Iron Man Action Figures Kansas City MO

The original Iron Man was drawn up in 1963 as your average, metallic American freedom fighter. But the new movie's styles have taken hints from robotics portrayed in Japanese anime, reminiscent of vintage tin toys from the 1950s.

Zoom
(816) 842-8697
2450 Grand Blvd Ste 213
Kansas City, MO
Doc Mikes 2 Rail O Scale Trains
(913) 596-2626
1400 Union Ave
Kansas City, MO
Brookside Toy & Science
(816) 523-4501
330 W 63rd St
Kansas City, MO
Toys R Us
(816) 468-0808
8330 N Broadway St
Kansas City, MO
Hobbytown Usa
(816) 459-9590
6265 N Oak Trfy
Kansas City, MO
Bloom
(816) 842-5666
2450 Grand Blvd Ste 213
Kansas City, MO
Brookside Toy & Science
(816) 523-4501
330 W 63rd St
Kansas City, MO
The Learning Tree
(913) 385-1234
4004 W 83rd St
Prairie Village, KS
Toys R Us
(816) 468-0808
8330 N Broadway St
Kansas City, MO
Funcoland
(816) 453-7766
Creekwood Commons Shopping Ctr
Gladstone, MO
Data Provided by:
 

Iron Man Renewing Vintage Robot Image

iron man Iron Man Renewing Vintage Robot Imageironman2 200x300 Iron Man Renewing Vintage Robot Image

Last week’s popular release of Iron Man in theaters has galvanized our fascination with robots and cybernetics. The original Iron Man was drawn up in 1963 as your average, metallic American freedom fighter. But the new movie’s styles have taken hints from robotics portrayed in Japanese anime, reminiscent of vintage tin toys from the 1950s.

The distinctive styling is really an example of American and Japanese cross-pollination. As C.B. Cebulski reports in Anime fringe :

Keron Grant is the new penciler of Iron Man for Marvel, and he was asked to redesign Iron Man’s armor. When Keron met Kia Asamiya at Wizard World, he confessed to Kia that for inspiration for Iron Man’s new armor, he looked at Kia’s character from Steam Detectives, the Emperor of Steam. Kia just looked at Keron and rather matter-of-factly replied, ‘That’s cool! When I was designing the Emperor of Steam, I looked at Iron Man for my inspiration.”

There is just something satisfying about armor and robots made of real metal… is it nostalgia for when the whole world wasn’t seemingly encased in plastic?...

Click here to read the rest of the article from Toy Reviews and News