After confirming his departure from Iron Man 3 via Twitter, Jon Favreau went to Hero Complex to explain his decision in more than 140 characters.
Favreau insisted there was no bad blood between him and Marvel. He simply wants to direct The Magic Kingdom for Disney, and that’s all.
“Marvel
and I both came of age together. The years that we shared were a
pivotal experience. Kevin has a firm grasp on the many franchises and
how they all interweave and I am happy that I had the opportunity to
establish the world that these characters can now play in…. Iron Man has given me tremendous opportunities and Kevin [Feige] and I are enjoying a lot of momentum in our careers thanks to the Iron Man films. I look forward to seeing what others can do playing in the same world.”
He
explained he really wanted to play in a new world, one that would fire
him up as a filmmaker and wasn’t “loaded with built-in expectations.”
His love for Walt Disney and Disneyland runs as deep as any fondness
for superheroes: “Between the theme parks and the movies, the Disney
iconography was probably the first set of archetypes that I was exposed
to. Walt was able to expose me as a child to the full array of emotions,
including fear and sorrow. Those movies and attractions haunted my
dreams and made a deep impression on me as a child.” And now he wants to
bring them to life (the film is about a family who causes the rides to
come alive), and play with more family friendly entertainment again.
As
I said in the initial news post, I’m sad to see Favreau leave the
Marvel universe. He brought a lot to it. When the dust settles on the
superhero decade, I think we’ll find that Favreau and Christopher Nolan
defined it, for better or worse, and ushered in something massive that
will leave its mark on a generation.
Ultimately, the reasons and
gossip as to why and how don’t matter. He doesn’t want to play with Iron
Man anymore, and he’s choosing to walk away. He’s not going to bog it
down with negativity or exhaustion. You have to respect that. We’ve
often begged for directors to do the same with their respective
franchises. Good for him for having the self-awareness and self-respect
to do so.
I also suspect this is the first whisper of an
interesting and promising future for Disney. Remember, they also have
David Fincher working on 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (news reconfirmed by Disney and Favreau) and Guillermo Del Toro working on The Haunted Mansion. They have Andrew Stanton working on John Carter of Mars.
They have Pixar. I don’t think we’re looking at the same
direct-to-disposable-DVD company that we were in the past. Something
is brewing, and the fact that three top notch directors are in on its
beginnings should excite or intrigue every film fan with a pulse.
So yeah, Iron Man 3
will have a new director. We’ll bitch about it if there’s cause to. But
for now, there’s a bright side, and I’m going to be a bit cheesy and
look at it. I don’t really give a damn about any gossipy tidbit that
might leak, or what anyone (with the possible exception of Robert Downey
Jr.) thinks about Favreau leaving. It’s the past. It doesn’t matter.
We’ll look to the future, and hope everything discussed here earns our
ticket money and the time we spend geeking out about it.
JON FAVREAU SAYS IT'S NOT YOU, TONY. IT'S ME AND THE MAGIC KINGDOM. REALLY!

15 Responses to “JON FAVREAU SAYS IT'S NOT YOU, TONY. IT'S ME AND THE MAGIC KINGDOM. REALLY!”
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Cue Brett Ratner, baby!
aren't you taking this a little too seriously?
guess Favreau is this site's new Zack Snyder… at least this time he's actually talented.
I now have no interest in the third film…unless a suitably talented dude takes over. The joke about Ratner is terrifying, but I think Marvel have more taste than that (Favreau, Branagh, Whedon). Sad news. And for the record, I'm one of the few who digged Iron Man 2…and feel it gets better with each viewing. Just wait until The Avengers comes out – all its flaws will be forgiven!
Let's face it, only the first half of Iron Man 1 was any good. The end was attrocious. And Iron Man 2 was painful the whole damn ride. Get Martin Scorscese to direct Iron Man 3 and a naked Olga Kurylenko to star and I still couldn't watch it this series. / 10+ verifications is still killing the urge to contribute to Chud.
Gutter is a tool! Gutter is a tool!
I too enjoyed Iron Man 2 quite a bit, as I'm big on all the world-building stuff that they're doing to lay the groundwork for the Avengers and everything else that they have coming up. In retrospect, was it REALLY as disappointing as some people say it is? It ended up being one of the very few movies that came out this last summer (hell, this last year) that came out of the gate hot and didn't roll over and die the next week, which can't be said of a lot of the "sure things" that were supposed to be blockbusters that people claimed to be psyched for but didn't bother to see. And are the people claiming that Iron Man 2 was so bad going to take a stand and not take a chance on what comes next, like Avengers and Iron Man 3? I doubt it.
Iron Man 3 and The Magic Kingdom are both Disney properties…
Here comes the reboot with cheaper talent.
"I think we'll find that Favreau and Christopher Nolan defined it"…are you mad? Those two shouldnt even be in the same setence together…If anything, Raimi and Nolan should be credited with the superhero movie archetype
I would say Singer, Raimi, and Nolan defined this generation of comic book raping. Sorry, but Iron Man 1 kind of sucked. It sucked so much, I haven't seen the second one and I am not really in any hurry to check it out.
Good on you, Rappe! It's time we had some positive outlook on the interwebs, instead of trolling/bitching/griping/whining/trolling. You just became my favorite CHUD person.
I wasn't a HUGE fan of the first IRON MAN – I enjoyed it but as it went on it got more and more conventional and less intersting. But it was well-played and breezy fun, just a tad over-rated by some net-heads. IRON MAN 2 then was something I went in with level expectations – and I enjoyed the heck out of the sequel. For me it did everything a sequel should do – more of the characters we enjoyed from the first, bigger in scope and better action. I like FAVREAU's work and look forward to what he does next – but I for one will miss his presence on the IRON MAN 3.
As long as he at least comes back to play Happy Hogan for the third film, I'll be happy.
Just love the fact that Iron man 1 gave brown people a chance to shine. Iron man 2 gave Jon a chance to prove to everyone in the world what a screen hog and terrible director he really is.
Someone else beat me to it, but that 'whoosh' you heard was the sound of Brett Rattner racing over to the Marvel offices.