What? There were three tests shown. North Korea, Iran, and then the Hammer test.Jeremy wrote:How is he still free after the Iran Powered Armor Test Video?
By the way, did the Korean mech look like a Mad Cat to anyone else?
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What? There were three tests shown. North Korea, Iran, and then the Hammer test.Jeremy wrote:How is he still free after the Iran Powered Armor Test Video?
As far as the comics go, Vanko doesn't exist. (Well at least as far as my collection goes, which is issue 2- 298) He is an amalgam of two different characters, namely Whiplash (the whips) and the Crimson Dynamo (vaguely character wise and the armor)Jeremy wrote:I am not familiar with the story in the comics.
Vanko's father fled communism to work with a major corporation and was then exiled for wanting to make a profit on his product.
Tony Stark in the comics is a very bad alcoholic. This scene is really the only time they touch on what happens when someone out of control does posses the type of immense power that Iron Man has. In the comics Tony eventually relinquishes the Iron Man mantle to Rhodes after basically hitting rock bottom, pretty much losing everything to Obidiah Stane.Tony Stark's control of the Iron Man suit is hideously dangerous. A man becomes a god in that suit, and what kind of king's justice would an enraged and drunken Stark be willing to show? If I were Rhodes, I would have tried to knock Stark out when his face shield was up. That may violate Posse Comitatus, but how long until an inebriated drunk with a hand cannon misses his shot?
This is played up a little more in the movies. In the comics he is more like a combination of the Bruce Wayne's from the Batman movies of Bale and Keaton.Stark is sickeningly narcissistic. I love it.
The Iran test was Iran not Hammer. As for his company, one of the things that they did take from the comics was that Hammer used a heavy dose industrial espionage to make his company successful. It is more his ability to implement other people's tech than his own business savvy that made him who he was.The Hammer guy, how can such a dunce run a major corporation? How is he still free after the Iran Powered Armor Test Video?
While a nice touch and would have added some much needed tension, it is just a problem that gets handwaviumed away with tech in a two hour movie.Vanko is (minus the toothpick) likable. I really wish that Tony's Power Armor Lite only covered a portion of him. I also wish that Tony would have lost a limb or suffered serious injury in his first fight with Vanko. It would have brought home the prosthesis line very nicely and heightened the impact of "making god bleed".
The Hammer-test was Tony zooming in on old satellite footage taken during the Iran test.Losonti Tokash wrote:What? There were three tests shown. North Korea, Iran, and then the Hammer test.Jeremy wrote:How is he still free after the Iran Powered Armor Test Video?
By the way, did the Korean mech look like a Mad Cat to anyone else?
It was clearly a third test. First we get the Sat image of Iran and north Korea which were still images. Then tony shows ground level video of if I remember right the north Korea one falling over and the iran one shooting randomly. We then see the hammer test.CaptainChewbacca wrote:The Hammer-test was Tony zooming in on old satellite footage taken during the Iran test.Losonti Tokash wrote:What? There were three tests shown. North Korea, Iran, and then the Hammer test.Jeremy wrote:How is he still free after the Iran Powered Armor Test Video?
By the way, did the Korean mech look like a Mad Cat to anyone else?
So I was remembering right. Very cool.DarkSilver wrote:he called it a football.
He was exiled (if Vanko is to be believed) because Howard Stark didn't want to share credit and profits.Jeremy wrote:Vanko's father fled communism to work with a major corporation and was then exiled for wanting to make a profit on his product.
What, Hammer? He tried to build a suit, it failed and crippled the pilot. That happens in the defense industry, mostly with high performance jets. Sometimes the prototypes crash and kill people. Nobody likes it, but you don't see defense contractors getting thrown in jail when it happens. Systems like that are extremely complicated, and they can't be totally debugged before the live testing starts.The Hammer guy, how can such a dunce run a major corporation? How is he still free after the Iran Powered Armor Test Video?
Samuel L. Fury said that Daddy Stark had Vanko Sr. deported because Vanko was after the money. As if Daddy Stark was such an altruistic humanitarian non-profit mang and not a sleazy piece of shit capitalist war profiteer. Heh.Simon_Jester wrote:He was exiled (if Vanko is to be believed) because Howard Stark didn't want to share credit and profits.Jeremy wrote:Vanko's father fled communism to work with a major corporation and was then exiled for wanting to make a profit on his product.
But given Daddy Stark's were likely for American interests versus Vanko's, to which Stark felt it was better to just throw him out.Shroom Man 777 wrote:Samuel L. Fury said that Daddy Stark had Vanko Sr. deported because Vanko was after the money. As if Daddy Stark was such an altruistic humanitarian non-profit mang and not a sleazy piece of shit capitalist war profiteer. Heh.Simon_Jester wrote:He was exiled (if Vanko is to be believed) because Howard Stark didn't want to share credit and profits.Jeremy wrote:Vanko's father fled communism to work with a major corporation and was then exiled for wanting to make a profit on his product.
Gotta disagree with you Ghost Rider. This needed more, not less development. It's an incredible dick move to resolve your dispute with the co-creator of a piece of technology by deporting a Soviet defector back to the Soviet Union. It gives Whiplash a credible motivation for revenge, as well as a background that allows him to create his own Arc Reactor.Ghost Rider wrote:
Really a slight flaw of the film as it makes even the underline motivation of Whiplash very meh. Add this to the rest of his mess, Whiplash has more of a whiny bitch spilled milk vibe rather then any real justification.
On that, I have to agree with you. It was for me thrown away, so for me I made my conclusion...but as if they gave it more then Nick Fury's 1 second infodump, it would've given a better context to the conflict.Imperial Overlord wrote:Gotta disagree with you Ghost Rider. This needed more, not less development. It's an incredible dick move to resolve your dispute with the co-creator of a piece of technology by deporting a Soviet defector back to the Soviet Union. It gives Whiplash a credible motivation for revenge, as well as a background that allows him to create his own Arc Reactor.Ghost Rider wrote:
Really a slight flaw of the film as it makes even the underline motivation of Whiplash very meh. Add this to the rest of his mess, Whiplash has more of a whiny bitch spilled milk vibe rather then any real justification.
Uh... that sounds wrong to me. I don't remember that.Shroom Man 777 wrote:It looked like the Hammer test WAS the Iran test, that Hammer was in Iran trying to build them armor designs or something, which might be a bad thing for Uncle Sams.
I suspect the blast could have killed him through the armor. There are limits, and those things are supposed to be extremely destructive.Sarevok wrote:I wish Whiplash was a smart villain instead of a lucky lunatic. He does not like using his helmet when fighting two Iron Man battesuits. Thus he got killed by a concussive blast. If he had it on the blast would not even have fazed him in slightest. He is lucky in sense that he did not get head shotted by auto targeting guns a millisecond after arriving. In first Iron Man Stane had a valid reason to remove his helmet after his targeting system got knocked out. Whiplash seems to just want to look intimidating. How a moron like him is supposedly both dangerous and a genius is beyond incomprehensible.
Dude, it probably severely damaged his spinal column as well.tim31 wrote:Twist too fast?? It rotated the torso 180 degrees!! The average human body doesn't go that far! We're talking very serious tissue damage!
Just to DA here...Sarevok wrote:I wish Whiplash was a smart villain instead of a lucky lunatic. He does not like using his helmet when fighting two Iron Man battesuits. Thus he got killed by a concussive blast. If he had it on the blast would not even have fazed him in slightest. He is lucky in sense that he did not get head shotted by auto targeting guns a millisecond after arriving. In first Iron Man Stane had a valid reason to remove his helmet after his targeting system got knocked out. Whiplash seems to just want to look intimidating. How a moron like him is supposedly both dangerous and a genius is beyond incomprehensible.
I agree completely here.Havok wrote:The way they rewrote Stane for the first movie, even though they completely changed the character, worked well, because he served as a father figure for Tony and the rest of the world trusted him. Hammer should have been an older character with ties to Howard Stark who then could have served as a father figure type for Ivan and they could have shared a hatred for Stark that extended beyond basic jealousy on Hammer's part.
Again I agree. You nailed it perfectly. What I’ve seen of Rhodey in the comics was a big muscular guy, not some short, scrawny, geeky looking guy. Neither of the two actors they have had did him justice.Havok wrote:I think that Don Cheadle did a great job taking over for Howard, and as good as I thought Howard was, Cheadle was better, although he seemed to have a smaller role this go round as Rhodes and as far as interacting on a friend level with Tony. I still think that they missed on Rhodey again. As I said before, Rhodes was a big burly 'hey sexy mama' black guy, basically a stereotype from the late 70's but he was great with Tony and the character grew in a pretty cool way, eventually becoming Iron Man and then War Machine. I think that Micheal Jai White (Spawn) would have filled the role perfectly.
Yes, very much so. That was actually what I thought they were going for.Losonti Tokash wrote:Jeremy wrote:By the way, did the Korean mech look like a Mad Cat to anyone else?
For one, Ivan doesn't have the tech that Tony did, so actual functioning armor was out of the question. Also, Ivan's plan was not to have a prolonged battle with Iron Man, but just to attack Stark and at least hurt him and make sure it was very public. He had no allusions to defeating Stark if he was able to suit up. He also seemed to be resigned to the fact that he was going to ultimately fail.Kingmaker wrote:Did anyone else think "Don't cross the streams" the first time Stark and Rhodey did the simultaneous repulsor shot thing? And of course, in the end crossing the streams was the solution.
The whiplash mk.1 suit was kind of stupid. Could he have put some armor on it? He could have been killed by a cop with a handgun, or powered armor suit with super strength punching him hard. Surely that must have occurred to him. The only decent justification I can think of is that he was more concerned with concealment than protection and didn't expect Stark to have his armor football.
He knew Stark was going to be at the track. The pit crew suit would have given him all kinds of access, getting him in and allowing him to close with Stark's position. That would be Plan A. It's not like Tony's last minute substitution was kept secret. The whole track would be buzzing with it. Ivan then adjusts his plan to attacking Tony's car. It really doesn't require much in the way of explanation.Havok wrote:
And, I was going to let someone else point this out, but since no one has... How the fuck does Ivan even know that Stark is driving? He surprised everyone, including his driver (who threw his helmet completely pissed off) with that 'bucket list' stunt.
This is really the only plot hole I can think of in the movie and it could have been closed with a 5 second shot of Ivan watching a quick newscast track side of what had transpired.