Iron Man

Iron Man

91% Liked It
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Iron Man

Robert Downey Jr., Terrence Howard, Gwyneth Paltrow, Jeff Bridges, Samuel L. Jackson

Tony Stark is a billionaire industrialist and genius inventor who is kidnapped and forced to build a devastating weapon. Instead, using his intelligence and ingenuity, Tony builds a high-tech suit of ...( read more  read more... )armor and escapes captivity. When he uncovers a nefarious plot with global implications, he dons his powerful armor and vows to protect the world as Iron Man.

Id: 10888219

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Recent Reviews


  • November 1, 2008
    Delivers all the elements of a great comic book movie: action, comedy, drama, & excitement. Robert Downey, Jr. gives a fantastic performance. He & Gwyneth Paltrow have such great chemistry in their scenes together as does Downey, Jr. & Terrence Howard. And Jeff Bridges is the fi...( read more)lm's classic example of big screen villiany.
  • November 11, 2009
    I've seen good superhero movies and bad superhero movies, but it's very rare to see one that is as fun as Iron Man. Spider-Man 2 comes to mind as a good comparison. Both movies take the essence of what makes these characters so fascinating, and adds in a good story and great spec...( read more)ial effects.

    The casting of Robert Downey, Jr. was perfect, the movie was never boring for a moment, and the tone struck the perfect balance between seriousness and levity. A great director, a great cast, and good writing = a movie that Iron Man fans and comic newbs can all enjoy.
  • November 7, 2009
    "It's not a piece of equipment. It's a suit. It's me!"

    He's not Batman or Superman. He's not in the public consciousness the way the Dark Knight or the Caped Crusader Man of Steel are. He's beloved by legions of comic fans, but they're a far more select crowd. Our pop-cu...( read more)lture lobes aren't cluttered with the faces of half a dozen different actors who've played him over the last half century, or with the memories of the earnest 50s black-and-white TV dramas or the campy candy-coloured 60s sitcoms in which he fought evil and embodied the spirit of the era.

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    No, there's just this film, now, and what a doozy of a popcorn-a-licious introduction to Iron Man it is. It spells certain ruin for future incarnations unless they are very, very good indeed, for when someone makes "Iron Man: The Web Series" in 2026 and someone else reboots Iron Man for 3D sensesurround films in 2043, everyone will be all, "Oh, but Robert Downey Jr. will always be Iron Man for me," and, "Oh, but no one can do it like Jon Favreau did."

    This might well be the perfect comic book film, actually. It's just pertinent enough to feel like it's set in something like the real world and just tongue-in-cheek enough not to get too heavy about it, but it's got enough self-respect to be sincere. It manages to be funny in more places than you might imagine without winking at itself, like it doesn't know it's a comic book flick, and that all sorts of smirking and jabs in the ribs are supposed to go along with film adaptations from that medium. Oh, sure, there's no question that this is Iron Man - the spirit of the character is absolutely intact, and though there's been some shuffling around, the faces and names and situations will be completely familiar to fans of the comic series, and will pay off in ways they'll be able to predict. But the key thing is: Tony Stark doesn't think he's a "superhero."

    And he isn't. He has no superpowers, unless genius and a preternatural ability to charm the ladies count. Nope: Stark is just your run-of-the-mill billionaire playboy geek - he's Bill Gates with Austin Powers' mojo. He heads up Stark Industries, a weapons contractor with sidelines in a few more philanthropical arenas for the PR value, but he's not just a businessman: he actually designs and builds his deadly toys. He's a brilliant engineer and inventor... as well as an inveterate party animal who just so happens to be as gorgeous and charismatic (if in a slightly smarmy way) as Robert Downey Jr.

    The funny stuff? It's all Downey and the easygoing, reflexive snark that is his trademark. Which isn't to say that he's not a vital part of the whole self-respecting sincerity of Iron Man: his snark is, as it always is, his way of armouring a character with deep and intriguing flaws against having to acknowledge those flaws. (One recurring joke about how Stark treats the robotics in his private lab, the kind of robots you might see in an automobile factory, like pet dogs or even sentient creatures, is layered with poignancy because he probably does count these machines as among his very few close relationships.)

    And when Stark is angry? Downey is nuclear with it - like a slow meltdown, not like a mushroom cloud. But whether Downey is gearing Stark toward funny or mad or somewhere in between - his relationship with his human assistant, Pepper (Gwyneth Paltrow) is fraught with all sorts of interpersonal land-mines that make for some of the film's best moments - Downey exudes a sense of effortlessness, as if he were just making it all up as he goes. Some of Stark's offhandedness was clearly given by Downey, but surely the four credited screenwriters - Mark Fergus and Hawk Ostby (both of whom worked on Children of Men and First Snow), and newcomers Art Marcum and Matt Holloway - contributed their fair share. Downey can't have done it all on his own: it just feels that way.

    Jon Favreau, being an actor himself, knows to just stay the hell out of Downey's way and let him run with a story so deceptively simple that it really does seem as if it's Faveau's star doing all the embellishing. On a trip to Afghanistan to push a new weapons system on the U.S. army, Stark is injured and kidnapped by cave-dwelling terrorists, and it's a full hour into the film - not that it drags or anything - before Stark has whipped up his first flying suit of armour as a way to escape. Refinements to the suit come later, but there's relatively little of the crime-fighting you'd expect from this kind of superhero origin story. Stark goes, well, ballistic when he discovers what uses his company's weapons are being put to, and engages in a bit of do-goodery to right that, but still: Stark emphatically isn't a superhero - a few snide Downey asides about what his life would be like if he were a superhero are well played, and only underline the non-comic-booky vibe here, which plays much more in the Sci-Fi sandbox. Think Robocop meets Transformers, not "Batman with metal armour."

    But this is, of course, deep down, a superhero origin, and the very funny final line of the film leaves no doubt that there will be a sequel. I say let it come. It's a nice feeling for a film to leave you, for a change, with the sense that that's a promise, not a threat.
  • October 22, 2009
    Alright so everyone already agrees that RDJ is tha bomb in this, and I wholeheartedly concur. I could take or leave Gwyneth and Terrence Howard, bur unlike most other reviewers, I liked Jeff Bridges' performance. The story is annoyingly laced with patriotism and an attempt at mod...( read more)ernity, but what else does one expect from America's largest "propaganda for the youths" machine?

    The movie whips by with a good action pacing, though it is devoid of any significant plot development. The suit is awesome and corresponding action scenes SEEM to fit in this movie's imagined world of physics. The end was a genuine fanboy heart-pumper: the (best) bumper (eva) left me fully excited (AVENGERS!!!!), especially after that awesome ending with Black Sabbath's anthem capping it.

    I can't compare this to the comic book, as I always found Iron Man to be boring (and the movie fits that). I do hope Terrence Howard gets dropped from the War Machine role, and that RDJ meets the studio's physical standards for the next installment, as he is a great Tony Stark and funny to see someone so talented and revered as an actor slipped into a cookie cutter superhero role because he makes something otherwise dull, interesting.
  • October 9, 2009
    I've owned the DVD for this movie for over a year, and I finally decided to watch it. Robert Downey Jr. did a very good job as Tony Stark. I've read Marvel comics for years, and this was one of the better adaptations. Just a few problems: Jarvis was NOT the name of Tony's hou...( read more)sehold AI. Jarvis was the name of a butler employed by Tony's father, who then became the butler for the Avengers. Oh, and Tony kept it secret that he was Iron Man for a number of years, actually using the cover story that Iron Man was his bodyguard (which he came up with himself, NOT S.H.I.E.L.D.).
  • December 15, 2009
    Best superhero movie since the Spidey 2
  • December 15, 2009
    I usually don't like superheroes, but this time I didn't even fall sleep!
  • December 15, 2009
    Is a cool movie would be god to see it
  • December 12, 2009
    eeeeeeh no idea what to say
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