Riri Williams, the 15-year-old M.I.T. student introduced in Marvel’s Invincible Iron Man #9 who built her own set of Iron Man armor will be rocking that armor long-term. Marvel announced that, as part of their Marvel NOW! intitiative, they will be relaunching the Invincible Iron Man title with a new #1, and with Riri as its new protagonist.
Brian Michael Bendis, who’s currently writing the title, will remain on writing duty for the new series with artist Stefano Caselli joining the team. InĀ the announcement in Time Magazine, Bendis explained what inspired Riri in the first place:
One of the things that stuck with me when I was working in Chicago a couple of years ago on a TV show that didnāt end up airing was the amount of chaos and violence. And this story of this brilliant, young woman whose life was marred by tragedy that could have easily ended her lifeājust random street violenceāand went off to college was very inspiring to me. I thought that was the most modern version of a superhero or superheroine story I had ever heard. And I sat with it for awhile until I had the right character and the right place.
As weāve been slowly and hopefully very organically adding all these new characters to the Marvel Universe, it just seemed that sort of violence inspiring a young hero to rise up and act, and using her science acumen, her natural born abilities that are still raw but so ahead of where even Tony Stark was at that age, was very exciting to me.
The new Invincible Iron Man #1 will have Tony Stark passing the Iron Man mantle on to Riri after having been made aware of this brilliant girl who reverse engineered his armor in her college dorm room.Ā Bendis says that Tony is “aware that this young woman is flying by him in terms of how quickly sheās doing it. Her brain is maybe a little better than his. She looks at things from a different perspective that makes the armor unique.”
But if you think that you know how the current Civil War II event is going to end because Tony is giving up being Iron Man, Bendis assures us that we really don’t, saying, “[P]eople are going to be upset that they think they know the ending to Civil War II now than anything we just talked about. But I can tell you just because weāre hearing what weāre saying doesnāt know you mean how Civil War II ends. Weāre not telling you the end, at all.”
I have to say that I’m really excited for these two characters to meet. As many problems as Tony has, and as much of a douche as he’s capable of being, he always respects brilliance, and he always nurtures and encourages that brilliance however he can. I’m thrilled that there’s gonna be a female 15-year-old prodigy who’s going to be showing him up, and I love that his response to him getting to know her is going to basically be You’re smarter than me and you createĀ better tech. You should be the one doing the Iron Man thing.
And yes, according to Time, “Iron Man for now. Sheās still working on the name.”
The thing I’m less excited about? That this All-New, All-Different NOW! title is being created by the Same-Ol’, Not-Different-at-All suspects.
I love that we’re getting a black, female protagonist who’s a genius and a superhero. And I’ve always been of the mind that it shouldn’t ONLY be the responsibility of creators of color to create characters of color. White, male writers should be writing female characters and characters of color (and female characters of color). First, because if we wait for comics publishers to give more creators of color the opportunity to create them, we’ll apparently be waiting a long time and then there’ll never be representation on the page. And second, because if creators of color are expected to identify with white characters, then the reverse should also be true. The burden of representation should not be laid exclusively at the feet of the marginalized.
But that’s the problem, isn’t it. The fact that companies like Marvel aren’t hiring very many women or people of color at all. You can’t just hire Ta-Nehisi Coates to write Black Panther and call it a day. You can’t just have a handful of female creators on your roster and call it a day. And you certainly can’t go through your entire publishing career having never hired a black woman to write anything for you. Because Marvel hasn’t, have they? I’m genuinely asking, because I can’t think of a single black woman who’s written a comic for them, but I’m praying I’m wrong and that I’m forgetting someone super-obvious. Anyone? Bueller?
Bendis came up with this character? Great. That doesn’t mean that Marvel had to have himĀ write her solo book. On the page, Tony Stark will eventually prove to be an awesome mentor,Ā seeing himself in someone who, on paper, has nothing in common with him. However, he will look beyond her gender, race, and class, see her immense talent, and give her his job.
If only Marvel took that approach to mentorship in the comics industry. If only Marvel’s desire to reflect the real world extended off the page and into the workplace.
(via Comic Book Resources, image via Marvel)
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Published: Jul 6, 2016 12:12 pm