I dont like this armor, and I dont like Extremis
in Shane Black I trust tho
man this cover bothered me. Lenght of Spidey's arms..
in Shane Black I trust tho
man this cover bothered me. Lenght of Spidey's arms..
Looking forward to the talk either way. I wonder if we'll actually ever see something like this on screen, though;
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One of the biggest things to turn me off the idea of seriously getting into comics is how utterly meaningless power levels are. Oh you're going to go fight the cosmic incarnation of destruction? Then I'm sure your one hundred foot tall robot suit will make a serious difference
Doubtful, the predominance of the pale color is to give the suit a more organic/biological look since it will be fused with his body.Like I said on the other page, I get the feeling the suit is made to go into space, and the predominance of the pale color is because it would look better in the more contrasted lighting of space than if it was predominantly red. The design also makes it look more like some sort of space battle suit IMO.
Like I said on the other page, I get the feeling the suit is made to go into space, and the predominance of the pale color is because it would look better in the more contrasted lighting of space than if it was predominantly red. The design also makes it look more like some sort of space battle suit IMO.
Ironman is not like Batman, Tony actually knows how to build his own shit. And he is always building the next great thing, it is a logical extension he would eventually make his armor and himself one and the same. Hell he even states it in the second movie.
NANOMACHINES
How is that logical? He's a genius with money, but in iron man he's just making simple(ish) missiles etc. Suddenly he's into genetic engineering? Just feels too much of a stretch, and I'm fine with crazy stuff.
How is that logical? He's a genius with money, but in iron man he's just making simple(ish) missiles etc. Suddenly he's into genetic engineering? Just feels too much of a stretch, and I'm fine with crazy stuff.
How is that logical? He's a genius with money, but in iron man he's just making simple(ish) missiles etc. Suddenly he's into genetic engineering? Just feels too much of a stretch, and I'm fine with crazy stuff.
Didn't he create a new element in the last movie ;P
Avengers advertisement.Thanks for reminding me of that terrible plot line.
Why does Iron Man 2 even exist?
How is that logical? He's a genius with money, but in iron man he's just making simple(ish) missiles etc. Suddenly he's into genetic engineering? Just feels too much of a stretch, and I'm fine with crazy stuff.
I wish I could go back in time and shoot whoever came up with this idea, if only for how often it's misused in fiction.
Thanks for reminding me of that terrible plot line.
Why does Iron Man 2 even exist?
I don't think space is going to be a part of the story at all. So far everything in the production points to the movie being about technological espionage in China, with Extremis plot elements thrown in.
See, that's what I like, Tony vulnerable because he only managed to get parts of his armor on (assuming this isn't him mid-transformation). Doesn't the whole extremis thing destroy that factor?Concept art:
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For people down on the suit coming out of his bones: that's not the Extremis suit, that's the Bleeding Edge armor. The Extremis armor has an undersuit that comes out of his bones, but they likely won't have that in the movie because they've never had an undersuit.
The main things about the Extremis suit are that it is modular and he can summon the pieces to him (which they've been building up to with the suitcase suit and the Avengers suit flying to him) and that he can interface with it directly through his brain. That's likely as far as they'll go with it in this movie.
And I don't really understand being down on the Bleeding Edge armor at all in the comics. A major theme in Matt Fraction's Invincible Iron Man run and Iron Man comics in general has been that everybody is trying to copy Stark's tech, so he has to remain one step ahead of them and always invent the next best thing. That was the main theme of Extremis, too, and since that made him basically one with the suit it only makes sense to take that even further. I mean after decades of gradual improvement on the armor in comics you have to take it somewhere a bit more science fiction.
And I don't mean this in a condescending way, but I think the reason people see it as stupid is because they don't read the comics and don't really understand just how long Iron Man had the exact same suit before getting the Extremis armor (which was the first one that even really looked like an armor and not yellow tights).
Didn't he create a new element in the last movie ;P
The way I see it, Tony Stark is a character who has a great capacity to learn and create. He also has the funds to do so. So what exactly would stop him from learning about genetic engineering? His intellect was never shown to have any limit that would tell us he couldn't learn such a thing and he clearly has the funds. I think it would be silly if Iron man 3 started out with him in a skin suit but I feel that if he HAD to create such a thing he could. He's already shown that he's capable of such feats if pointed in the right direction.
Ok I haven't read the whole Extremis thing, but I sort of get it, and it honestly does sound cool to me, but what makes this new movie suit look bad is that it doesn't look organic enough. It doesn't like what I was expecting when I read they were going to go with this Extremis stuff for IM3. It's too bulky and manufactured looking. I was expecting something sleeker and more organic.
He sure did, but it was still in line with the way technology was portrayed in Iron Man movies, that is with an almost "steam punk" vibe : he built his first armor with scraps while prisoner in a cave, invents an element with a few tubes, a mace and a wrench, have his armor built around him with all kinds of clunky and whirring sounds... Iron Man is (originally) mechanical, it's a machine, made of pieces of metal assembled together.
Turning it into a nanomachine-based bio-suit is a huge leap...
Nah, Iron Man had that chunky angular look to his armor before Extremis
He doesn't make Extremis
Even if someone else does it for him, it's still a big change to the mythos and the very idea of an "Iron Man". And not in line with the world they painted, where most of the technology was at our current level, except for a few genius like Stark or Vanko.
Even if someone else does it for him, it's still a big change to the mythos and the very idea of an "Iron Man". And not in line with the world they painted, where most of the technology was at our current level, except for a few genius like Stark or Vanko.
Once again Extremis is NOT the suit that comes out of his bones made of nanomachines. It's a modular suit whose pieces can be remotely controlled by Stark's brain, made to fly to him and assemble (kind of like the Mk. VII in Avengers, right?) and allows him greater control by interfacing through his brain.
How exactly is that not in line then? The virus itself isn't even out of line in a world where the Hulk, Abomination and Steve Rogers are all mutated super soldiers created by a serum and Asgardian tech like the tesseract can be reverse engineered.
I'm ok with the pieces of armor flying to him (or at least the whole armor, like in the Avengers), not really with the brain interface thing. It crosses a line that makes it too different from the original IM.
And yes of course it may be weird to be concerned about such things when other characters had other sources of superpowers, that is the usual problem with ensembles like the Avengers. It requires some suspension of disbelief, but it doesn't mean that I would like to see Stark injecting himself a serum, or Captain America get boosted by Gamma radiations... to each character his own style.
The idea of a metal suit that comes out of his bones is really stupid. You can defend it all you want, but the concept is utterly ridiculous and has no place in the movies, even if they aren't firmly grounded in reality.
The idea of a metal suit that comes out of his bones is really stupid. You can defend it all you want, but the concept is utterly ridiculous and has no place in the movies, even if they aren't firmly grounded in reality.
Just the opposite here. I like my fantasy heroes to be ever-inflating their power to more and more epic levels.See, that's what I like, Tony vulnerable because he only managed to get parts of his armor on (assuming this isn't him mid-transformation). Doesn't the whole extremis thing destroy that factor?
It's the weaknesses that make a super hero interesting (at least for me)
The idea of a metal suit that comes out of his bones is really stupid. You can defend it all you want, but the concept is utterly ridiculous and has no place in the movies, even if they aren't firmly grounded in reality.