The head of Disney's Marvel Studios announced that there are no plans to resurrect the "Iron Man" character from the Avengers movie.
According to the American entertainment ** "Vanity Fair" reported on the 4th (local time), Marvel Studios President Kevin Feige denied the possibility of resurrecting Iron Man in the sequel to the "Avengers" series in an interview with the **.
Iron Man suffered a violent end and quit in Avengers: Endgame, released in 2019. "We're going to cherish that moment and never touch that moment again," Feige said. Director Joe Russell, who directed the film, also said that "on the last day of filming, we said goodbye in tears", adding, "Everyone is emotionally over." Director Russell said actor Robert Downey Jr., who plays Iron Man, was even hesitant to reshoot the final act at the time, saying, "We promise him that this will be the last." Co-director Anthony Russell also explained: "It was difficult for him to reshoot the scene where he said this. In this interview about Downey Jr.'s acting career, Feige said that at first Downey Jr. may not be able to play the role of Iron Man. This is because the Marvel board of directors opposed the casting of Downey Jr., who had previously spent 15 months in prison for drug problems. In order to fulfill his wish, President Fitch suggested that he put an acting test on an actor who was already in the middle of his career, and the board of directors is said to have accepted it after seeing his performance. President Feige recalled that Downey Jr. had always played a pillar role on the set of "The Avengers" and said, "We joked that Robert was the head of the acting department and everyone respected him. Downey Jr.'s wife, producer Susan Downey, said that in the past few years, her husband has flatly rejected any role similar to Iron Man Tony Stark. Susan Downey explained that the film in which he challenged herself to present a completely different character was director Christopher Nolan's Oppenheimer. His next film was the American HBO drama "The Sympathizer" directed by Park Chan-wook. Downey Jr. plays four roles in this play, which is based on the 2016 Pulitzer Prize-winning Vietnamese-American writer Nguyen Viet Thanh**. According to "Vanity Fair", the show has been completed and is expected to be released next year.