The Novelization, while not the best....succent...also gave a bit of information reguarding the movie that we just didn't get told.
Such as Spoiler
Moderator: NecronLord
Unless somebody manages to knock out Tony and steal his reactor, as in the first movie.Bilbo wrote:When, and why, did Tony bother to install a Arc reactor in the silver model suit that Rhodes used? One perfect level of security would be to not do that. If the only powersource in the world for your uber suits is in your chest then no one is going to steadl one are they.
That was the first thing he tried when it got highjacked. JARVIS said he couldn't get into it. It was pretty much set up when Hammer said "The first thing I'm gonna do is upgrade your OS."Crazedwraith wrote:The second was him not having any safeguards built into the MkII. I expected him to reboot Rhodey himself. Hammer Software upgrade or not; That's his suit.
True, but it was retrieved by Stane and taken back to Stark Industries. It's not a stretch to deduce that Stark found it there and "reconstructed" it for his gallery.Admiral Valdemar wrote:It's a gallery. Last I checked, Tony didn't walk/fly back to the States in the Mk. I.
Nephtys wrote:I was under the impression that Rhodes or Stark mentioned that Rhodes had 'access' to the Mk2, and hints that Stark has asked him to try it before that he did not take up until the drunken brawl. Which is why Rhodes had the passcode to Stark's basement playground. I took that to also mean that it had some sort of lock or whatever so that he could use it. Not the greatest security in the world, but it's something.
I just saw the first movie again. The Mark I was shown in Stane's restricted area during the first movie. Pepper, Coulson and the SHIELD agents came across it when they were looking to arrest Stane. Pepper said, "I thought it'd be bigger."Galvatron wrote:True, but it was retrieved by Stane and taken back to Stark Industries. It's not a stretch to deduce that Stark found it there and "reconstructed" it for his gallery.Admiral Valdemar wrote:It's a gallery. Last I checked, Tony didn't walk/fly back to the States in the Mk. I.
Well well while Iron Man does has some range, his weapons are far more effective up close. Especially against a mobile target.Bilbo wrote:That part was just fucking lame. Oh look its Ivan. The last time I fought him he build a badass weapon that could damage my suit and was absolutely killer if you stand within 10 feet of him.Havok wrote:Really, the only difference between the two was experience in using the suit and some back up. Without Rhodey, Ivan beats Stark.
Look he is back.
Hey Rhodes, lets be a couple of complete fucking douchebags and BOTH stand within 10 feet of him even though we both mouth weapons effective at hundreds of feet so he can grab us with his electric tentacles.
Fucking lame.
Which is the point. The weaker suit is still functional even though it suffered a pretty good whipin'. Tony doesn't really have much to fear from Ivan.Admiral Valdemar wrote:Watch again. Vanko's first strike on Tony takes out a good chunk of armour in a gash on his chest, the second wastes the left hand repulsor, with the third taking out the right hand one. The HUD is already reading "Danger" at this point and it's amazing Tony isn't bisected when the whip is around his neck.
EDIT: In reference to the Monaco Grand Prix fight, that is. The final fight, yeah, it doesn't show much damage, but then the Mk. VI is far sturdier than the Mk. V.
Well for one, she didn't show up for the PA job. She was the notary from legal.Crazedwraith wrote:You know one minor complaint I had was that I was expecting Tony to, you know, be a genius. Two examples were I kinda expected him to be ahead of the game: 1) Black Widow. A superhot chick that can beat the shit out of your boxer champion Chauffeur just happens to show up for your PA job? I was expecting him to need to contact Fury as some point and just casually turn to 'Natalie' and say 'by the way, I need to see your boss."
He did. He purposely gave access to Rhodey, but then Hammer and Ivan got their hands on it.The second was him not having any safeguards built into the MkII. I expected him to reboot Rhodey himself. Hammer Software upgrade or not; That's his suit.
As cool as that sounds, considering the Way Ironmonger was destroyed i doubt there are any useful bits left. I would not be surprised if Stark Industries still has the blueprints on hand.Havok wrote: All the debris from the final conflict in the first movie was on SI property. That coupled with Stark getting his first lesson in letting his IM tech out of his sight and it is not at all surprising that he gathered up and reassembled and kept the Mk I. I'm sure he has the Iron Monger suit stashed away as well... oooh maybe he will use it as some Hulk Buster prototype.
Either is possible, but I just had to point out that Tony had access to the original if one prefers to believe that it was salvaged and reassembled.Havok wrote:Hmmm, that picture of the suits on display... the Mk I reads 'reconstruction' under it. I wonder if that means he recreated it or just reassembled the original?
Hmm. I could see it under a very specific condition. We've already got at least one "impossible" element in Marvel: adamantium. The garage apparatus Tony was playing with looked to me like a particle accelerator*. It would not be unreasonable to be able to transmute the little-known and exotic material adamantium into some other, even less-known and still more exotic substance by bombarding it with [insert particle here]. You wouldn't necessarily even need exotic particles; an electron beam is enough to do transmutation.Cykeisme wrote:There are a couple of things that struck me on first viewing..
First, the whole thing about Howard Stark hiding a "new element" in the goddamn shape of a globe on a model was sorta dumb.. and then the entire sequence where Tony synthesizes the new element with garage apparatus (even billionaire genius garage apparatus) blew my suspension of disbelief right out of the water. Yes, comic book movie, blah blah blah.. but the first movie stretched SoD to an extent or direction that was awesome. This was just a little too far.. who were the science advisors on the movie?
Oh yeah. No question there.Secondly, the Tony/Pepper dynamic was actually much better in the first movie. BUT it is a bloody excellent film overall.
My first thought, and this would never fly with the fans though it would be totally typical of Tony Stark, is that that he'd use the shield as a target; the unobtanium in the shield is what he's planning to turn into unobtanium-B for his arc reactor.GuppyShark wrote:I was more annoyed that he was doing the manual labour himself. Isn't that what staff/robots are for? Loved the use of a certain shield in that scene!
[salutes Nephtys]Nephtys wrote:So I just saw the movie and um, two random observations.
1. Rhodes was following ESD procedures while removing the reactor from the suit. Good for you, Rhodie. Electrostatic Discharge is mostly a non-issue in most circuits, but way to follow protocol with those lovable, dorky wriststraps.
2. Howard Stark's notebook somehow has elementary maxwells equations from electromagnetics 101 on the page right before drawings of tesseracts. Somehow, non-euclidean geometry has something to do with the right hand rule
Qutie possibly. Though Vanko had a huge advantage in independent rediscovery of the arc reactor: his father's notes. Anyone else would be in the same position Stane and the random Stark Industries scientists were in.Admiral Valdemar wrote:It would seem regardless of precautions in arc reactor tech being openly public, it was going to be developed again independently anyway, as Vanko proves. Now that Hammer and the US gov't have working reactors and even insights into Tony's main suit design from the stolen Mk. II, we could have a whole army made of each now.
Yeah. Now all we need is for North Korea to steal a few, reverse-engineer them, and go on the rampage for the Greater Good and the Ethereal Caste Kim Jong Il...Zor wrote:Just one observation of note, did anyone see those Hammer robots and think they reminded you just a bit of Tau Battlesuits?
Vanko, Jr. had the advantage of Vanko, Sr.'s knowledge in designing miniature arc reactors. Stark, Jr. has the same advantage: his father's knowledge.Shroom Man 777 wrote:Whuh? Vanko's dad invented the giant Arc reactor, nothing more. Stane and the random Stark Industries scientists were working with those same giant Arc reactor blueprints - with an actual-factual working Arc reactor right there in their buildings too! If anything, Vanko was a piece of shit shmuck who likewise built his gnarly Arc reactor things in his own basement with limited resources - the only thing he had going with him was the technical knowhow, but for the rest of it? Nada. He didn't have cash, and he didn't have the resources Stane and his scientists had. While he might not've been quite the genius Stark was, out of all the characters we've seen so far Vanko probably had the second-best brain in both films.
Yes.Bilbo wrote:Two questions
1. Are we to assume that the Hammerdroids were running with Vanko built Arc reactors?
No. And don't expect it to ever happen. Sony and Fox will keep producing those movies now that they have realized what cash cows they are, to keep the rights from reverting back to Marvel. IIRC, as long as they have a movie in production, they can hold onto the rights.2. Do all of the Marvel movies fit into the same timeline? I know the new Hulk movie and the Iron Man movies are about the same timeframe. But what about Spiderman or the XMen Movies?
Iron Man can rip through Sentinals like tin foil on his worst day. That has always been the case. Real or not. The Danger room tech may be alien, but the movies don't get into that. Regardless, they are a separate universe, so it doesn't matter.I am kind of assuming that the XMen movies are int he future relative to Iron Man and Hulk. If nothing else from the Sentinels in the Danger Room simulation. If the government can build Sentinels then Iron Man while impressive isnt the end all be all of America's defense. That or the XMen movies and Wolverine movie fit into a different reality.