Mr. Stark! Christine Everheart, Vanity Fair magazine. Can I ask you a couple of questions?...
Something wrong with the clip?
Quote
Christine Everheart:
Mr. Stark! Christine Everheart, Vanity Fair magazine. Can I ask you a couple of questions?
Hogan:
[whispers to Stark]
She's cute.
Tony Stark:
[whispers to Hogan]
She's alright.
[turns around]
Tony Stark:
Hi!
Christine Everheart:
Hi.
Tony Stark:
Yeah. Okay, go.
Christine Everheart:
You've been called the Da Vinci of our time. What do you say to that?
Tony Stark:
Absolutely ridiculous. I don't paint.
Christine Everheart:
And what do you say to your other nickname, the Merchant of Death?
Tony Stark:
That's not bad. Let me guess... Berkeley?
Christine Everheart:
Brown, actually.
Tony Stark:
Well, Ms. Brown. It's an imperfect world, but it's the only one we got. I guarantee you the day weapons are no longer needed to keep the peace, I'll start making bricks and beams for baby hospitals.
Christine Everheart:
Rehearse that much?
Tony Stark:
Every night in front of the mirror before bedtime.
Christine Everheart:
I can see that.
Tony Stark:
I'd like to show you firsthand.
Christine Everheart:
[exasperated]
All I'm looking for is a straight answer.
Tony Stark:
[removing his shades]
OK, here's a straight answer. My old man had a philosophy: peace means having a bigger stick than the other guy.
Christine Everheart:
That's a great line, coming from a guy selling the sticks.
Tony Stark:
My father helped defeat Nazis. He worked on the Manhattan Project. A lot of people, including your professors at Brown, would call that being a hero.
Christine Everheart:
And a lot of people would also call that war-profiteering.
Tony Stark:
Tell me, do you plan to report on the millions we've saved by advancing medical technology or kept from starvation with our intelli-crops? All those breakthroughs, military funding, honey.
Christine Everheart:
Have you ever lost an hour of sleep in your life?
Tony Stark:
I'm be prepared to lose a few with you.
Transcript
Mr. Stark! Excuse me, Mr. Stark!
Christine Everhart,
Vanity Fair magazine.
Can I ask you a couple of questions?
- She's cute.
- She's all right?
- Hi.
- Hi.
- Yeah. Okay, go.
- Lt's okay?
You've been called
the da Vinci of our time.
- What do you say to that?
- Absolutely ridiculous. I don't paint.
And what do you say
to your other nickname?
"The Merchant of Death"?
That's not bad.
- Let me guess. Berkeley?
- Brown, actually.
Well, Ms. Brown,
it's an imperfect world,
but it's the only one we've got.
I guarantee you, the day weapons are
no longer needed to keep the peace,
I'll start making bricks and beams
for baby hospitals.
Rehearse that much?
Every night in front of the mirror
before bedtime.
- I can see that.
- L'd like to show you first-hand.
All I want is a serious answer.
Okay, here's serious.
My old man had a philosophy,
"Peace means having a bigger stick
than the other guy."
That's a great line
coming from the guy selling the sticks.
My father helped defeat the Nazis.
He worked on the Manhattan Project.
A lot of people,
including your professors at Brown,
would call that being a hero.
And a lot of people
would also call that war profiteering.
Tell me, do you plan to report
on the millions we've saved
by advancing medical technology
or kept from starvation
with our intelli-crops?
All those breakthroughs,
military funding, honey.
You ever lose an hour of sleep
your whole life?
I'd be prepared to lose a few with you.
Good morning. It's 7:00 a.m.
The weather in Malibu
is 72 degrees with scattered clouds.
The surf conditions are fair
with waist-to-shoulder high lines.
High tide will be at 10:52 a.m.
Tony?
Hey, Tony?
You are not authorized
to access this area.
- Jesus.
- That's Jarvis. He runs the house.
I've got your clothes here.
They've been dry-cleaned and pressed,
and there's a car waiting for you outside
that will take you anywhere
you'd like to go.
- You must be the famous Pepper Potts.
- Lndeed I am.
After all these years, Tony still has you
picking up the dry-cleaning.
I do anything and everything
that Mr. Stark requires,
including, occasionally,
taking out the trash.
Will that be all?
Give me an exploded view.
The compression in cylinder three
appears to be low.
Log that.
- L'm gonna try again, right now.
- Please don't turn down my music.
I'll keep you posted.
You are supposed to be
halfway around the world right now.
- How'd she take it?
- Like a champ.
Why are you trying to hustle me
out of here?
Your flight was scheduled to leave
an hour and a half ago.
That's funny, I thought with it being
my plane and all,
that it would just wait for me
to get there.
Tony, I need to speak to you
about a couple things
before I get you out of the door.
Doesn't it kind of defeat the whole
purpose of having your own plane
if it departs before you arrive?
Larry called. He's got another buyer
for the Jackson Pollock in the wings.
Do you want it? Yes or no.
Is it a good representation
of his spring period?
No. The Springs was actually
the neighborhood in East Hampton
where he lived and worked,
- not "spring" like the season.
- So?
I think it's a fair example.
I think it's incredibly overpriced.
I need it. Buy it. Store it.
Okay.
The MIT commencement speech...
ls in June. Please, don't harangue me
about stuff that's way, way, down...
They're haranguing me,
so I'm gonna say yes.
Deflect it and absorb it.
Don't transmit it back to me.
I need you to sign this
before you get on the plane.
What are you trying to get rid of me for?
What, you got plans?
- As a matter of fact, I do.
- I don't like it when you have plans.
Clip duration: 258 seconds
Views: 438
Timestamp in movie: 00h 00m 00s
Uploaded: 12 December, 2020
Genres: action, adventure, sci-fi
Summary: After being held captive in an Afghan cave, billionaire engineer Tony Stark creates a unique weaponized suit of armor to fight evil.
Comments
Actors
00:36 To power the suit
00:27 That's what I was trying to tell you before
00:22 If I were Iron Man
00:13 That's the coolest thing I've ever seen
00:37 Strategic Homeland Intervention
00:30 Let's do this right
01:10 It is a tight fit sir
00:35 In the hands of those murderers
00:13 Time to hit the button
00:29 It's gonna be okay
00:10 You're all I have too
00:41 I never got to say goodbye to my father
00:16 All right
00:06 Will that be all
00:38 What the hell did you do to me
00:10 Three hours
00:36 What do you mean
00:15 There's pus
00:19 The doctor has to look at you
00:21 I would have preferred she live