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We Finally Understand Why The MCU Started With Iron Man

We Finally Understand Why The MCU Started With Iron Man You can follow Charlie Wen here:

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The Marvel Cinematic Universe grows just a little bit bigger and usually a whole lot weirder with every new movie and TV show that slides in front of our eyeballs. When the original Iron Man came out back in 2008, the world he lived in seemed pretty grounded in reality. The strangest thing that could possibly happen in that film was a rich guy deciding to build himself a suit of armor in a cave to become an international vigilante. Then fight another rich guy in some other armor who wanted to be an even worse international vigilante.

That's pretty strange, but not out of the realm of possibility, right? We're still waiting for Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg to throw down and televise the whole thing on Facebook Live.

But since then, we've seen gods, monsters, whole other planets, whole other dimensions, and all sorts of magical hijinks unfold in ways that would make any sane person's head spin. So how has the MCU kept feeling as real and fun as ever?

Well, former Marvel Studios head of visual development Charlie Wen has some ideas on that. The man in charge of just about all of the Marvel Cinematic Universe's designs over the past decade sat for an exclusive interview with us to talk about how and why Iron Man was actually the perfect superhero to kickstart the MCU as we know it.

"What was good with Iron Man is that it laid a foundation for what is tech on Earth. How do we ground it to Earth and to things we understand? Tech is something easier for us to sort of, we use it every day, right?"

He explained that Iron Man's connection with technology is a convenient starting point for audiences to find a connection with a world that looks a lot like our own, but is also full of super-people. That helpful foundation revealed that, despite Iron Man's then-reputation as a lower-tier comic book character, he was the perfect choice to kick off Marvel Studios' cinematic ambitions.

But technology isn't the only reason Iron Man was such a strong choice for Marvel's first film in a shared cinematic universe. Even though we all use phones and computers every day, very few moviegoers are also jet-setting billionaires. That's why Iron Man's alter ego Tony Stark and the fact that Robert Downey, Jr. played him was that other crucial piece of the puzzle to help audiences connect with the film, as well as the world it shows on-screen.

Once Iron Man established the baseline of the MCU's reality, the studio could start to explore bigger, weirder ideas. The next logical step, of course, was to try to get as weird as possible, as quickly as possible. Marvel Studios' third movie was 2011's Thor which happened to be the first film Charlie Wen worked on at the company as the head of design.

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