
After proving his hand-to-hand combat skills with her biohack ninjas, she tells “Franco” (i.e., Tony Stark using advanced bio-technology to look like an aging Luke Perry) that he may be potentially valuable to her.
Tony meets face-to-face with Tomoe, aka “Techno Golem,” an Inhuman who can control technology. agent “Franco.” Biohack ninjas in Japan take him hostage in the middle of the night because their leader wants to know more about him (he saved Yukio when her illegal gambling operation was raided). Tony has gone under cover as the former Navy SEAL and S.H.I.E.L.D. What would be a total disaster in lesser hands (e.g., Jose Molina’s “point” issues in The Amazing Spider-Man) is handled well, and as a result it appears as though IIM #11 will be a must-read.īefore we move on, here is what you need to know about IIM #10: Bendis jumps around to multiple locations to keep his “Tony,” “Rhodey,” “Riri,” and “Mary Jane” plates moving long enough to get to his grand finale. Perhaps the best way to describe IIM #10 is to liken it to a man at a talent show spinning plates. There needs to be a payoff to months of running around in the shadows, and luckily it seems as though IIM #11 will be the issue to deliver. Readers have more or less been treated to a solid tale of corporate espionage, but at some point in time even the most patient readers will move on.
Brian Michael Bendis’ Invincible Iron Man has employed a cloak and dagger sensibility for ten issues now.