"Iron Man 2020" is a fictional storyline published by Marvel Comics in 2020 which follows the character Arno Stark as he attempts to take over Stark Industries and the mantle of his estranged brother Tony Stark (Iron Man).[1] The crossover characters of two different brands meeting up in one storyline received mixed reviews from critics.
"Iron Man 2020" | |
---|---|
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
Publication date | January – August 2020 |
Main character(s) | Iron Man Arno Stark War Machine Pepper Potts Jocasta Machine Man Sunset Bain A.I. Army Ironheart Force Works |
Creative team | |
Writer(s) | Dan Slott |
Artist(s) | Pete Woods |
Penciller(s) | Pete Woods |
Editor(s) | Tom Brevoort |
Publication history
editMarvel Comics released the teaser for the event at New York Comic Con in November 2019.[2] It was also alluded to in December 2019's Incoming![3]
In the original checklist released for the event, 2020 Force Works was originally titled Force Works 2020, while 2020 Machine Man was previously named Machine Man 2020, and so on. Additionally, 2020 Wolverine was going to be called Weapon.EXE 2020.[4]
The publication of this event was intended to span from January to June 2020, however, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Diamond Comic Distributors suspended the distribution of new print titles between April 1 and May 27, which also caused digital releases by Marvel Entertainment to be postponed. The rescheduling of the postponed issues to new dates pushed the event's conclusion to August, and certain issues, namely 2020 Force Works #3 and 2020 Ironheart #1–2, were released exclusively in a digital format.[5][6]
Main plot
editArno Stark wakes up from a nightmare involving the Extinction Entity, which is a ghastly, colossal amalgamation of alien and machine. He dreams that the Extinction Entity is going to come to Earth in a matter of weeks and create an artificial intelligence (A.I.) army to consume humanity. After eating breakfast with the duplicates of Howard Stark and Maria Stark, Arno suits up as Iron Man and saves a construction worker from a hostage situation involving several Nick Fury Life Model Decoys which represent the A.I. army trying to liberate construction robots. Over different news outlets, the media wonders about the whereabouts of Tony Stark, who declared himself as nothing more than a simulation of the real, late Tony Stark. At the A.I. army's base, Machine Man is commanding the robots' moves when Arno appears, having planned for the A.I. army's leader to show himself. Machine Man activates the bomb, forcing Arno to fly it away so it explodes somewhere safe while he escapes. Machine Man uses the hospital's elevator to reach the Thirteenth Floor, a dimensional-shunted plane of existence made of solid light, and a haven for robotkind that humans can't access or even comprehend. Aaron introduces the bomb disposal robot to the leader of the A.I. army and creator of Thirteenth Floor: Tony Stark -- who is now going by the name Mark One and wears a reconstruction of the Iron Man Armor Mark 1 having embraced his nature as artificial intelligence. Also in the A.I. army are Albert (the cyborg clone of Wolverine), Awesome Android, some Constructo-Bots, some Dreadnoughts, Egghead II, H.E.R.B.I.E., M-11, Machinesmith, Quasimodo, a Sentinel, and Super-Adaptoid.[7]
The A.I. army continues its efforts to liberate artificial life forms by raiding places where robots are being subjugated. Iron Man intercepts an attack on a Futura Motors testing site by Quasimodo and H.E.R.B.I.E. and manages to recover an Un-Inhibitor allowing him to take control of all A.I.s. On the Thirteenth Floor, Mark One receives a transmission from a mole inside Baintronics -- codenamed Ghost in the Machine --revealing that Arno used the submission code on Jocasta, who received a new body as well, making her entirely compliant. Stark plans to upload the submission code to the internet to instantly infect every single robot online. With only three hours before the code is transmitted to Stark Unlimited's satellite network, Mark One devises a heist on the newly built Bain Tower to tamper with the code before its launch. Having discovered the secret behind the Thirteenth Floor, Arno shuts out the A.I. army, uses Jocasta to lure Machine Man away from the tower, infects Machinesmith with the submission code, and confronts Mark One.[8]
H.E.R.B.I.E., Awesome Android, and Machinesmith manage to escape from Bain Tower and get out of range of its jamming signal, allowing the latter to call for help to every robot in New York City. Mark One is left to fight Iron Man and is defeated. Meanwhile, Sunset Bain confronts and fires Andy Bhang under the accusation of being the mole inside Stark Unlimited, and feeding Bethany Cabe information to relay to the A.I. army. Arno takes Mark One to his living quarters inside Bain Tower to meet the duplicates he created of Howard and Maria Stark and asks Tony to join him, but he refuses and dismisses his rationale as lunacy. The robotic mob assembled by Machine Man reaches Bain Tower, giving Mark a distraction which allows him to fly off and disable the transmission dish from which Arno intends to broadcast the obedience O.S. to subjugate every robot. Tony manages to stop the upload and make the antenna unusable. In retaliation, Arno fires all of his armor's firepower at Tony as he falls to the ground.[9]
Tony Stark's remaining allies escape with his body as Arno attacks the robot protesters. Tony wakes up inside the Thirteenth Floor where he is greeted by F.R.I.D.A.Y., who had plucked Tony's consciousness from his body during his fall. As "Ghost in the Machine," Friday tells them to share the counter-code worldwide. Days later, Machine Man takes Jocasta's head to Andy Bhang, who manages to de-program the submission code. Andy clarifies to Machine Man he isn't the mole inside Stark Unlimited and had only owned up to it to help the real mole. In the streets, Arno Stark tracks down the duplicates of his parents (who had escaped from Bain Tower) but they die from an illness inherited from Arno. In the Thirteenth Floor, Friday explains to Tony that when Motherboard tried to kill her, her code became assimilated into the eScape and then into the Thirteenth Floor after Tony reformatted the eScape into it. She tries to convince Tony that he is not an A.I. duplicate. When Sunset objects to Arno creating new bodies for his parents and trying to control people, he reveals she is an A.I., a duplicate of the real Sunset Bain whom Arno replaced back when she solicited him to heal a scar on her face. He makes new bodies for Howard and Maria by recreating the Arsenal and Mistress bodies from the eScape. After learning of Arno's new plan, Dr. Shapiro (who is the actual mole) sneaks into a computer and warns Friday about it. When Friday relays that only Tony Stark can stop Arno, Tony insists that he isn't the real Tony Stark, but is confronted by holographic manifestations of himself in different points of his life, until they all merge into him and he acknowledges that he has always been Tony Stark.[10]
As Arno Stark sets off to the Stark Space Station to install his mind-controlling device to enslave all of humanity, Tony Stark's allies Pepper Potts, Riri Williams, Awesome Android, H.E.R.B.I.E., Machinesmith, Machine Man, and Albert assault the Stark Unlimited HQ, confronting Sunset Bain's duplicate, who goes by the name Madame Menace, and Arno's Iron Legion. Jocasta uploads a submission code to Madame Menace and they place Tony's body inside a bio-pod that restores his body to normalcy, uploads his consciousness back into his body. Using the Thirteenth Floor's access mechanisms, Tony and his allies reach the Stark Space Station from one of the elevators within. Employing his new Virtual Armor, Tony defeats Arno in combat. When Arno prepares to activate his mind-controlling device, the Extinction Entity suddenly appears in front of the station.[11]
With the revelation that the Extinction Entity is real, and has arrived, Tony Stark and Arno team up as their allies help to fight the Extinction Entity. Arno ultimately defeats the Extinction Entity by willingly assimilating with it, causing it to explode and disappear due to Arno's paradoxical nature of being a human who is more A.I. at heart. Following the Extinction Entity's defeat, Arno and Tony are suddenly back at the Stark Space Station. The story then reveals that Tony used the Virtual Armor to submerge Arno in a simulation, and the Extinction Entity that appeared was really an advanced hologram. The actual monster was nothing more than a delusion caused by Arno's relapse into his terminal, congenital disease, of which he would die by the end of 2020. Tony explains that he couldn't stop Arno from enslaving all of humanity before convincing him that he was wrong, so he decided to play up to his delusion to give him the happy ending he could not find in reality, and allows the Virtual Armor to take the place of the iron lung he used his entire life. Tony also convinced Mistress and Arsenal to download themselves into Arno's dream to keep him company, and prevent him from learning the truth. Afterwards, Jocasta uses the submission code to force Sunset Bain's duplicate to confess all of Baintronics' crimes, also claiming responsibility for tricking Tony into thinking he was an artificial intelligence and pulling the strings of the A.I. Army, putting an end to the robot revolution. Tony then uses a restorative pod to bring back James Rhodes and remove his phobia of suiting up, which had turned out to be caused by minor deviations in his genetic code. Tony Stark gives up Stark Unlimited to Bhang Robotics and he flies off in a new armor, reasserting himself as Iron Man.[12]
Issues involved
editMain issues
edit- Iron Man 2020 (vol. 2) #1–6
Tie-In issues
edit- 2020 Force Works #1–3
- 2020 Iron Age #1
- 2020 Ironheart #1–2
- 2020 Machine Man #1–2
- 2020 Rescue #1–2
- 2020 iWolverine #1–2
Critical reception
editAccording to Comic Book Roundup, the entire crossover received an average score of 6.4 out of 10 based on 36 reviews.[13] William Tucker from ButWhyTho Podcast stated "Iron Man 2020 #6 is an initially exciting end to a great event that eventually feels deflated. There is absolutely nothing wrong with the art, Woods has been incredible throughout, but the ending that Slott and Gage chose to round out an epic tale like this left me feeling cold. And while there were loads of enjoyable cameos, their involvement ultimately didn’t seem important to the story as a whole. Which is disappointing, as the rest of the event really was a fun and exciting ride."[14]
Anthony Wendel from MonkeysFightingRobots wrote "The 2020 event seems like it is taking some big risk, and it doesn’t inspire a lot of confidence from the start. Iron Man 2020 #1 has set the stakes and shown some very intense players on both sides of the board. Sadly, if it doesn’t unfold just the right way, many may feel cheated about defending the path characters are taking."[15]
Collected editions
editTitle | Material collected | Published date | ISBN |
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Iron Man 2020: Robot Revolution | Iron Man 2020 (vol. 2) #1–6 | October 2020 | 978-1302920852 |
Iron Man 2020: Robot Revolution - Force Works | 2020 Force Works #1-3, 2020 Machine Man #1-2, 2020 Iron Age #1 | November 2020 | 978-1302925536 |
Iron Man 2020: Robot Revolution - iWolverine | 2020 iWolverine #1–2, 2020 Ironheart #1–2, 2020 Rescue #1–2 | November 2020 | 978-1302925543 |
Tony Stark: Iron Man by Dan Slott Omnibus | Iron Man 2020 (vol. 2) #1-6 and Tony Stark: Iron Man #1-19, Iron Man (vol. 2) #25 | March 2021 | 978-1302928452 |
References
edit- ^ "The Road to 'Iron Man 2020'". Marvel Entertainment. Archived from the original on 2021-06-03. Retrieved 2021-06-03.
- ^ "NYCC 2019: 'Iron Man 2020' Will Present a New Hero This January". Marvel Entertainment. Archived from the original on 2021-06-03. Retrieved 2021-06-03.
- ^ Johnston, Rich (2019-12-27). "Long Live The Robot Revolution Of Iron Man 2020, Beginning In Incoming #1 (Spoilers)". Bleeding Cool News And Rumors. Archived from the original on 2021-06-03. Retrieved 2021-06-03.
- ^ "Iron Man 2020 First Look Unleashes an Evil Nick Fury Army". CBR. 2019-10-20. Archived from the original on 2021-06-03. Retrieved 2021-06-03.
- ^ "Get Hype: Marvel Comics announces 8 digital-only releases of once April titles for May 13 and May 20 • AIPT". 2020-05-06. Archived from the original on 2021-06-03. Retrieved 2021-06-03.
- ^ "Marvel Comics Reveals Additional Release Dates for New Digital-First Titles". Marvel Entertainment. Archived from the original on 2021-06-03. Retrieved 2021-06-03.
- ^ "Iron Man 2020 (2020) #1 | Comic Issues | Marvel". Marvel Entertainment. Archived from the original on 2021-06-03. Retrieved 2021-06-03.
- ^ "Iron Man 2020 (2020) #2 | Comic Issues | Marvel". Marvel Entertainment. Archived from the original on 2021-06-03. Retrieved 2021-06-03.
- ^ "Iron Man 2020 (2020) #3 | Comic Issues | Marvel". Marvel Entertainment. Archived from the original on 2021-06-03. Retrieved 2021-06-03.
- ^ "Iron Man 2020 (2020) #4 | Comic Issues | Marvel". Marvel Entertainment. Archived from the original on 2021-06-03. Retrieved 2021-06-03.
- ^ "Iron Man 2020 (2020) #5 | Comic Issues | Marvel". Marvel Entertainment. Archived from the original on 2021-06-03. Retrieved 2021-06-03.
- ^ "Iron Man 2020 (2020) #6 | Comic Issues | Marvel". Marvel Entertainment. Archived from the original on 2021-06-03. Retrieved 2021-06-03.
- ^ "Iron Man 2020 (2020) Reviews". ComicBookRoundup.com. Archived from the original on 2021-06-03. Retrieved 2021-06-03.
- ^ "REVIEW: 'Iron Man 2020,' Issue #6". But Why Tho? A Geek Community. 2020-08-26. Archived from the original on 2021-06-03. Retrieved 2021-06-03.
- ^ "Review: IRON MAN 2020 #1 Feels Like The Start Of A Very Polarizing Event". Monkeys Fighting Robots. 2020-01-15. Archived from the original on 2021-06-03. Retrieved 2021-06-03.