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Iron Man Vol. 3 #84
"TURF WAR PART 1: WHEN WORLDS COLLIDE!"
As with all my “production notes,” consider a “Spoiler Warning” attached. Please read the books first.
Marvel
determined in early 2004 to shake up the Avengers-verse, bringing the
popular Brian Michael Bendis and his writing partners in on the various
titles for "Avengers Disassembled." I'd been storyline-to-storyline on
the title, and while I certainly had Iron Man tales left in me, this
was show biz, and I'd just been gratified to get to do as much as I'd
done.
I was even more pleased to be asked to write an additional storyline, a
sequence introducing tensions between Tony Stark's old friends and his
new job — thus giving me an opportunity to put a finer point on some of
the themes I'd dealt with.
So began "Turf War," which drew on an old Bill Mantlo story
from Avengers Annual #9
(that's the one before the Rogue one, kids) to resurrect Arsenal, the
big bugaboo buried under Avengers Mansion. It took some text to
establish that, yes, there could be some places under the Mansion that
the Avengers had yet to check out, after all these years, and I wanted
to steer away from the whole notion from Annual #9 of the computer that
thought it was Tony's mother. But otherwise the idea of this monstrous
defense project underground in Manhattan quickly suggested to me the
conflict: why ever it was down there in the first place was probably
not something the government wanted to have get out - and the recent
change in the Avengers' status triggered the government's desire to get
it dealt with, now.
The Avengers' status as a "sovereign nation" fascinates me, and I'm
glad to have had the chance to address what I see as some of the
complicating issues involved in a block of Manhattan declaring itself a
separate country. It's quite a bit more than embassies and diplomatic
immunities we're talking about here — this is a house with its own
airspace. One could visualize a New York governor, irritated at an
unconstitutional land grab apparently pulled by the U.S. ambassador to
the U.N., demanding customs agents to control immigration between the
front yard and the sidewalk. The legal mind swims.
A fun sequence to write, in all: the Pentagon watching Iron Man, Gyrich
watching Black Panther watching Iron Man. I'd love to see a "Road"
picture with Henry Peter Gyrich and Edwin Jarvis, but I don't know if
anyone would produce it...
TRIVIA
- It's with this issue that Marvel went back to all capital letters in its lettering. I had been given the option of doing that a few issues before, but — really surprisingly for a purist like myself — declined. While I'm no fan of the lowercase letters as a comics reader, as a writer I don't mind having the extra levels of emphasis. And, some say the Iron Man's font looks just a little better in downstyle — not quite so harsh. But the change is fine — the kid in me missed the capital letters.
- The 147th Armor Regiment is depicted here — fitting my need of an infantry-unit-turned-armor-unit. The Chippewa war cry bit is real, a bonus...
- Force Works, of course, refers to the brief 1990s series featuring a team led by Iron Man. It's never mentioned any more, and is an in-joke here.
- The mix of Avengers present at the meeting was carefully selected to exclude anyone around in Avengers Annual #9, except for Gyrich — a low-powered mix, to be sure.
- While I don't know if the two ranking Armed Services Committee senators would be — as depicted here — be allowed into a Pentagon operations room, it was established way back in Annual #9 that Arsenal was a secret known to both the executive and legislative branches. I figured they'd all want to put their heads together.
- Yes, there really are rules for the placement of oyster forks. God bless the Web...
- Airborne gravity mapping is a real-life way of finding underground chambers. You can read more about it here.










