Tony Stark has always been very
protective of his Iron Man armors. He does everything in his power to ensure
those wonders of technology are always under his supervision. He doesn’t trust
SHIELD with them, or any law enforcement agency. He acts like they are an
extension of him, a part of his flesh and blood. So, it’s pretty safe to say
that he trusts anyone that he gives an armor to with a lot more than his life.
He trusts them with his legacy. Which leads us into our next hero of this patriotic
theme week, James Rhodes, War Machine. Let’s get to it.
They may bicker like an old married couple, but there are only a few teams that work better together. |
James “Rhodey” Rhodes’ life began
simply enough. Born in South Philadelphia, great now I have the Fresh Prince
theme song stuck in my head, he joined the Marine Corps pretty much as soon as
he was legally able to. He served in Southeast Asia as a combat pilot and
achieved the rank of lieutenant, all before his life started getting weird.
During his tour of duty his plane was shot down behind enemy lines by the Viet
Cong. He survived the crash, and as he tried to evade capture he came across
Iron Man. Mr. Stark had just finished his original prototype and escaped the
prison camp that he’d been held at. The two teamed up, first to defeat the Viet
Cong chasing both of them and then to destroy the enemy basecamp. They lit the
place up with a stolen helicopter and prototype Iron Man tech before escaping.
At the base hospital in Saigon, Rhodes was formally introduced to Tony Stark.
Tony thanked Rhodes for helping out Iron Man, whom he claimed was his
bodyguard, and offered Rhodes a job as his personal pilot as his reward.
Remember, Stark pays extremely well. Rhodes initially declined the offer,
wanting to first serve out his tour of duty and then try to make his own way,
but after a few failed career paths that included mercenary work, he took Tony
up on the offer. While working for Tony, he became a chief aviation engineer
for Stark International, and also one of Tony’s closest friends. A short time
after that, Rhodes was let in on the “big secret” that Tony Stark and Iron Man
are one in the same.
Rhodes was forced to step up a few
years later. Tony was in deep trouble. Obadiah Stane, corrupt businessman,
corporate shark, and just all around bad man, had spent several months and his
own group of lackeys to ruin Tony’s life. He ruins Tony’s business with shady
deals, stealing foreign contracts, and sabotage. He also ruins Tony’s personal
life by having one of his lackeys date Tony and use that connection to ferret
out his secrets. Stane also starts using mercenaries to attack those closest to
Tony, like Rhodes. Tony was in a bad way, and finally relapsed into alcoholism.
He still tried to be Iron Man, but was badly beaten by a supervillain known as
Magma. After that, Tony knew he couldn’t keep up as Iron Man. He turned over
his suit to Rhodes and asked him to take Tony’s place as Iron Man. Rhodes
agrees, and with the help of a Stark Industries scientist, Morley Erwin,
becomes Iron Man. The two quick Stark International, and sent the majority of
Iron Man armors to the bottom of the ocean to protect Tony’s tech from Stane’s
greed and SHIELD’s… misguided maneuverings. Rhodes did well as Iron Man, he
battled most of Tony’s most recognizable foes, and took up mercenary work to
help maintain the Armor. He also joined the Avengers a short time later.
Rhodes, Morley, and Morley’s sister formed a new electronics firm to try and
provide additional revenue. And, Tony even joined them to help out as an
engineer after he started to recover. Together they formed the company Circuits
Maximus and everything was looking well. Unfortunately, there were a few weird
side effects to Rhodes using Tony’s armor. The armor’s helmet interface was
keyed into Tony’s brainwaves, which made Rhodes more aggressive and paranoid as
time went on. Things came to a head when Rhodes went on a rampage to capture a
villain, and Tony was forced to use a new armor prototype, based on his
original design, to stop Rhodes and talk him down.
I can't think of a more appropriate name for this armor. Other than, maybe, Silver Death. |
Rhodes resigns from the Avengers
after this, and asks Dr. Henry Pym (Ant-Man, but I think he’s going by
Yellowjacket by this point) for help with his headaches. Pym sends Rhodes to
see Shaman from the Canadian superhero team Alpha Flight. The two go on a
spiritual journey through a place called “The Gorge” when Rhodes faces his
inner demons, the worst of which was the fear that he wasn’t worthy of the
mantle of Iron Man. Rhodes continues as Iron-Man, with Tony serving as his
backup/sidekick, until he’s critically injured by a bomb sent by Obadiah
“Asshole” Stane. While Rhodes recovers, Tony takes up the role of Iron-Man once
again. Rhodes and Tony take turns as Iron-Man for a while until Tony comes up
against “The Masters of Silence” a group of Japanese warriors. The Masters were
tricked by rival CEO Justin Hammer into attacking Iron-Man. The Masters had
their own crazy advanced tech, the most dangerous of which made them immune to
the effects of repulsors and unibeams. Not quite sure how that works, but role
with it. Tony is forced to develop a new armor, which he dubs the “Variable
Threat Response Battle Suit, Model XVI, Mark I” or War Machine for short. The
suit basically has every sort of weapon imaginable jammed into it. Tony beats
back the Masters, and the War Machine armor is added to the Armory. Tony is
apparently killed a short while later. In his will he names Rhodes as CEO of
Stark Enterprises, and asks him to take up being Iron Man again. This time with
a new and improved version of the War Machine armor specifically designed for
him. Rhodes agrees. Things go well for a while until Rhodes’ discover Tony was
alive, apparently having faked his death. Rhodes quits Stark Enterprises,
turning it over to Tony again, and their friendship is pretty strained at this
point. They’re forced to fend off some battledroids sent in to kill Rhodes,
which helps them patch things up. Tony insists that Rhodes’ keeps the armor, as
it was designed for him. Rhodes eventually takes up the offer, and dons the
moniker War Machine. Since then, Rhodes has been an on again off again
superhero. While he has tried to leave the life behind on more than one
occasion, he always finds a reason to come back. Whether it’s a desire to watch
Tony’s back, or a feeling of duty towards his country, we’ll always have a War
Machine looking out for us.
As a man, James Rhodes doesn’t have
superpowers. He is a highly trained veteran of the US Armed Forces, a skilled
pilot and aviation engineer. Basically he flies really well, and he can design
things that fly really well. These skills do help in the maintenance of the
various Iron Man armors. He’s also skilled in hand-to-hand combat and your
standard military weaponry, though he seems to have a preference for smaller
caliber weapons, which is kind of odd given his favorite armor.
I think when Captain America saw this he was like "Rhodey, you're kind of stealing my theme." |
Rhodes is one of the most
experienced users of Iron Man armors in the world, second only to Tony Stark
himself. He has a few different suits for different situations, but he’s most
well-known for the Variable Threat Response Battle Suit Mark I and its
successors. These gray and silver armors house more weaponry than your standard
armory. They have a shoulder mounted minigun, flamethrowers and double barrel
cannons on each arm, a plasma blade on his left gauntlet, rocket launchers, and
repulsors and a unibeam, to name a few. The War Machine armor also has a
superior auto-targeting feature than most of the other Iron Man armors, to help
Rhodes use his weaponry to the fullest without risking civilians. The suit is
also capable of flight, has a basic force-field, and has a self-contained
breathing system. His suit also uses a number of different types of ammunition,
such as rubber bullets for non-lethal situations. Like a good solider, he’s always
prepared.
Rhodes has appeared in a number of
Marvel series, always as Tony’s closest friend, backup and partner.
He featured in a few episodes of The Avengers: Earth’s Mightiest Heroes. He
first appears in “Alone Against Aim.” Rhodes was trying to help Tony and the
Avenger’s ship the Iron Man Armors out of Stark Tower, in the hopes that the
building would be less of a target without them. Unfortunately the Advanced
Idea Mechanics decide that this is the perfect opportunity to attack Stark
Tower. They unleash a technology devouring machine known as Technovore along
with their usual troops. Tony is without his armor and yet still defends
himself quiet well. Rhodes dons his armor towards the episodes end to kick some
AIM butt. He appears again in “New Avengers.” In this episode, the main
Avengers are all taken out by Kang the Conqueror during his latest bid for
conquest. They aren’t killed, but basically frozen in time. Tony, being a
genius, planned for this eventuality and had Jarvis rig up a backup plan. A new
Avengers team consisting of Spider-Man, War Machine, Iron Fist, Luke Cage,
Wolverine, and the Thing are called upon to fix things. While the team is far
from perfect, they are able to stop Kang’s plans and free the main Avengers.
War Machine is called in one final time in “Avengers Assemble,” where the
Avengers call in every superhero they can think of to help fight off Galactus.
He’s pretty useful, as always.
Call him a sidekick. I dare ya. |
James Rhodes was initially
portrayed by Terrence Howard in Iron Man.
Like with Bucky in Captain America
Rhodes is reimagined as Tony’s friend from before he starts doing the superhero
thing. He’s the military liaison for Stark Industries. After Tony is captured by
the terrorist group the Ten Rings, Rhodes spends most of that time scouring the
desert for him. When Tony returns, Rhodes is upset when Stark shuts down the
weapons division of Stark Industries, and even madder when he learns that Tony
built a battle suit to dowel out vigilante justice in his warzone. He’s largely
support in this movie.
Don Cheadle takes over as Rhodes
for the rest of the Iron Man films,
and in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Which is a good change, I have nothing
against Terrence Howard, but Don Cheadle just seems better suited to the part
for some reason. In Iron Man 2,
Rhodes is being pressured by the government to get Tony to turn over the Iron
Man armors. He’s reluctant at first; that is until Tony gets drunk in the suit
and endangers a bunch of people at his birthday party. Rhodes take the silver
Mark II Iron Man armor, and the two duke it out. After fighting for a few
minutes, the both fire a repulsor blast that destroys much of Tony’s mansion.
Rhodes recovers first and flies off with the suit. Justin Hammer, one of the
films villains, upgrades the armor with various weapons at the base. Later on
at the Stark Expo, Hammer shows off the various armored drones designed for him
by Ivan Vanko, the other antagonist, and the War Machine armor piloted by Rhodes.
When Tony arrives, Vanko takes control of the Drones and Rhodes’ suit. Rhodes
is forced to watch in horror as the suit hunts Tony down, until Black Widow
reboots the system, giving Rhodes control again. They team up and destroy the
Hammer Drones and Vanko, who had his own Crimson Dynamo/Whiplash armor.
If he was anyone else, I'd say he was compensating for something. |
Iron
Man 3 has Don Cheadle return as Rhodes, but his suit is given a makeover by
AIM. Apparently the government wanted to be seen doing something, and altering
the War Machine Armor into the Iron Patriot Armor just made sense. Rhodes excels
as Iron Patriot, but clearly misses his old suit. Heck, his password for all
military stuff is “WarMachineRox.” The Iron Patriot suit is stolen by AIM and
used by villain Eric Savin as part of a plot to kidnap the president. Rhodes
recovers the armor a short time later, and gets the president to safety while
Tony and his House Party Protocol took care of AIM.
He appears briefly in Avengers: Age of Ultron. He’s one over
various party guests at a victory party. He sees something of a Heroic divide
between himself and the Avengers, highlighted by a story he tells about dumping
a tank on some dictators door step that “kills” with most folks, but leaves
guys like Thor going “and?” He tries to help Tony lift Thor’s hammer as the
party winds down, but to little effect. He returns in the film’s climax, in
full War Machine armor, and helps the Avengers fight off the horde of Ultron
Drones. He’s really cheerful at “having a great story” when all is said and
done. War Machine joins the Avengers at the end of the movie.
Rhodes will return for Captain America: Civil War. If it stays
in line with the comic story, Rhodes will side with Tony and the US government
against Captain America and his team. We’ll just have to wait and see.
I enjoy War Machine. Rhodes’ life
as a superhero has been bumpy, but he is a much better character for it. He
started off as a sub, a guy to be Iron Man when Tony Stark was otherwise
occupied, but has since grown to a character that is just as popular as the
original armored superhero. I’d say most folks would recognize his silver suit
as much as they would Tony’s red and gold. Like the Winter Soldier and Captain
Atom, one of his most defined character traits is his loyalty. Which does have its
problems, as some times his loyalty to Tony and the US government are in
conflict. Don’t envy him when those situations pop up. His codename is
aggressive, but Rhodes seems to do his best work watching someone’s back, be it
Tony, or another Avenger. Like Captain America, he’s first and foremost a
guardian. Another metal sentinel to protect the US and the world from threats.
He’s the other invincible armored hero, the always prepared War Machine.
http://marvel-movies.wikia.com/wiki/File:Iron-man-2-war-machine-jim-rhodes-rhodey-cropped-575x428.jpg
http://vignette3.wikia.nocookie.net/avengersearthsmightiestheroes/images/a/a9/2288003-wm.png/revision/latest?cb=20121203030227
http://vignette2.wikia.nocookie.net/marvelcinematicuniverse/images/0/08/IP1.jpg/revision/latest?cb=20130428180952
http://vignette3.wikia.nocookie.net/marvel-cinematic-universe/images/6/6a/War_Machine.png/revision/latest?cb=20120602140720
http://img4.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb20090110011051/marveldatabase/images/c/c2/War_Machine_Vol_2_1.jpg
http://img4.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb20090110011051/marveldatabase/images/c/c2/War_Machine_Vol_2_1.jpg