Rating:

4.5 out of 5
Short version: While not perfect, it comes pretty damn close – Iron Man is one of the best superhero movie adaptations to hit the big screen so far.
Finally. It’s here.
And yes, you can rest easy – especially if you’re a long time Iron Man fan, this movie will rock your world. If you’re not, get ready to witness the launch of the next big superhero franchise.
Believe it or not, this is one of the more difficult reviews I’ve written. I’ve been a huge supporter of this film, the production and Jon Favreau since day one, and I’ve also been looking forward to it probably longer than most of you reading this have been alive.
So it was difficult to balance the fanboy love for the character and the fact that I want it to do well, with an objective look at the film as a whole.
So, without any further delay, here’s my review, free of any major spoilers…
The movie opens with the very familiar scene of Tony Stark (played by Robert Downey Jr.) riding in a Humvee with some soldiers in what is presumably Afghanistan. Although we’ve seen about a minute of this scene in trailers and clips, there’s much more to it that’s very funny and serves to start giving us a sense of who Stark is almost immediately. He’s a billionare, but he’s very engaging and as far from “stuffy” as you can imagine. Within a couple of minutes he puts the intimidated soldiers at ease.
Of course just as that happens all hell breaks loose when an explosion takes out the vehicle ahead of theirs and brings their convoy to a stop. They’re obviously outgunned and the vehicle (and soldiers are peppered with armor piercing bullets. Stark manages to get away from the vehicle and behind cover where he tries to call for help, but (as we’ve seen) he gets hit by shrapnel from another explosion.
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The movie then cuts to a recent flashback, less than two days prior, giving us a look at Stark in his own element: Partying hard in Vegas and charming the pants off ladies (quite literally, actually). Here we’re introduced to his long time friend and military liason Rhodey (played by Terrence Howard), his father-figure Obadiah Stane (played by Jeff Bridges) and Pepper Potts (Gwyneth Paltrow), his ever-on-the-ball personal assistant.
It doesn’t take long for director Jon Favreau (who also plays Stark’s driver, ‘Happy’ Hogan) to establish the dynamic between Tony and those who surround him: Stane is the ‘responsible’ one who handles the details of running the company, putting up with Tony’s impetuous personality; Rhodey also suffers Stark’s personality, but at his core we almost see that he wishes he could be as carefree; finally Pepper is Tony’s rock: she keeps him on track and grounded and we see the playful sexual tension between them that is very close from boiling over into something serious, but has been held back to maintain their working relationship.
When we cut back to Stark in Afghanistan, we see his cocky attitude even in business as he demonstrates a state of the art missile system to the high ranking officers in the field. From here we move back to the explosion and then him as captive, where we meet Professor Yinsen (Shaun Toub), who has jury rigged a device to keep Tony alive. Stark is completely disoriented but Yinsen has been there for quite a while and instructs him on how to act in order to not be immediately killed by his captors.
The terrorists (known as “The Ten Rings”) want him to build them a version of that very same missile, which for reasons revealed in the film will not be as difficult as you might think in his cave environment. Instead Stark has an epiphany regarding his role in conflicts around the world and decides instead to construct something that will allow him and Yinsen to escape: The Mark I armor.
The scenes that follow are very well done and it’s no cakewalk for Stark and Yinsen to get away with building this right under the video-watching noses of their captors. Within the context of a superhero movie, I actually found this part of the film very effective and even believable. When we finally get to the escape itself, it is nothing less than absolutely thrilling as they run out of time and Stark finally gets to take his vengeance on his captors. Actually, in the notes I took down during the film I used the following as a reminder: AWESOME!
Stark makes it back to California where he makes an announcement that does not sit well at all with Stane or even his pal Rhodey, and he sets out to create a more streamlined version of his first prototype armor. He utilizes the help of his A.I. “butler,” Jarvis (no it’s not a robot) to construct and test the suit. Some of the funniest moments in the film take place here during his initial attempts at flight and when he takes the Mark II armor out for it’s first spin.
From here Stark feels the weight of the responsibility of what his company has contributed to conflicts in the Middle East and at least briefly takes matters into his own hands. Things get complicated and eventually as you must know, he has to confront Obadiah Stane in the Iron Monger armor which was based on the Mark I.
Yeah, yeah… but what’s the bottom line, you ask? Is it any good? The short answer is it’s not good – it’s great.
If you’re a long time Iron Man fan from the comics who’s been waiting for this movie forever, your fanboy geek meter is going to be pegged, no question. If you never heard of Iron Man until you started seeing commercials for this, you, too will think it’s awesome.
At the screening I attended, every time Downey Jr donned a new set of armor the crowd went nuts. The reaction was extremely positive with cheers coming from the audience three or four times during the course of the film, lots of laughter and applause at the closing credits.
One of the absolute best things about this film as far as comic book fans will be concerned is how faithful the movie is to the spirit of not only Tony Stark/Iron Man, but of the supporting characters as well. Favreau reached back to classic Tony Stark instead of depending on the more recent incarnations of the character: Impetuous, a bit older, risk taker and charming as hell throughout.
On the other hand he incorporated more modern-day elements into the technology of the armor, taken from the more recent comics. While purists may be annoyed at not having the skin-tight, Oscar-shiny armor in a briefcase, that just would not have worked nearly as well on the big screen.
The action sequences were awesome, and it was quite difficult to distinguish the practical suits from the CGI versions. Loved the way they made Iron Man fly, with slow, gentle takeoffs and super-fast landings (quite the opposite of Superman), and the in-air flight sequences were shot in a way that also made them very believable. The bells and whistles contained in the armor and used during various fights were very cool. In particular a scene where he faces off with terrorists using civilians as human shields.
I loved the chemistry between Downey Jr. and Paltrow. I’m not a big fan of hers as I usually find her kind of cold on-screen, but here she was business-like but also emanated a warm glow that made her vulnerable and appealing. I thought Jeff Bridges was a bit under-utilized, but for me the weak link and character chain was Terrence Howard as Rhodey. Maybe for those unfamiliar with the comics it won’t be an issue, but for me he didn’t work. As someone suggested earlier someone more like a way toned down Wesley Snipes would have fit the character better in my opinion.
So what kept it from getting a solid 5/5? After the first incredible, awesome first hour, it seemed like the film kind of lost its direction a bit. Like Tony didn’t really know what to do with the armor. A lot of time was spent in the building of it, but it didn’t seem like there was quite enough payoff from all that time spent. A lot of people were concerned that Iron Man wouldn’t have a long enough running time, but I really think that it could have used some trimming to tighten things up from it’s just over 2 hour length.
Also, yes, we all crave footage, trailers and images prior to a movie opening as we froth at the mouth from anticipation, but the fact that every action sequence in the movie was hinted at or partially shown in released footage took something away. It would have been fantastic if there had been at least ONE action sequence in the film that we had no clue about. Paramount, please take note of that for the next film.
On the other hand, even having seen so many clips, when the action hit, it was AWESOME to behold. And fans will love the reference to “The Ten Rings” and I’ll be damned if we haven’t seen the Mandarin in this movie.
All in all though it more than lived up to my expectations and I can’t wait for a sequel now that the origin story is out of the way!
P.S. Yes, you need to stay through to the end of the credits for a brief, but fanboy-cool scene.
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74 Comments
i have been scrolling through the comments to avoid spoilers.
do we know how much money the advanced screenings made last night?
Advanced screenings made 5 mil Gary. And that’s a huge amount. !!!!!
Fantastic movie. Vic, you were right on this one all the way. Nice job of calling this one as an awesome movie.
I can only hope the Captain America, Thor, and Hulk movies will all be as good as this one, but I unfortunately doubt it.
I saw the Iron Man movie last night with my brother, and it was aw….. wait for for it… some!!!
I have seen some stuff, first trailer and stuff, but have been tryning hard not to see to much, like the first test of the flying boots- had not seen it and it was funny ass… -And Robert was just the perfect tony stark.
Must admit that i did not see the agentcy beeing S.H.I.E.L.D even do I know that it is the secret superhero-dealing military agency in the marvel universe…
and sam as nick… man…. that rocked….
Yes!!!!!!!! Awesomeness!!!!! I so can not wait for # 2!!!!!
I can tell is that this is the best marvel adaptation ever made. My husband had to drag me to see Xmen 3 (I had a baaaad feeling with that movie and sadly it became true).
Here in PR the theater was packed! I had luck to find a ticket for the english version (don’t stand translated movies) and just had to refresh my hubby small details like who’s shield, jarvis and what not. My kid is more up to date (he reads my comic collection) about Iron Man. Thank God who thought about letting Kirby and Lee participate in co-writing the script. It made a lot of different. Good introduction film with a open ending, of course preparing for a sequel.
Good action, good laugh. And Jeff Bridges looked sooo bad! He surprised me, always pictured him so sedated. I’ll surely buy the dvd when it comes out.
Now I know I’ll have to suffer Speed Racer, FF, Dragonball but thank God I have a mp3 player.
Here the previews in Puerto Rico theaters were the new Mike Meyers movie about a indian guru (it looks very promising), Indy 4 (even in the trailer Ford looks tired), Speed Racer (love the anime, I’m not sure about the flick), Get Smart (funny s h i t), Ashton Kusher/Cameron Diaz New Film (will surely NOT see, hate ‘em both).
I’ve always been a marvel gal and is good to see good work done with some of my fav comic characters. Here (my local theater) if you came with Iron Man comics gifted you with some promotional things.
I missed the scene after the credits (I always stay after the credits but this time I couldn’t), would have love to see Nick Fury!
Marvel is eating out DC. One word: Sweeeet!
BTW, happy Internation Free Comic Book Day to y’all!
Greetings LadyAmbar from Purto Rico!
I knew the ladys love Iron Man!!!
I never thought I’d live to see an Iron Man movie for the simple reason that – Avengers membership notwithstanding – he’s always been a bit of a B-lister, not even as popular as Daredevil. However, Marvel have been pretty astute in placing him centre-stage for the last couple of years during this Civil War phase, and they’ve timed this to perfection.
It works because it’s not really a superhero film. Just as Tony Stark doesn’t possess superhuman abilities, the story’s presented in a straightforward, no-nonsense way. No tricksy Tim Burton title sequence, no Ang Lee split screens, no Sam Raimi acid-trip backgrounds. And REAL acting! Some people have criticised Jeff Bridges and Terence Howard for not bringing enough to their parts, but I really appreciated their restraint. Bridges in particular was far more menacing in Dillinger-in-Tron mode than he ever would have been as some goggle-eyed megalomaniac. Same thing goes for Shaun Toub as Yinsen: his death came across far more for having been preceded by such a quiet, dignified performance. Pepper Potts could easily have been either forgettable rescue fodder or that staple 21st century upgrade: the gun-confident uber-babe. Which is no less of a cliche. Gwyneth Paltrow worked a treat, bless her 8″ heels. Touching and sweet rather than girlie and pathetic. It’s all in the face. Little looks, little expressions. Best thing I’ve seen her in since Sliding Doors.
Now then… Robert Downey Jr. What a genius bit of casting. BORN to play Tony Stark, and he is superb. Flawless. Arrogant but likeable, cocky without being irritating or over the top. It’s a witty, well-written part, though regardless of the actual lines sometimes his mere delivery was laugh-out-loud funny.
In fact I found myself cackling like a beached idiot quite a lot throughout this film, for all the right reasons. Stan Lee’s cameo; the notion of a SHIELD agent sitting around meekly waiting for an appointment; RDJ being bolted into the suit like a medieval knight off to battle. Actually that suiting-up sequence looked fantastic, but also weirdly archaic in view of how Stark does it in the comics these days post-Extremis. Total cybernetic interface and all the suit sections leaping up onto him, as Hunter S Thompson would put it, “like frogs in a dynamite pond”.
Iron Man was the only superhero comic I used to buy as a kid, from the end of the Gene Colan era through George Tuska to Bob Layton. Stopped reading it in the ’80s when they changed his armour to that red & silver Lord Buckethead travesty, and looked on thereafter in horror, each subsequent makeover worse than the last. Then I saw Adi Granov’s take on the suit and immediately wanted to rain kisses on his eager little upturned face. So that was one hurdle the film cleared for me straight away (though the Mk III still looked a bit clunky from the waist down). Loved the graceless, jerky, haven’t-quite-got-used-to-it-yet flying sequences; loved the helmet-cam view of RDJ’s face with all the Head Up Displays (I’d wondered how they were going to do this); loved the Mk I and the whole idea of the arc reactor device being physically inside his chest.
Minor gripes: the plot itself wasn’t great, though on the plus side they did manage to shoehorn a hell of a lot in there from 45 years of continuity, and hats off to them for even attemting to tackle the ethical ramifications of the arms industry. Also the final scrap (ho ho) with Iron Monger reminded me a bit too much of the end of Robocop 2. And that final line. Um… not entirely sure what I feel about that at this stage. Could save some messing around in the sequels, I suppose.
Nevertheless, I thought it was one of the best comic book adaptations yet. Easily up there with Batman Begins, Hellboy and Spider-Man 2. If the same people are involved with the sequel(s) both behind and in front of the camera then I trust them with it. Ten rings to rule the world!
According to (Box Office Mojo) Iron Man has taken in 38.000.000 as of yesterday.
Its tracking to go past 70.mill by Sunday.
(Made of Honor) brought in a whopping 5mil. So far.
I think its safe to say that Iron Man is bringing in the ladys.
Iron Man should break 100mil by next weekend easy. :_/
oh, 790 I also introduced my kid to Dr. Strange, Stars Comics, Brave and the Bold, JIM, Westerns Stories, and my first love of all the amazon princess. But I had to stop there, ‘cuz my kid is only seven and he’s too young to see my golden age collection.
My relationship with Iron man has not been easy, with comics is like a marriage, they’ll be good and bad days but you have to stay firm and have some amount of faith. IronMan gives me a lot of good memories, he’s one of uncle fav characters. He would have love to see that movie.
What I like most of Marvel is that everyone of this characters has at least one flaw; they’re not perfect but thrive to help and improve humanity in some way.
At Kaisen 3 (cosplay/comic/anime con) they were a LOT of people on the Iron Man table. And now I’m crossing my fingers for a live action version of Dr. Strange or Spiderwoman (the 70s version, because the 80s one suck). The Avengers will be an interesting one if they don’t put boyband bubblegum people like they do lately in all movies.
…and you know Tony Stark will charm off the undies of anything female, 790!
Thants awesome LadyAmbar, being raised on excellent comics in Purto Rico is unique childhood indeed!
What’s it like down there right now?
With the kind of temperature and humidy is an amazing feature to collect ‘em, that’s for sure.
I hope to see the movie again this week alone (will go to the first matinee, 12 pm), it’s not the same going with a lot of nieces, nephews and my kid that going alone.
Big Dentist, those are 7 helluva great paragraphs! Post more often sir / madam!
I am afraid the next movie will have Stark all drunkified and Rhodes taking over the armor for the middle. A rehash of Spidey 2, full of angst and self-doubt. Identity Crisis.
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Don’t understand why 2 lines didn’t get more comments from fans. The first, from Rhodes, saying to the armor, “Next time, baby!” Giving a direct signal for the sequel. Then “I’m Iron Man” setting Stark apart from many other heroes. Did he give away his identity in the comics? I don’t remember that. I stopped reading in the early 80s though.
I thought it was a great film.
Jeff Bridges wins the prize for best marvel villain on film.
was the suit Tony used for his first flight test based on the silver centurion armor?
Thats what it reminded me of .
Jimmy, yeah, his identity has been public knowledge for quite a while now. It happened in Iron Man (vol.3) #55. You can get the history of the character here:
http://www.advancediron.org/iron-man-timeline/iron-man-timeline-list-of-milestones
Vic
Gary, Jeff Bridges was awesome as Stane/Iron Monger!! I think you may be correct that he is the best villain in any Marvel film, maybe tied with Alfred Molina as Doctor Octopus in SpiderMan 2. Although Doc Ock redeemed himself and Stane was evil right to the end.
I sure hope that the next film doesn’t get all whiney and angst-filled like the Spidey films. It should just be a great action film with IM kicking evil doers butts!! Although I wouldn’t mind seeing War Machine come into the picture…
Over $200 mil worldwide in the first weekend. Pretty good for a superhero not many people ever heard of!!! I think we will DEFINITELY be seeing a sequel or 2…Let’s just hope that Favreau is back for the sequel!!
This has to be the best superhero film I have seen thus far, and I have seen them all. ILM (Idustrial Light and Magic) did the CGI so you know it has phenominal VFX, and the acting (especially by Downey) was great, which many films of this type lacks. The film was soo good that you can overlook some obvious flaws, like a cavity in Stark’s chest where his heart should be (Pepper Potts replacing the old magnet scene).
My son from W. Virginia hasn’t seen it so that gives me a reason to see it again.
“I knew you’d like it!” – Stark
John, that “heart” scene was the one thing I really disliked in the film. CGI looked way fake and the hole was WAY too big. They made it look like the arc reactor REPLACED his heart instead of keeping the shrapnel from reaching it.
Vic
Hey guys at Fantastic Four land. This is how its done!
(Flame on, yourself ghssesh).
Hard to believe there both Marvel films after seeing Iron Man.
Notice to all production companies planning on doing a superhero film.
If you can’t at least match Iron Mans script and vfx. Don’t even bother!!!!
The bar is set Batman 2 will reach it but Hulk,,, ???
Hulk would add about 50 mil to their B.O.gross if there’s a Iron Man cameo. That’s how big Iron Man is now. And if there is a Iron Man cameo you better show a brief glimpes in the next trailer. This is common sense marketing folks.
Yeah Vic they kinda blew it with the chest cavity but it hardly matterd the script and action was soo brilliantly done.
I wonder if that (chest vfx) was considered a rating point prob. and was changed last min.
{{that “heart” scene was the one thing I really disliked in the film.}}
Q. What material was the wire that came out of Stark’s chest made of?
A. Elastic credulity.
I would just like to say that I was very surprised and greatly pleased with how well this movie turned out. We all know the history of Hollywood botching up comic book films as well as videogame films. I want to give Jon Favreau a freakin’ high five a million times over because this movie just turned out to be that damn good!
Robert Downey Jr. is the most believalbe comic book character that I’ve seen in a while. I don’t know how he did it, but he did it and it was fantastic. I’ve already seen it twice and now I’m just going to have to wait for the sequel. I loved how they didn’t go completely over the top by throwing in War Machine when they could have done so for that would have been just stupid. The hints to the Mandarin were excellent so I’m thrilled at how well this was done.
If they don’t keep the same production team and director and everyone else who made this a success, then they’ll just shoot themselves in the foot and come away with some garbage. I hope they recognize this.
Also, did anyone else catch that Ghostface from the Wu-Tang Clan was playing in the background when they were on the plane? I loved that part since Ghostface refers to himself as Iron Man or Tony Starks on his albums. They went all out and did tons of research to make this a success.
Fair enough with the cavity thing! I liked the concept of sticking the device inside Stark’s chest rather than him having to wear the breastplate all the time – in the same way that the Spider-Man movies having Peter Parker generate web fluid from his body instead of strangely invisible web canisters just made more sense to me. But you’re right Vic, it was way too deep. An inch would have done it. And not many antibiotics out in the desert, you’d think.
Talking of the soundtrack, I couldn’t believe I was hearing “Institutionalised” by Suicidal Tendencies in there. Yet another thumbs-up for that.
I do hope they lock down a better score on the next one.
I would like a theme. Like Superman or Indy. I need an Iron Man theme.
I don’t need hardrock blended in throughout. It worked with “Back in Black” but I need a theme.
A real good Stark Industrial theme.
I never thought that I was charmed with Iron Man very much. I think that this film is #1 Iron Man is the best!!!
Really do not be how to explain what me pleased the movie, but a thing if I say to them … really they have to see this film!
Iron Man was practically flawless as a super hero flick; it drops pretty obvious hints that would indicate a sequel as well… i’m thinking the next one should be equally great
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