lego iron man crimson dynamo

lego iron man crimson dynamo

lego iron man carrefour

Lego Iron Man Crimson Dynamo

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"If you could make God bleed, people would cease to believe in Him." ―Ivan Vanko to Tony Stark[src] Ivan Vanko was the civillian identity of the villain Whiplash bent on the destruction of the Stark family. He is a brilliant physicist just like his father before him but also has a history of crime, selling illegal weapons and killing innocent people who get in his way. Ivan was the son of Anton Vanko, a Russian physicist who had helped Howard Stark design the Arc Reactor, but who had been subsequently deported from the United States when it became clear that he was working for money rather than for the benefit of humanity. Ivan's father fell into alcoholism and proceeded to abuse the young boy for many years. Over the years, Ivan became highly knowledgeable in the fields of physics and mechanical sciences, while adopting his father's hatred for the Stark family. At some point he was caught selling Soviet grade plutonium to Pakistan and served 15 years in prison. This would be the only recorded knowledge of his existence.




After the death of his father, Ivan Vanko immediately began work on a replica of the arc reactor. Ivan constructed an exoskeleton, powered by a miniature arc reactor, to use against Tony Stark in an effort to discredit him.Vanko attacked Stark during the Monaco Grand Prix, using his Whiplash harness to destroy several cars in the race, but Stark ultimately defeated him using a portable Iron Man suit, and Vanko was sent to prison. While in custody, Vanko was asked by Tony why he didn't sell his technology to make money. Vanko replied that he wanted to remove Stark's awe from the people and demonstrate that Iron Man could be defeated. Ivan also deduced that Tony was being poisoned by the palladium in his arc reactor saying, "Palladium in the chest, painful way to die." Later, Vanko escaped from prison with the help of Stark's rival Justin Hammer, who also orchestrated the faking of Vanko's death in the prison break. Hammer and Vanko then made a deal in which Vanko was to build armored suits like the Iron Man armor in exchange for Hammer Industries resources.




Vanko changed the terms of the deal however, when he retrofitted Hammer's existing armor technology from wearable suits into unmanned drones. Vanko was then locked up in the Hammer Industries New York factory, having enraged Hammer with the unexpected change. In the mean time, Hammer's plan to unveil the drones during the World Stark Expo went ahead, although Vanko again surprised his benefactor when the drones powered up and altered the simple unveiling to a full-blown demonstration. Vanko had killed his guards and remotely assumed control of the drones, as well as the War Machine armor worn by James Rhodes. As a lengthy dogfight involving both Stark armors and the Hammer drones progressed, Vanko abandoned the factory and got personally involved in an armored suit of his own. The superior bulk and capabilities of his suit initially outmatched the combined efforts of Stark and Rhodes, but working together they soon found a way to beat him. As he lay wounded in the remains of his armor, Vanko revealed that he had concealed self-destruct devices in his suit as well as all of the Hammer drones.




His dying words were, "You lose." A year after Ivan Vanko's death, S.H.I.E.L.D. were still analysing his first armor. While rarely utilized, Vanko was shown to be a capable hand-to-hand combatant, easily able to kill two presumably well trained thugs of Hammer's with little damage to himself. He also was deceptively intelligent, his accent and thuggish appearance belaying a highly skilled mechanical and programming knowledge and cunning to outwit those around him, consciously manipulating Hammer and his men with their perception of him as weak or stupid. Vanko is bilingual, able to speak fluent Russian and intermediate English. He also has an sentimental attachment to a pet cockatoo which immediately soured his working relationship with Justin Hammer. “I tried to incorporate the whole Russian philosophy. It’s a culture of its own and I really enjoyed doing the research and meeting the people and they were very gracious there at the prison. “The guards took their time with me, I talked to the guards and to the prisoners and I was very interested in seeing under what conditions my character would have been incarcerated for 20 years.”




“It was nice because both Favreau and Downey Jr both fought for me to get my deal worked out, those guys both went into bat for me and I appreciated that,” says Rourke. “And then I spoke to Favreau and I told him, after I read the material, that I had some adjustments that I wanted to make and some character choices and he brought in Justin Theroux, the writer. “And I said ‘well, I’d like to be able to speak Russian in the movie, I’d like to be able to use a Russian accent when I had to speak English and I also wanted to have a pet.’ “I was also adamant about not making him your typical, you know, lumbering kind of one dimensional Russian villain character. I said ‘there is no reason why this guy can’t be sympathetic at times…’ “I also wanted him to have a sense of humour. Yeah, sure he is going to be violent and unpredictable and all those other stereotypical things that you are going to have with a Russian bad guy but it was important for me to bring some likeability to the character.”




Michael Lee is a writer, script consultant, script reader and judge. He’s worked as a creative executive for a few production companies and as reader and judge for some of the most prestigious screenwriting contests in the country including PAGE and Final Draft Big Break. He’s recently optioned his latest project: a science-fiction comedy entitled How to Conquer the Earth. Follow Michael on Facebook and Twitter:@GoldenAgeofGeek. Click to tweet this article to your friends and followers! With the first Iron Man and The Incredible Hulk under their belts, Marvel Studios and their ambitious MCU project were off and running. For the third movie, they returned to the superhero who had kicked things off, Iron Man. It’s here that we really see a lot of foundational work getting thrown into the narrative. Other characters are introduced that will become important to other movies in the series as well as the future Iron Man 3. Tony Stark’s friend Rhodey gets his own set of battle armor and becomes War Machine.




Nick Fury who has just a brief moment at the end of the first Iron Man becomes a full fledged character, and we’re introduced to Scarlett Johansson’s Black Widow. And that was just the good guys. This was a bit of risky move because at the time the prevailing wisdom was that too many super beings in one movie would sink it. This was commonly believed to be the fault of Sam Rami’s Spiderman 3. But putting multiple super powered people in the same movie was one of the reasons Marvel formed its own studio in the first place. They pressed on and the result was another success. Once again, Marvel took a slightly different approach. Where the first Iron Man was as much a character study as it was an action movie, Iron Man 2 was a character study with some special effects action sequences thrown in. This movie took an even closer look at the main character—this time delving into his complicated relationship with his deceased father. In doing so, this movie added another important character to the Marvel Universe though fans and critics at the time may not of have realized it;




Tony’s father—Howard Stark—played by John Slattery. There’s a hint at how important Howard Stark is to this version of the Marvel Universe in what many thought was just an Easter Egg for the fans. In the scene, Tony finds a shield remarkably like the one used by Captain America among his father’s belongings. But that actually turned out to be a vital clue as to who Howard Stark really was and how involved he was with the secret organization SHIELD. Since Iron Man 2, the character Howard Stark has been in almost as many Marvel movies as Tony has. As it turns out, Howard Stark is the surprising connection between Tony and this film’s supervillain. As last time a warning; The Supervillain: Ivan Vanko AKA Whiplash This time around, the supervillain almost counts as a new creation. He’s a mashup of a 1980s villain named Blacklash and one of Iron Man’s original enemies, Anton Vanko the Crimson Dynamo. The Crimson Dynamo was a product of Iron Man’s Cold War origins.




Anton Vanko was a Soviet scientist who created his own battle armor which of course was all in red. Blacklash was a product of the glorious 80s as filmmakers gave his look an update. This time the results were much more successful. The new Whiplash character design was an instant classic and has a unmistakable silhouette. The character’s background doesn’t match up with either the of the comic inspirations, so he’s closer to a film original creation. Ivan Vanko is the son of a former associate of Howard Stark’s. Vanko blames Howard and for his father’s ruin and has decided Tony should pay for his father’s sins. This ties in with Tony’s own struggles. Throughout the movie, Tony tries to come to terms with his long dead father, a man about whom he has very mixed emotions. Vanko’s accusations seem to confirm the more negative feelings Tony has towards Howard. In many ways, this is a continuation of the arc begun in the first Iron Man. Tony is a very complex character and in these first two movies he is closely tied to the enemies that threaten him.




Marvel would push this further in his next three movies. In the subsequent entries, Tony actually helps to create the foes he must later defeat almost like Peter Cushing’s Dr. Frankenstein from the Hammer films. But in this film, he’s not quite there yet. He didn’t make Ivan Vanko any more than he made Obadiah Stane. In fact, Howard may not have created Vanko. The film isn’t perfect. It isn’t as highly regarded as the first Iron Man. That film was groundbreaking and nearly flawless in its execution.  Iron Man 2 had big boots to fill and at times, feels like Tony is on a personal journey of discovery and the super heroics are more of a distraction. It’s also that Tony and Vanko only have one scene together in between battles. It’s a good scene but it’s hardly the Christian Bale/Heath Ledger confrontation from Dark Knight. It’s odd because in this case the villain mirrors what the hero is thinking or feeling. Vanko has a grudge against Howard Stark and at that moment, Tony is feeling pretty ambivalent about his father as well.




It’s a great dynamic and one that again shows Marvel’s ambition. But it’s a character dynamic that really needs more than just one scene to make it work. I should also mention Sam Rockwell as Justin Hammer. Hammer is pretty much what he is in the comics, an evil industrialist. He’s also a very minor character. He first appeared in 1979 and while many comics fans have heard of him, he never made much of an impression. The same thing happens here despite a good performance by Rockwell. He does move the plot along and provide a few entertaining moments but that’s about it. At this point Marvel hadn’t quite figured out how to take minor characters from their roster and make them shine. They would do a much better job in later years leading to some of their most acclaimed work. Iron Man 2 was another critical and commercial success for Marvel. Its MCU project was now gearing up towards its first big milestone. The film may not have reached the heights of its predecessor but it was still a very good and Marvel’s reputation for quality films was beginning to grow.

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