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Iron Man Vol. 3 #82
"THE DEEP END PART 4: FORCE PROJECTION"
As with all my “production notes,” consider a “Spoiler Warning” attached. Please read the books first.
In
death, Sonny Burch still causes Tony Stark problems. Thanks to David
Michelinie, whose original Force stories gave me just enough of an
opening to establish a way for the government to find Carl Walker out.
I had considered several characters from Tony's past along with Force
in determining who his "rescuer" would be, but none fit the bill the
way Force did. A memorable Michelinie character, he seemed to have
simply dropped out of sight a decade ago — making him the perfect
candidate for a surprise return.
As noted for earlier issues, I had pared back this storyline from five
issues to four - and you can see here where I changed one of the
elements. The dilemma of two tanker groups heading in opposite
directions would've caused Tony and Force some problems — but as it is
here it's dealt with very quickly.
General Krebs was enjoyable to write — and it's interesting how much
different he appears than I visualized him. I pictured more of a career
soldier in a terminal rank - playing it safe until Tony Stark's visit
upsets his ordered world; physically, more John Goodman than Arnold
Schwarzenegger. Phillip went much more the tough-guy route in his
depiction, which probably works better, given the many physical things
he's made to do. He still gives us the comic relief we need when we
need it.
Finally, a note about this storyline's setting. One of the dangers in
placing a story in the middle of a real-life battlefield is that things
may change greatly, events overtaking your story. I began the story
during a relatively calmer stretch of the occupation —Saddam Hussein
was captured while I was writing the second issue — and I feared
overplaying armed dissent. Opposing factions making common cause
together, too, seemed remote in the beginning — but before I turned in
the final page, it didn't seem nearly so unlikely. These are the sorts
of things that have led for years to comics stories taking place in
"fantasy geography" — fake countries, so nothing is overtaken by
events. I continue to feel that it's worth the extra work, though; it's
tougher to get worked up over a threat to Outer Phredistan.
TRIVIA
- Phillip Tan designed the new Force armor seen here, which resembles the old pretty much only in its yellow coloring. I told him to imagine it as an inverse version of Iron Man's - which made sense given that Walker had been working on Iron Man armor at the arsenal for the last two years. Clearly, he picked up — or ripped off — some more of Tony's ideas.
- Being no chemist, I was surprised to learn that "milk of magnesia" was a generic chemical term and not a brand name. I have to say I have no idea whether a river full of neutralized acid and dead little microbes would be any safer for those downstream, but it at least avoids this issue's apocalyptic opening situation.









