No, these are not photos of a man with a mechanical heart

Multiple Facebook posts which have been shared tens of thousands of times contain a photo collage which purports to show a heart transplant patient. The claims are false; the photos in fact show US actor Robert Downey Jr. wearing prosthetic makeup behind the scenes of the 2008 superhero film Iron Man. 

One Facebook post with the photos has been shared more than 143,000 times since being posted March 23, 2019.

It includes four photos of a bearded man with what appears to be a circular mechanical device attached to his chest.

The Urdu language caption translates to English as: “Your one share can save a precious life. This person’s heart has failed, and he is alive because of a mechanical heart. Doctors say this is a temporary machine, and will soon stop working.

“To keep him alive, he will need a heart transplant, and that operation will require five million rupees. Facebook has decided to help him, and contribute one rupee for every share.

“You are all requested to share this photo in as many groups and with as many friends as possible. Your one share can save a precious life.”

Below is a screenshot of one of the misleading Facebook posts:

The same photo has been shared here and here on Facebook with the same claim.

But the claim is false; the photos show US actor Robert Downey Jr. preparing for his role in the 2008 superhero film Iron Man.

A reverse image search on Yandex reveals the images were shared on the Instagram page of Los Angeles-based makeup artist Jamie Kelman in early 2018. Kelman’s professional website here states he worked on the Iron Man film.

He shared photos of Downey Jr. in two Instagram posts here and herefrom the film set.

In his first Instagram post on February 22, 2018, he included the image which also appears in the bottom-right-hand corner of the photo collage in the misleading Facebook posts.

The Instagram post’s caption says, in part: “IRON MAN (2008) – Marvel Studios is celebrating its 10th anniversary – happy 10 years of massive success, Marvel! I was the Key Makeup Artist on their very first and imo still best Marvel Entertainment MCU movie, but I know I’m biased”.

It also says: “Pictured here: silicone appliance makeup on the very brilliant actor, Robert Downey Jr that I sculpted, molded & ran at my home fx lab, KELMAN STUDIO.”

Below is a screenshot comparison of the the misleading Facebook post (L), with the corresponding photo circled in red, and Kelman’s Instagram post (R):

Here is the IMDB page for the 2008 film Iron Man, which lists Robert Downey Jr. in the lead role of “Tony Stark / Iron Man” and Jamie Kelman as “key makeup artist”.

Kelman’s second Instagram post, shared on March 12, 2018 and embedded below, contains the three other photos which can also be seen in the misleading Facebook post.

Its caption states in part:  “This prosthetic makeup was built by Stan Winston Studio, supervised by Shane Mahan, and applied by 3 of us— my boss, makeup department head Deborah La Mia Denaver, and by Richie Alonzo, and by me.”

It adds: “These pix are from the VERY first day of filming the first IRON MAN, they are dated March 12, 2007.”

Jamie Kelman told AFP by email that the images in the misleading Facebook post showed fake make up from Iron Man.

“Yes it is absolutely fake makeup – I was the Key Makeup Artist on the original IRON MAN, and I personally took those photos of the makeup work that I had applied on actor Robert Downey Jr. as a wounded Tony Stark.”

“Those pictures are from a dozen years ago in the makeup trailer and on-set during filming the first IRON MAN movie in 2007, here in Los Angeles, California.”

“Yes the images are just makeup for telling the story of IRON MAN. Synthetic silicone rubber for skin, prosthetic glue and paint, with a bit of fake blood, etc,” he said in a March 25 email.

Robert Downey Jr can be seen playing the role of Tony Stark in the film’s official trailer, embedded below:

The posts contain no evidence to prove that Facebook is raising money for the purported heart transplant patient. Facebook had not responded to a request for comment by time of publication.

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