"You Either Die A Hero, Or You Live Long Enough To See Yourself Become The Villain."
missed that but was thinking more Keaton batman. Like Spider-Man asking if he was a bat.
"You Either Die A Hero, Or You Live Long Enough To See Yourself Become The Villain."
missed that but was thinking more Keaton batman. Like Spider-Man asking if he was a bat.
I enjoyed it. Thought they would make a batman reference in there somewhere.
The movie picks up few months after Civil War, placing the events of the film in 2016 and before the second and third acts of Doctor Strange and before the events of the fourth season of Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D..
Although Aaron Davis is mentioned to be 33 years old, and his criminal record states a birthdate of April 1984, which would set the rest of the movie in 2017 (present day).
The opening scene where Toomes is cleaning up the wreckage from the Battle of New York takes place eight years before the events of Homecoming. However, Homecoming is set two months after Civil War, which established that the Battle of New York (the Avengers' formation) happened four years before the events of Civil War, Additionally, Civil War establishes that its been 8 years since the events of the first Iron Man, making it impossible for Avengers to be set 8 years prior.
When Toomes breaks into the jet carrying all the tech from Avengers Tower, the Mark 42 suit is seen in the background, complete with all of it's battle damage from Iron Man 3. Considering that Tony had J.A.R.V.I.S. destroy the Mark 42 while he had Killian trapped inside it, it seems unusual and unlikely that Stark would rebuild the suit while intentionally incorporating the marks and damages it sustained beforehand.
plus, in civil war itself toney had to be able to build the suit, and all those web spinner options in how much time between meeting pete and getting to Germany...
Remember the prototyping sequences for the Iron Man suit in the first movie? Once Tony has a design finalised, he can basically set it to fabricate within hours - and that was with the manufacturing technology he had lying around at home, somewhere over eight years ago.
Add in all the dozens of suit designs he'd gone through by the time of Iron Man 3, with all their varied specialised gadgetry, and he probably got around to playing with more flexible fabrics at some point. By this point he could basically fabricate any suit he likes by just picking off a menu of previously-built options, letting the design software hack them together, and waiting a few minutes for the fabrication systems to finish their work and go 'ping'.