Iron Man 3 Full Movie Download Mp4

Iron Man 3 Full Movie Download Mp4

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Iron Man 3 Full Movie Download Mp4

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Marvel's "Iron Man 3" pits brash-but-brilliant industrialist Tony Stark/Iron Man against an enemy whose reach knows no bounds. When Stark finds his personal world destroyed at his enemy's hands, he embarks on a harrowing quest to find those responsible. This journey, at every turn, will test his mettle. With his back against the wall, Stark is left to survive by his own devices, relying on his ingenuity and instincts to protect those closest to him. As he fights his way back, Stark discovers the answer to the question that has secretly haunted him: does the man make the suit or does the suit make the man?
When Tony Stark's world is torn apart by a formidable terrorist called the Mandarin, he starts an odyssey of rebuilding and retribution.
Is it me or does the entire premise of this film rip off &#39;Batman Forever&#39;? Think back to that 1995 Schumacher film when &#39;Edward Nygma&#39; approaches Bruce Wayne asking him to check out his new invention, but Wayne denies him. Nygma then goes off filled with hatred for Wayne, reinvents himself as The Riddler and becomes his arch nemesis.<br/><br/>Now look at the start of this film. Killian approaches Stark about his new company, Stark denies him, so off he goes filled with vengeance, recreates himself as a nemesis to Stark and the Iron Man hero, using his company alongside a new experiment. Notice any similarities here?<br/><br/>I&#39;m no Iron Man fanboy, I don&#39;t know all about the Iron Man lore, but that still doesn&#39;t detract from the fact they really fudged up The Mandarin. The whole setup for this guy is really well done, it really is. We see lots of news footage, stock footage and hand held camera footage of the character as it buzzes around various TV stations. Its all been created in the same vain as reality, obviously in recent years with Osama Bin Laden and various other terrorist propaganda, what you would (and still do) see every night on the news. Footage of him with his extremists, firing guns, preaching, making statements etc...<br/><br/>The Mandarin is envisioned just like this and it all looks very realistic, threatening and intimidating, Black and his team really do make this villain look good, like he&#39;s really gonna be a hard underground nut to crack for Stark. But then out of nowhere the whole setup is thrown out the window because the character is fake, a front, a big setup created by Killian to cover himself and his experiments. Neat twist? yes, very much so...good idea? no definitely not, not for a franchise like this. A franchise where a villain like The Mandarin is very popular and people wanna see The Mandarin not a puppet creation.<br/><br/>A film like this hinges on its villain, usually the villain makes the film. In this case they made a great looking villain with Kingsley (despite his rather odd drawl) but they threw it away. Plus you also gotta ask yourself who would actually agree to act or play a villain to cover someone else? surely common sense would dictate that you&#39;re only gonna cause a lot of trouble for yourself? even if you didn&#39;t actually do any of the things you claim, you&#39;re still gonna be in the sh*t for being involved with terrorism. Just doesn&#39;t make any real sense to me.<br/><br/>Must admit I liked Kingsley&#39;s little performance in the reveal sequence, a kind of typical drunk, drugged up British hippie, but it just made a mockery of the whole film. Makes you feel you&#39;re watching a spoof not a serious adaptation.<br/><br/>Nice little touches of humour throughout as we have come to expect from this franchise and Downey Jr. The small team up with the little kid isn&#39;t as cheesy as it sounds and offers some nice dialog, although one sequence seems to be pretty similar to a certain John Candy/Macaulay Culkin film from many moons ago.<br/><br/>On the whole the film is really quite average in my opinion. I didn&#39;t think that much of the whole Extremis idea and the way characters looked when they went all ballistic. The visuals and ideas kinda looked like something from a hammy sci-fi flick to me, it all felt a bit X-Men-ish, a franchise I never liked. I still don&#39;t really get how this regenerative power causes people to have such extreme heat power, its suppose to help them heal no? so why the heat? Plus I really don&#39;t see how Stark manages to kill most of them when they can regenerate so easily, when Savin is killed, why couldn&#39;t he regenerate from it? The Extremis soldiers seemed so much more powerful, they could easily take down Iron Man suits as shown by Pepper Potts.<br/><br/>The finale is on impressive scale but messy really. Lots of Iron Man suits flying all over the place, difficult to make out what exactly is going on, Extremis henchmen/women leaping all over the shop. It all sounds cool and the idea is cool but like some other superhero comicbook flicks it becomes a fast blur of CGI, an incoherent badly lit chaotic brawl between metal suits and CGI people. Plus I gotta ask, why didn&#39;t Stark just utilize all his Iron Man suits together originally? before Jarvis went offline, and why does Stark keep running around without his suit?! just stay in it you fool!<br/><br/>I must say I&#39;m disappointed with this trilogy bookend. The first film was superb, the second (in my opinion) was clearly not as good as the first but still a solid action film. This third entry has lost me completely with bad plot decisions and untidy action sequences (something which the made the first so good, it was very clear without excess CGI mess). <br/><br/>So the question is...was this all just narration, a therapy session for Stark to get some previous history of his chest with Banner or is that it? no more Iron Man films and no Iron Man for &#39;Avengers 2&#39;?<br/><br/>5/10
Okay, so we have had a lot of Marvel characters movies already and just a few of them actually got to their third movies. Spider-Man 3 and X-Men: The Last Stand were horrible and with Iron Man 3&#39;s trailers and predecessor movies we had a huge hope for that movie. And does the movie pay it back? The answer is a out loud NO. The movie fails in every possible way, the only scene we actually get a bit nervous is when the Mandarin attacks Tony&#39;s house, but we have seen this scene in every trailer of the movie. Of course Robert Downey Jr. delivers a perfect job, so does Gwyneth Paltrow and Ben Kingsley. Unfortunately for those last two the script just fails. A lot of people are having problem with the Mandarin and having it as the major complain about the movie. Of course I have a problem with that too, but this is not why I hated this movie, although it helped a bit. Shane Black would have succeed with this idea of a fake terrorist in any other movie, because it&#39;s a brilliant idea, but not in an Iron Man movie ans specially not with the most interesting and epic villain of the comics.<br/><br/>Everything in this movie doesn&#39;t make any sense when compared to the older ones, like armors that need to be recharge, making the chest reactor almost useless, or the fact that we met the Ten Rings terrorist in the first movie, we even see their symbol on the TV every time the Mandarin shows up, but in the end the Mandarin does not even exist. Don Cheadle is only in this movie because he was in the second one because his character does not make any difference at all in this movie. The villain plan is insanely stupid and not explained and the reason he wants to get back on Tony is just stupid. Also Rebecca Hall character was there just to create the Extremis and then they just waste her, I don&#39;t even remember her name. They might just have told us that Aldrich Killiam created it and so she would not even be in the movie, because she was not necessary there.<br/><br/>All in all this is just a huge disappointing movie and I am not even willing to see the next flicks on Marvel characters until The Avengers 2.
The big problems with Iron Man 3 are less specific to the movie itself than they are characteristic of the hypermalaise that’s infected so many current mega-blockbusters—too much plot, too much action, too many characters, too many pseudo-feelings.
Still suffering from posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) following the events in <a href="/title/tt0848228/">The Avengers (2012)</a> (2012), Tony Stark (<a href="/name/nm0000375/">Robert Downey Jr.</a>) deals with his insomnia by spending his sleepless nights designing new prototypes of the Mark-42 Iron Man suit. The suits come in handy when the mysterious Mandarin (<a href="/name/nm0001426/">Ben Kingsley</a>), a villainous terrorist, steals TV broadcast time, threatens the United States as well as President Ellis (<a href="/name/nm0006669/">William Sadler</a>), stages a devastating attack on the Chinese Theater in Los Angeles, and sends Tony&#39;s Malibu mansion tumbling into the ocean. When Tony and Colonel James Rhodes (<a href="/name/nm0000332/">Don Cheadle</a>) finally track down the Mandarin, Tony discovers that an event from 1999 is also connected to the present terrorist attacks. . Iron Man 3 is the third movie in the Iron Man film series, preceded by <a href="/title/tt0371746/">Iron Man (2008)</a> (2008) and <a href="/title/tt1228705/">Iron Man 2 (2010)</a> (2010). The character of Iron Man is based on a comic book of the same name created by Marvel Comics editor Stan Lee and artists Don Heck and Jack Kirby. Iron Man first appeared in issue #39 of Tales of Suspense (March 1963). The story for Iron Man 3 was based on &quot;Extremis&quot;, a six-issue story arc from the comic book series Iron Man (vol. 4), published in issues 1 through 6, in 2005 and 2006, by Marvel comics. The screenplay for Iron Man 3 was written by American filmmaker Shane Black (who also directed) and British screenwriter Drew Pearce. The reason for this is not directly referenced in the film and is left to the viewer&#39;s interpretation. It has been noted that the star in the center of the shield has been replaced with an &quot;A&quot;, the symbol for anarchy. Kevin Feige has said that the Mandarin uses &quot;symbolism of various cultures and iconography that he perverts for his own end.&quot; A popular theory is that he is attempting to twist the ideals the shield represents. This fits in with the speech that he gives in the film: &quot;Ladies, children, sheep... Some people call me a terrorist. I consider myself a teacher. Lesson number one: Heroes, there is no such thing.&quot; The complex design of the Mark 42 made for some unique properties: Each piece of independent armor had to have its own power supply to utilize the repulsor/anti-gravity flight capacity and each piece had to be able to independently and cooperatively know where it needed to be and in what order it needed to arrive to make the suit viable upon receipt: this means they were all capable of managing their own power resources. Each unit is capable of functioning independent of any other pieces (see Tony&#39;s unconventional one hand, one foot aerial ballet of destruction) and thus they are likely not able to be easily recharged unless the suit is in one piece. The Mark 42 did not seem to be as physically strong as some of the other designs, possibly because of its very modular nature. Since the suit was designed to fit people other than Stark himself—we see Pepper using it quite well—it makes sense to have the suit function without a direct link to the Arc reactor in Tony&#39;s chest. It also makes sense to allow the suit to be recharged on ordinary electricity in the event Stark is not around (as it proved to be a useful feature). Recharging on ordinary electricity was a feature of the comic version of Iron Man from the very first designs. His suits were designed to absorb solar energy constantly, absorb some electromagnetic energy from his enemies or to be powered directly from land-based power supplies. He could even link his armor to land based power supplies to augment his strength briefly. After Pepper Potts (<a href="/name/nm0000569/">Gwyneth Paltrow</a>), whose Extremis powers allowed her to survive the fall, kills Aldrich Killian (<a href="/name/nm0001602/">Guy Pearce</a>), Tony orders JARVIS to destroy the Iron Man suits as proof that he&#39;s going to spend more time with Pepper and less time in his lab. The next day, Vice President Rodriquez (<a href="/name/nm0001208/">Miguel Ferrer</a>) and Trevor Slattery (<a href="/name/nm0001426/">Ben Kingsley</a>) are arrested. In a voiceover, Tony explains that he was able to cure Pepper and to undergo surgery to remove the shrapnel embedded near his heart. Happy Hogan (<a href="/name/nm0269463/">Jon Favreau</a>) awakes from his coma, and Harley Keener (<a href="/name/nm1339223/">Ty Simpkins</a>) comes home from school to find his garage laboratory rebuilt, replete with a brand new potato gun. In the final scene, Tony tosses his old chest arc reactor off the cliff where his mansion used to stand. &quot;My armor?&quot;, he asks. It was never a distraction or a hobby. It was a cocoon. And now I&#39;m a changed man. You can take away my house...all my tricks and toys. One thing you can&#39;t take away: I am Iron Man. Yes: Tony Stark can be seen lying on a sofa in a doctor&#39;s office. It is revealed that the voice over in the beginning was the start of a movie-length flashback: Stark has told the entire story to his friend Bruce Banner (<a href="/name/nm0749263/">Mark Ruffalo</a>), wanting to get it off his chest, even though Banner isn&#39;t exactly a doctor of psychology and had nodded off. He can be seen at the Miss Chattanooga pageant as one of the judges. He is briefly shown on a video monitor holding up a white sign with his critique of one of the contestants. &quot;Something To Fight For&quot; by Joseph Trapanese The future of the Iron Man series is uncertain. There are rumors that Downey Jr wants to retire the character, meaning that an Iron Man 4 would be out of the picture; but this may change in the future, depending on the commercial results of the next movies. In the meantime, Downey Jr.&#39;s Tony Stark/Iron Man character can be seen in <a href="/title/tt2395427/">Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015)</a> (2015) and in <a href="/title/tt3498820/">Captain America: Civil War (2016)</a> (2016). a5c7b9f00b

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