This file is literally titled "Iron Man 3 UA-cam 9" on my computer because that's how many re-edits I had to do to even be able to post it🥲 I sped up the audio a tiny bit and with all the changes I made I hope it keeps the copyrights off my back.. 🤞🏻 Anyways enjoy guys this one was fun!! ❤
Ignore these people talking about best and worst movies. They are simpeltons. What I like about this film is it humanizes Tony in a way many hero movies don't do. Marvel does it well with their heroes.
10:17 Not quite. Tony had a nightmare where he was in danger, so the (empty) suit responded -- although Tony thought he'd designed things so he couldn't summon the suit in his sleep. When the suit responded, it deduced that Pepper must be the source of the danger (since it couldn't perceive his nightmares)..
Tony's evolution is what this story tells, the Mark 42 suit is the part where he's making a suit that he can summon, make it more portable. all the suits between were him solving individual problems. For example if he needed to be able to lift heavy loads he just crate a suit that's purpose was to easily haul a lot of weight, if he needed to say repair a satellite in space he designed a suit to be as efficient in the vacuum of space, etc In the Avengers (2012) he was up to the Mark 7.
To add to the numbering system, the first suit he made in the cave was the Mark 1 model, and each new model got a higher number. So by this film he had built 42 total suits. They survived the destruction of his house because most of them were in a storage vault below his workshop, and the shop was the lowest level of the house. 42 is a joke reference to the "Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" stories by Douglas Adams. 42 is the ultimate answer to life, the Universe, and everything (what the question was is unknown 🙂). The story of the "Extremis" explody stuff they were using on people is continued in the first season of the Marvel "Agents of Shield" TV series. It and the companion "Agent Carter" series (Peggy after WWII) are great, but they is 9 seasons total, so you many not have time for them.
ive seen this movie countless times and you're the first person to get the fact that Jarvis actually saved Tony from the house toppling over him under water without instruction... as AI, it was very impressive.
10:30-10:32 "call it in his sleep" Tony was injecting himself with devices to allow him to call suits which he equipped with the capability to respond, with nothing but a thought. He didn't fully account for brain activity while asleep. He said "that shouldn't have happened" indicating he clearly missed something. He still perceives himself as who he was before New York (Avengers) and didn't consider the psychological changes that such events would manifest. The suit came to him, Pepper was the only person near him, and was in physical contact with him. Without direct instruction to the contrary, a simple version of a "protect/save" directive to a machine would be separate the threats from the protected. In reality, this would have likely been a "delete" the threat... i.e. kill Pepper. From the perception of a machine, she must be the threat. (Thankfully, it appears he didn't implement any code that allows them to kill without explicit direction, or at least implemented code that restrains them to least necessary force.) 11:40-11:47 There's something that still bugs me... Guy explodes, then "regeneration" somehow makes him come back _with_ his (now tatterred) clothes? When were his clothes imbued with this regeneration effect? 14:24-14:38 "You got each other, okay?" My thought process to this day is "Sonny and Cher: I got you babe"
"You know what happens when I tell people I'm Iron Man's bodyguard?.. They laugh in my face." -- Happy -- Might be the most underrated line of the Iron Man Trilogy.
Honestly my Favorite Iron Man movie for a lot of reasons, it tries to juggle a lot and manages it fairly well for the most part, I wish the Mandarin was a bit better personally but I don't mind how they did it too much
Plotwise not my favorite Iron Man movie, but I liked certain elements of it. Specifically, showing that Tony is a person who can suffer and have nightmares and PTSD. I liked the Potato Gun 2.0, and the post-credits scene explained the narration style throughout the movie.
One of the more underrated MCU films. I like this Iron Man because it really delves deep into Tony’s psyche and the trauma that he’s been through and that’s pretty realistic. Anyway’s, phase 2 is (mostly) great and I can’t wait to see more of those reactions!
It wasn't that the woman found Tony so quickly. She was there for the woman who she called earlier and her "files". She had information that could be damaging, so they needed to silence her and retrieve the information. That Tony happened to be there was just serendipity. Then once Tony got involved they had to take him out as well.
Keep up the great reaction! I always love watching yours preferably than others because you dont fill up the video with lots of talking/foreshadowing during watching the video and ends up asking, "wHy DiD tHaT HaPPeN?", you didnt know why it happened because you keep on talking nonsense instead of paying attention
I had a good time with this movie. Trevor Slattery was a hoot, and getting Ben Kingsley to play him was a real coup. IMO Tony is still suffering from PTSD. Thor: the Dark World is not my favorite movie, but it advances the Thor/Loki arc considerably. After that we have Captain America: The Winter Soldier. Great movie.
I dunno why they decided to only make 3 Iron Man movies, people love that character. Besides the ptsd, which we know he can get over it by being busy, there are no other reasons why to stop being Iron Man.
Three solo films. He's in a lot more of the MCU films. They didn't do more solo films because (a) Tony as a character had been sufficiently introduced and (b) RDJ's salary was getting way too high when he was the lead character.
38:05 THERES NO F***ING WAY I JUST REALIZED THAT TONY SAID “oh they’re only coded to me” in such a nonchalant way. This is interesting because I noticed that his estranged upbringing with Howard stark he’s emulating his father still or has qualities obviously a womanizer ( at the beginning and now committed to pepper ) maybe has made his personality abrasive. But whatever he said that because in the past rodey took his silver titanium alloy Mk 2 suit to make war machine and now iron patriot. The only reason he didn’t code them to Rodney was out of spite plus extra work having him come in and have biometrics rescanned and maybe new data would need to be taken.
You realize this is the exact premise from the Pixar film Incredibles like think about it Tony made him a long time ago him, hurt his feelings, which push him over the edge, and now he's a super villain, current with the upper hand, and he's temporarily trapped it's totally the same story, and Tony even has a black friend to help him fight crime, and he has a super suit
Hey, Evie! The fanbase was sharply divided over this Iron Man installment for two major deviations from the comics: the Mandarin and AIM. Ben Kingsley was admittedly hilarious as Trevor and the revelation that he's merely a paper tiger facade for Killian was completely unexpected. However, the Mandarin is Tony's nemesis and one of Marvel's great villains. When he was reduced to a laughingstock, it frustrated all the expectations the trailers had built up for a live-action showdown between these major opponents. The other disappointment was that AIM was reduced to a corporation run by Killian when it's supposed to be a major terrorist organization comparable to Hydra but comprised of rogue scientists! The movie also uses PTSD as a substitute for Tony's notorious alcoholism but this deviation nevertheless helps to ground the character and humanize him for audiences. The plot is adapted from the "Extremis" storyline written by Warren Ellis and illustrated by Adi Granov which propelled the character into the 21st-century. The Mandarin is a top-tier Marvel villain who deserves a special note. He was created by Stan Lee in 1964 debuting in issue # 50 of the title that was running Iron Man's adventures at the time called "Tales of Suspense". He goes by many aliases such as Eugene Khan, Zhang Tong and Tem Borijgin but none know his real name. He is the bi-racial product of an aristocratic Chinese family from pre-Communist China who claim descent from Genghis Khan. Orphaned at an early age, he was raised by a bitter dowager aunt whose hate for the Communist regime was exceeded only by her hate for the West! A boy prodigy, she spent every last bit of his fortune training him in science, history and combat until they could no longer pay taxes and were evicted by the government from his ancestral estate. Now a proud young man with a grudge against the world, he explored a hidden valley none dare enter and made a remarkable find: a spaceship with the corpse of a dragon-like pilot from a world called Maklu IV. This find explains the motif of intelligent dragons in Chinese folklore. He spends years mastering the technology which confers upon him longevity and the ten control rings that power the ship. Each ring has a specific function and can be wielded independent of the ship as weapons. He easily seizes the area around the valley which draws in the government whom he intimidates into a detente where they agree to shelter him and turn a blind eye to his machinations so long as he doesn't undermine China. He moves his center of operations to the Gobi desert and begins his plans for world conquest. More recently, he has modernized his outfit into a legitimate corporation to advance his nefarious agenda. Perceived as a culturally insensitive "yellow peril" stereotype in collusion with the Chinese government, a true rendering of the character would have prevented distribution of "Iron Man 3" in the lucrative Asian market so the Ten Rings became a logo and the Mandarin himself became a joke. Feige attempted to correct this egregious misrepresentation in the One-Shot "All Hail the King" and the movie "Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings" but still came up short. Shane Black, who directed RDJ in the excellent neo-noir "Kiss Kiss Bang Bang", handles this entry as if it were more of a techno-thriller than a clash of armored titans like the last two. It's a smart move and a faithful translation of the source material which has Tony out of his armor for most of the film! The relationship with young Harley is amusing and affecting presaging his mentorship of another character later on. The destruction of the Malibu mansion and the human chain skydive rescue are thrilling highlights! The cast, as always, is excellent headed by Robert Downey, Jr. playing Tony Stark aka Iron Man for the fifth time now accompanied by his regular stable of Don Cheadle as Col. James 'Rhodey' Rhodes rebranded as Iron Patriot, Gwyneth Paltrow as Virginia 'Pepper' Potts, Jon Favreau as Harold 'Happy' Hogan and Paul Bettany as JARVIS. Paltrow, in particular, gets to perform some amazing action both in and out of some armor! Ty Simpkins of the "Insidious" franchise as the young Harley Keener, in whose cluttered garage runaway Tony flops, is excellent as an unwitting, pint-sized therapist. Shaun Toub returns for a Yinsen cameo set in 1999. Guy Pearce plays a lean and hungry Aldrich Killian nursing a hateful grudge with a perpetual sneer and running two evil organizations: his company, Advanced Idea Mechanics, which fronts for a mock Ten Rings terrorist cell. Ben Kingsley does a menacing job as the Mandarin and delivers a brilliant comedic turn as sleazy Trevor Slattery. The lovely Rebecca Hall is appropriately tragic as the spurned Maya Hansen. James Badge Dale is savage as the lead Extremis operative Savin. Stephanie Szostak, as another Extremis goon named Brandt, has a vicious throwdown with Tony. William Sadler plays President Ellis, a role he reprises in "Agents of SHIELD", and Miguel Ferrer plays treacherous Vice President Rodriguez compelled to collude with Killian for his amputee daughter played by Jenna Ortega of "Wednesday" and "Scream VI" making her screen debut! Character actors Spencer Garrett and Dale Dickey have bit parts as a Tennessee sheriff and barfly, respectively. Adam Pally is memorably amusing as a Stark-obsessed cameraman named Gary. TRIVIA: 1. Shane Black sets every movie he directs at Christmastime and "Iron Man 3" is no different. 2. The freefall rescue sequence was accomplished practically and filmed mid-air by a team of skydivers who performed the stunt multiple times! EASTER EGGS: 1. The dragon tattoos on Killian's chest are of the Makluan dragon and Iron Man antagonist Fin Fang Foom! 2. The red, white and blue armor and Iron Patriot moniker are references to when Spidey villain Norman Osborn wore the suit in command of the Dark Avengers! 3. The company the accountant hostage worked for, Roxxon, is the Marvel Comics equivalent of Exxon, a multinational petrochemical juggernaut! CAMEO: 1. Stan Lee appears as a gleefully generous judge of the beauty pageant issuing a score of '10'! END-CREDIT SCENE: 1. Tony recounts his adventure to a half-asleep Bruce Banner who protests that his doctorate doesn't qualify him to practice psychiatric therapy before Tony ignores him and goes on an even deeper dive into his childhood! The gag reveals that the entire movie has been a flashback from this session! The next chronological stop in the MCU is the One-Shot featurette "All Hail the King" in which we catch up with Trevor Slattery in jail. The featurette is found on the "Thor: The Dark World" blu-ray or on DPlus. This is followed by the first seven episodes of Season 1 of "Agents of SHIELD".
Did you make that long enough? 🙄 What you didn't point out that the comic Mandarin was a racist stereotypical ripoff of Fu Manchu. They weren't about to bring that into the MCU. Come to think of it, the MCU is frequently at great variance than the comic version.
@@Caseytifyand thank goodness for that. I can’t stand comic book purists. They can’t enjoy the movies fully so they ruin it for others who do , with semantics 😂
I dunno, Phase 1 has the two worst movies in the entire franchise with Incredible Hulk and Iron Man 2. *edit* I forgot Thor: Love & Thunder exists for a minute lol, so yeah, Phase 4 does contain the worst movie, and Phase 1 has the second and third worst.
This file is literally titled "Iron Man 3 UA-cam 9" on my computer because that's how many re-edits I had to do to even be able to post it🥲 I sped up the audio a tiny bit and with all the changes I made I hope it keeps the copyrights off my back.. 🤞🏻 Anyways enjoy guys this one was fun!! ❤
Sorry it was so much work! I watch on 2x speed anyway to spare time so I didn’t notice anything different lol
Thanks a lot for making the effort! Great fun.
Ignore these people talking about best and worst movies. They are simpeltons. What I like about this film is it humanizes Tony in a way many hero movies don't do. Marvel does it well with their heroes.
10:17 Not quite. Tony had a nightmare where he was in danger, so the (empty) suit responded -- although Tony thought he'd designed things so he couldn't summon the suit in his sleep. When the suit responded, it deduced that Pepper must be the source of the danger (since it couldn't perceive his nightmares)..
Tony's evolution is what this story tells, the Mark 42 suit is the part where he's making a suit that he can summon, make it more portable. all the suits between were him solving individual problems. For example if he needed to be able to lift heavy loads he just crate a suit that's purpose was to easily haul a lot of weight, if he needed to say repair a satellite in space he designed a suit to be as efficient in the vacuum of space, etc In the Avengers (2012) he was up to the Mark 7.
To add to the numbering system, the first suit he made in the cave was the Mark 1 model, and each new model got a higher number. So by this film he had built 42 total suits. They survived the destruction of his house because most of them were in a storage vault below his workshop, and the shop was the lowest level of the house.
42 is a joke reference to the "Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" stories by Douglas Adams. 42 is the ultimate answer to life, the Universe, and everything (what the question was is unknown 🙂).
The story of the "Extremis" explody stuff they were using on people is continued in the first season of the Marvel "Agents of Shield" TV series. It and the companion "Agent Carter" series (Peggy after WWII) are great, but they is 9 seasons total, so you many not have time for them.
ive seen this movie countless times and you're the first person to get the fact that Jarvis actually saved Tony from the house toppling over him under water without instruction... as AI, it was very impressive.
Jarvis is not AI isn't he a computer something...
10:30-10:32 "call it in his sleep"
Tony was injecting himself with devices to allow him to call suits which he equipped with the capability to respond, with nothing but a thought. He didn't fully account for brain activity while asleep. He said "that shouldn't have happened" indicating he clearly missed something. He still perceives himself as who he was before New York (Avengers) and didn't consider the psychological changes that such events would manifest. The suit came to him, Pepper was the only person near him, and was in physical contact with him. Without direct instruction to the contrary, a simple version of a "protect/save" directive to a machine would be separate the threats from the protected. In reality, this would have likely been a "delete" the threat... i.e. kill Pepper. From the perception of a machine, she must be the threat. (Thankfully, it appears he didn't implement any code that allows them to kill without explicit direction, or at least implemented code that restrains them to least necessary force.)
11:40-11:47 There's something that still bugs me...
Guy explodes, then "regeneration" somehow makes him come back _with_ his (now tatterred) clothes? When were his clothes imbued with this regeneration effect?
14:24-14:38 "You got each other, okay?"
My thought process to this day is "Sonny and Cher: I got you babe"
"You know what happens when I tell people I'm Iron Man's bodyguard?.. They laugh in my face." -- Happy --
Might be the most underrated line of the Iron Man Trilogy.
Honestly my Favorite Iron Man movie for a lot of reasons, it tries to juggle a lot and manages it fairly well for the most part, I wish the Mandarin was a bit better personally but I don't mind how they did it too much
Though when you get to Shang-Chi you realize this ´Mandarin’ was just perfect for who he was 😉
Hands down the best Iron Man. So weird that people often forget this one. Thanks for reacting!!!!
26:16 "Okay, he thought he . . . had it wrong?" He suspected Miami might be another cranberry.
Jarvis was suffering from E. Henry Thripshaw's Disease.
"Whoa, there's thunder outside." Maybe Thor's on his way to meet you! 🌩🔨😆
Plotwise not my favorite Iron Man movie, but I liked certain elements of it. Specifically, showing that Tony is a person who can suffer and have nightmares and PTSD. I liked the Potato Gun 2.0, and the post-credits scene explained the narration style throughout the movie.
Loved your reaction to Iron Man 3 Evie.😃🥰
Thunder rumbling ⛈ and Thor's 🔨 the next movie
Epic timing 👍🏾
One of the more underrated MCU films. I like this Iron Man because it really delves deep into Tony’s psyche and the trauma that he’s been through and that’s pretty realistic. Anyway’s, phase 2 is (mostly) great and I can’t wait to see more of those reactions!
It wasn't that the woman found Tony so quickly. She was there for the woman who she called earlier and her "files". She had information that could be damaging, so they needed to silence her and retrieve the information. That Tony happened to be there was just serendipity. Then once Tony got involved they had to take him out as well.
Keep up the great reaction! I always love watching yours preferably than others because you dont fill up the video with lots of talking/foreshadowing during watching the video and ends up asking, "wHy DiD tHaT HaPPeN?", you didnt know why it happened because you keep on talking nonsense instead of paying attention
I hope they do Ironheart next. And I want her to be this kid's friend or something.
🤮
I had a good time with this movie. Trevor Slattery was a hoot, and getting Ben Kingsley to play him was a real coup.
IMO Tony is still suffering from PTSD.
Thor: the Dark World is not my favorite movie, but it advances the Thor/Loki arc considerably.
After that we have Captain America: The Winter Soldier. Great movie.
I dunno why they decided to only make 3 Iron Man movies, people love that character. Besides the ptsd, which we know he can get over it by being busy, there are no other reasons why to stop being Iron Man.
Three solo films. He's in a lot more of the MCU films. They didn't do more solo films because (a) Tony as a character had been sufficiently introduced and (b) RDJ's salary was getting way too high when he was the lead character.
38:05 THERES NO F***ING WAY I JUST REALIZED THAT TONY SAID “oh they’re only coded to me” in such a nonchalant way. This is interesting because I noticed that his estranged upbringing with Howard stark he’s emulating his father still or has qualities obviously a womanizer ( at the beginning and now committed to pepper ) maybe has made his personality abrasive. But whatever he said that because in the past rodey took his silver titanium alloy Mk 2 suit to make war machine and now iron patriot. The only reason he didn’t code them to Rodney was out of spite plus extra work having him come in and have biometrics rescanned and maybe new data would need to be taken.
Great reaction, awesome edit
34:34 Yes it is.
Jesus! Are you doing one MCU movie per month? Why did I think we were past this 😂
You realize this is the exact premise from the Pixar film Incredibles like think about it
Tony made him a long time ago him, hurt his feelings, which push him over the edge, and now he's a super villain, current with the upper hand, and he's temporarily trapped it's totally the same story, and Tony even has a black friend to help him fight crime, and he has a super suit
Hey, Evie! The fanbase was sharply divided over this Iron Man installment for two major deviations from the comics: the Mandarin and AIM. Ben Kingsley was admittedly hilarious as Trevor and the revelation that he's merely a paper tiger facade for Killian was completely unexpected. However, the Mandarin is Tony's nemesis and one of Marvel's great villains. When he was reduced to a laughingstock, it frustrated all the expectations the trailers had built up for a live-action showdown between these major opponents. The other disappointment was that AIM was reduced to a corporation run by Killian when it's supposed to be a major terrorist organization comparable to Hydra but comprised of rogue scientists! The movie also uses PTSD as a substitute for Tony's notorious alcoholism but this deviation nevertheless helps to ground the character and humanize him for audiences. The plot is adapted from the "Extremis" storyline written by Warren Ellis and illustrated by Adi Granov which propelled the character into the 21st-century.
The Mandarin is a top-tier Marvel villain who deserves a special note. He was created by Stan Lee in 1964 debuting in issue # 50 of the title that was running Iron Man's adventures at the time called "Tales of Suspense". He goes by many aliases such as Eugene Khan, Zhang Tong and Tem Borijgin but none know his real name. He is the bi-racial product of an aristocratic Chinese family from pre-Communist China who claim descent from Genghis Khan. Orphaned at an early age, he was raised by a bitter dowager aunt whose hate for the Communist regime was exceeded only by her hate for the West! A boy prodigy, she spent every last bit of his fortune training him in science, history and combat until they could no longer pay taxes and were evicted by the government from his ancestral estate. Now a proud young man with a grudge against the world, he explored a hidden valley none dare enter and made a remarkable find: a spaceship with the corpse of a dragon-like pilot from a world called Maklu IV. This find explains the motif of intelligent dragons in Chinese folklore. He spends years mastering the technology which confers upon him longevity and the ten control rings that power the ship. Each ring has a specific function and can be wielded independent of the ship as weapons. He easily seizes the area around the valley which draws in the government whom he intimidates into a detente where they agree to shelter him and turn a blind eye to his machinations so long as he doesn't undermine China. He moves his center of operations to the Gobi desert and begins his plans for world conquest. More recently, he has modernized his outfit into a legitimate corporation to advance his nefarious agenda. Perceived as a culturally insensitive "yellow peril" stereotype in collusion with the Chinese government, a true rendering of the character would have prevented distribution of "Iron Man 3" in the lucrative Asian market so the Ten Rings became a logo and the Mandarin himself became a joke. Feige attempted to correct this egregious misrepresentation in the One-Shot "All Hail the King" and the movie "Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings" but still came up short.
Shane Black, who directed RDJ in the excellent neo-noir "Kiss Kiss Bang Bang", handles this entry as if it were more of a techno-thriller than a clash of armored titans like the last two. It's a smart move and a faithful translation of the source material which has Tony out of his armor for most of the film! The relationship with young Harley is amusing and affecting presaging his mentorship of another character later on. The destruction of the Malibu mansion and the human chain skydive rescue are thrilling highlights!
The cast, as always, is excellent headed by Robert Downey, Jr. playing Tony Stark aka Iron Man for the fifth time now accompanied by his regular stable of Don Cheadle as Col. James 'Rhodey' Rhodes rebranded as Iron Patriot, Gwyneth Paltrow as Virginia 'Pepper' Potts, Jon Favreau as Harold 'Happy' Hogan and Paul Bettany as JARVIS. Paltrow, in particular, gets to perform some amazing action both in and out of some armor! Ty Simpkins of the "Insidious" franchise as the young Harley Keener, in whose cluttered garage runaway Tony flops, is excellent as an unwitting, pint-sized therapist. Shaun Toub returns for a Yinsen cameo set in 1999. Guy Pearce plays a lean and hungry Aldrich Killian nursing a hateful grudge with a perpetual sneer and running two evil organizations: his company, Advanced Idea Mechanics, which fronts for a mock Ten Rings terrorist cell. Ben Kingsley does a menacing job as the Mandarin and delivers a brilliant comedic turn as sleazy Trevor Slattery. The lovely Rebecca Hall is appropriately tragic as the spurned Maya Hansen. James Badge Dale is savage as the lead Extremis operative Savin. Stephanie Szostak, as another Extremis goon named Brandt, has a vicious throwdown with Tony. William Sadler plays President Ellis, a role he reprises in "Agents of SHIELD", and Miguel Ferrer plays treacherous Vice President Rodriguez compelled to collude with Killian for his amputee daughter played by Jenna Ortega of "Wednesday" and "Scream VI" making her screen debut! Character actors Spencer Garrett and Dale Dickey have bit parts as a Tennessee sheriff and barfly, respectively. Adam Pally is memorably amusing as a Stark-obsessed cameraman named Gary.
TRIVIA:
1. Shane Black sets every movie he directs at Christmastime and "Iron Man 3" is no different.
2. The freefall rescue sequence was accomplished practically and filmed mid-air by a team of skydivers who performed the stunt multiple times!
EASTER EGGS:
1. The dragon tattoos on Killian's chest are of the Makluan dragon and Iron Man antagonist Fin Fang Foom!
2. The red, white and blue armor and Iron Patriot moniker are references to when Spidey villain Norman Osborn wore the suit in command of the Dark Avengers!
3. The company the accountant hostage worked for, Roxxon, is the Marvel Comics equivalent of Exxon, a multinational petrochemical juggernaut!
CAMEO:
1. Stan Lee appears as a gleefully generous judge of the beauty pageant issuing a score of '10'!
END-CREDIT SCENE:
1. Tony recounts his adventure to a half-asleep Bruce Banner who protests that his doctorate doesn't qualify him to practice psychiatric therapy before Tony ignores him and goes on an even deeper dive into his childhood! The gag reveals that the entire movie has been a flashback from this session!
The next chronological stop in the MCU is the One-Shot featurette "All Hail the King" in which we catch up with Trevor Slattery in jail. The featurette is found on the "Thor: The Dark World" blu-ray or on DPlus. This is followed by the first seven episodes of Season 1 of "Agents of SHIELD".
Did you make that long enough? 🙄
What you didn't point out that the comic Mandarin was a racist stereotypical ripoff of Fu Manchu. They weren't about to bring that into the MCU.
Come to think of it, the MCU is frequently at great variance than the comic version.
@@Caseytifyand thank goodness for that. I can’t stand comic book purists. They can’t enjoy the movies fully so they ruin it for others who do , with semantics 😂
35:56 Funniest Reaction Ever
You have a VERY unique accent that I can't quite place but something about it is familiar. Is there a hint of French Canadian?
Full on French-Canadian yes🥳
You look like pepper😉
❤❤❤
you should Watching the Avenger infinity war
My least favorite Ironman movie but Tony Stark is still my favorite MCU superhero.
Reaction?
Phase 2 has the worst movies alongside phase 4 now.
I dunno, Phase 1 has the two worst movies in the entire franchise with Incredible Hulk and Iron Man 2.
*edit* I forgot Thor: Love & Thunder exists for a minute lol, so yeah, Phase 4 does contain the worst movie, and Phase 1 has the second and third worst.
@@carlgibson285 I'd say Phase 4 has the worst, second worst, and fourth worst. And Phase 3 has the third and fifth worst.