SPIDER-MAN: HOMECOMING Was Originally Set To Feature This MCU Character In Place Of Iron Man

SPIDER-MAN: HOMECOMING Was Originally Set To Feature This MCU Character In Place Of Iron Man

While Iron Man has always been an obvious choice to join the wall-crawler in Spider-Man: Homecoming, director Jon Watts has revealed that Tony Stark wasn't the hero he envisioned as Peter Parker's mentor.

By JoshWilding - Jun 29, 2017 04:06 AM EST
Filed Under: Homecoming
Source: io9
When Marvel teamed up with Sony to bring Spider-Man into the Marvel Cinematic Universe, the deal was that Sony would be allowed to use characters from the MCU in the wall-crawler's solo adventures in exchange for him appearing in the likes of Captain America: Civil War and Avengers: Infinity War. When presented with a list of heroes for Spider-Man: Homecoming, it's easy to see why they'd want box office draw Robert Downey Jr. as Iron Man but things could have gone much, much differently.

In a piece over at io9, director Jon Watts reveals that he initially envisioned Nick Fury as Peter Parker's mentor, something which likely won't surprise fans of both the Ultimate Spider-Man comic/cartoon.


"Interestingly, while Tony was the obvious choice, especially after the events of Civil War, Watts created images of Nick Fury as the mentor in the story in early 'mood reels' before getting the job. 'I don’t know what the situation would be,' he said. 'But that would be a person he’d want to get in trouble with.'"

Fury would have been an interesting choice but given his status in the MCU following the events of Avengers: Age of Ultron, it probably makes more sense for Marvel to reintroduce him in Avengers: Infinity War than to have him pop up out of the blue (sans S.H.I.E.L.D.) as a mentor to the young hero.

Do you think Nick Fury would have been a better choice for Spider-Man: Homecoming than Iron Man? 
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iMVuze
iMVuze - 6/29/2017, 4:19 AM
It's better this way. What would Fury's motivation be? I don't see it being smooth enough for it to be valid.
Chewtoy
Chewtoy - 6/29/2017, 5:35 AM
@iMVuze - Actually, it makes a certain sense. The Avengers Initiative was always Fury's baby, so it seems like he's long harbored a desire to find "extraordinary" people and set them towards fighting the battles that regular society never could.

The idea that he would continue to do so even after leaving the agency would show how much of a personal belief he has in that kind of thing, rather than it just being a government program he was in charge of.
ImperiousRex
ImperiousRex - 6/29/2017, 9:55 AM
@Chewtoy - Marvel already used Fury as Parker's mentor/boss in the Ultimate Spider-Man cartoon series that aired on Disney XD. It was very plausible in that show in a sort of "Avengers Academy" context. I wasn't crazy about their teenage Power Man and Iron Fist. But in latter seasons they added White Tiger III and Nova II as additional students.
Bokis
Bokis - 6/29/2017, 4:26 AM
I think Bruce Banner could show up as a professor or something in the future. Or maybe Hank Pym
Asturgis
Asturgis - 6/29/2017, 4:48 AM
@Bokis - Hank Pym? Please, let's keep the wife-beaters out of the MCU, and let's especially not ask them to mentor teenagers of any kind.
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