What is Tony Stark injecting into himself in Iron Man 3?












21















In the beginning of Iron Man 3 (2013), Tony injects something into his forearm. He then attempts to get his suit to come to him. After it fails, he licks his arm, rubs it and tries again, at which time it works.



Is it ever explained, either in the movie or the comic book source, what he's injecting, and why he needed to rub it to get it to work?










share|improve this question




















  • 2





    There is multiple rumor all over the place that he injected himself with a fixed, stabilized Extremis virus, but none of these are confirmed. Just rumors that SEEM to fit the bill.

    – MissouriSpartan
    yesterday











  • I always assumed it was a vague reference to extremis. the other villains/lackeys are also test subjects of what appears to be extremis.

    – Chris Hayes
    yesterday
















21















In the beginning of Iron Man 3 (2013), Tony injects something into his forearm. He then attempts to get his suit to come to him. After it fails, he licks his arm, rubs it and tries again, at which time it works.



Is it ever explained, either in the movie or the comic book source, what he's injecting, and why he needed to rub it to get it to work?










share|improve this question




















  • 2





    There is multiple rumor all over the place that he injected himself with a fixed, stabilized Extremis virus, but none of these are confirmed. Just rumors that SEEM to fit the bill.

    – MissouriSpartan
    yesterday











  • I always assumed it was a vague reference to extremis. the other villains/lackeys are also test subjects of what appears to be extremis.

    – Chris Hayes
    yesterday














21












21








21








In the beginning of Iron Man 3 (2013), Tony injects something into his forearm. He then attempts to get his suit to come to him. After it fails, he licks his arm, rubs it and tries again, at which time it works.



Is it ever explained, either in the movie or the comic book source, what he's injecting, and why he needed to rub it to get it to work?










share|improve this question
















In the beginning of Iron Man 3 (2013), Tony injects something into his forearm. He then attempts to get his suit to come to him. After it fails, he licks his arm, rubs it and tries again, at which time it works.



Is it ever explained, either in the movie or the comic book source, what he's injecting, and why he needed to rub it to get it to work?







plot-explanation marvel-cinematic-universe iron-man-3






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edited yesterday









Jenayah

1,567621




1,567621










asked yesterday









Johnny BonesJohnny Bones

39.5k15106202




39.5k15106202








  • 2





    There is multiple rumor all over the place that he injected himself with a fixed, stabilized Extremis virus, but none of these are confirmed. Just rumors that SEEM to fit the bill.

    – MissouriSpartan
    yesterday











  • I always assumed it was a vague reference to extremis. the other villains/lackeys are also test subjects of what appears to be extremis.

    – Chris Hayes
    yesterday














  • 2





    There is multiple rumor all over the place that he injected himself with a fixed, stabilized Extremis virus, but none of these are confirmed. Just rumors that SEEM to fit the bill.

    – MissouriSpartan
    yesterday











  • I always assumed it was a vague reference to extremis. the other villains/lackeys are also test subjects of what appears to be extremis.

    – Chris Hayes
    yesterday








2




2





There is multiple rumor all over the place that he injected himself with a fixed, stabilized Extremis virus, but none of these are confirmed. Just rumors that SEEM to fit the bill.

– MissouriSpartan
yesterday





There is multiple rumor all over the place that he injected himself with a fixed, stabilized Extremis virus, but none of these are confirmed. Just rumors that SEEM to fit the bill.

– MissouriSpartan
yesterday













I always assumed it was a vague reference to extremis. the other villains/lackeys are also test subjects of what appears to be extremis.

– Chris Hayes
yesterday





I always assumed it was a vague reference to extremis. the other villains/lackeys are also test subjects of what appears to be extremis.

– Chris Hayes
yesterday










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















29














Iron Man is constantly tinkering, and each suit evolution gets a new name - Mark 1 was built in the cave in the mountains, Mark 2 was built in his lab and has tech to deal with the icing problem etc.



In this scene, he is developing the Mark 42 suit (https://ironman.fandom.com/wiki/Mark_42).



The suit can arrive in multiple pieces that can slot on individually, "tuned" to Tony, and even obey remote commands originating from Tony, and from great ranges - beyond just an AI being controlled by Jarvis. The injections he is putting into himself seem to be part of that tech.



It's either a substance or a chip that is being injected into his forearm, to interface with his body - likely a neural interface.



Consider the following results:




  • His initial gesture/command does not work as expected.

  • After tapping/awakening his arm, it does work. This could be a direct result on the substance/chip itself, in the same vein as slapping a TV to get it to work, or slapping his forearm, designed to stimulate neural activity.

  • When he is asleep, and having nightmares about New York, he manages to "call" to the suit in his sleep - a direct connection to his brain activity.

  • The suit similarly "called" when he is imprisoned, from across the country.

  • In almost all of these instances, we are visibly shown a physical gesture (the sleep one not so much, but we are cutting in and out of flashback).






share|improve this answer
























  • This seems most likely. I had heard that it was a variation of Extremis, but some type of neural interface seems more likely for the reasons you explained.

    – Johnny Bones
    11 hours ago






  • 7





    "in the same vein" I see what you did there...

    – void_ptr
    8 hours ago











  • "slapping a TV to get it to work" - good memories... don't try that with a 4K flatscreen though.

    – Mathieu Guindon
    4 hours ago



















19














What Tony is injecting are the Subcutaneous Implants for controlling Mark 42, otherwise known as:




JARVIS: Mark 42, inbound.
Tony: I'll be damned. The prodigal son returns.




Source: Springfield! Springfield@ - Iron Man 3




The Mark 42 also features the unique ability to control itself when Tony Stark isn't inside his suit or when Mark 42 is A.I-deactivated. The Subcutaneous Implant in Tony's forearms allow the armor to communicate with his nervous system helping the armor follow his commands. Any action done by Stark is imitated by Mark 42 if he connects with it.




Source: Mark 42 > Armor Capabilities > Subcutaneous Implants



we see the Mark 42 in the workshop at the start of the film and after injecting himself we see him try to put on the suit.



where the wiki says it imitates tony's actions we know it does more than that as Tony used it to fool Pepper that he was wearing the suit sitting in the lounge when really he was still in his workshop working on stuff and when they are sleeping the Mark 42 enters the room and looks as if it's about to attack Pepper before Tony takes up, commands it to power down and then does a sorta sword slash motion which causes it to fall into the individual components.



so despite The Subcutaneous Implant being in his arms it seems to also be tied mentally to him and can react to certain moves by Tony (which as the sword cutting move he did in bed)




Is it ever explained, either in the movie or the comic book source, what he's injecting, and why he needed to rub it to get it to work?




i'm not sure where it's referenced to outside the wiki but according to This Quora question on the same topic




[the Subcutaneous Implants is] the equivalent of what "Extremis" was in the comic storyline.




so chances are the comic fans worked this out



In regards to the rubbing, he's more cleaning his arm of from what i assume is blood after the injections, as for the sorta tapping/slapping either it's either




  1. sorta moving the implant(s) around to spread them out a bit more

  2. he's trying to mask the pain. we see him saying "owe" when J.A.R.V.I.S is counting and J.A.R.V.I.S stopped counting at 47 and i think Tony does 2 more. so he injected himself like 49 times and they don't seem painless.






share|improve this answer































    7














    While the “technical” in-universe answer is he’s injecting subcutaneous implants to control the Mark42 armor, Stark performs many technical tasks they don’t show us on screen. The entire Iron Man 3 storyline is about addiction - Tony is addicted to his legion of suits, all the baddies are addicted to Extremis... Showing Tony “shooting up”, basically, is a very direct filmmaker statement to that effect. He’d be doing the same thing if he were shooting up (you slap to get a vein, and lick for a very crude sterilization).



    See The Addiction Of Tony Stark, Why Won’t Anybody Help Him or any other number of analyses of the movie for more in-depth on this.






    share|improve this answer































      1














      I didn't see the movie since months but from memory he injects the tracking chips that define the anchor points of his mobile armor when he calls it remotely. So, you know, the crotch part doesn't anchor itself on his face by accident.



      I guess he licks/rubs it because the chip didn't align properly on the first try and he does this to put it in the right place.






      share|improve this answer
























      • He "projects" the suit onto Pepper and then later Kilian, so it seems unlikely that anchor points are required on the person. Or at least, it'd be a plothole if it was.

        – DariM
        yesterday











      • @DariM Nice catch, I didn't remember that. My guess is that Tony had programmed a failsafe mode just for this kind of case (he makes a specific gesture at this moment to save Pepper). The chips may be there to protect Tony when he has anxiety attacks or if he fears to faint at the wrong time. I remember the theme of Iron Man 3 being like "Tony uses his armor like a coccoon and must learn to grow out of it".

        – kikirex
        yesterday











      • It's entirely plausible it was just forgotten detail. After all, Pepper just randomly happens to be perfectly capable of using the hand repulsor and the suit, even without Jarvis, or any shown prior experience.

        – DariM
        yesterday





















      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes








      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      29














      Iron Man is constantly tinkering, and each suit evolution gets a new name - Mark 1 was built in the cave in the mountains, Mark 2 was built in his lab and has tech to deal with the icing problem etc.



      In this scene, he is developing the Mark 42 suit (https://ironman.fandom.com/wiki/Mark_42).



      The suit can arrive in multiple pieces that can slot on individually, "tuned" to Tony, and even obey remote commands originating from Tony, and from great ranges - beyond just an AI being controlled by Jarvis. The injections he is putting into himself seem to be part of that tech.



      It's either a substance or a chip that is being injected into his forearm, to interface with his body - likely a neural interface.



      Consider the following results:




      • His initial gesture/command does not work as expected.

      • After tapping/awakening his arm, it does work. This could be a direct result on the substance/chip itself, in the same vein as slapping a TV to get it to work, or slapping his forearm, designed to stimulate neural activity.

      • When he is asleep, and having nightmares about New York, he manages to "call" to the suit in his sleep - a direct connection to his brain activity.

      • The suit similarly "called" when he is imprisoned, from across the country.

      • In almost all of these instances, we are visibly shown a physical gesture (the sleep one not so much, but we are cutting in and out of flashback).






      share|improve this answer
























      • This seems most likely. I had heard that it was a variation of Extremis, but some type of neural interface seems more likely for the reasons you explained.

        – Johnny Bones
        11 hours ago






      • 7





        "in the same vein" I see what you did there...

        – void_ptr
        8 hours ago











      • "slapping a TV to get it to work" - good memories... don't try that with a 4K flatscreen though.

        – Mathieu Guindon
        4 hours ago
















      29














      Iron Man is constantly tinkering, and each suit evolution gets a new name - Mark 1 was built in the cave in the mountains, Mark 2 was built in his lab and has tech to deal with the icing problem etc.



      In this scene, he is developing the Mark 42 suit (https://ironman.fandom.com/wiki/Mark_42).



      The suit can arrive in multiple pieces that can slot on individually, "tuned" to Tony, and even obey remote commands originating from Tony, and from great ranges - beyond just an AI being controlled by Jarvis. The injections he is putting into himself seem to be part of that tech.



      It's either a substance or a chip that is being injected into his forearm, to interface with his body - likely a neural interface.



      Consider the following results:




      • His initial gesture/command does not work as expected.

      • After tapping/awakening his arm, it does work. This could be a direct result on the substance/chip itself, in the same vein as slapping a TV to get it to work, or slapping his forearm, designed to stimulate neural activity.

      • When he is asleep, and having nightmares about New York, he manages to "call" to the suit in his sleep - a direct connection to his brain activity.

      • The suit similarly "called" when he is imprisoned, from across the country.

      • In almost all of these instances, we are visibly shown a physical gesture (the sleep one not so much, but we are cutting in and out of flashback).






      share|improve this answer
























      • This seems most likely. I had heard that it was a variation of Extremis, but some type of neural interface seems more likely for the reasons you explained.

        – Johnny Bones
        11 hours ago






      • 7





        "in the same vein" I see what you did there...

        – void_ptr
        8 hours ago











      • "slapping a TV to get it to work" - good memories... don't try that with a 4K flatscreen though.

        – Mathieu Guindon
        4 hours ago














      29












      29








      29







      Iron Man is constantly tinkering, and each suit evolution gets a new name - Mark 1 was built in the cave in the mountains, Mark 2 was built in his lab and has tech to deal with the icing problem etc.



      In this scene, he is developing the Mark 42 suit (https://ironman.fandom.com/wiki/Mark_42).



      The suit can arrive in multiple pieces that can slot on individually, "tuned" to Tony, and even obey remote commands originating from Tony, and from great ranges - beyond just an AI being controlled by Jarvis. The injections he is putting into himself seem to be part of that tech.



      It's either a substance or a chip that is being injected into his forearm, to interface with his body - likely a neural interface.



      Consider the following results:




      • His initial gesture/command does not work as expected.

      • After tapping/awakening his arm, it does work. This could be a direct result on the substance/chip itself, in the same vein as slapping a TV to get it to work, or slapping his forearm, designed to stimulate neural activity.

      • When he is asleep, and having nightmares about New York, he manages to "call" to the suit in his sleep - a direct connection to his brain activity.

      • The suit similarly "called" when he is imprisoned, from across the country.

      • In almost all of these instances, we are visibly shown a physical gesture (the sleep one not so much, but we are cutting in and out of flashback).






      share|improve this answer













      Iron Man is constantly tinkering, and each suit evolution gets a new name - Mark 1 was built in the cave in the mountains, Mark 2 was built in his lab and has tech to deal with the icing problem etc.



      In this scene, he is developing the Mark 42 suit (https://ironman.fandom.com/wiki/Mark_42).



      The suit can arrive in multiple pieces that can slot on individually, "tuned" to Tony, and even obey remote commands originating from Tony, and from great ranges - beyond just an AI being controlled by Jarvis. The injections he is putting into himself seem to be part of that tech.



      It's either a substance or a chip that is being injected into his forearm, to interface with his body - likely a neural interface.



      Consider the following results:




      • His initial gesture/command does not work as expected.

      • After tapping/awakening his arm, it does work. This could be a direct result on the substance/chip itself, in the same vein as slapping a TV to get it to work, or slapping his forearm, designed to stimulate neural activity.

      • When he is asleep, and having nightmares about New York, he manages to "call" to the suit in his sleep - a direct connection to his brain activity.

      • The suit similarly "called" when he is imprisoned, from across the country.

      • In almost all of these instances, we are visibly shown a physical gesture (the sleep one not so much, but we are cutting in and out of flashback).







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered yesterday









      DariMDariM

      68047




      68047













      • This seems most likely. I had heard that it was a variation of Extremis, but some type of neural interface seems more likely for the reasons you explained.

        – Johnny Bones
        11 hours ago






      • 7





        "in the same vein" I see what you did there...

        – void_ptr
        8 hours ago











      • "slapping a TV to get it to work" - good memories... don't try that with a 4K flatscreen though.

        – Mathieu Guindon
        4 hours ago



















      • This seems most likely. I had heard that it was a variation of Extremis, but some type of neural interface seems more likely for the reasons you explained.

        – Johnny Bones
        11 hours ago






      • 7





        "in the same vein" I see what you did there...

        – void_ptr
        8 hours ago











      • "slapping a TV to get it to work" - good memories... don't try that with a 4K flatscreen though.

        – Mathieu Guindon
        4 hours ago

















      This seems most likely. I had heard that it was a variation of Extremis, but some type of neural interface seems more likely for the reasons you explained.

      – Johnny Bones
      11 hours ago





      This seems most likely. I had heard that it was a variation of Extremis, but some type of neural interface seems more likely for the reasons you explained.

      – Johnny Bones
      11 hours ago




      7




      7





      "in the same vein" I see what you did there...

      – void_ptr
      8 hours ago





      "in the same vein" I see what you did there...

      – void_ptr
      8 hours ago













      "slapping a TV to get it to work" - good memories... don't try that with a 4K flatscreen though.

      – Mathieu Guindon
      4 hours ago





      "slapping a TV to get it to work" - good memories... don't try that with a 4K flatscreen though.

      – Mathieu Guindon
      4 hours ago











      19














      What Tony is injecting are the Subcutaneous Implants for controlling Mark 42, otherwise known as:




      JARVIS: Mark 42, inbound.
      Tony: I'll be damned. The prodigal son returns.




      Source: Springfield! Springfield@ - Iron Man 3




      The Mark 42 also features the unique ability to control itself when Tony Stark isn't inside his suit or when Mark 42 is A.I-deactivated. The Subcutaneous Implant in Tony's forearms allow the armor to communicate with his nervous system helping the armor follow his commands. Any action done by Stark is imitated by Mark 42 if he connects with it.




      Source: Mark 42 > Armor Capabilities > Subcutaneous Implants



      we see the Mark 42 in the workshop at the start of the film and after injecting himself we see him try to put on the suit.



      where the wiki says it imitates tony's actions we know it does more than that as Tony used it to fool Pepper that he was wearing the suit sitting in the lounge when really he was still in his workshop working on stuff and when they are sleeping the Mark 42 enters the room and looks as if it's about to attack Pepper before Tony takes up, commands it to power down and then does a sorta sword slash motion which causes it to fall into the individual components.



      so despite The Subcutaneous Implant being in his arms it seems to also be tied mentally to him and can react to certain moves by Tony (which as the sword cutting move he did in bed)




      Is it ever explained, either in the movie or the comic book source, what he's injecting, and why he needed to rub it to get it to work?




      i'm not sure where it's referenced to outside the wiki but according to This Quora question on the same topic




      [the Subcutaneous Implants is] the equivalent of what "Extremis" was in the comic storyline.




      so chances are the comic fans worked this out



      In regards to the rubbing, he's more cleaning his arm of from what i assume is blood after the injections, as for the sorta tapping/slapping either it's either




      1. sorta moving the implant(s) around to spread them out a bit more

      2. he's trying to mask the pain. we see him saying "owe" when J.A.R.V.I.S is counting and J.A.R.V.I.S stopped counting at 47 and i think Tony does 2 more. so he injected himself like 49 times and they don't seem painless.






      share|improve this answer




























        19














        What Tony is injecting are the Subcutaneous Implants for controlling Mark 42, otherwise known as:




        JARVIS: Mark 42, inbound.
        Tony: I'll be damned. The prodigal son returns.




        Source: Springfield! Springfield@ - Iron Man 3




        The Mark 42 also features the unique ability to control itself when Tony Stark isn't inside his suit or when Mark 42 is A.I-deactivated. The Subcutaneous Implant in Tony's forearms allow the armor to communicate with his nervous system helping the armor follow his commands. Any action done by Stark is imitated by Mark 42 if he connects with it.




        Source: Mark 42 > Armor Capabilities > Subcutaneous Implants



        we see the Mark 42 in the workshop at the start of the film and after injecting himself we see him try to put on the suit.



        where the wiki says it imitates tony's actions we know it does more than that as Tony used it to fool Pepper that he was wearing the suit sitting in the lounge when really he was still in his workshop working on stuff and when they are sleeping the Mark 42 enters the room and looks as if it's about to attack Pepper before Tony takes up, commands it to power down and then does a sorta sword slash motion which causes it to fall into the individual components.



        so despite The Subcutaneous Implant being in his arms it seems to also be tied mentally to him and can react to certain moves by Tony (which as the sword cutting move he did in bed)




        Is it ever explained, either in the movie or the comic book source, what he's injecting, and why he needed to rub it to get it to work?




        i'm not sure where it's referenced to outside the wiki but according to This Quora question on the same topic




        [the Subcutaneous Implants is] the equivalent of what "Extremis" was in the comic storyline.




        so chances are the comic fans worked this out



        In regards to the rubbing, he's more cleaning his arm of from what i assume is blood after the injections, as for the sorta tapping/slapping either it's either




        1. sorta moving the implant(s) around to spread them out a bit more

        2. he's trying to mask the pain. we see him saying "owe" when J.A.R.V.I.S is counting and J.A.R.V.I.S stopped counting at 47 and i think Tony does 2 more. so he injected himself like 49 times and they don't seem painless.






        share|improve this answer


























          19












          19








          19







          What Tony is injecting are the Subcutaneous Implants for controlling Mark 42, otherwise known as:




          JARVIS: Mark 42, inbound.
          Tony: I'll be damned. The prodigal son returns.




          Source: Springfield! Springfield@ - Iron Man 3




          The Mark 42 also features the unique ability to control itself when Tony Stark isn't inside his suit or when Mark 42 is A.I-deactivated. The Subcutaneous Implant in Tony's forearms allow the armor to communicate with his nervous system helping the armor follow his commands. Any action done by Stark is imitated by Mark 42 if he connects with it.




          Source: Mark 42 > Armor Capabilities > Subcutaneous Implants



          we see the Mark 42 in the workshop at the start of the film and after injecting himself we see him try to put on the suit.



          where the wiki says it imitates tony's actions we know it does more than that as Tony used it to fool Pepper that he was wearing the suit sitting in the lounge when really he was still in his workshop working on stuff and when they are sleeping the Mark 42 enters the room and looks as if it's about to attack Pepper before Tony takes up, commands it to power down and then does a sorta sword slash motion which causes it to fall into the individual components.



          so despite The Subcutaneous Implant being in his arms it seems to also be tied mentally to him and can react to certain moves by Tony (which as the sword cutting move he did in bed)




          Is it ever explained, either in the movie or the comic book source, what he's injecting, and why he needed to rub it to get it to work?




          i'm not sure where it's referenced to outside the wiki but according to This Quora question on the same topic




          [the Subcutaneous Implants is] the equivalent of what "Extremis" was in the comic storyline.




          so chances are the comic fans worked this out



          In regards to the rubbing, he's more cleaning his arm of from what i assume is blood after the injections, as for the sorta tapping/slapping either it's either




          1. sorta moving the implant(s) around to spread them out a bit more

          2. he's trying to mask the pain. we see him saying "owe" when J.A.R.V.I.S is counting and J.A.R.V.I.S stopped counting at 47 and i think Tony does 2 more. so he injected himself like 49 times and they don't seem painless.






          share|improve this answer













          What Tony is injecting are the Subcutaneous Implants for controlling Mark 42, otherwise known as:




          JARVIS: Mark 42, inbound.
          Tony: I'll be damned. The prodigal son returns.




          Source: Springfield! Springfield@ - Iron Man 3




          The Mark 42 also features the unique ability to control itself when Tony Stark isn't inside his suit or when Mark 42 is A.I-deactivated. The Subcutaneous Implant in Tony's forearms allow the armor to communicate with his nervous system helping the armor follow his commands. Any action done by Stark is imitated by Mark 42 if he connects with it.




          Source: Mark 42 > Armor Capabilities > Subcutaneous Implants



          we see the Mark 42 in the workshop at the start of the film and after injecting himself we see him try to put on the suit.



          where the wiki says it imitates tony's actions we know it does more than that as Tony used it to fool Pepper that he was wearing the suit sitting in the lounge when really he was still in his workshop working on stuff and when they are sleeping the Mark 42 enters the room and looks as if it's about to attack Pepper before Tony takes up, commands it to power down and then does a sorta sword slash motion which causes it to fall into the individual components.



          so despite The Subcutaneous Implant being in his arms it seems to also be tied mentally to him and can react to certain moves by Tony (which as the sword cutting move he did in bed)




          Is it ever explained, either in the movie or the comic book source, what he's injecting, and why he needed to rub it to get it to work?




          i'm not sure where it's referenced to outside the wiki but according to This Quora question on the same topic




          [the Subcutaneous Implants is] the equivalent of what "Extremis" was in the comic storyline.




          so chances are the comic fans worked this out



          In regards to the rubbing, he's more cleaning his arm of from what i assume is blood after the injections, as for the sorta tapping/slapping either it's either




          1. sorta moving the implant(s) around to spread them out a bit more

          2. he's trying to mask the pain. we see him saying "owe" when J.A.R.V.I.S is counting and J.A.R.V.I.S stopped counting at 47 and i think Tony does 2 more. so he injected himself like 49 times and they don't seem painless.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered yesterday









          Memor-XMemor-X

          5,44453559




          5,44453559























              7














              While the “technical” in-universe answer is he’s injecting subcutaneous implants to control the Mark42 armor, Stark performs many technical tasks they don’t show us on screen. The entire Iron Man 3 storyline is about addiction - Tony is addicted to his legion of suits, all the baddies are addicted to Extremis... Showing Tony “shooting up”, basically, is a very direct filmmaker statement to that effect. He’d be doing the same thing if he were shooting up (you slap to get a vein, and lick for a very crude sterilization).



              See The Addiction Of Tony Stark, Why Won’t Anybody Help Him or any other number of analyses of the movie for more in-depth on this.






              share|improve this answer




























                7














                While the “technical” in-universe answer is he’s injecting subcutaneous implants to control the Mark42 armor, Stark performs many technical tasks they don’t show us on screen. The entire Iron Man 3 storyline is about addiction - Tony is addicted to his legion of suits, all the baddies are addicted to Extremis... Showing Tony “shooting up”, basically, is a very direct filmmaker statement to that effect. He’d be doing the same thing if he were shooting up (you slap to get a vein, and lick for a very crude sterilization).



                See The Addiction Of Tony Stark, Why Won’t Anybody Help Him or any other number of analyses of the movie for more in-depth on this.






                share|improve this answer


























                  7












                  7








                  7







                  While the “technical” in-universe answer is he’s injecting subcutaneous implants to control the Mark42 armor, Stark performs many technical tasks they don’t show us on screen. The entire Iron Man 3 storyline is about addiction - Tony is addicted to his legion of suits, all the baddies are addicted to Extremis... Showing Tony “shooting up”, basically, is a very direct filmmaker statement to that effect. He’d be doing the same thing if he were shooting up (you slap to get a vein, and lick for a very crude sterilization).



                  See The Addiction Of Tony Stark, Why Won’t Anybody Help Him or any other number of analyses of the movie for more in-depth on this.






                  share|improve this answer













                  While the “technical” in-universe answer is he’s injecting subcutaneous implants to control the Mark42 armor, Stark performs many technical tasks they don’t show us on screen. The entire Iron Man 3 storyline is about addiction - Tony is addicted to his legion of suits, all the baddies are addicted to Extremis... Showing Tony “shooting up”, basically, is a very direct filmmaker statement to that effect. He’d be doing the same thing if he were shooting up (you slap to get a vein, and lick for a very crude sterilization).



                  See The Addiction Of Tony Stark, Why Won’t Anybody Help Him or any other number of analyses of the movie for more in-depth on this.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 12 hours ago









                  mxyzplkmxyzplk

                  22318




                  22318























                      1














                      I didn't see the movie since months but from memory he injects the tracking chips that define the anchor points of his mobile armor when he calls it remotely. So, you know, the crotch part doesn't anchor itself on his face by accident.



                      I guess he licks/rubs it because the chip didn't align properly on the first try and he does this to put it in the right place.






                      share|improve this answer
























                      • He "projects" the suit onto Pepper and then later Kilian, so it seems unlikely that anchor points are required on the person. Or at least, it'd be a plothole if it was.

                        – DariM
                        yesterday











                      • @DariM Nice catch, I didn't remember that. My guess is that Tony had programmed a failsafe mode just for this kind of case (he makes a specific gesture at this moment to save Pepper). The chips may be there to protect Tony when he has anxiety attacks or if he fears to faint at the wrong time. I remember the theme of Iron Man 3 being like "Tony uses his armor like a coccoon and must learn to grow out of it".

                        – kikirex
                        yesterday











                      • It's entirely plausible it was just forgotten detail. After all, Pepper just randomly happens to be perfectly capable of using the hand repulsor and the suit, even without Jarvis, or any shown prior experience.

                        – DariM
                        yesterday


















                      1














                      I didn't see the movie since months but from memory he injects the tracking chips that define the anchor points of his mobile armor when he calls it remotely. So, you know, the crotch part doesn't anchor itself on his face by accident.



                      I guess he licks/rubs it because the chip didn't align properly on the first try and he does this to put it in the right place.






                      share|improve this answer
























                      • He "projects" the suit onto Pepper and then later Kilian, so it seems unlikely that anchor points are required on the person. Or at least, it'd be a plothole if it was.

                        – DariM
                        yesterday











                      • @DariM Nice catch, I didn't remember that. My guess is that Tony had programmed a failsafe mode just for this kind of case (he makes a specific gesture at this moment to save Pepper). The chips may be there to protect Tony when he has anxiety attacks or if he fears to faint at the wrong time. I remember the theme of Iron Man 3 being like "Tony uses his armor like a coccoon and must learn to grow out of it".

                        – kikirex
                        yesterday











                      • It's entirely plausible it was just forgotten detail. After all, Pepper just randomly happens to be perfectly capable of using the hand repulsor and the suit, even without Jarvis, or any shown prior experience.

                        – DariM
                        yesterday
















                      1












                      1








                      1







                      I didn't see the movie since months but from memory he injects the tracking chips that define the anchor points of his mobile armor when he calls it remotely. So, you know, the crotch part doesn't anchor itself on his face by accident.



                      I guess he licks/rubs it because the chip didn't align properly on the first try and he does this to put it in the right place.






                      share|improve this answer













                      I didn't see the movie since months but from memory he injects the tracking chips that define the anchor points of his mobile armor when he calls it remotely. So, you know, the crotch part doesn't anchor itself on his face by accident.



                      I guess he licks/rubs it because the chip didn't align properly on the first try and he does this to put it in the right place.







                      share|improve this answer












                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer










                      answered yesterday









                      kikirexkikirex

                      25015




                      25015













                      • He "projects" the suit onto Pepper and then later Kilian, so it seems unlikely that anchor points are required on the person. Or at least, it'd be a plothole if it was.

                        – DariM
                        yesterday











                      • @DariM Nice catch, I didn't remember that. My guess is that Tony had programmed a failsafe mode just for this kind of case (he makes a specific gesture at this moment to save Pepper). The chips may be there to protect Tony when he has anxiety attacks or if he fears to faint at the wrong time. I remember the theme of Iron Man 3 being like "Tony uses his armor like a coccoon and must learn to grow out of it".

                        – kikirex
                        yesterday











                      • It's entirely plausible it was just forgotten detail. After all, Pepper just randomly happens to be perfectly capable of using the hand repulsor and the suit, even without Jarvis, or any shown prior experience.

                        – DariM
                        yesterday





















                      • He "projects" the suit onto Pepper and then later Kilian, so it seems unlikely that anchor points are required on the person. Or at least, it'd be a plothole if it was.

                        – DariM
                        yesterday











                      • @DariM Nice catch, I didn't remember that. My guess is that Tony had programmed a failsafe mode just for this kind of case (he makes a specific gesture at this moment to save Pepper). The chips may be there to protect Tony when he has anxiety attacks or if he fears to faint at the wrong time. I remember the theme of Iron Man 3 being like "Tony uses his armor like a coccoon and must learn to grow out of it".

                        – kikirex
                        yesterday











                      • It's entirely plausible it was just forgotten detail. After all, Pepper just randomly happens to be perfectly capable of using the hand repulsor and the suit, even without Jarvis, or any shown prior experience.

                        – DariM
                        yesterday



















                      He "projects" the suit onto Pepper and then later Kilian, so it seems unlikely that anchor points are required on the person. Or at least, it'd be a plothole if it was.

                      – DariM
                      yesterday





                      He "projects" the suit onto Pepper and then later Kilian, so it seems unlikely that anchor points are required on the person. Or at least, it'd be a plothole if it was.

                      – DariM
                      yesterday













                      @DariM Nice catch, I didn't remember that. My guess is that Tony had programmed a failsafe mode just for this kind of case (he makes a specific gesture at this moment to save Pepper). The chips may be there to protect Tony when he has anxiety attacks or if he fears to faint at the wrong time. I remember the theme of Iron Man 3 being like "Tony uses his armor like a coccoon and must learn to grow out of it".

                      – kikirex
                      yesterday





                      @DariM Nice catch, I didn't remember that. My guess is that Tony had programmed a failsafe mode just for this kind of case (he makes a specific gesture at this moment to save Pepper). The chips may be there to protect Tony when he has anxiety attacks or if he fears to faint at the wrong time. I remember the theme of Iron Man 3 being like "Tony uses his armor like a coccoon and must learn to grow out of it".

                      – kikirex
                      yesterday













                      It's entirely plausible it was just forgotten detail. After all, Pepper just randomly happens to be perfectly capable of using the hand repulsor and the suit, even without Jarvis, or any shown prior experience.

                      – DariM
                      yesterday







                      It's entirely plausible it was just forgotten detail. After all, Pepper just randomly happens to be perfectly capable of using the hand repulsor and the suit, even without Jarvis, or any shown prior experience.

                      – DariM
                      yesterday





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