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Iron Man Vol. 3 #81
"THE DEEP END, PART 3: BAPTISM OF FIRE"
As with all my “production notes,” consider a “Spoiler Warning” attached. Please read the books first.
This is perhaps the most politically sensitive
issue of my run
on Iron Man, given how much of Vitriol's origin is rooted in the recent
history of Iraq. While using real events as a springboard, I worked to
try to shoot straight down the middle as often as I could.
I wanted to be careful not to make a political statement one way or the
other about weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, so I tried to make it
clear that Vitriol's bioweapon was something she came up with on her
own — while working out her rage and madness out of the country between
the two Gulf Wars.
And while the Kurds' fate before Saddam's forces following the first
Gulf War was certainly a part of Vitriol's backstory, I tried to have
Tony explain the reason why the Americans didn't intervene earlier on
their behalf. And, of course, in all of this, I really couldn't have
Tony take a position beyond pity for her situation and, in the end,
action in defense of his troops both in Hatra and later in Baghdad. I
fully realize there are more sides to these historical events than just
two - but you hit what you can hit in 21 pages.
While I couldn't find a place to establish it, Leyla was an
accomplished martial artist as well as a brilliant scientist - such
that, once her acid bug had compromised Iron Man's armor, she has a
fairly easy time with him. I figure that the current armor, with the
juice turned off and all its little nanite bits misbehaving, would hang
on the guy like a Jell-O™ bathrobe.
TRIVIA
- The best description I could give Phillip Tan for Vitriol was Blair Brown's transformation from Altered States. He didn't have the movie, and it was astounding how hard it was to find the image online. Luckily, he came up with a great look for her on his own. The girl sweats acid, so the action figure should be fun...
- When last we saw Carl Walker, he had just had his clock cleaned violently by Ultimo back in #300. When I was thinking in terms of five issues for "The Deep End," I had considered that, given that he'd been injured badly in mid-air, he might have an aversion to flying in the suit again — making for a humorous scene when we get to him having to chase Vitriol in #82. No room, so no bit — though Singleton's line about Walker not wanting to fly to Iraq remained, further establishing Walker's resentment against Tony.
- And, yep, it's a mention of the Stark Web Browser, from eons gone by. Remember when the Internet was the next big thing?









