TL;DR: Ironheart roars onto the Disney+ stage with a sharp blend of superhero spectacle, youthful energy, and a raw emotional core. Dominique Thorne stuns as Riri Williams—a genius torn between grief, ambition, and the moral murk of a world where power rarely comes clean. This isn’t just another Marvel spin-off. It’s a next-gen rocket launch. 4 out of 5 stars.
Ironheart
Building a Hero from Ashes
From the moment Riri Williams hits the screen, it’s clear: this is her world now, and we’re just watching it recalibrate around her. Fresh off her breakout in Wakanda Forever, Riri’s story picks up in the neon-drenched labs of MIT, but she’s already crashing against the boundaries of academia. Brilliant but bruised, her journey is less about building suits and more about rebuilding herself after tragedy.
That grief becomes her fuel. It drives her brilliance, her recklessness, and her decision to imprint her late best friend Natalie into a prototype AI—yes, comic book logic, but also a beautiful metaphor for memory, loss, and the desperate things we do to keep our loved ones close.
Chaos Above a Pizza Joint
The show quickly ditches the lecture halls for the back alleys and rooftop hideouts of Chicago. Riri stumbles into a crew of street-level rebels led by a smooth-talking, possibly magic-using rogue known as The Hood (Anthony Ramos, clearly having the time of his life).
Their missions? Equal parts Robin Hood and GTA Online. It’s the perfect vehicle for the series’ high-stakes heist energy—complete with rogue AI, illegal tech stashes, and aerial dogfights that make Iron Man’s early MCU flights feel quaint.
Riri doesn’t fit the mold of a hero, and that’s the point. She’s messy, impulsive, and emotionally raw. But that’s exactly what makes her human. That, and her grounded bond with her mother, her cautious flirtation with Natalie’s brother Xavier, and her desperate need to prove she belongs in a world that’s already burned her once.
Brains, Blasters, and Big Questions
What makes Ironheart sing is its tonal balance. It’s flashy, yes—loaded with CGI suit-up sequences and wall-shattering punchlines. But underneath the dazzle is a show that actually cares about ethics. What does it mean to weaponize genius? To align with criminals for survival? To build a legacy from borrowed time?
The series doesn’t always land its moral swings cleanly. Some episodes sprint through big ideas too fast. But Riri’s voice—conflicted, passionate, brave—is always the anchor. Her internal dilemmas echo louder than any explosion.
The Verdict: A Hero is Forged
Ironheart isn’t just a follow-up. It’s a forge. It takes the raw ore of Marvel’s past—the Tony Stark mythos, the Wakandan legacy, the burden of brilliance—and melts it down into something new. Something young, fierce, and full of future.
Riri Williams doesn’t want to be the next Iron Man. She’s too busy building what comes after.
A thrilling, thoughtful, and emotionally rich origin story for a new kind of Marvel hero. Riri’s journey is just beginning, and we’re lucky to ride shotgun.