IRON MAN No. 11, October 2021 |
To begin with the American author would have this publication’s readers believe that the "competent" super-villain somehow managed to make his own way to the distant astronomical body from Earth with a premeditated plan, and subsequently created/adapted the Interference Beam used to kidnap numerous hapless colonists thousands of miles from their homes. He then fortuitously “learned how to reprogram” the millennia old alien robots inhabiting the world so as to use them to cull the settlement’s population down whenever he realised he’d abducted too many to control.
In addition, Day also remarkably heard Stark’s S.O.S. signal from outer space, and decided to bring his arch-nemesis down to his personal nirvana simply to show the billionaire inventor what a great job he was doing in leading the ramshackle colony. Such revelations are debatably utterly bizarre, even if it is made crystal clear that the former Emissary of Evil is barking mad. And none of this nonsensical exposition helps to explain why the Living Tribunal enigmatically ‘pops up out of nowhere’ to helpfully transport Shell-head to “the worldship of Galactus before Korvac has even arrived”; “I’ll go. But only if you send all the people on this planet home.”
Agreeably, at least Issue Eleven of “Iron Man” contains some prodigious pencilling by Angel Unzueta, who does an absolutely cracking job in depicting Stilt-Man’s aforementioned scrap with the titular character. However, the inclusion of “everyone’s favourite armoured Canadian hero, Avro-X” does lead to some confusion as the bearded Colin Richard is the spitting image of Tony when not encased within his personal battle-suit, and is disconcertingly not even that dissimilar in appearance to the Golden Avenger when the Major in the Armed Forces is wearing it.
The regular cover art of "IRON MAN" #11 by Alex Ross |
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