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[其他] The history of Iron Man

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發表於 8-9-2012 15:32:01 | 顯示全部樓層 |閱讀模式
50 Years ago, Tony Stark became Iron Man, a historic milestone in the tapestry of the Marvel Universe.

                                    
Flash forward half a century, and the Armored Avenger has become a worldwide sensation. Beyond his prominent role across the Marvel Comics line, Shellhead hit the big screen in 2008 as Robert Downey Jr. brought Tony Stark to life in the first “Iron Man” movie. The character’s popularity grew in 2010’s “Iron Man 2” and 2011’s “Marvel’s The Avengers.”
                                    
On May 3, 2013, Tony Stark returns to theaters everywhere in “Iron Man 3.” In anticipation of this momentous occasion and to celebrate Iron Man’s 50th anniversary, each week Marvel.com will be bringing you another chapter in the history of this complex and beloved character. Year by year, get an in-depth rundown of the trials, foes and experiences that have made Iron Man the hero he stands as today.                                    
Also, be sure to visit the Marvel Digital Comics Shop and Marvel Digital Comics Unlimited to read 50 years’ worth of Iron Man adventures!
                                    

                                    
1963 started off with a bang for Iron Man—literally.                                    
Deep within the Vietnam jungles, a guerilla booby-trap exploded and caught millionaire weapons inventor Tony Stark unaware. As it unfolded in TALES OF SUSPENSE #39, a piece of shrapnel lodged itself dangerously near Stark’s heart and made him easy prey for a cruel and ambitious warlord who saw value in holding the wealthy American captive. However, with the help of fellow prisoner the brilliant Professor Yinsen, Tony constructed a suit of iron armor that both saved his life and allowed him to escape and defeat his jailers, albeit at the cost of his ally’s life.                                    
From that day forth, Tony Stark vowed to honor Yinsen’s memory and make up for his own youthful mistakes by becoming the heroic Iron Man, who would publicly be billed as his bodyguard in order to safeguard his identity. However, his new calling came at a price, as he could never remove the armored chest plate that sustained his life.                                    
Health concerns dominated Stark’s adventures for the rest of the year, with the suit’s energy reserves dropping to dangerously low-levels after Iron Man’s strenuous battles. In fact, this dire situation culminated in TALES OF SUSPENSE #48, when Stark lay closer to death than ever before. Concern for his vulnerable heart also kept Iron Man at arm’s length from his former life as a playboy, for fear that someone might tumble to the cold, hard fact that Tony Stark wore an iron chest plate eerily similar to the super hero’s own armor.                                    

                                    
Stark continued to refine his armored suit, which lead to a few innovations. Poor public reaction to his first dull grey armor brought about a change to a golden hue in TALES OF SUSPENSE #40, Iron Man’s second adventure. When the malicious Melter threatened to melt the now-Golden Avenger down for scrap in TALES OF SUSPENSE #47, Stark whipped up a new armor made “entirely out of tough extruded aluminum.” Alas, that incredible innovation lasted only until the next issue, TALES OF SUSPENSE #48, when the inventor designed a lighter, more durable suit that would cause his heart less strain to boot. It also inaugurated the classic red and gold look that Iron Man would sport for many years to come.                                    
What about villains? Well, it took Stark several issues before he found a foe worthy of his talents and cleverness. Beginning with TALES OF SUSPENSE #40, Iron Man rumbled with forgettable fiends like Gargantua, Doctor Strange—not the later Sorcerer Supreme—The Red Barbarian, Kala and The Mad Pharaoh. Then, finally, in TALES OF SUSPENSE #45, along came the icy Jack Frost, a disgruntled former employee of Tony Stark’s who adapted a cold ray into a sinister weapon for personal gain. Jack would later return as Blizzard to bedevil his old boss time and time again.                                    
TALES OF SUSPENSE #46 brought Iron Man into direct conflict with the armored Crimson Dynamo. Though, in the end, Stark convinced the Russian scientist to defect to the United States, their encounter began a long series of battles with many different Crimson Dynamos.                                    

                                    
1963 also saw the introduction of two people who became part of a small inner circle of Tony Stark’s associates and friends: secretary Pepper Potts and chauffeur Happy Hogan. Readers met the squabbling duo in TALES OF SUSPENSE #45, and they quickly proved to be a popular supporting cast for the armored hero—though they seemed to fight with each other more than they actually worked. Happy had eyes for Pepper, but Pepper had eyes only for her handsome boss, Tony Stark, which set up a triangle that would take many years to resolve.                                    
In addition to his civilian allies, Iron Man forged an historic alliance with Thor, Ant-Man, The Wasp and The Hulk in AVENGERS #1, with the birth of Earth’s Mightiest Heroes as Marvel’s most prominent super hero team. This initially unstable gathering of champions for good would provide their Armored Avenger with some of his greatest moments and most dire challenges in the days to come.









Over the course of 1974, Iron Man fights for his life in Asia…and gains a nose?                                    
As IRON MAN #66 opened, the mighty Thor squared off against a Golden Avenger possessed by the incredible influence of Doctor Spectrum’s Power Prism. After defeating Iron Man, the God of Thunder ripped off the hero’s helmet to reveal not Tony Stark, but young Eddie March, a Stark employee with a dangerous blood clot heading for his brain. The real Iron Man zoomed in to defeat Spectrum and expose him as the seemingly-kindly Dr. Obatu and Thor’s alter ego of Dr. Don Blake prepared to whisk Eddie to a hospital and attempt to save his life.                                    

                                    
The Armored Avenger also aided the Avengers at this time in a long struggle against the Zodiac Crime Cartel that stretched out over AVENGERS #120, #121, #122 and #123.                                    
Roxie Gilbert, Tony Stark’s main squeeze, made up her mind to jet off to Vietnam and look for Eddie’s lost brother in IRON MAN #67, but Stark himself felt the pressure of his young employee’s life hanging in the balance. As Iron Man, he brought his amazing Enervator device to aid Don Blake in Eddie’s resuscitation, but like Happy Hogan before him, the machine transformed the youngster into the furious Freak. Our hero held back his full power in battling The Freak, for fear of harming Eddie further, and managed to deliver him back into the waiting arms of Blake, who operated and saved Eddie’s life at the cost of his ability to walk.                                    
Stark flew off to Vietnam to catch up with Roxie in IRON MAN #68 and look for Marty March in the wilds of the war-torn country. The Japanese hero Sunfire complicated matters by aligning himself with a Vietnamese general against Shellhead, another headache Iron Man didn’t need. In the middle of their battle, though, The Mandarin transported Sunfire to his side to use the mutant’s abilities to power a mind-transference machine and deposit the master villain’s brain back in his rightful body. And Stark, his helmet damaged from the fight, fashioned another one, this time sporting an all-new feature: a nose piece.                                    
AVENGERS #125 and CAPTAIN MARVEL #33 brought Iron Man once again into conflict with the mad god Thanos, while AVENGERS#129 and GIANT-SIZE AVENGERS #2 revealed the mysterious heroine Mantis as the “Celestial Madonna” to Iron Man and the Avengers, a fact that the time-traveling villain Kang found to be of great interest.                                    

                                    
IRON MAN #69 set The Mandarin in heated battle with his old foe in an undersea base. When the base fell after the scuffle, Iron Man risked his own life to save Sunfire and for his troubles found himself rocketing uncontrollably into space, thanks to the treachery of his opponent. Meanwhile, in the villain’s fortress in China, The Yellow Claw, another masterful fiend, investigated his rival the Mandarin’s arsenal and then witnessed the return of the villain’s greatest experiment from a volcano: Ultimo!                                    
The Unites States thought the wayward Iron Man looked like an attack from space, so they sent missiles to destroy him in IRON MAN #70. Meanwhile, back on Earth, The Mandarin fought The Yellow Claw, but, seemingly defeated by him, lost his amazing power rings to his rival. Together, Iron Man and Sunfire stopped Ultimo’s rampage and the Japanese hero recanted on his rage against the American. Iron Man faced off against the Claw’s creatures in IRON MAN #71, obliterated the Mandarin’s fortress and then returned to the States. There he found a reunited Happy and Pepper Hogan who informed their former boss that they’d both be working for Tony Stark once again…




資料from marvel.com


發表於 8-9-2012 19:03:17 | 顯示全部樓層
謝謝分享,avengers中最喜歡唔系佢:73:
發表於 8-9-2012 23:09:55 | 顯示全部樓層
我都係睇完IRONMAN第一集電影, 才開始留意呢位MARVEL英雄
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