Archive for the ‘Comic Top 10’ Category

Top 10 Iron Man Armors

Sunday, June 1st, 2008 by Carl Doherty under Comic Top 10

Tony Stark’s vanity has never been in question. Whether he’s signing world peace treaties, seducing page 3 models, thwarting inter-conglomerate espionage, or getting his spine returned to him on a shiny silver platter by an angry Hulk, the moustachioed man has to look his best.

Here I present you a fine selection of tailor made metal suits, evaluated in terms of design, power, fashion statement (“oomph” in the common tongue) and the all-important codpiece factor.

10. Thorbuster

Powered by state-of-the-art Asgardian technology (okay, a big mystical crystal) this armor could withstand, and absorb, event the massive amounts of energy the Son of Odin threw at it. Ironically, it was still destroyed, by the latest in hi-tech warfare: a giant hammer.

Finest moment: Stark learns that technology has nothing on the power of the Gods, in Iron Man (vol. 3) #64.

Iron Man - Silver Centurion

Iron Man - Silver Centurion Armor

9. Silver Centurion

Nothing screams eighties like titanium shoulder-pads. The Silver Centurion also had a built in chameleon effect, previously used in the dark blue Stealth Armor.

Finest moment: Iron Man (vol. 1) #163 – 200, in which Stark uses this suit to take on Obadiah Stane, a battle which resulted in the destruction of Stane International. Serves him right!

Iron Man - Hulkbuster Armor

Iron Man - Hulkbuster Armor

8. Hulkbuster

When the Big Green Guy is out levelling small towns and smashing military installations, only the biggest, heavy-duty exo-skeletal shell, designed for maximum strength amplification at the cost of reduced versatility and mobility, is capable of giving him a good hard spanking.

Finest moment: The Mark II Hulkbuster severely failing to live up to its title as World War Hulk commences.

7. Modular

The classic red & gold got a nineties injection with this modular, compactable and highly customizable model, which not only made saving the world that little bit easier, but allowed the animated series and subsequent toylines to spawn an arsenal of Iron Man variant, including Samurai Armor Iron Man… which is either emotionally offensive or insanely cool, depending on your age.

Finest moment: Kicking M. Bison’s butt in the Marvel vs. Capcom series.

Iron Man - Red & Gold Suit

Iron Man - Red & Gold Suit

6. Red & Gold

Definitely the most iconic armour, and possibly Stark’s longest running outfit, lasting unchanged throughout the seventies. Quite what inspired his future first cousin once removed, Arno Stark, to attach giant cogs at the shoulders, we’ll never know.

Finest moment: The metal faceplate does nothing to hinder Stark’s boozing in Twisted Toyfare Theater’s surly and perpetually inebriated parody. I’m pretty sure these exploits are considered canon.

Ultimate Iron Man

Ultimate Iron Man

5. Ultimate Armor

Bulky without compromising sleek design, this suit goes for theoretical realism over big ideas, and not only requires a full behind-the-scenes support team to maintain and operate at full proficiency, but two hours of Tony’s time just to put the damn thing on.

Finest moment: The Ultimate Iron Man miniseries, written by Ender’s Game author Orson Scott Card.

4. Movie Armor (Mark III)

Almost an amalgam of all that has gone before but with an industrial, automobile bent, the gold-plated titanium Hollywood edition Mark III operates with remote assistance from Stark’s artificial intelligence JARVIS, who may be infinitely more useful than his comic book counterpart, but is incapable of making a good cup of tea.

Finest moment: Annihilating a group of Ten Rings terrorists, Robocop style, in Afghanistan, before playfully escaping two F-22 Raptors.

3. War Machine

Accessorize, accessorize, accessorize! Originally, briefly worn by Stark, this armor was soon passed down to best buddy James Rhodes, fully aware that, for the financially stretched, a light grey and dark grey colour scheme would never go out of fashion. Though the suit previously went under the catchy name of “Variable Threat Response Battle Suit,” Rhodes decided that the “guns, lots of guns” was the route to follow, adopting a name that doesn’t exactly connote peace-keeping heroism.

Finest moment: The non-canonical, monochromic miniseries U.S. War Machine, in which Rhodes is fired by Stark after cold-bloodedly killing two hostage takers on national TV.

2. Golden Avenger

Sure, grey is nice… but if you really want to impress the ladies, nothing screams affluence quite like this gold-plated setup. Strictly for those entrepreneurs wishing to take the Midas influence that little bit further, while adhering to the “big is better” principle. Also used a solar recharger; even in the sixties, Stark was anticipating global warming… which, as we all now know, doesn’t actually exist.

Finest moment: Tales of Suspense #40. One issue after his debut, Stark decides the grey suit was a little scary and, eventually rejecting the giant puppy armor prototype he’s worked so hard on, paints the entire thing gold. Because gold is the least intimidating colour of them all.

Iron Man - Extremis Armor

Iron Man - Extremis Armor

1. Extremis

The most powerful armor of them all, formed from nanotechnology and fused to Stark’s body via a techno-organic virus, which allows him to store the inner layers of the Iron Man armor in the hollows of his bones. A veritable cyborg indeed!

Finest moment: Warren Ellis’ entire Extremis run. Buy it now.

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Top 10 Spider-man Villains

Saturday, August 18th, 2007 by Carl Doherty under Comic Top 10

Though Spider-Man’s rogues gallery is not as fine as Batman’s, it’s still a memorable assortment of rapscallions and rascals. With Spider-Man 3 giving box office records a sly slap on the rear, and a Spidey 4 inevitable, I thought it time to look at some of the web-slinger’s most nefarious nasties.

Spider-man

Spider-man

10. The Lizard

Like Man-Bat, Henry Jekyll and the wolfman there was always a tragedy about Dr. Curt Conner’s transformation that put him a notch above Spider-Man’s other animal-themed enemies.

Finest Moment:    Amazing Spider-Man #6 (November 1963)

9. Kraven (Sergei Kravinoff)

Nothing gets you remembered like a good suicide. Kraven is also one of the few Spidey villains to have stayed dead.

Finest Moment:     Spider-Man: Kraven’s Last Hunt (GN)

8. Sandman

Flint Marko wasn’t what you’d call evil. Hell, he even fought crime with Silver Sable for a good few years. He was however, a volatile, moronic thug, bless him. And even if his powers made absolutely no sense they always looked great,

Finest Moment:     The Amazing Spider-Man #4 (Sept. 1963)

7. Carnage

Since his debut, Venom’s bastard son has been overused, but Maximum Carnage was pretty good fun in its day. Psychotic and virtually indestructible, with a peculiar affection for his dead mother, Cletus Cassidy was always more than a minor nuisance. The Sentry apparently killed him recently, by dragging him outside Earth’s atmosphere… but he’ll be back.

Finest Moment:     Spider-Man: Maximum Carnage (GN)

6. Mysterio (Quentin Beck)

Sure, he has a goldfish bowl for a head, and he was never a serious threat, but there was always a lot of mileage in the character. Quentin Beck drove Daredevil mad a few years back… which seems to happen an awful lot.

Finest Moment:     Daredevil: Guardian Devil (GN)

5. Venom (Eddie Brock)

Every superhero needs their mirror-image counterpart. Thought the symbiote suit was introduced in 1984’s Secret Wars, it was not until 4 years later that Todd MacFarlane merged it with bitter journalist (is there any other kind?) Eddie Brock that fan favourite Venom was born. He was always more fun when used as a Punisher-style vigilante than a villain, though.

Finest Moment:    Spider-Man: Birth of Venom (GN)

Venom

Venom

4. Green Goblin (Norman Osborn)

Spider-Man’s prominent archenemy, the Green Goblin left his mark on Peter’s life when he murdered Gwen Stacy. As if that weren’t enough, he later turned Peter’s best friend, son Harry Osborn, into an enemy. A maniacal, cackling nutter, he was hardly a deep character, but when Norman Osborn came back from the dead (again and again) the results were always unpredictable.

Finest Moment:     Amazing Spider-Man: The Death of Gwen Stacy (GN)

Green Goblin

Green Goblin

3. Doctor Octopus

Barmy scientist Otto Octavius was one of the few villains with the brains to outwit Spider-Man, an IQ conveniently dormant when Doc Oc briefly dated Aunt May. Still, four ultra-cool adamantium tentacles don’t do his image any harm.

Finest Moment:   Spider-Man 2

Doctor Octopus

Doctor Octopus

2. The Kingpin

The archetypal crime lord, Wilson Fisk is a criminal strategist without equal. Unlike much of Spidey’s rogues gallery, he has no superhuman powers as such, but is exceptionally strong. He is also reining champion of numerous North American pie eating contests.

Finest Moment:    Daredevil: Born Again (GN)

Wilson Fisk

Wilson Fisk

1. J. Jonah Jameson

Pompous, arrogant editor of the Daily Bugle, Jameson has turned the people of New York against Spidey for 40 years, and will probably do so for 40 more. Because he works within the law, Parker will never be rid of the bastard, and more importantly, never get the opportunity to beat the crap out of him.

Finest Moment:     The Spider-Man movies

J. Jonah Jameson

J. Jonah Jameson

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