OK, that answers my question about what was going on with the Ben & Jerry’s joke…

More importantly, though, Bruce Banner’s wording is interesting: “He sent Loki.” One possible interpretation of what was going on in The Avengers was that Loki wanted to invade and rule Earth anyway, and Thanos offered to help him in exchange for the Tesseract. Bruce’s wording, if it’s deliberately chosen (rather than just being imprecise), suggests that instead, Thanos was the one who chose the target because Earth was where the Space Stone was. Incidentally, that’s consistent with my fanfictional account of how things went down…

thehumming6ird:

‘God of Mischief, Loki. He doesn’t look very happy. He’s not looking like he’s having a good time in the trailer… Is he not ‘ending his run’, more or less, with handing over the Tesseract?’

Thank you, Tom, for reminding us of Loki’s emotional complexity. And pointing out that the fact that he was lied to all his life and found out a world-shattering truth in an abrupt, traumatic fashion does still make a difference in the way he behaves.

seidrade:

philosopherking1887:

notdoinggethelp:

Whatever you do, do not imagine Loki having all his fears and insecurities exploited through illusory hypnosis at the hands of Ebony Maw after getting “rescued” from the void

OK, I didn’t know about Ebony Maw, but… sound familiar, @darklittlestories, @foundlingmother, @fuckyeahrichardiii, @illwynd, @seidrade…?

Ohhhhh man. I’m curious how much they will potentially reveal— if they’ll just imply/reference through dialogue what Loki endured, or if they’ll actually show something awful to confirm it.

Either way— I really wouldn’t be surprised if you were totally right on, albeit the character swap. The notion of Loki being manipulated with the mind stone was already so heavily supported by canon, and what else is there to manipulate but the raw emotion and insecurities he felt as he let go of Gungnir (shit, I wonder if that somehow made him a beacon in the void, rather than it just being accidental that he landed on Sanctuary— I can’t recall if you already suggested that?)

But yes, kind of difficult to draw any other conclusion at this point, unless the film goes out of its way to show that the Black Order came to Thanos after Loki had come and gone— which seems unlikely. I’m sure Loki’s dread will be used to illustrate to the audience just how much they should be feared 😦

The way I did it in the fic, Loki spent some time making a name for himself in the criminal underworld (not his real name, obviously), Thanos got wind of it and figured out who he really was, and sought him out because he thought Loki would be useful. I didn’t like the idea everyone else seemed to be assuming that Loki just fell straight into Thanos’s clutches… it didn’t line up with what Hiddleston and Whedon were saying about where he’d been. If I were to write it again, I might have Loki hear of Thanos and seek *him* out – and get way more than he thought he was bargaining for.

loxxxlay:

so like, i realize this has probably already been said today, but in case not:

seeing thor be tortured like that just makes me think that loki was probably tortured like that too, u know? 😦 

and it’s so upsetting for a variety of reasons. like obv, thor himself being tortured really just feels so, so wrong. seeing him so helpless and out-of-sorts being dragged by his skull… the way his eyes roll back in his head. i’m. just. -incoherent screaming- T_T 

and then (assuming it’s the same scene and not disjointed), seeing loki take in that visible breath while he watches it happen like i know exactly how that feels and i can’t do anything to help you

i’m. dead.