Iron Man: Demon in a Bottle
There was apparently an Iron Man animated series running in the early 90s, the period of my youth, when I wasted many an hour watching episodes of Batman, Spider-Man, and X-Men, making me lifelong fans of all three franchises; however, I never saw so much as one episode of the Iron Man show, and so I never developed much interest in the character (or the entire Avengers franchise in general, which was absent from the screens in that era, only arriving in highly diluted form after the big boom was over). Once I started reading comics, I gradually became familiar with him, and with the big movie on the way (which looks great), were seeing a renaissance of Iron Man product; this is often heralded as Tonys big story, so I bought the very nice-looking Premier edition, collecting the nine-issue "Demon in a Bottle" arc (which, in the tradition of older comics, is really a series of one-, two-, or three-parters linked by a common subplot.
The overall verdict: pretty good stuff. Certainly quite readable, and Michelinie and Layton largely avoid smothering the pages with captions, giving Romita Jr. room to work, something Claremont never learned to do (not to say there arent plenty of captions; much more than youd find in a modern comic; in particular, theres the understandable need for each issue to recap, in space ranging from a few panels to a few pages, the preceding issue, which is rather awkward in a modern collected edition which this story clearly wasnt written with in mind). This is trumpeted as Tonys big brush with alcoholism, but for all but the last issue or so thats deep-background; the main plot involves the newly-introduced Justin Hammers attempts to undermine Stark Industries by various means, which is just the main of many pressures building on Stark that drive him to drink (including a notably unresolved plot introduced before this collection even begins involving SHIELD, but the ending provides a sort of "go get em" closure where you know Tony will get by fine now that hes got his winning edge). The principle supporting cast is Bethany Cabe and James Rhodes; the former, Tonys new love interest (with some discreetly implied casual sex in a hotel), is a memorable character; Rhodeys fine here, though he hasnt yet become War Machine (or even found out about his bosss real name). Also present are the Avengers (notably a sparring session with Captain America), the late Ant-Man II (a Michelinie creation), and Namor (there are few better choices for a misunderstanding-fight than Namor, given his nature). One thing I found kind of amusing is the status of secret identities here: nobody knows who Tony is; not Cap or any of the other Avengers, not Bethany or Rhodey, not Ant-Man (particularly notable, since Tony doesnt know Scott is Ant-Man either); it feels a bit forced, really, but its not anything close to a real issue. I really like Romita Jr.s art here; nowadays his stuff is just boxy and ugly, but the classic look is wonderful.