Calling an example like that an inconsistency would be stretching, IMO.Even the MCU has its inconsistencies, like Iron Man retiring at the end of one film and being back in the armor in the next.
I have the same reaction. There is nothing particularly wrong... just nothing that makes it must-watch either.Back the actual trailer.....
I'm underwhelmed. Nothing in it made go 'I need to see this'. Will catch on Netflix, tv or cheap dvd at some I think, unless subsequent trailers wow me.
, like Iron Man retiring at the end of one film and being back in the armor in the next.
Even the MCU has its inconsistencies, like Iron Man retiring at the end of one film and being back in the armor in the next.
I don't think they've yet managed to go even a single movie without creating some kind of contradiction or another.
agreed. It looks mostly like stuff that's been done before, and not very well the first time.Back the actual trailer.....
I'm underwhelmed. Nothing in it made go 'I need to see this'. Will catch on Netflix, tv or cheap dvd at some I think, unless subsequent trailers wow me.
He didn’t really retire. He just blew up the suits that were made during his panic attack phase.
He scaled back and still made suits. Probably at slower intervals
The first Iron Man movie also established SHIELD as a new organization that didn't quite know what to call itself, while the second movie established Tony's long-dead father as one of the founders.
That's not an inconsistency, that's just you missing the whole point of the movie (not to mention literally the last line before the credits rolled.)In the history of film, you'd be hard-pressed to find a movie series that didn't have major discontinuities and retcons between installments. Many never even bothered to maintain more than a superficial pretense of continuity, like the Universal Monsters films or the original Planet of the Apes films. Audiences today seem to think that absolutely perfect continuity is a requirement, but the reality is that loose continuity has historically been the norm. Even the MCU has its inconsistencies, like Iron Man retiring at the end of one film and being back in the armor in the next.
Common misconception, but no SHIELD was not said to be new in 'Iron Man'. Coulson just gave a dry "we're working on it" when Tony said they need to find a better name that "Strategic Homeland yadda-yadda-yadda..." Some people just took it a little too literally.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S.H.I.E.L.D.The acronym originally stood for Supreme Headquarters, International Espionage and Law-Enforcement Division. It was changed in 1991 to Strategic Hazard Intervention Espionage Logistics Directorate. Within the various films set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, as well as multiple animated and live-action television series, the backronym stands for Strategic Homeland Intervention, Enforcement and Logistics Division.[1]
That thought crossed my mind too.Whereas I took it as Jennifer Lawrence being disenchanted with the film series (which has been reported a few times over the years) and having issues with the make-up (which is pretty damn clear in this trailer). Probably a combination of all of those factors.
Nah, he was just being sarcastic.I took the "working on it" line as a reference to the fact that the phrase SHIELD stood for has been changed from time to time in the comics.
Nah, he was just being sarcastic.
Which might or might not be a retcon.I agree, Coulson has a very wry sense of humor.
He didn’t really retire. He just blew up the suits that were made during his panic attack phase.
He scaled back and still made suits. Probably at slower intervals
You mean the film that ends with him saying "I am Iron Man"? Doesn't sound like a retirement to me. And who at that point could possibly have been gullible enough to think that Avengers 2 wouldn't have an armored Iron Man in it? When It was revealed that Stark wasn't being recommended for the Avengers at the end of Iron Man 2, did anybody really think Stark wouldn't be Iron Man in The Avengers?
Actually, he admits that he didn't want to stop (about a minute in)...More to the point, though, Tony literally confirms that he *was* trying to retire in one of the more recent films. It just didn't take.
His increased Iron Man activities weren't the problem, they were a symptom. He was using his suits as a coping mechanism to try and ward off the bone chilling terror. The core anxiety at play here wasn't "OMG the aliens are still coming!" it was about Tony feeling so exposed and vulnerable that he'd developed an impostor complex. Hence the recurring theme of "Iron Man" embodied as an external character; the kid pointing to the suit saying "is that iron Man", the suit walking around the house on it's own, grabbing Pepper in the middle of the night. Hell, could the imagery of having to drag the empty suit through the snow, unable to cozy up inside it be any less subtle?The film that is also all about him having serious issues because of his Iron man activities, in which Pepper repeatedly tells him to stop and his big character moment at the end is largely fueled by seeing her seemingly die. It was a more than ambiguous enough issue to cause major confusion at the time.
More to the point, though, Tony literally confirms that he *was* trying to retire in one of the more recent films. It just didn't take.
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