In Marvel’s latest attempt to salvage interest in Ironheart, the long-delayed Disney+ series centered on Riri Williams, the studio has rolled out the nuclear option: Robert Downey Jr yet again. In his latest promotional sit-down with Dominique Thorne — the actress behind the titular character — RDJ is on-hand to give his take on the first three episodes of Ironheart while acting as an emotional bridge between Tony Stark and Riri Williams.
It’s a clever move on paper. But in execution? It comes off like a last-ditch marketing stunt wrapped in nostalgia and coated with scripted sincerity.
The Setup: An Interview That Feels Like a Commercial
The nearly 15-minute promotional video is Marvel’s big play to reframe Ironheart as something more than a troubled spin-off. The show, originally filmed over two and a half years ago and subjected to nearly a dozen re-edits (according to multiple insider reports including YouTuber Nerdrotic), has been missing in action since Wakanda Forever introduced Riri back in 2022.
But this latest push isn’t a press junket or panel. It’s a tightly controlled, overly polished back-and-forth that feels more like brand damage control than genuine conversation.

Ironheart in her new suit – Disney+
That’s made all the more clear by Downey himself, who — despite his signature effortless charm — spends much of the discussion glancing down at his notes, as if reading pre-approved talking points. It’s hard to ignore. For a guy who was the Marvel Cinematic Universe, the constant paper-checking makes the entire thing feel staged and strained.
Trying to Crown a Successor
The main goal of this interview is unmistakable: make Riri Williams the emotional and thematic heir to Tony Stark.
“They really are twin flames,” RDJ says at one point, drawing a direct line between his former character and Thorne’s.

Ironheart in the trailer for Ironheart – YouTube, Marvel Entertainment
“This is Iron Man. This is Tony Stark. This is the HUD. This is insane,” Thorne gushes, recalling the moment she first suited up in a scene meant to mirror Tony’s early journey.
From there, the pair carefully unpack all the ways Riri and Tony are supposedly linked: personal trauma, a need to protect community, tech innovation, anxiety in the face of pressure. It’s all there — except one thing: audience investment.
The Iron Doesn’t Fit
For all the emotional beats and thematic overlap, the fundamental issue remains — Ironheart is not Iron Man. And no amount of Downey-delivered praise can disguise the disconnect.
“She didn’t go seeking this hero mantle at all,” Thorne explains.

Robert Downey Jr. as Tony Stark in Iron Man (2008), Marvel Entertainment
“I think of Riri Williams as kind of almost like a founder looking for a way to keep her enterprise afloat,” says Downey, framing her like a start-up Stark.
But while Iron Man built its identity around Stark’s flaws, growth, and redemptive arc, Ironheart opens with a character already burdened by world-saving expectations, underdeveloped motivations, and minimal narrative setup.
A Scripted Lifeline
The moment Robert Downey Jr. starts talking about episode structures, thematic anxiety, “the Shaka Tunnel Heist Freehand Sequence,” and character development arcs with all the polish of a trade magazine writeup, it becomes obvious what’s going on.

Robert Downey Jr. as Iron Man in Avengers: Endgame (2019), Marvel Studios
This isn’t RDJ being RDJ. It’s RDJ being deployed. Like a retired quarterback dragged onto the field to pitch a struggling rookie — except instead of throwing touchdowns, he’s reciting PR copy.
Marvel knows Ironheart isn’t connecting. And rather than let it stand on its own, they’re attempting a spiritual baton pass using the face of the old guard.
Marvel’s Third Attempt to Use RDJ as Hype Fuel
This latest sit-down isn’t the first time Marvel has wheeled out Robert Downey Jr. in an attempt to generate buzz for Ironheart. In fact, it’s the third time they’ve tried using his legacy as Tony Stark to validate the series — and none of it has moved the needle.
First, ahead of the show’s release, RDJ called into Good Morning America in what was clearly a scripted segment to offer well wishes to the cast. It was brief, awkwardly placed, and quickly forgotten.

Robert Downey Jr calls in to say “Iron Man loves Ironheart” – YouTube, Good Morning America
Then came a separate video released by Marvel showing Downey once again addressing Dominique Thorne directly, this time congratulating her on the series premiere.
Now, with this full-length interview circulating, Marvel seems to be hoping the third time’s the charm. But if audiences didn’t respond the first two times RDJ popped in to wave the Iron Man flag, why would a longer, more obviously scripted version do the trick?
The Final Verdict
There’s something telling about the fact that Marvel’s most significant Ironheart marketing push to date doesn’t focus on the show’s story, the villain, or the action — it focuses on Robert Downey Jr. reminding you how much you liked Iron Man.
The strategy is clear: if you’re not excited about Riri Williams, maybe you’ll watch for Tony Stark’s blessing. But even that isn’t working the way Marvel hoped. The show still isn’t trending, buzz remains muted, and viewers can see through the attempt to manipulate nostalgia.

Riri Williams in Ironheart – YouTube, Marvel Entertainment
In the end, this interview might be the most revealing part of Ironheart’s rollout — not for what it says about the character, but for what it says about Marvel Studios.
When you have to bring back the king just to convince people the throne is still relevant… maybe the new regime wasn’t ready.
How do you feel about Robert Downey Jr promoting Ironheart? Sound off in the comments and let us know!
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They should just let it go. Ironheart is a failure. It’s time to move to the “acceptance” stage.
Keep throwing away money, disney. It’s all you’re good at these days.
If iron-dreads is such a failure, why would they want to hitch their future tent-pole wagon to this anchor?
This is disney though, so: expectations met.
Aim for the stars iger!
This is the same crew who thought Captain Marvel would be the future of the Avengers. Of course they’d look at a young black Ironman replacement as the anchor for their next phase. Looks like they failed their intelligence check again.
Ironheart and Fantastic Four are not passing the torch between Phase 5 and 6 to bigger and better things, instead it is becoming the M-She-U Phase 2, with an added dose of extreme failure and pandering.
Does RDJ want to retire? Why is he trying so hard to sabotage his own career?
RDJ doesn’t have the influence he thinks he does. This was proven when he supported Hillary, Biden and Kamala.