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Ironheart

'Ironheart' Has Kinks to Work Out, But Flies High Enough
Gaming Gear

‘Ironheart’ Has Kinks to Work Out, But Flies High Enough

by admin June 25, 2025


Since Avengers: Endgame, the MCU has examined which heroes will step up now that most of the original characters have bowed out. In the case of Iron Man, this question has mostly been answered in Spider-Man, but fans of the armored Avenger’s comics know his actual successor comes in Riri “Ironheart” Williams, introduced in 2016 by Brian Michael Bendis and Mike Deodato, Jr.

Marvel brought Riri into the cinematic fold with 2022’s Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, with the promise of her eventually headlining her own spinoff. (Currently, it’s the only flag planted by that movie which has actually come to fruition.) Despite that real-world, three-year wait, it doesn’t feel like much time has passed between Wakanda and the Ironheart show. As the series opens, Riri (Dominique Thorne) is still interested in building Iron Man-esque suits of armor after she got a taste of it throughout Wakanda, and has no trouble using MIT’s resources (and her classmates’ money) to achieve her dreams.

Within the first minutes of the pilot, we see the fruits of Riri’s genius when she takes her newest suit to fly out of MIT immediately after her expulsion. Watching her fly may evoke memories of watching Iron Man take his own test flight for the first time, mixed with the youthful energy found in the recent Spider-Man films. The suit itself is impressive for something made on a TV budget; there’s a weight and sense of realness to it not seen in this franchise in ages, made all the more impressive by how often it’s around on screen.

© Marvel

Riri’s flight home (and subsequent crash in the middle of the street) also draws the attention of Anthony Ramos’ Parker Robbins, who leads a gang of thieves and wears a red hood that grants him some magical abilities. He quickly deduces she needs money and recognition and plays on both to get her to join his crew, made up of various specialists that’ve been recruited by Parker and his lieutenant John (Manny Montana). The members of Parker’s crew are also outcasts or have ambitions that require some cash, but unlike Riri, they’re more willing to own that they’re criminals.

This makes for an interesting dynamic as she helps them pull off their heists against the elites of Chicago while growing increasingly wary of Parker’s endgame. Riri may not be as morally gray as the recent New Avengers, but that doesn’t stop her show from constantly challenging her about her complicity in the crew’s actions despite her more noble intentions. Thorne’s as compelling here as she was in Wakanda, and she’s allowed to breathe more life into Riri and go on a more complicated hero’s journey than what’s generally been allowed of most younger heroes in the MCU.

Unlike Kamala Khan or Peter Parker, Riri doesn’t have or want a superheroic mentor to help solve her problems. (Her brief, eventual answer to a “call Wakanda” solution is a funny showcase of Thorne’s comedic talents.) They may share half a name, but Ironheart has a genuine lack of interest in exploring how or whether Riri would actually be an Iron Man successor. Instead, series creator Chinaka Hodge prioritizes how her time in Wakanda and return home are all weighing on her and affect relationships with her various loved ones, including mother Ronnie (Anji White) and friend Natalie (Lyric Ross).

© Marvel

Ironheart is being released in a pair of three-episode chunks, but it won’t take long to wish it were cut into a movie. This criticism can be levied at most live-action MCU shows, but it sticks out here by the way the supporting cast pop in and out without any real arcs of their own and mainly react to Riri and Parker’s actions. While Riri is well-defined, Parker himself is more of a mixed bag; Ramos has enough charisma to buy that he’s put a team together, but his hood never really imbues him with menace and it becomes increasingly clear he was put in the show as a gateway toward what he and other characters could become in the future.

By that point, though, it’s hard to know when or even if these characters will turn up again, given Marvel’s contractions and general uncertainty as it heads toward its next big finish. As far as recent additions go, Ironheart has enough that works that it’d be nice to see Riri and company return in the right format that fits them.

The first three Ironheart episodes are now streaming on Disney+.

Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.



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June 25, 2025 0 comments
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A smiling Riri Williams wearing her white iron armor suit in Ironheart
Product Reviews

Ironheart review: Marvel and Ryan Coogler cook up a surprisingly super Disney+ show that bleeds street-level simplicity and magical mayhem

by admin June 25, 2025



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Slight spoilers follow for Ironheart.

Ironheart is an underdog in every sense of the word.

Despite man-of-the-moment Ryan Coogler’s involvement, the final TV show of the Marvel Phase 5 era was mostly written off well ahead of release; few other live-action Marvel TV projects have faced an uphill battle to convince Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) devotees and casual fans alike to watch it.


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Write off Coogler, the comic giant, and the series’ titular hero at your peril, though, because Ironheart is an impressive Disney+ TV Original that largely hits its marks. Yes, it falls into the perennial traps that other small-screen MCU projects have, but after watching all six episodes I was pleasantly surprised by its style, energy, and emotionally impactful story that explores themes around family and flawed heroes.

Tech check

Ironheart reintroduces us to Riri Williams, who made her MCU debut in Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (Image credit: Marvel Studios/Disney+)

Set days after Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, i.e., the MCU movie in which Riri Williams (Dominique Thorne) made her live-action debut in, Ironheart opens with the eponymous character returning to her hometown of Chicago. The reason? She’s kicked out of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) for selling completed assignments to other students to fund development of her Iron Man-inspired super-suit.

Financially broke and suit-less – after the self-made prototype suit, which she steals from MIT, malfunctions on the flight home – Riri soon crosses paths with Parker Robbins/The Hood (Anthony Ramos). The mysterious, magical cloak-wearing leader of a street gang, Robbins preys on Riri’s ambition to build a new, souped-up suit by saying he’ll fund her creation in exchange for helping his crew conduct heists.

Ironheart occasionally paints Riri as an anti-hero in the vein of Breaking Bad’s Walter White

Central to Ironheart‘s story is the internal struggle Riri continually wrestles with. At her core, she’s a good person – indeed, due to a deeply traumatic event that occurred years prior, Riri wants to “revolutionize safety” by creating a suit that can be used by first responders and other emergency services personnel.

After she’s kicked out of MIT, Riri builds a new suit at her Chicago-based childhood home (Image credit: Marvel Studios/Disney+)

It’s that philanthropic nature, among other things, that draws parallels with a certain Tony Stark, whose ghost looms large over yet another MCU project. However, given their comic book ties – Stark is a long-time mentor of Riri’s in Marvel literature – Stark’s posthumous influence is more valid here than in prior MCU productions, even if the namedropping is occasionally incessant.

That said, while Riri wants to build on Stark’s legacy and make something “iconic”, her unwavering ambition and Stark-sized ego occasionally paints her as an anti-hero in the vein of Breaking Bad‘s Walter White or, in more familiar MCU terms, Frank Castle/The Punisher and Loki. Riri’s a more complicated and naïve hero than we’re used to seeing, and that make the decisions she makes, and the consequences spawned by her actions, all the more fascinating.

Fight off your demons

Ironheart does a much better job of examining post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and panic attacks than Iron Man 3 did (Image credit: Marvel Studios/Disney+)

The dichotomy at the heart of Riri’s story is further heightened by the moral complexities and grief born out of the loss of her stepdad Gary (LaRoyce Hawkins) and best friend Natalie (Lyric Ross) in a random act of gun violence.

This excruciatingly painful event is not just a driving force behind Riri’s ambition to make the world a safer place, but also a moment she refuses to confront. Such a deep-seated mental and emotional scar is a breeding ground for PTSD and panic attacks, which here are handled with greater precision, creative flair, and sensitivity than Stark’s post-Avengers mental health problems were in Iron Man 3.

In Thorne, Ironheart has a talented lead with the swagger, emotional nuance, and comedic timing – despite its melodrama, occasional toe dips into horror, and suspense-filled Ant-Man-like heisting, Ironheart is a surprisingly funny show – to bring all aspects of its protagonist to life, too.

Thorne has the swagger, emotional nuance, and comedic timing to bring all aspects of Ironheart’s protagonist to life

She’s not the sole bright spot among Ironheart‘s cast of characters.

The scene-stealing Ross, who plays Natalie in flashbacks and also portrays N.A.T.A.L.I.E – an AI construct like Iron Man’s J.A.R.V.I.S. and F.R.I.D.A.Y, and Black Panther‘s Griot, who Riri inadvertently creates – helps to bring a playful and squabbling relatability to the dynamic Riri shares with both characters. The pair’s natural rapport is evident from the outset and, while the way in which N.A.T.A.L.I.E helps to strip away Riri’s metaphorical armor to allow the latter to process her grief is a little on the nose thematically, it’s a ‘bestie’ dynamic that’s full of real heart.

Dancing with the devil

Anthony Ramos’ Parker Robbins/The Hood is Ironheart’s primary antagonist (Image credit: Marvel Studios/Disney+)

Ross, Riri’s concerned and warm-hearted mom Ronnie Williams (Anji White) and Natalie’s brother Xavier (Matthew Elam) notwithstanding, Thorne shares the most screentime with Ramos’ The Hood, whose introduction is not only novel in its execution, but also happens very early on.

Some Marvel TV shows are guilty of prolonging their narrative setup, but Ironheart gets to the crux of its primary plot within the first 30 minutes of its premiere. That might seem quick, but I can fully get behind a story that tackles its meatier content sooner rather than later – and which still maintains an air of mystery despite its fast-paced nature.

Ironheart follows in most MCU TV series’ footsteps by rushing through its finale

This doesn’t mean Ironheart‘s narrative structure is consistent in its quality. Some episodes feel hurried and, by proxy, don’t spend enough time reflecting on character choices or fleshing out certain plot threads. It also follows in most MCU TV series’ footsteps by rushing through its finale that, spoilers notwithstanding, sets up a possible sequel season and teases wider implications for the MCU via the arrival of a character MCU fans have waited years for.

Some MCU fans think they know who Alden Ehrenreich is really playing in Ironheart (Image credit: Marvel Studios/Disney+)

Ironheart has a semi-regular issue with its villains, too. Fans were full of praise for Ramos’ take on The Hood when the show’s first full clip was released online, but he feels a little underdeveloped in Ironheart‘s first half. It’s not until the series’ second three-episode batch that he’s fully realized as a menacing antagonist through his powerset, and positioned as a sympathetic villain via his backstory. In certain lighting, his magic-infused cloak is a tad garish, too, but I suspect that’s intentional.

Joe McGillicuddy (Alden Ehrenreich) falls into a similar category. A fascinating mix of bumbling and unhinged with his own tragic past, Joe bonds with Riri over their shared technical expertise and grief until their budding camaraderie is shattered by events midway through Ironheart‘s six-episode run. The fallout creates another conflicted antagonist for Riri to deal with but, while Ehrenreich does a fantastic job of capturing Joe’s betrayal of trust and emotional turbulence, his evolution from timid ally to complicated foe happens too quickly for my liking.

Ironheart satisfyingly blurs the lines between the magic versus technology-led storyline we’ve been sold

Still, Joe’s transformation, along with Riri’s magic-based suit upgrade and other references to the MCU’s mystical elements (there are as many ties to Doctor Strange as there are to Iron Man here), satisfyingly blur the lines between the magic-versus-technology storyline we’ve been sold. Yes, Ironheart pits these diametrically opposed forces against each other, but also acts as a collision point where they can come together and create something wholly unique for the MCU.

What’s more common is the at-times clunky and stifled dialog, which some fans pointed out in Ironheart‘s first trailer and isn’t aided by hard cuts between specific scenes, particularly in early episodes.

It’s also another Marvel production that refuses to explain certain things with enough intent. Sure, the MCU is a franchise where superpowered beings run riot and parallel universes exist among other things, but I don’t think I’m asking for much by wanting a bit more story exposition, especially for viewers who haven’t seen Black Panther 2. I guess my Wakanda Forever ending explainer will have to do!

My verdict

Marvel Television’s Ironheart | Official Trailer | Disney+ – YouTube

Watch On

Ironheart exceeded my expectations with its smaller-scale, family-oriented, street-level-style narrative that reminded me of Hawkeye, Ms Marvel, and Daredevil: Born Again, all of which I similarly enjoyed. I feared the worst when Marvel confirmed Ironheart‘s unusual release schedule, but its two-part release format lends itself well to the story it tells.

It isn’t the best Marvel TV Original, but I suspect Ironheart will prove a lot of people wrong. It’ll be a tough ask to win round anyone who’s already dismissed it but, if it does so through mine and other critics’ reviews, plus positive word of mouth, then Coogler, showrunner Chinaka Hodge, and the rest of its chief creative team might have built something iconic for Riri Williams after all.

Ironheart episodes 1 to 3 are out now on Disney+. Read my Ironheart release schedule article to see when its final three episodes will be released.

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June 25, 2025 0 comments
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'Ironheart' Will Continue Tony Stark's Legacy, and Robert Downey Jr. Approves
Product Reviews

‘Ironheart’ Will Continue Tony Stark’s Legacy, and Robert Downey Jr. Approves

by admin June 18, 2025


“I want to continue Stark’s legacy,” says Riri Williams, the main character in the upcoming Marvel Studios show Ironheart. Played by Dominique Thorne, Riri is a genius inventor, just like the late, great Iron Man, but without his billionaire resources. That conflict will be at the heart of the new show, which debuts on Disney+ June 24, and Tony Stark himself just endorsed it.

Two fantastic Ironheart videos just came online, one of which focuses on the practical suits built for the production. Executive producer Ryan Coogler, who introduced Riri in his film Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, chimes in along with other members of the creative team. Here’s where we get to see Riri really try and be the MCU’s next Tony Stark.

Gear up for a behind-the-scenes look at how Riri’s suit came to life—straight from the filmmakers and special effects team behind Marvel Television’s #Ironheart. Streaming June 24 on @DisneyPlus. pic.twitter.com/XsSEgam5P2

— Marvel Studios (@MarvelStudios) June 17, 2025

In reality, though, we know that the next Tony Stark isn’t Tony Stark at all. He’s Doctor Doom. Robert Downey Jr. is currently in London filming Avengers: Doomsday, where he plays the titular villain, and the actor chimed in from the set to give his approval to Ironheart during an interview with Good Morning America. The full interview is below, but we’ve cued it right up to Downey’s bit.

Now, it’s quite clear Downey is reading a pre-written statement there, and to some, that might make it seem forced. But he didn’t have to read or record anything at all. If this were a political campaign, Ironheart getting the official backing of the Godfather of the MCU like this would be a big deal. And we still think it’s at least a medium-sized deal, just because who better to know stories of geniuses in super suits than Robert Downey Jr.?

Ironheart debuts June 24 and is one of only a handful of Marvel Studios shows coming to Disney+ in the next year or so. After this, there’s the animated Eyes of Wakanda and Marvel Zombies, followed by Wonder Man in December, season two of Daredevil Born Again, probably sometime next year, and, finally, the Vision show. Will Ironheart be the best of the bunch? What kind of impact, if any, will it have on the MCU? We’ll find out soon.

Here’s a look at the episode titles:

Riri’s notebook = unlocked. 🔓

Check out the official #Ironheart episode guide and stream on @DisneyPlus starting June 24. pic.twitter.com/cIJrILXbAi

— Marvel Studios (@MarvelStudios) June 17, 2025

Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.





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June 18, 2025 0 comments
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Robert Downey Jr. Publicly Supports Ironheart In Touching Video
Game Updates

Robert Downey Jr. Publicly Supports Ironheart In Touching Video

by admin June 18, 2025



Image: Marvel

The torch has been officially passed. During a recent Good Morning America interview, Ironheart stars Dominique Thorne and Anthony Ramos were surprised with a video message from Robert Downey Jr. In the clip, the OG Iron Man shares his support and jokes about a similarity between Ramos’s Parker Robbins character and Downey Jr.’s own much-anticipated Doctor Doom portrayal.

Ironheart’s New Trailer Delivers A Couple Cool Surprises

During the recorded message, which we all hope was filmed on the set of Avengers: Doomsday, the MCU’s anchor being professes his love and support for Thorne and Ramos’s work in Ironheart, dotingly remarking, “Ms. Thorne, I couldn’t be happier than seeing you bring Riri Williams to life.” Never one to pass up an opportunity to poke fun at the obvious, he then follows up his praise by joking that he hopes the green hood that Ramos’s character dons in the Ironheart trailer isn’t a sign that the actor will replace him as Doctor Doom.

The real passing of the torch comes in the heartfelt final moments of the message, when the 60-year-old actor uses his fingers to make a heart resembling the Arc Reactor that keeps Tony Stark alive, as he proclaims, “Iron Man loves Ironheart.” What makes the gesture feel that much more genuine is Thorne’s revelation that Downey Jr. called her shortly after she finished filming Ironheart in Chicago to share his support. In a May interview with Empire, the longtime Iron Man fan shared exactly what he told her during that phone call.

“He told me how excited he was and that he’s rooting for it, too. I literally got two thumbs up. It’s really reassuring to know you’re not embarrassing Iron Man.”

This isn’t the first time Downey Jr. has shared his public support of Ironheart. During a gala at the Gene Siskel Film Center in June 2019, 18 months before Marvel announced the Ironheart series, the first superhero of the Marvel Cinematic Universe definitively stated he thought Ironheart belonged in the MCU. He got his wish when Riri Williams made her MCU debut in Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, even though she wasn’t specifically referred to as Ironheart.

Downey Jr.’s Good Morning America appearance isn’t the holographic video tutorial that we hope Stark will leave Riri in Ironheart. Still, it’s good for the people who built the MCU to show support for the next generation, especially when you know there are going to be trolls ready to curse Ironheart in honor of Iron Man’s name.





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June 18, 2025 0 comments
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Marvel Comparing Ironheart To Breaking Bad Could Mean Madness
Game Reviews

Marvel Comparing Ironheart To Breaking Bad Could Mean Madness

by admin June 17, 2025


Marvel just can’t help itself. The house that Stan Lee built (and Kevin Feige turned into a mega mall of blockbusters) has been mashing characters from different universes together and making villains out of heroes for the better part of this decade. But this time, the comic book powerhouse may have gone off the deep end, as a Marvel executive alluded to Riri Williams (Dominique Thorne) going the antihero route in the upcoming Ironheart miniseries, comparing her arc to—wait for it—those of Walter White in Breaking Bad and Tony Soprano in The Sopranos.

Ironheart’s New Trailer Delivers A Couple Cool Surprises

And now our imaginations are going to the strangest places.

Ironheart executive producer Sev Ohanian told SFX magazine that Ironheart viewers can expect the “brilliant yet flawed” Riri to find herself spiraling down a questionable path he’s not sure has ever been explored in the MCU. Seeing as Thunderbolts recently had a superhero’s internalized depression send people to the shadow realm, I wonder how much darker the MCU can get. Unlike the Thunderbolts, Riri’s dark side might be a bit more grounded in reality.

“She kind of breaks bad in the show, and we go to some uncomfortable places for audiences that I think will be really fun to explore, almost in the vein of Walter White from Breaking Bad or Tony Soprano,” Ohanian said.

Yes, somehow Marvel has seemingly found some connection between a teen superhero and two of the most despicable criminals in 21st-century television history. For those unaware, Walter White broke bad when the underpaid and undervalued high school chemistry teacher was diagnosed with terminal cancer and became determined to not die without building an empire that would help his family and outlast him. That empire turned out to be made of meth. Tony Soprano was already bad but spent six incredible seasons trying to reconcile his violent mob boss life with his desire to be a good person.

Honest question: What the fuck does that have to do with Ironheart? I’m not entirely sure, but this does open the door to some unhinged possibilities.

As the heir apparent to Tony Stark’s iron throne, the MIT student could follow the morally dubious path he laid out when he was selling weapons that ended up in terrorist hands. Alternatively, the young woman who created a way to detect vibranium could go full Heisenberg and find a way to turn the Wakandan export into an injectable drug to help impoverished people around her gain a fighting chance against the cops. Noble intent, but it will just lead to drug-dealing flying robots everywhere like those annoying Amazon Scouts. I also wouldn’t put it past her to become so drunk with power that, like Walt, she spends an entire episode using every weapon she has to exterminate a pesky fly in her workshop.

There’s also a world in which she realizes these suits she’s creating cost a lot of money and just unleashes swarms of robot drones to break into banks while she’s telling kids to get good grades and stay in school. Can you imagine Riri needing to go to therapy like Tony Soprano? She also could just start killing people to avenge her dad’s death.

There is some comic book precedent for her not-so-good streak. In the comics, she grows distant and emotionally detached from her fellow superhero allies, opting to focus more on tackling the Ten Rings organization and the mystery of her father’s death than mending any personal relationships. She even beats a villain so badly in a fight that her teammates are concerned she could one day kill someone. That sounds like she could easily break bad.

We’ll see how closely she resembles the two iconic TV show villains when Ironheart hits Disney+ on June 24.



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June 17, 2025 0 comments
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kotaku
Game Reviews

10 Ironheart Cameos That Marvel Needs To Make Happen

by admin June 13, 2025


Image: Marvel

Tony Stark is dead, and unlike in the comics, Riri has never interacted with him or even acknowledged his existence. Even though we see Riri pounding away at metal to shape her suit, mirroring Stark in the first Iron Man movie, a passing of the repulsor baton would not only be appropriate, it would also connect the show to its comic book roots. In the comic, Riri is mentored by a Tony Stark AI program. While Riri will likely have a holographic AI companion based on her deceased best friend, played by Lyric Ross, there are some problems only Stark can solve.

It would be cool if Riri were faced with a seemingly impossible obstacle with one of her suits, a situation that could lead to Gwyneth Paltrow returning to the MCU as Penny Potts, bringing with her the answer. It’s not far-fetched to think Stark has terabytes of instructional videos about how to not only build and maintain those Iron Man armors but also bring some of his wildest ideas to life. Remember, he left a lifelike holographic message to be played after his death in Avengers: Endgame—a proper tearjerker of a scene. Stark wouldn’t be back in the flesh, but he would help usher in his successor while reminding us of the Tony Stark we once knew. You know, before Doctor Doom changes all of that in Avengers: Doomsday.



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June 13, 2025 0 comments
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Ironheart Trailer Unveils New J.A.R.V.I.S And Magical Suit
Game Updates

Ironheart Trailer Unveils New J.A.R.V.I.S And Magical Suit

by admin June 10, 2025



Image: Disney

Marvel’s upcoming miniseries Ironheart may only have six episodes, but its latest trailer proves it’s going to pack in all of the magic and machinery it can. In a newly released trailer, we not only get to see Riri Williams’ latest suit, but we also see her unique take on an Iron Man favorite.

Black Ops 7, Invincible Vs & More — Here Are The 5 Games That Stole Microsoft’s Show

The show’s first trailer laid out almost everything we needed to know about the upcoming season. We saw Williams (Dominique Thorne) proving her genius to Parker “The Hood” Robbins (Anthony Ramos) in a life-threatening test, we heard her coyly describe her time in Wakanda during Black Panther: Wakanda Forever as “an internship abroad,” and we also got a look at some of the cool suits she’ll be piloting. This new trailer is shorter but reveals two major additions: a magic-infused suit and her own spin on Tony Stark’s J.A.R.V.I.S.

After hearing Williams say she needs to think outside the box, we see a crimson-colored explosion of the same magical sigils we’ve seen sorcerers like Dr. Strange (Benedict Cumberbatch) and Wanda Maximoff (Elizabeth Olsen) wield. We later get a glimpse of someone actually drawing those symbols and of Williams inside a suit that gets ensconced in those sigils. We don’t know yet who introduces her to this magic, but I’m praying to the MCU gods that somehow Wanda makes a surprise return to give our new iron-clad hero a lesson in multiversal magic.

Another cool part of the trailer is Williams building her own version of J.A.R.V.I.S. in the likeness of her best friend, played by This Is Us actress Lyric Ross. Since Ross’s character is memorialized in a mural with Williams’s late father, it’s safe to assume she’s dead and that this is Williams’s way of keeping her memory alive, whether she did so consciously or subconsciously. In the comics, Ross’s character is named Natalie, and her AI counterpart is dubbed N.A.T.A.L.I.E. This, and the profound quote from Williams’s father about taking something apart to really know what it’s made of, provides Ironheart the emotional core that gives its fantastical action human stakes.

Ironheart will have a three-episode world premiere on June 24 at 6 p.m. PT / 9 p.m. ET on Disney+.



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June 10, 2025 0 comments
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