Marvel Studios announced at Comic Con in San Diego that Iron ManRobert Downey Jr. returns to the Marvel Cinematic Universe as Dr. Victor Von Doom in the next two Avengers films.
It’s a move that few expected, and after the excitement in Hall H died down, it’s slowly becoming clear that not everyone is immediately excited about this major development in the Multiverse Saga, according to an analysis by Character bookRead the translation below:
Lost balance
The biggest problem with Downey Jr.’s return is the difference between movies and comic books. Comic books will always be a fun form of entertainment, because they’re often weird and off-the-wall. The trick to making movie adaptations work is knowing how much pulp to bring to the screen and how much to leave behind. Marvel Studios is now seriously losing that balance. Gwyneth Paltrow didn’t quite get it, and her feelings were shared on social media.
It has become abundantly clear through projects like: Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness The average audience doesn’t engage with multiverse stories. Even when they do go for the layered approach of adding nostalgia, they turn out to be a mixed bag: fandom and hype when cameo-filled event films first come out, but they lose their value as standalone experiences.
Will be released in 2026 and 2027.
And now Marvel Studios is going so far as to recast its franchise’s original hero as a villain. It’s a development rooted in the multiverse framework that Downey Jr. established. Something like this plays like what if…? The demonic version of Iron Man who switched minds with Doctor Doom.
But no matter how much plot can be created between him and characters like Spider-Man, the Hulk, or Rhodey, Iron Man’s history will always be in the public’s mind, making it impossible to separate him and give fans a darker version of Tony Stark instead of a new, standalone villain.