I love Thor’s face too lol and the “did you miss me?” you bet your frosty ass I did
you bet your frosty ass I did
I love that Thor and Loki both make happy faces to see each other in the final battle. Can we even maybe talk about how Loki showing up to help, to get everyone on board the orgy ship (lol), is directly what inspired Thor to center himself, tap into his memories of Odin, and find his thunder power?
I think, even though I am not sure it’s ic for Thor, that Thor tortured Loki with the electrocution device and speeched at him, then left, fully hoping that Loki would surmount that extreme test to his pride and sense of revenge, and still come to help save the day. And that Thor needed that win in order to regain hope that he lost through so many defeats and friend/family deaths. And that that hope needed to come from the person he was always closest to growing up: his brother.
So when Loki showed up, to Thor that was a good omen of victory in battle. That was hope returning.
Think about it. When Thor sees Loki after this scene, he doesn’t express disbelief. He says
“You’re late”
meaning
“I fully expected you to come.”
In the weirdest way, this is Thor’s faith in Loki being restored, and, therefore, since they are so tightly connected, his faith in HIMSELF, lost during Avengers Assemble, when he was hesitant to even lift Mjolnir, after Loki had dropped him from the sky in the Hulk cage.
I think Thor was using reverse psychology in the elevator.
Loki is the first to suggest he stay on Sakarr, Thor then agrees which throws Loki off balance. He wanted his brother to fight for him, but Thor’s done playing games.
I do wonder if Loki turning on Thor was a last minute plan, revenge for Thor nor wanting him “You don’t want me to come? Fine, I’ll make you stay.”
But Thor proves he’s not falling for that trick anymore and with a little inspiring speech, he’s off, wishing Loki well.
Loki finally realises that if he wants Thor, it’ll have to be on Thor’s terms and if that means doing battle with an unkillable sister and several out of work skeletons from The Mummy, he’ll take it, certain death and all.
I don’t know if Thor expected Loki to come, but he certainly hoped he would.
character concept: two people who have been reincarnated for thousands of years and have always found eachother but instead of being in love they just fucking hate eachother
Of course one of the things that just make me so gd ecstatic about Ragnarok is that we finally got to see Thor and the level of power he really possesses. I still don’t think we’ve seen what he can fully unleash yet, but Ragnarok was a breath of fresh air because I feel as if they severely depowered him in the past movies.
This panel pretty much sums up my feelings about his situation for the past movies:
You want some ice for that, Tony?
Thor 1 made sense with his powers not being as formative looking because he spent over half the movie without them. In Avengers we saw his strength and his power, but it wasn’t anything that we were presented with as being overly different or magnificent. We see him light shit up and fight like a badass, but I still think that the MCU didn’t really tap into what made Thor Thor. Whether this was intended because he was holding back or not isn’t too clear, but still, I was left wanting.
Dark World and Ultron showed us some more of his powers to affect the elements and use them to his advantage. Also, we how much he could endure in a fight without him getting too beat up. But still, it felt like they didn’t give him his due.
Mjolnir has always been such a prominent weapon, fixture, and symbol for Thor that you literally cannot picture him without it. The immediate knee-jerk reaction is that Thor without Mjolnir isn’t as powerful or deadly. Even Thor thinks that because it’s what he was presented with as a youth. Almost as if it were a crutch. Mjolnir was a very powerful weapon, but in the end, Mjolnir was only as powerful as Thor. Odin even said that it was there to help focus the power he already had and that Mjolnir wasn’t source of how powerful Thor could be. He’s not the god of hammers, he’s the god of thunder.
I love Mjolnir. I feel like they were a character on its own and they will be missed. Korg put it so nicely:
“Sounds like you had a pretty special and intimate relationship with this hammer and you losing it was almost comparable to losing a loved one.”
“That’s a nice way of putting it.”
That is perfect because to Thor Mjolnir was a part of him and seeing that part of him destroyed is no minor thing. He’s lost his father, found out that his sister is a maniac that just wants to rule and kill everything, and had Mjolnir bite the dust all within a literal 10 minute period. Seriously if that were me I’d be a mess, but hey, this is Thor and he can compartmentalize like a champ.
While I’ll miss Mjolnir very much, the destruction of them was very necessary for Thor to grow as a character and fighter. It gave the audience who may not be as familiar with Thor as we diehards are a good look as to how powerful he really is. He is the weapon. He is the one that would ultimately cause the destruction of his enemies, not Mjolnir.
I’m happy that Ragnarok showed us what Thor could be without Mjolnir same as in Iron Man 3 we saw what Tony could do without his suits. These guys are far, far more than their tech and their weapons. It showed us they can be equally badass without.
Then there’s his fight with Hulk. There’s always debate about who is stronger and who would win, but Thor was created to be stronger than Hulk.
Of course, it varies with writers through the comics, but he was originally created to be stronger, so he’s stronger than Hulk and no one can tell me differently.
We saw in Avengers how well matched he was with Hulk, but there was no clear winner because things were all over the place in regards to what was going on.
This is why I love the gladiator arena fight so much because you see both Thor and Hulk just absolutely throw down and not hold back. You see Thor throw Hulk and just send him flying around half the damn arena. Thor gets absolutely pummeled in the face repeatedly and he barely has a scratch on him. This is how powerful and indestructible he really is. He is in no way a lightweight in the MCU and can go toe to toe with the best.
I fully believe that had the fight been seen through that Thor would have won. I think Grandmaster realized this, especially as Thor was connecting to his powers deeper down. Hulk would lose so Grandmaster did what he had to and took Thor out of the game. While I would have liked to have seen Thor win, I thought that this was kind of a clever way to have it as so there was no clear winner. Everyone kinda leaves happy.
Then, of course, there’s The Scene™. The Scene to end all scenes and my life. We see a fully powered up Thor that absolutely deals out destruction and doesn’t take names. This is Thor THE God of Thunder. This is the Thor that hasn’t been given to us before. This is the Thor that finally understands the depth and reach of his powers and that it’s him and nothing else doing this. This is him unleashing the thunder and lightening to end all thunder and lightening.
This
is the
Thor
I have
been dreaming of
I literally cannot thank Taika Waititi and Ragnarok enough for this. I hope that he just grows more powerful and we see more epic shit like this in Infinity War.
The year is 2018. Your bills are on autopay. You just got paid and you still have $1200 from the last check. When you want something, you buy it without moving money around. Your credit cards are paid off. You and your friends have 2 international trips planned and paid for this year. Your parents are in great health and you’re able to help if they need anything. You love your job. Your desired creative career is falling into place and you get to take your little cousins to Six Flags and Universal Studios over the Summer. Your relationships are healthy and supportive. All of the toxic energy from the past 6 years is gone. You going to concerts, eating good across the states and your crib has art and warmth throughout. 2018 is going to be so good to you.