Man was one of several characters to receive a full length dedicated series in 1968 19 The final issues of Tales of Suspense and Sub Mariner s Tales to Astonish were combined as a one shot special Iron Man and Sub Mariner 20 Iron Man then began its run under writer Archie Goodwin 21 Political themes were reintroduced slowly over the following years with a focus on domestic issues like racial conflict and environmentalism rather than geopolitics 22 1970s I don t feel Tony Stark is a dinosaur a creature unable to change before the weight of time crushes him aside Yeah it is hard in 1977 to praise a millionaire industrialist playboy and former munitions manufacturer but it isn t impossible to change that image Which is what I plan to do Bill Mantlo Iron Man 100 23 Over the years the letters to the editor column in several issues saw extensive political debate 24 When Goodwin was made editor in chief assigned Gerry Conway as the writer for Iron Man 25 Conway began a four year long effort to reform Iron Man in 1971 with stories that directly addressed the character s history as a weapons manufacturer 26 These stories were especially prominent during a run by Mike Friedrich in which corporate reform of Stark Industries was a recurring subplot 27 Iron Man was one of several Marvel characters that declined in popularity during the 1970s and the series went for a period of time without a dedicated writer until Bill Mantlo took over in 1977 28 The following year David Michelinie and Bob Layton took charge of the series beginning with issue 116 29 30 While inking the series Layton used issues of GQ Playboy and electronics catalogues as visual references 31 and they stayed informed on developments in real world technology so that the Iron Man armor would always be a more advanced version of what existed 30 Layton was inspired by the vast collection of specialized outfits used by Batman when designing Iron Man s various armors 32 In Iron Man 117 and 118 Michelinie and Layton replaced many elements that had developed in the series they removed Iron Man s romantic interest they removed the Life Model Decoys that served as robotic doubles of Tony Stark and they had him move to a different home 33 Iron Man s new romantic interest Bethany Cabe was introduced as a feminist character who worked as Tony Stark s bodyguard 34 The largest change they made was making Iron Man an alcoholic 33 This was unprecedented for a major comic book hero 35 and for much of popular fiction 36 This began the Demon in a Bottle story arc that ran from 120 to 128 37 At the same time they introduced the character of Justin Hammer who became the main backer of several Iron Man villains 38 1980s and 1990s The 1980s saw increased focus on Iron Man as a businessman reflecting the economic changes associated with Reaganomics and many of his challenges involved threats to his company 39 Denny O Neil was put in charge of Iron Man beginning with issue 158 His run explored Tony Stark s psychology having the character again fall into his alcoholism and suffer at the hands of business rival Obadiah Stane 32 O Neil eventually wrote Tony Stark out of the role entirely having him temporarily retire as Iron Man and replacing him with his ally James Rhodes 40 The 1987 Armor Wars story arc blends the superhero and businessman aspects of Iron Man more directly when Tony Stark seeks legal recourse for rivals stealing the Iron Man technology 39 Michelinie and Layton returned to the series with issue 211 and they again began experimenting with different variations on the Iron Man armor 41 In 1990 Michelinie and Layton stopped writing for Iron Man and the series was given to John Byrne one of the most highly regarded comic book writers of the time His run consisted of three story arcs across twenty issues Armor Wars II which had already been announced by Michelinie and Layton The Dragon Seed Saga and War Games He did not have further interest in the series by 1992 as his collaborators John Romita Jr and Howard Mackie had moved on to other projects During his run Byrne rewrote Iron Man s origin to remove references to communism and the Vietnam War 42 Iron Man s supporting character War Machine was spun off into his own comic book series in 1994 43 As part of a company wide reorganization Marvel s major characters including Iron Man were given to former Marvel writers Jim Lee and Rob Liefeld in a profit sharing agreement Lee and Liefeld were given charge of the 1996 Heroes Reborn branding that renumbered Marvel s long running periodicals at 1 44 This new iteration labeled volume two was set in an alternate universe created during the Onslaught event It ran for thirteen issues written by Lee and Scott Lobdell and drawn by Whilce Portacio 45 46 The following year Marvel introduced the Heroes Return event to bring the characters back from the alternate universe which again reset characters such as Iron Man to issue 1 47 48 This was labeled volume three which was taken on by writer Kurt Busiek and artist Sean Chen 45 49 21st century When the Ultimate Marvel imprint was created with reimagined versions of Marvel s characters an alternate Iron Man appeared in 2002 with the Ultimates the imprint s adaptation of The Avengers 50 A five issue limited series Ultimate Iron Man was released featuring this character in 2005 51 In 2004 Iron Man was a major character in the Avengers Disassembled event and subsequently became a founding member of The New Avengers 52 Volume four of Iron Man began in 2005 45 This new run was written by Warren Ellis and drawn by Adi Granov and its first story arc Extremis sees Iron Man upgrade his body directly through the Extremis virus giving him direct control over a biological armor 51 The first fourteen issues of volume four carried the Iron Man title while issues 15 32 were titled Iron Man Director of S H I E L D 45 Iron Man was the leader of the pro registration faction during the 2006 Civil War crossover event by Mark Millar and Steve McNiven 53 After the character was rebranded as Director of S H I E L D he also appeared with The Mighty Avengers in 2007 54 Coinciding with the release of the first Iron Man film Marvel restarted Iron Man s comic book run with Invincible Iron Man written by Matt Fraction and drawn by Salvador Larroca This series ran for sixty issues alongside the character s standalone film appearances ending shortly before Iron Man 3 was set to be released 55 The series reverted to the original numbering in 2011 when the overall 500th issue was published as Iron Man 500 45 Iron Man was then one of several characters whose series was relaunched at issue 1 with the Marvel Now branding following the 2012 Avengers vs X Men event 56 The 2014 AXIS event led into the Superior Iron Man series featuring an amoral Iron Man 57 Iron Man was again a leader of one faction during the 2016 Civil War II event by Brian Michael Bendis 58 As part of a broader trend by Marvel Comics to substitute its main characters with a diverse cast of original characters in the 2010s Iron Man was then temporarily replaced by Ironheart an African American teenage girl who reverse engineered the Iron Man armor 59 At the same time the series Infamous Iron Man was created with Dr Doom becoming Iron Man Invincible Iron Man was renumbered to 593 with the 2017 Marvel Legacy branding and this issue reintroduced Tony Stark 60 61 The series Tony Stark Iron Man premiered in 2018 with the Fresh Start branding written by Dan Slott and drawn by Valerio Schiti 62 In 2020 Iron Man was relaunched in a new series written by Christopher Cantwell and illustrated by CAFU following the Iron Man 2020 event This series was written as a back to basics project that reverted the character to a more traditional superhero following the developments of previous series 63 The character was relaunched again in 2022 with Invincible Iron Man written by Gerry Duggan and illustrated by Juan Frigeri 64 CharacterizationFictional character biography nbsp Tales of Suspense 39 March 1963 Iron Man debuts Cover art by Jack Kirby and Don Heck nbsp Tales of Suspense 48 December 1963 the debut of Iron Man s first red and gold suit of armor Cover art by Jack Kirby and Sol Brodsky Tony Stark inherited his family s business Stark Industries after his parents were killed in a car crash 65 Developing equipment for the U S military he travels to a war zone to conduct a weapons test when he triggers a booby trap His heart is critically injured by shrapnel and he is captured by the communist Wong Chu who demands that Stark build him a weapon Stark instead builds a suit of armor that sustains his heart becoming Iron Man 15 5 The war zone that Stark visits has been changed multiple times by different writers to correspond with the character s age which is explained by a sliding scale of continuity in which the timing of significant events in the world of Marvel may change For the first decades of Iron Man s publication history the conflict is the Vietnam War 66 This was changed retroactively in the 1990s to an unnamed Southeast Asian country 67 and a conflict in the fictional country of Siancong was eventually established to justify the inconsistency 68 Iron Man returns to the United States and becomes a superhero convincing the public that Iron Man is Tony Stark s bodyguard 65 When he is called to stop Hulk and learns that Loki is behind Hulk s attack he joins forces with Hulk Thor Ant Man and Wasp to defeat Loki and they agree to form a superhero team the Avengers 12 At the same time he helps found the intelligence agency S H I E L D providing the organization with equipment 65 As Iron Man comes to regret his involvement in weapons manufacturing Stark Industries is changed to Stark International an electronics company that emphasizes environmentalism and ending world hunger 69 65 S H I E L D attempts to take over the business and revert it back to weapons manufacturing At the same time Iron Man is framed for murder These stresses cause him to begin drinking heavily and he develops alcoholism 70 Though he gets sober he later relapses back into alcoholism as part of a plot by Obadiah Stane 65 Iron Man briefly loses his company to Stane passes the mantle of Iron Man to his ally James Rhodes 71 and becomes homeless 72 After he recovers Stane adopts an armored suit and becomes the Iron Monger before being defeated Iron Man then founds a space technology company Stark Enterprises When Iron Man learns that Justin Hammer had acquired the Iron Man armor s technology he seeks out all of the other armors The resulting fights leave Iron Man a fugitive leading him to fake his death and then describe himself as a new Iron Man 65 Iron Man had previously undergone surgery to replace the damaged portions of his heart eliminating the need for his prosthetic chest plate 72 But when he is shot in the spine and paralyzed he develops a new prosthesis that grants him mobility This prosthesis is hacked and controlled remotely causing neurological damage that appears for a time to kill him 73 During this time James Rhodes takes the Iron Man armor After returning Iron Man falls under the control of Immortus turning him evil The Avengers bring an alternate Tony Stark from another reality to help defeat him Iron Man is killed and the alternate Tony Stark becomes the new Iron Man The original Iron Man and the alternate Iron Man are merged into a single being by Franklin Richards when he rewrites reality His company had been bought out so he starts a consulting firm Stark Solutions His secret identity is revealed to the public shortly afterward He is then appointed Secretary of Defense until Scarlet Witch alters his mind causing him to embarrass himself and leave in disgrace 65 When Mallen becomes a threat through the Extremis project Iron Man has himself injected with the Extremis virus giving him a biological armor that he can control with his mind 74 Iron Man serves as the enforcer of the Superhero Registration Act upon its enactment creating a schism between superheroes with Iron Man leading proponents of registration against a group of resistors led by Captain America 53 At the end of the conflict Iron Man is appointed head of S H I E L D 75 When the Earth is invaded by Skrulls S H I E L D is dismantled but Iron Man refuses to turn over the list of registered heroes to its corrupt successor agency H A M M E R 76 This is eventually dismantled as well and Iron Man organizes the Avengers to replace these intelligence agencies 65 He founds a clean energy company Stark Resilient and he fakes his death so his enemies would not threaten it He joins the Guardians of the Galaxy for a time and upon returning to Earth he discovers that he had actually been adopted by the Starks so their real son could be hidden 77 When a man is discovered who can see the future the superhero community undergoes another schism and Iron Man leads a team of heroes opposed to a system of predetermined justice using his ability 58 The battle ends with Iron Man in a coma A reformed Victor von Doom becomes Iron Man while an artificial intelligence backup of Stark s mind guides a new armored superhero Ironheart until the technology in Stark s body allows him to heal 77 Personality and motivations We really thought about how we needed to give him a weakness It wasn t hip to have him running out of energy and looking for a light socket every few pages or having a heart attack every time Ultimo was fighting him So we discussed it and we thought that we would give him the corporate man s disease alcoholism Something that would always haunt him Bob Layton 78 Iron Man is a businessman and an entrepreneur who constantly seeks to innovate and improve his technology 79 Stan Lee modeled Iron Man after businessman Howard Hughes 80 79 The character shares many traits with Hughes including a similar business his reputation as an arrogant playboy and a physical resemblance 79 As a businessman Tony Stark is motivated to create and develop technology both for personal benefit and for the benefit of society 81 82 His belief in progress sometimes manifests as opposition to the press and politicians whose attempts to keep him accountable hamper his efforts as a superhero 83 Iron Man was created at a time when comic book characters were first depicted struggling with real life problems and his heart injury was an early example of a superhero with a physical disability 84 This injury was prominent in his early characterization making him misanthropic so as not to reveal the nature of his injury or his secret identity 8 thereby threatening his autonomy and his masculinity 85 As real world medical technology made heart injuries less fatal Iron Man s physical maladies extended to neurological damage 86 Iron Man was given a mental illness as well when he was written as an alcoholic 87 When his stories frequently invoked the Cold War during his first years of publication Iron Man stood for liberal capitalism fighting against communism in the name of democracy and capitalism 88 In the early 1970s Iron Man became more self doubting questioning when the use of force is justified against communism 89 and he responded by becoming a philanthropist 90 The 1990s saw Iron Man reject broader ideology in favor of individualism and his allegiance to American democracy was replaced by his own personal values He remains anti communist however reiterating his support for democracy and refusing to do business in China following the Tiannamen Square Massacre 91 Iron Man is portrayed as an archetype of how masculinity is seen in the United States 92 with his success in business and his playboy characterization allowing the character to symbolize a masculine image of the country during the Cold War 93 This characterization also manifests in negative traits that were prominent in early Iron Man stories including belligerence negligence and misogyny 94 Iron Man prefers machines to humans believing that machines can be more easily controlled and repaired 65 Writer Dennis O Neil described the Iron Man armor as a psychological crutch preventing him from dealing with his own inner demons 32 He identifies with the Iron Man armor as an extension of himself He believes that the image it presents is his own image and he considers himself responsible any time someone uses the technology 95 In the 2008 story The Five Nightmares Iron Man narrates his five greatest fears relapse into alcoholism reproduction of the Iron Man technology other people becoming Iron Man the technology becoming disposable and that someone else would be distributing this technology Besides the danger that such scenarios pose they all represent fear of Iron Man losing power over himself or his technology 96 Themes and motifsPolitics Iron Man was more overtly political than other Marvel characters of the Silver Age 97 Stan Lee wished to create the quintessential capitalist developing him as an industrialist that manufactures weapons to fight communism 98 From 1963 to 1968 Iron Man represented capitalism and the United States in allegories for the Cold War particularly in reference to the Vietnam War 4 99 Though anti communist sentiments were present throughout Marvel Comics they appeared most prominently in Iron Man stories 100 This dynamic allowed Iron Man to examine the perspectives of both the individual inventor and of the bureaucracy of governments and corporations 101 After Marvel shifted away from addressing foreign conflicts Iron Man was portrayed as a liberal who was skeptical of the U S government while also opposing radicalism associated with the counterculture of the 1960s By 1975 Iron Man was an opponent of the Vietnam War 102 John Bryne s run revisited communism at the end of the Cold War in the early 1990s but it was shown as less threatening 103 The absence of Cold War politics was not immediately replaced by another theme and post Cold War Iron Man stories often visited different ideas regarding technology for a short time before moving on 104 When terrorism became more prominent in the public mind Iron Man became a symbol of anti terrorism rather than anti communism 105 Iron Man was one of the two main characters of the 2006 Civil War event an allegory for the Patriot Act and government surveillance While Captain America represented liberal opposition to government surveillance in the name of individualism Iron Man represented conservative support for government surveillance in the name of security 106 In this story Iron Man represented an attempt to define what a superhero was in the 21st century following the September 11 attacks implicitly likening the fear of terrorism to the fear of unregulated super powered beings 107 While Marvel was neutral between the characters readers overwhelmingly saw Iron Man as the villain being the stronger force that the underdog had to overcome 108 109 A second Civil War event in 2016 portrayed Iron Man as an advocate of free will against Captain Marvel s determinism 58 Technology Technology and its influence on society is a common theme in Iron Man stories 110 111 and Iron Man has been emphasized as a technological marvel since his earliest appearances 112 Depictions of technology in Iron Man stories have often endorsed the use of technology to alter the natural world 113 This is in contrast with other Marvel superheroes of the time when scientific advances and radiation in particular are portrayed as having unintended effects 82 114 Iron Man s business Stark Industries is depicted as a force for good that advances scientific knowledge through capitalist innovation 82 Reflecting his characterization as a businessman Iron Man stories often invoke themes of economic competition seeing him face characters that try to develop better versions of the Iron Man armor 115 Likewise many of Iron Man s challenges involve corrupt business rivals and corporate espionage 103 The technological nature of the character means that he may also be seen as something that could possibly exist in the real world 116 Iron Man s position within the suit allow for discussion regarding automation versus human oversight of technology 117 These technological themes are explored through a modern lens during the Extremis story arc which incorporates the idea of human enhancement through biotechnology 118 119 Armor Main article Iron Man s armor nbsp The Bleeding Edge Armor like the Extremis Armor before it is stored in Stark s bones and can be assembled and controlled by his thoughts In most depictions Iron Man does not have any superhuman abilities He instead derives his strength from powered armor of his own design 120 In addition to protecting the wearer with its durability it allows the wearer to fly 121 As of 2010 Marvel Comics described Iron Man s armor as being able to lift 100 tons and to fly at Mach 8 The armor is also equipped with various weapons which typically include particle beam repulsor rays in each palm that project energy as well as a stronger unibeam on his chest 76 From its first appearance the armor is linked to the brainwaves of the wearer to allow movement 122 It must be calibrated to the user and Iron Man has to design the armor specifically for who will be using it whether it be himself or an ally 123 It typically has some method of being shrunk down or made more portable when not being used 124 When it was first developed the armor was described as using transistors to function 15 This was replaced with integrated circuits as real world technology advanced 125 Its primary function was to produce a magnetic field that protected his heart from the shrapnel in his body and his efforts to keep it charged and to keep it secret sometimes drove the story s plot in early years 126 A contrast is made between the armor s strength and the vulnerability of the human inside it 127 126 The armor protects Iron Man externally from attacks but it also protects him internally as it keeps his heart beating 122 This point is emphasized by the form fitting design of many Iron Man armors which incorporates a clear human like element in an otherwise robotic looking character 88 The armor was gray in its first appearance but Iron Man gave it gold plating in the subsequent issue and a few issues thereafter it was replaced by the red and gold look that the character became identified with 128 The character constantly seeks to develop newer more advanced variations on the armor and he frequently designs specialized models for specific purposes 129 These include the space armor the stealth armor and the deep sea armor 130 as well as the Hulkbuster armor to engage in combat with the Hulk 129 Developments in the armor s design often reflect real world advances in technology as well as trends in science fiction 131 The use of a technological suit of armor has allowed artists to frequently make changes to the character s appearance without controversy 111 During the Extremis story arc Iron Man developed a biotechnological armor that was embedded in his DNA and stored in his bones allowing him to summon the armor from within his body and control it with his mind effectively giving him superhuman abilities This reduced the input lag between him and his armor allowed him to mentally interface with technology and gave him the focus to engage in several unrelated tasks at once 132 133 The Extremis technology also converted Iron Man s mind into a digital storage device this allowed him to create a back up of his memories He uses this back up after wiping his mind to destroy any record of the superhero registry but he loses access to the Extremis armor in the process He then develops the similar Bleeding Edge armor based on nanotechnology but he gives this up as well after being unfit to pilot it during a period of alcoholism He has subsequently used other armors that incorporate nanotechnology 134 Supporting charactersAllies Main article List of Iron Man supporting characters Pepper Potts is an employee of Stark Industries that Tony Stark promoted to his executive assistant As he had little interest in running the business much of the management was handled by her 135 When Stark became Iron Man and began taking responsibility for his company she taught him how to manage the business 65 When Potts is injured by an explosion and receives a heart injury similar to Iron Man s he installs the arc reactor technology in her 136 She eventually becomes the CEO of Stark Industries 137 Iron Man built her a set of armor in secret and after finding it she became the superhero Rescue 138 James Rhodes is an employee of Tony Stark s that became the superhero War Machine 105 He first appeared in 1979 and was developed as a supporting character in 1981 139 He briefly took on the role of Iron Man while Tony Stark was relapsing on alcoholism 71 Later on when Stark was near death he gave Rhodes his corporation and the War Machine Armor 140 After Stark returned he had Rhodes keep the armor 141 Rhodes dependency on Iron Man for his armor often constrains him as a supporting character to Stark even in solo War Machine stories 142 Happy Hogan was hired as Tony Stark s chauffeur after saving his life and Hogan later deduced that Tony Stark was Iron Man 143 Edwin Jarvis is the butler for the Stark family and for the Avengers Through Iron Man s membership in the Avengers he has worked extensively with many of his fellow heroes including Captain America and Thor among others 144 His association with S H I E L D sees him working with its agents and leadership including Nick Fury and Maria Hill 137 He has also taken on other heroes as sidekicks including Spider Man and Jack of Hearts 65 Iron Man has had many romantic interests most of which only last a short time 65 In Iron Man s original Tales of Suspense run a love triangle was established in which Tony Stark and Happy Hogan both had romantic interest in Pepper Potts 145 8 Hogan eventually married Potts 143 Roxie Gilbert the sister of the villain Firebrand was introduced as a romantic interest in the early 1970s She was a foil for both Iron Man and Firebrand representing non violent activism 146 Whitney Frost was Iron Man s romantic interest later in the decade until she turned against him as the villain Madame Masque 33 She was replaced by Bethany Cabe as part of an overhaul of Iron Man s supporting cast and Cabe was Iron Man s romantic interest during his alcoholism 70 She left Iron Man after he saved her husband who had been presumed dead Iron Man later partnered with Rumiko Fujikawa the daughter of a businessman who took over Stark Enterprises 65 He eventually began a relationship with his long time ally Janet van Dyne 77 A story arc in September 2023 saw Iron Man married to X Men member Emma Frost 147 Villains Main article List of Iron Man enemies Iron Man s earliest villains were often affiliated with the Soviet government or otherwise associated with communism 148 In the first three years after Iron Man was created one third of his villains were communists 149 Some of these enemies were Soviet counterparts of Iron Man such as Titanium Man 97 and Crimson Dynamo 150 while others were leadership of communist states such as the Red Barbarian and the real life Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev 148 Khrushchev like most communists in the series was drawn in caricature style as a brute who only sought power 151 Multiple communist villains such as Crimson Dynamo were reformed and became heroes loyal to the United States to present Iron Man and liberal capitalism as more appealing and morally superior 152 Two prominent Marvel heroes Soviet spy Black Widow 153 and American street criminal Hawkeye were introduced as Iron Man villains before reforming as heroes 13 The Mandarin was introduced as a Chinese villain initially incorporating racist Yellow Peril themes and stereotypes regarding China 154 155 Though he is also an allegory for autocracy 156 the Mandarin was not created as another communist villain 157 Instead any work he does with the Chinese government is purely in self interest 158 Later on the Mandarin was retroactively established as the man behind the kidnapping of Tony Stark that created Iron Man 67 The Mandarin contrasts with Iron Man in that he is associated with magic and mysticism rather than science and technology 159 158 and in that he was born into nobility unlike Iron Man who is a self made man in line with American ideals 156 Beginning in the 1970s Iron Man faced villains that represented social conflict and unrest such as the anarchist Firebrand and the corrupt businessman Guardsman 160 Villains representing concerns about technology emerged at the same time including Ultimo 161 The business aspect of Iron Man s character has invited several supervillains who oppose Stark Industries rather than just Iron Man 141 These villains became prominent in the 1980s 162 and they were amplified by the backlash to the decade s consumerism that emerged in the 1990s 103 Some of these villains wish to compete with the corporation and steal trade secrets such as Spymaster Whiplash and Beetle Others oppose the corporation on ideological grounds such as Atom Smasher 141 Other such villains include Obadiah Stane 71 Justin Hammer 65 Shockwave the Controller the Mauler and Stilt Man 162 A focus on terrorism brought villains such as Zeke Stane who carried out terrorist attacks using suicide bombers 163 Alternate versionsOther characters in the Marvel Universe have taken on the role of Iron Man besides Tony Stark including James Rhodes 71 Victor von Doom 77 and Arno Stark 164 Several other versions of Iron Man exist in other universes as part of Marvel s multiverse In the Ultimate Universe an alternate version of Iron Man exists as a member of the Ultimates the universe s counterpart of the Avengers 165 Other variations include 166 167 Iron Man 2020 the title of Arno Stark as a future Iron Man 168 Iron Man 2099 the superhero Sonny Frisco in the year 2099 169 Lord Iron who exists in an Elizabethan society in the Marvel 1602 series 170 A Tony Stark who operated as Ant Man on Earth 818 171 An evil version of Iron Man called Iron Maniac 172 A Tony Stark who operates as Iron Lad on Earth 6160 173 Iron Hammer a combination of Iron Man and Thor during the Infinity Warps event 174 Iron Lantern a combination with Green Lantern of DC Comics in the Amalgam crossover 175 Cultural impact and legacyIron Man s appearances in the 1960s saw mixed reception from readers many of whom criticized the character for his association with the United States military and the controversial Vietnam War 4 24 In response Marvel rewrote the character to moderate his image and to have him directly reflect on his culpability in the harms caused by war 26 89 Iron Man became widely popular following the success of the film Iron Man which made him one of Marvel s most recognizable characters 1 and Iron Man is credited with redefining the superhero film genre 176 177 The relatively realistic nature of the character and the fact that he had no history of poor adaptations are factors in Iron Man s capacity to renew the interest of general audiences in superhero fiction 178 179 Since then many publishers have listed Iron Man in the top ten in best Marvel character and best superhero lists 180 181 182 183 Iron Man s portrayal of futuristic technology has affected public image of how these technologies may develop Heavy use of augmented reality interfaces by Iron Man in his helmet s heads up display and elsewhere has informed public awareness of the technology 184 In 2019 a statue representing the character in his Iron Man armor was erected in Forte dei Marmi Italy 185 186 In other mediaMain article Iron Man in other media See also Tony Stark Marvel Cinematic Universe nbsp Iron Man was portrayed by Robert Downey Jr in the Marvel Cinematic UniverseIn 2008 a film adaptation titled Iron Man was released starring Robert Downey Jr as Tony Stark and directed by Jon Favreau Iron Man was met with positive reviews from film critics 187 grossing 318 million domestically and 585 million worldwide and became the first in the long running Marvel Cinematic Universe 188 Downey s casting was praised as was his portrayal of the character Downey s own recovery from substance abuse was seen as creating a personal connection with the character 189 Downey reprises his role in Iron Man 2 2010 Marvel s The Avengers 2012 Iron Man 3 2013 Avengers Age of Ultron 2015 Captain America Civil War 2016 Spider Man Homecoming 2017 Avengers Infinity War 2018 and Avengers Endgame 2019 190 191 Downey s character was retired following his appearance in Avengers Endgame but Iron Man supporting characters continue in their own Marvel Cinematic Universe titles Ironheart and Armor Wars 191 Iron Man s first animated appearance was in a seven minute segment of the 1966 series The Marvel Super Heroes and has since been featured in the animated series Iron Man 1994 1996 and Iron Man Armored Adventures 2009 2012 He has also made many appearances in other Marvel animated programs particularly those featuring the Avengers and there have been multiple Iron Man direct to video releases 192 193 Iron Man has featured in several video games including Iron Man 2008 and Iron Man 2 2010 which were released as adaptations of his Marvel Cinematic Universe films He also featured in the PlayStation VR game Iron Man VR 2020 An Iron Man action adventure game was announced in 2022 to be developed by Motive Studio Iron Man has also appeared in many other Marvel video games such as those featuring the Avengers 194 Notes a b c d Darowski 2015 p 1 McGuire Liam July 5 2021 Stan Lee Admitted He Created Iron Man to be Completely Unlikable ScreenRant Retrieved September 4 2023 Cooley amp Rogers 2015 p 78 a b c d Mills 2013 p 123 a b c Howe 2012 p 43 a b Patton 2015 pp 5 6 a b Gilbert 2008 p 91 a b c Patton 2015 p 7 Coates John 2014 Don Heck A Work of Art Raleigh North Carolina TwoMorrows Publishing p 41 ISBN 978 1605490588 Howe 2012 p 45 Gilbert 2008 p 94 a b Friedenthal 2021 pp 30 31 a b Howe 2012 p 56 Howe 2012 p 50 a b c Patton 2015 p 8 Gilbert 2008 p 99 Wright 2001 pp 222 223 Henebry 2015 pp 100 101 Howe 2012 p 89 Gilbert 2008 p 130 Henebry 2015 p 101 Henebry 2015 pp 102 105 Henebry 2015 p 116 a b Henebry 2015 p 110 Howe 2012 p 188 a b Henebry 2015 p 111 Henebry 2015 p 112 Sacks 2015 p 138 Sacks 2015 p 139 a b Ridout 1992 p 6 Howe 2012 p 223 a b c Ridout 1992 p 7 a b c Sacks 2015 p 140 Gilbert 2008 p 187 Sacks 2015 p 142 Sacks 2015 p 144 Sacks 2015 pp 141 142 Gilbert 2008 p 189 a b Zanco 2015 pp 165 166 Howe 2012 p 255 Ridout 1992 Darowski Joseph J 2015 pp 171 173 Gilbert 2008 p 269 Howe 2012 p 373 a b c d e Zehr 2011 p 181 Gilbert 2008 p 280 Howe 2012 p 394 Gilbert 2008 p 285 Gilbert 2008 p 289 Gilbert 2008 p 311 a b Gilbert 2008 p 325 Gilbert 2008 pp 323 324 a b Friedenthal 2021 pp 82 83 Gilbert 2008 p 335 Mozzocco J Caleb May 28 2013 Re reading Invincible Iron Man Part 1 What s so great about Invincible Iron Man CBR Retrieved September 4 2023 Overpeck 2017 pp 178 179 Johnson Jim November 12 2014 Superior Iron Man 1 CBR Retrieved September 4 2023 a b c Friedenthal 2021 pp 91 93 Friedenthal 2021 p 90 Adams Tim October 23 2017 REVIEW Invincible Iron Man 593 Kicks Off The Search for Tony Stark CBR Retrieved September 4 2023 Staley Brandon July 7 2017 Marvel Legacy s Invincible Iron Man Sees the Return of Tony Stark CBR Retrieved September 4 2023 Johnson Jim June 20 2018 REVIEW Tony Stark Iron Man 1 Is Big Budget Fun With Faults CBR Retrieved September 4 2023 Stone Sam September 18 2020 REVIEW Iron Man 1 Is a Welcome Back to Basics for the Armored Avenger CBR Retrieved September 4 2023 Gribbin Sean December 12 2022 Iron Man s Invincible New Series Leads Marvel s New Releases CBR Retrieved September 4 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Hoskin 2010 Iron Man Friedenthal 2021 pp 73 74 a b Darowski Joseph J 2015 p 176 Friedenthal 2021 pp 74 75 Henebry 2015 pp 95 96 a b Sacks 2015 p 141 a b c d Chambliss 2015 p 152 a b Mulligan 2015 p 209 Mulligan 2015 pp 210 211 Hogan 2009 pp 209 210 Friedenthal 2021 p 86 a b Hoskin 2010 Iron Man Update a b c d Fentiman 2019 p 195 Sacks 2015 pp 140 141 a b c Zanco 2015 p 167 Cooley amp Rogers 2015 p 77 Zanco 2015 pp 164 167 a b c Cooley amp Rogers 2015 p 80 Cooley amp Rogers 2015 pp 81 82 Mills 2013 p 106 Genter 2007 p 968 Mulligan 2015 pp 205 206 Sacks 2015 p 137 a b Patton 2015 p 15 a b Cooley amp Rogers 2015 p 88 Henebry 2015 p 103 Darowski Joseph J 2015 pp 176 177 Michalek 2015 p 193 Alaniz 2015 p 58 Michalek 2015 p 201 Hogan 2009 p 205 Michalek 2015 p 196 a b Wright 2001 p 222 This 2015 p 17 Alaniz 2015 p 52 Patton 2015 p 10 Genter 2007 pp 967 968 Wright 2001 pp 241 243 a b c Darowski Joseph J 2015 p 175 Mulligan 2015 p 218 a b Chambliss 2015 p 148 Friedenthal 2021 p 83 Darowski John 2015 p 189 Darowski John 2015 p 181 Friedenthal 2021 p 85 Vohlidka 2015 p 121 a b Hogan 2009 p 201 Patton 2015 p 14 Alaniz 2015 pp 58 59 Zanco 2015 p 164 Zanco 2015 p 168 Zehr 2011 p 154 Mulligan 2015 pp 206 207 Michalek 2015 pp 194 195 Hogan 2009 p 210 Vohlidka 2015 p 132 Zehr 2011 p xi a b Hogan 2009 p 203 Zehr 2011 p 78 Zanco 2015 pp 164 165 Ridout 1992 p 5 a b Mulligan 2015 p 208 Zehr 2011 p 166 Zehr 2011 pp 8 10 a b Zehr 2011 p 6 Ridout 1992 pp 6 7 Mulligan 2015 p 205 Mulligan 2015 pp 213 214 Zehr 2011 pp 37 38 Allan Scoot May 1 2020 Iron Man What s Inside Tony Stark s Bleeding Edge Armor CBR Retrieved September 5 2023 Hoskin 2010 Pepper Hogan Michalek 2015 p 197 a b Michalek 2015 p 198 Hoskin 2010 Rescue Chambliss 2015 p 150 Chambliss 2015 p 153 a b c Chambliss 2015 p 154 Chambliss 2015 p 158 a b Hoskin 2010 Happy Hogan Ashford Sage July 28 2020 Iron Man Tony Stark s 10 Closest Allies CBR Retrieved September 4 2023 Minett amp Schauer 2017 p 58 Henebry 2015 pp 113 114 Schedeen Jesse June 19 2023 Marvel Comics Teases the Wedding of Tony Stark and Emma Frost IGN Retrieved September 6 2023 a b Patton 2015 pp 10 11 Alaniz 2015 p 59 Wright 2001 p 241 Alaniz 2015 pp 61 63 Alaniz 2015 p 65 Howe 2012 p 106 Iadonisi 2015 p 39 Henebry 2015 p 98 a b Iadonisi 2015 p 46 Iadonisi 2015 p 41 a b Darowski Joseph J 2015 p 178 Iadonisi 2015 p 44 Henebry 2015 pp 111 113 Vohlidka 2015 p 119 a b Zanco 2015 p 166 Zanco 2015 p 169 Brunner Adam J September 4 2022 Iron Man Lore Reveal Sets the Stage to Resurrect Tony s Evil Brother ScreenRant O Sullivan 2015 Ultimate Universe Reality 1610 Ashford Sage July 27 2019 10 Coolest Alternate Universe Iron Man Armors CBR Retrieved September 4 2023 Harn Darby September 25 2021 15 Most Powerful Variants Of Iron Man In Marvel Comics ScreenRant Retrieved September 4 2023 Machine Man Vol 2 2 Marvel Comics Secret Wars 2099 1 Marvel Comics Marvel 1602 New World 2 Marvel Comics Avengers Assemble Vol 2 1 11 Marvel Comics Marvel Team Up Vol 3 2 Marvel Comics Ultimate Invasion 1 4 Marvel Comics Infinity Wars Iron Man 1 2 Marvel Comics Iron Lantern 1 Marvel Comics Crump Andy May 2 2018 Why Iron Man was the most pivotal movie of the last decade The Week Retrieved September 5 2023 Robinson Joanna November 29 2017 Marvel Looks Back at Iron Man the Movie That Started It All Vanity Fair Retrieved September 5 2023 Fink Richard April 1 2023 Why the First MCU Movie Had to Be Iron Man MovieWeb Retrieved September 5 2023 Harris Jeffrey January 28 2023 Iron Man Was the Only Way the MCU Could Have Kicked Off Collider Retrieved September 5 2023 The 100 Best Marvel Characters Ranked 20 1 The A V Club July 8 2022 Retrieved November 21 2022 Harth David February 26 2023 10 Most Influential Marvel Heroes Ranked Comic Book Resources Retrieved April 24 2023 Cartelli Lance February 15 2018 The 50 Most Important Superheroes Ranked GameSpot Retrieved November 21 2022 Cartelli Lance February 25 2019 Ranking The 50 Most Important Superheroes Ever ComicBook com Retrieved November 21 2022 Pedersen Isabel Simcoe Luke May 5 2012 The iron man phenomenon participatory culture amp future augmented reality technologies CHI 12 Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems ACM pp 291 300 doi 10 1145 2212776 2212807 ISBN 978 1 4503 1016 1 S2CID 14161327 Italy erects Iron Man statue to honor Tony Stark s noble death in Avengers Endgame SYFY Official Site September 5 2019 Retrieved November 21 2022 Italian Town Pays Tribute to Iron Man By Erecting Statue comicbook com Retrieved December 29 2022 Yamato Jen May 1 2008 Iron Man is the Best Reviewed Movie of 2008 Rotten Tomatoes Archived from the original on November 9 2014 Retrieved June 21 2008 Iron Man Box Office Mojo Archived from the original on May 12 2013 Retrieved May 14 2013 Sacks 2015 p 145 Patchett Brian July 17 2019 How Much Robert Downey Jr Was Paid For Each of His MCU Films CBR Retrieved September 3 2023 a b Drakes Kyshaun September 22 2020 MCU Every Movie Starring Iron Man amp The Order To Watch Them In ScreenRant Retrieved September 3 2023 Goldman Eric April 29 2013 Iron Man s TV History IGN Retrieved September 3 2023 Minton Turner January 17 2017 Every Adaptation Of Iron Man Ranked Worst To Best ScreenRant Retrieved September 3 2023 Good Owen S September 20 2022 EA is making an Iron Man video game Polygon Retrieved September 3 2023 ReferencesDarowski Joseph J ed 2015 The Ages of Iron Man Essays on the Armored Avenger in Changing Times McFarland ISBN 978 1 4766 2074 9 Alaniz Jose Does Khrushchev Tell Kennedy In Darowski 2015 Chambliss Julian C War Machine In Darowski 2015 Cooley Will Rogers Mark C Ike s Nightmare In Darowski 2015 Darowski John I would be the bad guy In Darowski 2015 Darowski Joseph J Cold Warrior at the End of the Cold War In Darowski 2015 Henebry Charles Socking It to Shell Head In Darowski 2015 Iadonisi Richard A Fu Manchu Meets Maklu In Darowski 2015 Michalek Jason Feminizing the Iron In Darowski 2015 Mulligan Rikk Iron Icarus In Darowski 2015 Patton Brian The Iron Clad American In Darowski 2015 Sacks Jason Demon in a Bottle and Feet of Clay In Darowski 2015 This Craig Tony Stark Disabled Vietnam Veteran In Darowski 2015 Vohlidka John M Countdown to 100 In Darowski 2015 Zanco Jean Philippe From Armor Wars to Iron Man 2 0 In Darowski 2015 Fentiman David 2019 Marvel Encyclopedia New ed DK Books ISBN 978 1 4654 7890 0 Friedenthal Andrew J ed 2021 Iron Man The World of Marvel Comics Routledge pp 192 195 ISBN 978 1 000 43111 7 Genter Robert 2007 With Great Power Comes Great Responsibility Cold War Culture and the Birth of Marvel Comics The Journal of Popular Culture Hoboken New Jersey Wiley Blackwell 40 6 953 978 and 965 969 doi 10 1111 j 1540 5931 2007 00480 x Gilbert Laura ed 2008 Marvel Chronicle A Year By Year History DK Publishing ISBN 978 0 7566 4123 8 Hogan Jon 2009 The Comic Book as Symbolic Environment The Case of Iron Man ETC A Review of General Semantics 66 2 199 214 ISSN 0014 164X JSTOR 42578930 Hoskin Michael 2010 Iron Man Iron Manual Mark 3 Marvel Comics Howe Sean 2012 Marvel Comics The Untold Story Harper Collins ISBN 978 0 06 221811 7 O Sullivan Mike ed 2015 Secret Wars Official Guide to the Marvel Multiverse Marvel Comics Mills Anthony 2013 American Theology Superhero Comics and Cinema The Marvel of Stan Lee and the Revolution of a Genre Routledge ISBN 978 1 135 01437 7 Ridout Cefn 1992 Introduction The Many Armors of Iron Man Marvel Comics pp 4 9 ISBN 0 87135 926 X Wright Bradford W 2001 Comic Book Nation The Transformation of Youth Culture in America JHU Press ISBN 978 0 8018 6514 5 Yockey Matt 2017 Make Ours Marvel Media Convergence and a Comics Universe University of Texas Press ISBN 978 1 4773 1250 6 Minett Mark Schauer Bradley Reforming the Justice System In Yockey 2017 Overpeck Deron Breaking Brand In Yockey 2017 Zehr E Paul 2011 Inventing Iron Man The Possibility of a Human Machine JHU Press ISBN 978 1 4214 0488 2 Further readingTom DeFalco Avengers The Ultimate Guide Dorling Kindersley 2005 ISBN 978 0 7566 1461 4 Mark D White ed Iron Man and Philosophy Facing the Stark Reality Wiley Blackwell 2010 ISBN 978 0 4704 8218 6External links nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Iron Man comics Iron Man at the Marvel Universe wiki Iron Man Tony Stark at the Comic Book DB archived from the original Stark Reality A Different Hero for Different Times by Ian Chant PopMatters com Advanced Iron fanzine Iron Man Library Archived December 23 2018 at the Wayback Machine Tony Stark on Marvel Database a Marvel Comics wiki Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Iron Man amp oldid 1186306327, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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