Not Many People Thought 'Iron Man' Was Going To Be A Hit: Robert Downey Jr
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The difficulties that the first 'Iron Man' movie went through have become the stuff of legend over the years, with everyone from director Jon Favreau to star Robert Downey Jr discussing how chaotic the production was and close it was to going up in flames. The team encountered problems every step of the way; even Downey's casting was an uphill task, with 'Marvel' brass balking at the suggestion of mounting such a massive movie on an actor who wasn't a proven draw at the box office and was just emerging from highly publicised personal issues.
At a recent 'Directors Guild Event', Downey recalled the tumultuous production of the first 'Iron Man' movie and likened the crew to a bunch of 'lunatics' taking over the asylum. He was asked to elaborate on comments that he had made in the past, about 'Iron Man' being a big-budget version of the kind of whacky movie that his late father, the underground filmmaker Robert Downey Sr, would have made.
He said, "First of all, not too many people were thinking 'Iron Man' was going to have an opening weekend or do much of anything, so we were a little bit left alone. I find out more every day about how that thing was financed; it was basically ready to be written off if it tanked. And so, it was the perfect situation where there were not a lot of creatively aggressive eyes on us. And by the time they gave it to us, it was like united artists, like the lunatics took over the asylum."
"I remember Jeff Bridges too, he was like, 'Man, we're doing a 200-million-dollar independent movie.' And there was just that sense that, of course, it was much more organised," he added.
'Iron Man' became a runaway critical and commercial hit.