foundlingmother:

Hi new followers! I sometimes write Ragnarok meta. It’s not positive. I try to cultivate an environment on my blog where people can have fun and where people who like Ragnarok are welcome. Hence why I’m writing this. I want you to know I have a tag: 

“ragnarok discourse” 

You deserve the dashboard that’s right for you. Blacklist if you do not like to see anything negative about Ragnarok, or any Ragnarok discourse in general, and stop reading here.


Ok, let me start by saying that Thor needs to incapacitate Loki when he attempts to betray him in Ragnarok. This isn’t up for debate, imo. Loki is attempting to prevent Thor from returning to Asgard to save a bunch of innocent lives. For me, this is similar to when Thor used Mjolnir to immobilize Loki in Thor. He needed to do that in order to save people. 

That specific part isn’t a problem for me. Thor is in the right to incapacitate Loki, who is in the wrong by betraying Thor.

Now, I could go on forever and ever about how I feel Loki’s betrayal doesn’t make a lot of sense. MCU Loki–unlike comics Loki–doesn’t have a habit of betraying Thor for petty or purely self-serving reasons. He does betray Thor, but there’s an understandable reason for it when it happens (understandable does not mean righteous, btw). It’s not something he does for shit and giggles. We know this because we see in Thor that the experience of being betrayed by Loki is foreign. It’s new.

Like I said, forever and ever. However, proving that both characters are OOC in this scene isn’t the point of this post. No, the point is to talk about the obedience disk (I nearly wrote obedience dick XD). I’ve done this before, but… I have to do it again.

Better.

Bigger.

Bolder.

Not actually any of those things. Mostly just not as upset as I was the last time.

I want to talk about the intent of the filmmakers. 

I don’t really give a shit about the intent of the filmmakers. I’m one of those death of the author people. Personal interpretations are not based on the notes in the script or the private thoughts or directions of anyone on set. I think it’s important to take a look at, however, to

definitively

prove one point: that my interpretation isn’t crazy. It doesn’t come from nothing.

My opinion: I believe the obedience disk is a disgusting torture device that causes both Thor and Loki immense pain. I feel disgusted and uncomfortable seeing it used on both of them. I can understand the necessity when Thor’s lacking resources and needs to incapacitate Loki, but I find it OOC that Thor leaves Loki defenseless and in serious pain. I don’t think Thor would do that. I don’t even think he’d be gloating. He did gloat when outsmarting Loki in TDW, but the handcuffs didn’t cause Loki the sort of pain the obedience disk does. I do not think Thor could ever be pleased watching his brother writhe in pain, no matter how much of a shit he’s being (and Loki is a shit).

A lot of people, in my experience, think there’s no basis for this interpretation. They’ll say it’s just an inconvenience, it’s not that bad. They’ll wonder why I’m blowing it so out of proportion or what movie I even watched.

And that’s where our receipts come in.

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Hold on! Stop!

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Can someone please explain to me what the pain of a thousand screaming squirrels is? What is this metric?

……….Let’s move on……….

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Again, I don’t think that interpretations of movies need to rely on the notes within a script. We don’t have access to those when consuming the movie. My point is that the intention of the filmmakers was to portray Thor and Loki suffering when the obedience disk is used on them (or when Thor messes with it), and so it’s not an overreaction that I should take it that way, or that I should be disturbed that (the impostor) Thor smugly leaves Loki in a situation where he cannot move enough to free or protect himself.

Big thanks to @loxxxlay and @philosopherking1887 for listening to me rant (thought you guys might like to see organized and measured thoughts), and credit to @incredifishface, who reblogged a meta with a response, which I feel I kind of picked words and phrases and arguments from during this, though it was unintentional. I’m just not good at coming up with my own words.

Thank you for bringing in actual textual evidence. I feel like there isn’t enough of that in this fandom. Or on Tumblr in general. Or, you know, in life.

incredifishface:

kingloptr:

toomanylokifeels:

toomanylokifeels:

…why are some people so very upset that thor essentially put a tazer on loki? he literally beat loki at his own game? loki was just about to betray him? a part of loki was pretty impressed that thor tricked him? why do we gotta be like this, y’all?

I’ve read everyone’s explanations as to why and I *kind of* get it, but at the same time here are my reasons for not having any issue at all with this scene:

Loki was just about to abandon Thor, again, while being rewarded for Thor’s capture to “set him up nicely.” Thor had every right to defend himself and every right to be tired of Loki’s games in a very critical moment. 

Thor has no reason to protect Loki anymore, because no matter what he does, Loki does not change. This doesn’t mean there aren’t unresolved issues between them. It means Thor can’t be the only one trying anymore.

When you have a family member who is consistently choosing to do terrible things with little consideration for the consequences, sometimes you have to put them in a sink or swim situation to protect yourself. 

Otherwise, you’ve exhausted yourself trying to help someone who doesn’t want to be helped and who gets hurt in the end? You do. Asgard is literally falling apart and Loki’s selfishness is a liability. 

Thor has changed and matured, but that doesn’t mean he’s got to stick to some ridiculous moral code. He’s never been the hero who wont play dirty when he needs to play dirty and I personally respect that. 

Loki almost always plays dirty. Loki is also a very powerful being just like Thor. That being said, he’s good at weaseling out of difficult situations and he can fend for himself. I’m honestly not too worried about a taser of all the things.  

Loki is one of my favorite characters, but I love Thor’s complexity as well. He doesn’t set himself at a higher standard than anyone else because he doesn’t care about being better than anyone else. 

He cares about the task in front of him. He cares about what needs to be done even if he doesn’t like it, but Thor canonically gets pissed off very easily and he’ll show it. He even shows this side of him to his “hero” friends.

And I like that about him.

Loki not only impeded Thor from helping Asgard, but his actions pissed Thor off. I’m not going to nit-pick or hold any ill feelings towards Thor for being pissed off and acting like it, especially when Loki is given excuse after excuse.  

Thor isn’t a better individual because he always acts within a rigid moral code. It’s because he’s doing good things and putting others first even when he’s really pissed off about it. 

And, I mean… come on… it’s a taser not a death ray. Loki has actually stabbed Thor multiple times. I think Loki can stand having the wiggles for a while until he can manipulate whoever into saving him.

T̲̠̟͕͖͎̠̑̈̈͋̌ͧ̅H͉̋̆͋̾̄ͫ̄Ạ͎̘͎̙ͬN̳͙̯̰̱͈̋̎K̼̜̭͆̆ ̥̟Y̦̭͛ͩ̒͂̆̒̅O͎͆̈̐ͫ̎Ŭ̪͕͈͉̞ͨ̈́̚̚

my very real problem with this whole scene is that any meta concerning that scene for me rests on a basis made of… nothing, really.

That betrayal IS the bread and butter of the comics, in which the characters have been dancing around each other for like 30 human years of issues and continuities, but it feels extremely wrong in the MCU continuity. That’s NOT where they are in the MCU. Loki does not betray and double-cross Thor for shits giggles and cold self-gain in MCU. 

Basically, if you have a quick overview, you’ll see that everything Loki has done against Thor in MCU is motivated in deep fresh pain and hurt, that it hurts both of them. The stabbing in Avengers is not a joke, for either. Thor is not used to this, to his brother being an enemy. In the previous 3 films they’ve shared time in we see the grief and shock and disbelief and incomprehension, the attempts to reach him, and then in TDW we see reconciliation, alliance, and more grief. Thor would not be used to it. It would be an extremely callous and baseless thing for Loki to do. So you want to write it in? Sure, but it’s not a fucking joke. Or it shouldn’t be. Idk i don’t know what i’m trying to say. I’m saying it’s fucking wrong.

And yes, then Loki is back from the dead and in the throne of Asgard, and I’m very fricking sorry but Thor’s reaction to the news that Loki is lives is… yeah it’s deeply disappointing and again, wrong in the MCU continuity. And the fact that Loki betrayed him AGAIN wouldn’t be “Loki up to his old tricks again”, it would be the FIRST time Loki betrays him for personal gain, without deeper reasons based mostly on a hell of a lot of pain. 

you know what, fuck it. Ragarök just doesn’t exist in the same fucking universe as the rest of the MCU and that’s it. Might work as actual adaptation of the comics, and good, great, have fun. But I was hoping to see MCU Thor and Loki. And it could have been done, they could have done both.  Just keep some fucking coherence. You can make jokes and then cut people deep with actual real feelings building up from the 3 previous films. They failed miserably at developing that relationship in a way that actually makes sense emotionally or narratively. That’s not where we left them. That’s not where they were. That’s not what TDW Thor would have said or done finding out Loki was alive. THEY DIDN’T EVEN BOTHER WITH AN EXPLANATION OF WHAT HAPPENED THERE, WHAT SORT OF SHIT CONTINUITY IS THAT. LOKI WAS SUPPOSED TO HAVE ACTUALLY DIED. ANYBODY THOUGHT WE MIGHT BE INTERESTED IN THE IN-VERSE TYING UP OF LOSE ENDS? no, fuck the first 3 films, booo boring.  REALLY TALENTED PEOPLE WHO CARED ABOUT THE MATERIAL AND THE FANS ENOUGH WOULD HAVE MANAGED HUMOR AND DEEP EMOTIONS, OR AT LEAST FUCKING TRIED. They don’t even call themselves god of ANYTHING in the MCU. It’s the first fucking time any of them refer to themselves or others as “god of thunder” or “god of mischief” or “trickster god” or whatever. We do canonically have ODin in TDW explicitly saying “we are not gods” and then all of a sudden YOU’RE A GOD HE’S A GOD EVERYBODY IS A GOD. 

I couldn’t fucking finish it the other day. That is not Thor. Its not even Comics Thor. My Thor has a fucking heart and feels things deeply, in his every incarnation BUT RAGNARÖK. HERE I’M MAKING MYSELF FURIOUS AGAIN. 

And I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: if Ragnarök was the only Thor & Loki MCU film, I would not have written 6 THorki novels in 4 years, because I wouldn’t have given a shit about anyone in there. 

i wish i could distance myself and enjoy it but no. I’ve come to this point. I don’t like that film. Everything feels wrong, the jokes aren’t that funny, and most are OOC. Cool aesthetics tho, and yay cool god of thunder and immigrant song. 

they don’t even fucking touch once. Is that accidental?? No neck grabbing, no intense manhandling, no soul-searching glares?? Fuck that too. 

oh fuck this i’m having a shit day.

Oh look, I found another reason why I hate this movie:

blockmind:

mentallydatingahotcelebrity:

Literally everything Thor does in this movie is condescending and uncaring toward Loki. He’s not even remotely nice to him. His brother who said “Sometimes I’m envious of you, but never doubt my love” “I didn’t do it for him.” This entire movie was just a stage for Thor to be “awesome God of Thunder” and to put Loki in some sort of sideshow space. 

Exactly where he started in the first film.

He’s back to just having to go along with Thor regardless of how he feels about the matter “let’s do get help, you love it.” “I hate it, it’s embarrassing” “we’re doing it”

Loki literally tells Thor he finds that modus operandi degrading and Thor essentially replies “I don’t give a flying fuck what you think, we’re doing it because I want to, so deal.” and Loki, of course, does exactly that.

Because that’s how it’s been with Thor for all their adult lives.

“know your place, brother.”

“Enough.”

TR took Thor back to square one. He’s not the mature, thoughtful king-in-training he was in TDW (I will ALWAYS prefer that version of him; it was true to his character arc). He’s gone back to the selfish, arrogant “it’s all about me” outlook. He doesn’t care about Loki, doesn’t ask his opinion– unlike the carefully executed plan of TDW where Loki gets to use his skills equally alongside Thor’s brawn. 

But the one thing that really gets me about that comment above is this part: “while Loki thought it was an affectionate pat” 

What. The. Hell?!?!?! God forbid Loki actually receive some real, genuine affection from Thor because he’s just a trickster, so he doesn’t really matter. That was beaten in our faces OVER AND OVER AND OVER by Taika Waititi–

Loki is just a dumb trickster who has no motive and no life-plan.

Loki just wants to drink margaritas and watch bad theater about himself because he’s a glorified narcissist.

Loki just wants to fuck the Grandmaster (or at least the GM wants to fuck him).

Loki and all of his past issues were non-issues, so stop feeling sorry for him.

Oh, and my favorite, though I don’t think I can contribute this to TW, but rather whoever wrote the script:

“You’ll always be the God of Mischief, but you could be something more.”

We’re supposed to admire Thor’s cleverness and kingly wisdom in this scene, when actually all this is doing is subtly reinforcing the fact that Loki’s been treated as the punching bag, the jokes-on-legs, the “if we have no SMART ideas I’ll just throw my LITTLE brother at the bad guys”.

What. 

The. 

FUCK.

I thought Thor was pretty cleverly executed given that he’s tried dealing with Loki in failure after failure to bridge that gap. The unconditional love of Thor 1 didn’t help, the attempt to regain common ground and offer a hand in Thor 2 ended in Loki faking his own death and usurping Asgard. 

The problem was that Thor was enabling him rather than helping him. By Ragnarok he’s mature enough to guess how Loki is going to act, and he helps Loki help himself. Stepping back from the relationship logically, Thor’s love and trust has been abused time and time again and I don’t blame him from stepping back from it when he’s stuck in the same old loop of enabling Loki into the next fresh batch of bullshit. 

I’ll preface the next statement by saying that I love Loki in all his incarnations dearly but it’s not as though he’s NOT guilty of some pretty despicable shit that Thor has been more than patient over (I’m talking about the entirety of The Avengers) so I think Thor is pretty validated in his suspicion and distance. 

For what it’s worth, it DOES work and we see Loki in a better place at the end of TR and I suspect he needed someone he loves and respects to be sick of his bullshit in a dismissive way or he was never going to change. Which is reminiscent of what happened to his character arc in the comics but that’s a whole different thing. Loki’s been through a lot of writers in the MCU with varying quality and difference of characterization but personally I still think the biggest injustice is what happened in Infinity War. 

Regarding the claim that Thor was “enabling” Loki by continuing to reach out to him, I would encourage you to read this post, because I really can’t say it any better. It was written by someone who liked Ragnarok for several months until having a conversation that led to the realizations described in the post.

The only reason “it DOES work and we see Loki in a better place at the end of TR” is because the same writer(s) who wrote that gambit ensured that it would work. (People who have read the novelization and said the betrayal-electrocution sequence wasn’t in there lead me to believe we have Taika himself, not Eric Pearson, to thank for that little bit of amateur relationship counseling.) It’s not like they tested it out on an actual person with the same complex of mental illnesses as Loki, as seen in previous movies. It’s not clear what he has (depression? bipolar? BPD?), but it should be clear to anyone that he’s unwell; he doesn’t just betray people for shits and giggles. And it’s debatable whether Loki is really in a “better place” at the end of TR. He’s been cowed into submission; he’s accepted a place as Thor’s inferior.

It also doesn’t make a whole lot of sense to say that Loki abused Thor’s love and trust in TDW, except given the assumptions about what happened that TR wants to push on us. It tells us again and again that Loki “faked his death” – but a more plausible reading, considering that Loki’s illusions aren’t tangible, is that Loki actually was impaled, thought he was going to die, and took advantage of the situation when he unexpectedly woke up. And considering that Thor told him he would just put him back in prison after they finished avenging Frigga (“Vengeance. And afterward this cell”), can you completely blame Loki for doing what he did? Can you completely blame him for exiling Odin, after all the shit Odin has pulled? TR totally ignores all the intelligible reasons Loki had for doing what he did: avoiding getting thrown in solitary confinement for life, with no Frigga to visit him – or worse (remember, “Frigga is the only reason you’re still alive”?); getting back at Odin for his lies and rejection (and for locking him away without actually asking why he invaded Midgard…); putting himself in a position of safety and power from which he could hide from Thanos and make efforts to thwart him (remember, it was Loki who sent Sif and Volstagg to store the Aether with the Collector). None of that is even mentioned; it’s just because Loki is such an incorrigible trickster and wants to lounge around in his bathrobe eating grapes and watching self-glorifying plays. That’s never who Loki has been in the MCU. He always has comprehensible, psychologically compelling reasons for his misdeeds: envy, resentment, the need for his father’s approval, internalized racism, vengefulness, threats and coercion from Thanos. Naked hedonistic self-interest has never been a significant part of his motivation. It’s only by completely reframing everything he’s ever done that TR makes it remotely plausible that Loki needs this kind of “tough love” to just “get over himself” and start being a good guy. What he needs is for someone to really listen, which Thor, even with all his pleas for him to come home, has never done.

How Ragnarok Took Everything From Loki and Its Consequences

lucianalight:

I wanted to write this post since I
watched TR but I wasn’t calm enough for it until now. Even writing so little
about how TR unfairly treated Loki’s character and disrespected him and his
fans in my TR reviews made me angry enough to start shouting in my head and
rendered me unable to write it the way I wanted. Then IW happened and it was
the cause for another wave of rage in me. So it took me a long time.

We always talk about how TR
disrespected Loki and took away a lot of his canon characterizations and
motives and his arc from him. I noticed we never explained it in details and it
caused a lot of misunderstandings about why we hate TR and what we mean. So
this is a detailed explanation of how TR took everything from Loki.

Keep reading

Again, great analysis, and I just have to highlight the conclusion:

“By dismissing Loki’s pain, the narrative paints Loki as someone who is always in the wrong and Thor as blameless in everything. It leads to Thor dismissing Loki’s pain and it leads to disguising Thor and Loki’s imbalanced relationship (Thor as superior and Loki as inferior the way they started in the first Thor movie) as reconciliation and healing.

“You know what all of this led to right? A Loki robbed of his sacrifice, bravery, intelligence and planning skills, his magic and power had no place in IW. He was useless in the authors’ minds. He was healed after all! What else could Loki do except failing at tricking Thanos when he could be outsmarted by Thor and Dr. Strange. What else could Loki do except attacking Thanos with a tiny dagger when that was all the weapons he was left with? At least they gave him his bravery back so his stupid attack makes some sense. In their minds the only way his story could end, and he could completely be redeemed was a true sacrifice (which was pointless since Thanos could still kill Thor) in which he actually dies with no resurrection. This is how they took away Loki from us, by taking away everything from his character first and then when he had nothing left they killed him.”

This is why I’m still so pissed about Loki’s death in IW. Not just because he died – not just because it was unnecessarily brutal and graphic – but because it made him into a plot device rather than a character; because it passed the judgment that he had outlived his interest and usefulness and could only serve as a functionary in someone else’s story. It wasted the potential for a payoff of the connection to Thanos established in The Avengers; it showed that the creators (writers, producers, and directors) did not care enough about Loki’s character to give us that payoff or even tell us what the hell happened with Loki and Thanos. But Loki’s treatment in Ragnarok should have shown us that it was inevitable. Of course Markus & McFeely couldn’t know how thoroughly Taika Waititi was planning to ridicule and emasculate Loki, but if they saw the basic script, they might have had some idea of how his power, intelligence, and complexity were going to be minimized, and how the narrative was going to tie a neat little bow on his “redemption” and “reconciliation” with Thor. And of course these movies have no time for recovery from trauma, except maybe if your name is Tony Stark (and he has RDJ going to bat for him).

I was glad that Loki turned out not to be dead at the end of TDW because I thought he was going to have more time to develop his relationship with Thor and achieve genuine reconciliation, that we might find out what happened with Thanos, that Thor might finally ask what happened, that they might confront the prejudice against Frost Giants that led both of them to kill so many in Thor 1. But now I agree with @lucianalight: I would rather that he had died being noble and clever (turning on the grenade while impaled!!) than live to have everything that made him a magnificent character negated and shat on.

can someone explain this plothole: loki tells the revengers that hes run out of favor with the grandmaster and in exchange for a ship, he wants passage through the devils anus. Then thor tells him in the elevator that this is a perfect place for you, lawless yada yadh and both agree that he should stay (even though 2 seconds ago he told thor he’s run out of favor with the grandmaster) did loki betray thor last minute so he can stay on Sakaar like Thor wants him to? did thor not even hear him

juliabohemian:

shine-of-asgard:

edge-of-silvermoon:

lokihiddleston:

.

They need Loki to betray Thor for no reason so they can stomp on Loki’s character harder, and give Thor a chance for grandstanding, what else is there to it? This betrayal literally serves no other purpose than give Thor the chance to deliver his “you can be more” lectures. It’s lazy and sloppy writing.

Waititi and Hemsworth wanted a scene of Thor triumphing over Loki as a “payback” for 3 movies or Loki outsmarting him, and they wrote… that. Whatever the hell it was. And it’s been proven that it was a last minute addition because the official novel doesn’t have this last “twist”. Loki leaves with everyone, willingly.

Could we just re-shoot the movie and have it like the novel? So it isn’t this ridiculous mess? Like did no one edit this film besides TW? Did anyone check for consistency or to be sure that it made sense? How does something make it all the way to the theater with that many mistakes?

This thread is missing the original answer, which was a screenshot of another anonymous ask:

“It’s not really a plothole. Loki has only fallen out of favor with the Grandmaster because he did not return with Thor and his champion as promised. But Thor/Valkyrie are staging a revolt with Korg. So once the Grandmaster is out of power, Thor knows Loki could take over. However, Loki decides that he could regain favor with the Grandmaster by giving him Thor and then probably Bruce. I think though that Loki partially chose this route because he honestly didn’t think that Thor stood a chance against Hela […] I think at least partially, Loki is trying to keep his brother alive.”

There is something to that… but I still think @edge-of-silvermoon and @shine-of-asgard​ hit the nail on the head. Not only were Loki’s last-minute betrayal and Thor*’s (this is not the same person as the Thor of previous films) ultimatum/electrocution combo not in the novel (which I haven’t read), but we have some indication from the trailers that they shot a version where Loki came in the small ship with the rest of the Revengers: the clips of him standing on the bridge in a row with Thor, Valkyrie, and Hulk, and that shot of Hulk punching him off the bridge like he did to Thor in The Avengers. The betrayal and subsequent smackdown were a later addition – probably by Waititi rather than the screenwriter (Eric Pearson), possibly at Hemsworth’s behest – and I suspect that they wanted three things out of it:

  1. To show Thor*’s “character growth”: he has learned not to fall for Loki*’s tricks and illusions anymore (I’m using Loki* because the motivation for the betrayal, which I still think is basically “shits and giggles,” is not in keeping with Loki’s established character).
  2. The famous “trickster tricked” narrative trope. That’s fine in and of itself; we saw it in The Avengers when Black Widow successfully pulls her “wounded gazelle” act on Loki and again when Hawkeye shoots an arrow at Loki, Loki catches it, and then the arrow explodes. We also saw it in TDW when Thor handcuffed Loki and then pushed him out of the Dark Elf ship onto the skiff. This version, however, is undermotivated and unnecessarily cruel, and I really do think the purpose was to assert Thor*’s superiority over Loki. It also gives us the completely unintended irony of Thor*, who has reverted to a cruelty and arrogance worse than that he was humbled for in Thor 1, lecturing to Loki, who has evolved quite a bit over the past 3 films, about the need for “growth and change.”
  3. As @endiness​ argued a while back: “i do legitimately believe that loki’s character was regressed in order to make thor responsible for loki’s character growth (rather than loki himself) to kind of prop thor up and have him come off as the better character […] loki’s character had to start out in ragnarok regressed (and far beyond where he was at the end of tdw) and passive, stay that way for most of the movie as most of his actions were dictated by other characters, and then only ‘change’ after and because thor prompted him to through reverse psychology.”

taranoire:

Loki stabbing Thor and Thor using the obedience disc on Loki is like…..the equivalent of pulling each other’s hair. They’re not hurt that easily, and especially for the latter, it’s been well established that Thor would never ever actually seriously hurt him. He did it to immobilize him temporarily so that he didn’t fuck up Thor’s plan to, you know, save Asgard. 

This discussion has also been had ad nauseam. Have you seen the Ragnarok shooting script? If not, it’s here. The script describes Loki as “WRITHING in pain” and “convulsing in agony.” So even if the disk can’t do too much damage to him, it is still causing considerable pain. That is even the goal of much torture these days: to cause unbearable pain without causing lasting damage.

@foundlingmother has given this thoughtful response to exactly the argument you’re making now (with some additional comments from me).

The one thing I would add is that it has been well established that Thor would never seriously hurt Loki. Thor’s characterization in Ragnarok is so radically different from his characterization in previous movies that I don’t even consider him the same person; accordingly, I’ve started calling him Thor* (following a notational convention in academic philosophy). From the fact that Thor* left Loki defenseless on a planet full of people who would melt him without a second thought, I cannot conclude that Thor* would never seriously hurt him.

in defense of thor ragnarok

taranoire:

This is a poorly thought-out rant post with no cohesive structure, because I couldn’t be bothered. It was inspired by criticisms I’ve seen levied at Thor: Ragnarok lately, both by people I don’t know and people I respect and consider friends. The intention isn’t to say “you’re wrong for not liking this thing,” but to explain why I happen to think this is one of the best films in the MCU to date and how it pulled me into the fandom where none of the other movies could. 

I’m going to start with a personal anecdote. 

Before November 2017, I’d seen a handful of Marvel movies–bits and pieces of Captain America, Iron Man 2 & 3, and Guardians of the Galaxy 1 & 2. What I knew of the rest of the franchise I’d gleaned from Tumblr since about 2011. I was not impressed with it. I didn’t get it, and that made me frustrated, because I felt like I was left out of this huge thing that I couldn’t possibly catch up on. 

So I saw Ragnarok on a whim–it looked accessible, and it was. I didn’t need to know a lot about the universe, because its intention was to deconstruct it and wipe the slate clean. It was funny, but it was also more brutally honest about topics like Odin’s campaign of terror and imperialism than the past films; it fully embraced Asgard and Thor’s presence in the MCU as a sci-fi/fantasy spectacle; it poked fun at everyone but never punched down and respected the journeys that led them to that point. 

Most importantly, Ragnarok is the film that did the impossible, though I didn’t realize it on my first-time viewing: it deliberately set out to repair Thor and Loki’s relationship. That is the core of this film, the key takeaway, and it wouldn’t have worked if the tone, setting, and narrative were any different. 

I went back and watched Thor 1 & 2 and the Avengers. It became painfully clear to me that after all of the heartbreak, betrayal, attempted murder, hate and mistrust, Ragnarok was the only solution.(And how fitting–Ragnarok is, in mythology, the culmination of a cycle of destruction and rebirth.) 

To be content with one another again, Thor and Loki needed to be broken down, hit rock bottom, and make the decision to move forward together. Their relationship in Ragnarok is the metaphorical equivalent of the Japanese art of kintsugi: breaking pottery and repairing it with molten gold.

It achieves this in two key ways. 

1) Villain decay. Loki’s deeds and their consequences had to be put in a different perspective–and more importantly, he needed to show some semblance of having learned the error of his ways by teaming up with Thor against a new, darker, more unambiguously evil threat. 

2) Sakaar. I could write fucking essays about Sakaar. Sakaar is Thor and Loki’s purgatory. Their Hotel California. Their Pleasure Island. Their Garden of Eden. It’s a place that is tangibly and emotionally far removed from the real world, where no one knows who they are and no one cares. 

Loki jumps at that–and it makes complete sense why. He’s not a villain or a hero here; not a prince or a usurper; he’s not the brother of Thor, he’s not Thanos’ puppet. He’s just Loki, and he can carve out a fresh start. Thor, on the other hand, fights it; he needs to get back to Asgard, needs to return to his duties and responsibilities. 

To further this rather convoluted metaphor, they’re both tempted to stay here in this almost-paradise where they can forget everything bad that has ever happened to them and live out their days in relative happiness. And they both choose to leave. 

Loki was tempted by the Grandmaster into remaining; Thor was probably at least a little tempted by Loki’s offer in that prison cell. “You, me, taking over.” That was everything he wanted but shouldn’t want; to forget the pain, to abandon a hopeless mission, to be with Loki and rule together, safe and happy and ignorant. 

So at the climax, when they both have lost everything–their home, most of their people, their family, their body parts, in Thor’s case, and their freedom in Loki’s–it’s still a victory. They’ve learned that Sakaar was a lie, that that dream to forget and abandon reality to save themselves from more pain was an illusion. 

As Tom Hiddleston said (and I’m paraphrasing): “They only have each other, and maybe that’s enough.” 

“it poked fun at everyone but never punched down and respected the journeys that led them to that point”: that’s where we massively disagree. If you’re actually interested in knowing why many of us disagree, you’re welcome to search “thor ragnarok meta” or “thor ragnarok criticism” on my blog; many of my detailed explanations are from months ago, so you may not have seen them, and may have the impression that all any of us have are snarky throwaway comments. I’m not invested in changing your mind, and if you want to continue enjoying the movie you might make the conscious choice NOT to read the critical analysis, which is fine. But I do want you to be aware that those of us who don’t like it have very well-thought-out reasons for not liking it. It’s not that we’re not aware of the virtues people claim for it – most of Tumblr has been citing them at us for months – it’s that we have reasons for thinking those purported virtues aren’t so virtuous and/or that they’re outweighed by much more important vices.

There are things I thought Ragnarok did well – I kind of liked the psychedelic 80′s aesthetic of Sakaar, Valkyrie was cool, Heimdall’s role was fantastic, and the half-baked critique of imperialism was heading in the right direction. And maybe someone who saw Ragnarok *before* seeing the other movies just wouldn’t have the same sense of dissonance between the characters as they had been established in the other movies and as they were retconned in TR. But I don’t think there was anything Ragnarok did well that couldn’t have been done better by someone who genuinely respected the previous movies and the characters, as Taika Waititi – and Chris Hemsworth! – showed plainly in all their interviews as well as in the film that they did not. What’s more, all the “breaking down to nothing” had already been done in the previous films. That was the whole point of Thor 1; both Thor and Loki lost everything they thought they’d had. “Villain decay” had already been done in TDW: Thor and Loki had to team up to face a villain more evil and destructive than Loki had been.

What Thor and Loki really needed was to fucking talk to each other, and that’s exactly what TR *didn’t* have them do. It lampshaded the lack of communication (which “has never been our family’s forte”), but that doesn’t excuse the continued lack of it. No one ever asked Loki for an explanation of his actions. In fact, as I’ve argued on a number of occasions, Ragnarok makes a point of implying that Loki doesn’t even have much in the way of motivation for anything he does beyond “I’m a trickster/ the God of Mischief, it’s in my nature,” i.e., “I did it for the lulz,” or childish self-aggrandizing narcissism. In previous movies Loki always had complex, psychologically compelling motivations for the things he did. But Thor never acknowledges that Loki might have some legitimate reasons for resenting him, never asks why Loki invaded Earth; and they never talk about Loki’s Jotun heritage or the internalized racism and self-hatred that was such a huge part of his breakdown in Thor 1. As I have remarked, if TR really wanted to explore the impact of Asgard’s racist imperialism, that would have been a really good avenue to go down; but apparently it didn’t want to take Loki’s problems that seriously.

I also disagree (thanks in large part to @illwynd​‘s insightful comments) that TR constituted a “repair” of Thor and Loki’s relationship. Here’s some commentary from @foundlingmother​ and me in response to someone who accepted the movie’s intended interpretation of Thor’s actions (that he was taking the healthy move of “stepping back from an unhealthy relationship” to reestablish it on healthier ground); here’s a discussion involving me and some other people on both sides of the issue in direct response to Taika’s claim that the film sees Thor and Loki reach “understanding and resolution,” which also goes into the issue of TR’s reduction of Loki’s motivations to “mischief/lulz.”

lokisinsurrection:

mastreworld:

lasimo74allmyworld:

whitedaydream:

yume-no-fantasy:

whitedaydream:

glitteryfoggy:

2oo-ugly:

note-a-bear:

afro-elf:

whitedaydream:

vocifersaurus:

gaysunfire:

njadakas-grills:

afro-elf:

lasimo74allmyworld:

shine-of-asgard:

whitedaydream:

whitedaydream:

Avengers Infinity War BBC Interview:
Tom Hiddleston Talks about “The Tragedy of Loki” Scene

Int: And then Matt Damon, surely that must have been a pinch yourself…

Tom: It was very weird, yeah, very peculiar. Taika and I were both feeding him lines of things that I have said over the course of… And I was of course trying to give Matt really witty lines, like, “It would be fun if you said this because I said this in Avengers,” and Taika would just be like, “Nah,” and giving him much funnier things to say.

image

I don’t want to bring Loki back and let him fall into the wrong hands again. I wish that beautiful death scene in The Dark World was true with his last words “I didn’t do it for him.”

Translation: “I was trying to keep the character consistent and Waititi shat all over that again and again”.

THIS.

Also I’d like to know WHY the heck Marvel and TW hate this amazing character so much. And why they try in every possible way to put him in bad light, demeanor him and cut him off so blatantly from plots.

They should be grateful to him and Tom for brought them fans and money.

TAIKA WAITITI IS FUNNIER THAN TOM HIDDLESTON JUST IN GENERAL AND THERE’S REALLY NOTHING Y’ALL CAN DO ABOUT IT

The comments on this is so fucking funny. Taika breathed new life into Loki. Y’all boring asses should be grateful.

Tom: Taika is funnier than me and all the other writers and directors I’ve played this character for.

Loki Stan’s: buhbuh he wasn’t a bland pretentious baddie for us to wet ourselves overrrrrrr.

I forgot about the smile after the snake story! You’re totally right, @sleepynegress. Best Loki scene.

This movie is the only time he actually seemed like an interesting, conflicted trickster instead of a greasy asshole.

@afro-elf

@njadakas-grills @gaysunfire @vocifersaurus @sleepynegress  @bana05 Sorry to break all your delusions. 😉👇

image

is this graph supposed to mean something to me?

The only thing I see is that a majority of Loki stans are only interested in seeing him reduced to a genocidal fascist Christian Gray wannabe

i think taika did a good job at writing canon loki.

no, not marvel.

i mean, Canon Loki

@note-a-bear @blad-the-inhaler I beg your pardon? In Avengers Loki’s goal was to rule the earth. How could he rule people if he killed them all? And you know what is genocide? Here is a living case: In the first Thor movie, angel baby Thor invaded another planet and slaughtered local residents only because they gave him a nickname, and he wouldn’t stop the massacre until Odin arrived and shouted him down.

And in TDW Loki was not a villain anymore. He was an anti-hero there, by saving Thor’s girlfriend almost at the cost of his own life, saving Thor at the cost of being impaled and revenging his mother’s death. Even Kevin Feige admitted Loki acquired the throne without betraying Thor, because Thor renounced it on his own account first.

Now I believe waititi stans have never watched the previous Marvel films but they pretend they have.

Hiddleston:

-“I feel so lucky with the writing, the way he’s been written. In Kenneth Branagh’s film the writing was very poignant, and you can see the vulnerability in him. Rather like Killmonger in a way, he doesn’t start out as an antagonist; he becomes an antagonist through the revelations. And then Joss Whedon wrote him as a very witty, very charming, very charismatic, and… So I’ve been quite fortunate with some beautifully complex writing of the character.”

-“The best thing about Loki is that if he is afraid he won’t show it. He’s been highly trained through the experience of his slightly traumatic life to shield his fear.”

-“Loki’s death on Svartalfheim was written as a death, and I would say Chris and I played that scene for real. That was meant to be that he redeemed himself, he helped save his brother, he helped save Jane Foster but that he, in the process, sacrificed himself.

SDCC 2013

-When Loki stabbed Thor in the Avengers:

GAGNAROK and Waititi:

Waititi grossly misinterpreted and shat on the character that Hiddleston had painstakingly built; it’s a fact. If you need more evidence I have them. Some people need to learn the difference between character development and retcon. Other than the role of comic relief what did Gagnarok and Waititi give Loki?

To quote this article:

Waititi’s solution was a story in which Loki is mocked and emasculated in almost every scene. It’s very funny, and Hiddleston plays it without visible qualms, but it leaves the character nowhere else to go.

image credits: @whitedaydream

@yume-no-fantasy Thanks for these details! I’m just losing patience with these irrational waititi stans.

And speaking of misinterpretation, I happened to find one of waititi’s tweets:

source

Never doubt he’d always surprise us more.

The more I read his tweets/words, the more Taika Waititi seems the bully at my school who made my life a nightmare…

Which may be exactly why he appeals to bullies so much. He speaks their language.

So like, of all the things Waititi could pick on Loki for, he chooses to shit on him for being an orphan? What the fuck? That is EXACTLY what a bully would do. It isn’t funny, it’s incredibly mean-spirited. Kinda like making him joke about his attempted suicide.

What is hilarious to me, however, is Waititi trying to say that Loki only talks about himself and it’s annoying. Like… You do that more than anyone else, Taika. I’ve read interviews from you before, lmao. Don’t be a hypocrite.

I know it’s not worth trying to engage with the people who stan Ragnarok, Waititi, and Thor* (i.e., the version of Thor shown in Ragnarok, who is NOT the same person as the Thor of the previous movies he was in, and was definitely not the kind, goodhearted ray of sunshine that the Thor* stans want to pretend he is), so I’m not going to tag them. But note how simplistic and ill-informed their rebuttals are.

Yes, Tom recognizes that Taika is funnier than he is. But “funny” isn’t the only virtue in a character or a writer. The writers he praises, as @yume-no-fantasy points out, are the ones who gave him complexity to work with: Miller & Stentz (the writers of Thor 1) and Joss Whedon. And the way Whedon wrote Loki often was funny: “I’m listening”; “Are you ever not going to fall for that?”; “This usually works”; “If it’s all the same to you, I’ll have that drink now.” But it’s a subtle humor (which I guess goes over some people’s heads?) and Loki is as often in on the joke as it is at his expense. Which is as it should be: he’s intelligent and mischievous and doesn’t always take himself seriously. If all the Waititi/TR/Thor* stans see is “a bland pretentious baddie” or “a greasy asshole” that’s their problem.

Similarly, if they didn’t see “an interesting, conflicted trickster” in the previous movies, all I can conclude is that they didn’t understand (or watch) the previous movies. In Thor 1, Loki secretly disrupts Thor’s coronation and subtly goads him into charging into Jotunheim (trickster) – not only “to ruin my brother’s big day,” but because he recognizes that Thor isn’t ready to rule (interesting). He finds out that he’s a member of a people that has historically been Asgard’s enemies (interesting, conflicted). He makes overtures to the ruler of that people, his biological father, offering to let them into Asgard to murder Odin so that Loki can take the throne permanently (trickster, conflicted); but then he turns around and kills his biological father to protect his adoptive father to prove his loyalty to Asgard and enmity toward Jotunheim (double trickster, double conflicted). He lies to Thor to keep him from returning to prevent him from going through with this plan (trickster), but on his way out tries to lift Mjolnir, desperate to be found worthy (conflicted); he obviously hesitates before he has the Destroyer strike Thor, and he does it in a way that isn’t guaranteed to kill him the way blasting him with fire would (conflicted). He tries to destroy the planet where he was born because he so deeply hates what he now knows he is; he begs Thor to fight him while fucking crying (have I given enough proof that he’s interesting and conflicted?).

I could keep doing this with The Avengers and Thor: The Dark World, but I have better things to do than write Reader’s Digest summaries of Marvel movies for people who didn’t understand them the first time around. (I didn’t exactly think they were intellectually taxing, but people continue to surprise me.)

I know interpreting graphs is hard and American schools (at least) don’t teach statistics very well, but here’s a hint: the spikes in interest in the search term “loki” indicate that The Avengers and TDW *generated* interest in Loki. These are searches from people who were not previously “Loki stans”; the loyal fans are the ones who sustain the lower levels of interest in between the spikes. No, Ragnarok did not “breathe new life” into Loki; very few new people became interested in Loki after it came out. And that was deliberate on the part of the filmmakers.

Also, what the hell is “Canon Loki” if it isn’t Marvel canon? Did Taika do a good job at writing myth Loki? Most of my myth expert friends don’t think so. Did he do a good job writing comics Loki? MCU Loki was never supposed to be identical with the Loki of the comics, for one thing; but for another, most of the people I know who are familiar with Loki comics (though there is one exception I know of) don’t think that Ragnarok Loki is a good representation of the Loki of recent comics, who is much smarter and more complex than Ragnarok Loki (not that that would be hard…).

Finally… if Taika is so into sympathetic representations of outsiders, he should have been thrilled with the opportunity Loki presented him. Instead, he decided Loki was to be dismissed as a spoiled, whiny little bitch and ridiculed for exactly the characteristics that make him an outsider: his mental illness, his (implicit) queerness, and his history as an adoptee from another race who spent most of his life ignorant of his heritage. As I’ve discussed before, you’d think that last part would present a great opportunity in a movie that supposedly wanted to make a point about imperialism and the victims of war, but I guess not. As for the other issues, the conclusion I’m forced to draw from Taika’s handling of them is that he’s a mental ableist who thinks Loki just needs to “grow up and get over” his problems (or maybe was faking them?) and quite possibly also homophobic.

saygoodbye-not-thisday:

philosopherking1887:

saygoodbye-not-thisday:

juliabohemian:

saygoodbye-not-thisday:

You know, I get all the criticisms of Ragnarok, I see where they are coming from, I agree with a number of them, and they’re all valid even if I don’t agree with all of them, but…

I just wish there was a little more positivity around the film… for instance, I would love to read some in-depth positive discussion around it, because I personally enjoyed it, I think it did some new interesting things with the direction of Thor and Loki’s relationship and characters and I don’t think it butchered their characterizations. I do think that the style feels like a radical departure from the previous films, and that humorous style in which the narrative was painted jarred at times with the emotions it conveyed.

Most of the positivity I see on Tumblr tends to come from more pro-Thor, anti-Loki blogs (which I care absolutely nothing for) or from shippy blogs. Among the blogs I tend to relate more to (more gen-focused and Loki-supportive) the only discussion I can seem to find is discourse on how bad Ragnarok was. Which, again, I can understand, but at times it’s just a little downing.

I don’t like to be a downer, because I totally understand how it feels to be looking for positivity and coming across negativity instead. I consider myself to be more analytical than negative. Unfortunately, analysis can often result in pointing out the negative aspects of something.

However…I think I can explain why it is that you notice positivity coming from the pro-Thor anti-Loki blogs. Simply put -there’s a reason why people like the things that they do.

Thor appeals to a certain kind of person. More specifically, the manner in which he’s been characterized appeals to a certain kind of person. And that is the kind of person who finds movies like Ragnarok amusing. Thor is not a deep thinker. He’s not stupid by any means, but he’s not introspective. He’s not intellectual. And there’s nothing wrong with that. That’s just who he is. He’s a physical guy, for the most part. He’s a jock. He acts based on gut instinct. He doesn’t look below the surface of things. He sees no need to. He’s ego driven. And thus -he appeals to people who function similarly. The protagonist electrocuting his no good brother? That’s hilarious. Using the no good brother as a battering ram? He had it coming, of course. He’s no good. Duh!

To be perfectly honest, if one doesn’t dig TOO deeply, Ragnarok is a very entertaining movie. It’s visually stunning. The music is great. The dialogue is witty. If you completely disregard the established canon for the characters and don’t think too deeply about the implications of anything they are saying or doing, the movie is great fun. Thor fans are looking for what is explicit and Ragnarok is full of it.

Now -Loki fans are the opposite of that. They are deep thinkers. They take things very seriously. They want to to know the WHY of everything. They are largely made up of people who know what it is to be rejected and despised, or at the very least, to feel different. They see the pain that is unspoken. Behind every one of Loki’s words or actions, they see the contributing trauma. They see more than what is shown. Loki fans are always looking for what is implicit. Give them a film directed by a Shakespearean actor like Sir Kenneth Branagh and they will are happy as a pig in shit.

So, Ragnarok is not without merit. But you’re not likely to find many die hard Loki fans who don’t have at least some criticisms of its treatment of their favorite character.

I think maybe my calling certain blogs “anti-Loki” is a bit strong, through they are definitely pro-Thor. I don’t believe that people who prefer Thor are necessarily more shallow or less introspective, or that people who prefer Loki are deeper thinkers. It feels too much like generalizing and slapping a label on people. I have encountered a number of intelligent analytical people who loved Ragnarok and who also see Loki as a complex character more than a villain and who are pro-Loki AND pro-Thor (What do I even mean by pro-Thor? I guess I mean that they didn’t see Thor’s actions/characterization in Ragnarok as mainly problematic). I wish there were more of those people.

I’m not saying I want to see zero criticisms, I’m saying I want to see some other discussion mixed in as well. A lot of the problems Loki fans on here have seem to be with Ragnarok dismissing Loki’s past sufferings, experiences and depth as a character, when I don’t feel it did that. I feel like Loki changed and grew in this film, as he does in every film he has appeared in. To say that Loki has been moving beyond his past pain and trauma is not the same as belittling those experiences, even if I agree that it is easy to read the film as saying that Loki should “just get over it.” And that is one legitimate interpretation of the film, but it is not the only one, and it is not mine. I take issue with the concept that, if you can move on in any way from your past pain, if you can get better, then your pain and struggles must not have been real in the first place. It’s invalidating. That kind of thinking has got me stuck a long time before. It has got many people who suffer from mental illness stuck.

I appreciate Loki in Ragnarok, because he has clearly done some healing for himself in the interval, has started being willing to discuss some of what he went through (in the play and in his convo with Thor in prison), some of the sharpest pain has worn off, but he is still recovering, still struggling with how exactly to move on from it and who exactly he is in the aftermath. This is not unusual for those who have gone through trauma/mental illness, this is part of the recovery period where they are looking to build their life back. 

Loki was afraid to confront Hela, which has been criticized as a cowardly characterization of the character – but I disagree. Fear is not cowardly, fear is a survival mechanism. Loki in the Avengers and in TDW would probably have thrown himself recklessly into the fight, regardless of the odds (and in this case I’m certain the odds are that Hela would have easily defeated them both and Loki KNOWS the odds because he isn’t actually stupid), because he was self-destructive and didn’t truly care about his life. In contrast in Thor 1, before he learns the shattering truth and even before he gives up all hope on the Bifrost, Loki clearly favored non-confrontational methods first, as on Jotunheim when he preferred to placate rather than provoke Laufey. In moving past some of his self-destructiveness, Loki is in a way going back to who he was before. There was nothing to be won from confronting Hela then and there, what he couldn’t account for in his panic was her following.

In my opinion, Loki was seeking his sense of direction in this film. He has overcome some of his past self-destructiveness, but without yet having a clear idea of where to go from here. Like I said, he’s been recovering, it’s a tenuous period where he is rediscovering and redefining himself, he’s going back and looking at his memories and taking back his own narrative – where he was once “the monster that parents tell their children about,” he chooses to be the “savior of Asgard” – but it’s a process and he was just not ready yet to confront Hela and save Asgard.

Loki says “Take US back” which means him AND Thor, and this is key. Loki was trying to get Thor to stay on Sakaar, and I’ve discussed this before, but I personally think Loki’s main, selfish goal throughout most of the film was to keep Thor alive, to not lose the last of his family. On the one hand, I consider this bravery, that Loki seems to have reached a level of honesty with himself, that he does value his family, the family that let him down and hurt him, inadvertently or not, and that could still reject him (see again his conversation with Thor, he had to know that Thor might still reject his help and invalidate his sincerity), rather than simply pushing them away and running from the pain of past and potential rejection.

Ragnarok is not perfect, obviously. The dynamic between the brothers is unbalanced, and Loki might not have returned to Thor’s side for the healthiest of reasons – their relationship will always have a flavor of codependency to me. But for me, this does not invalidate what I consider to be good character development and progress on Loki’s part. Besides, I love that I have a reflection of how messed-up and hurtful relationships can be in real life, even when the other person does love you. I also disagree that the narrative affirms Thor at every turning, he is mocked plenty as well while he flounders in Sakaar at the mercy of Valkyrie and the Grandmaster. The film stops mocking both Thor and Loki once they are back on Asgard working towards a selfless goal, rescuing the survivors on Asgard. 

It’s just my opinion. I get most people will probably disagree with me, and that’s okay.

I can’t speak for other Loki fans who have been criticizing Ragnarok, but my problem with its depiction of Loki’s psychology is not that it shows him having “moved past” his trauma; rather, it either ignores it, or actively mocks and minimizes it. A few people who have a negative overall opinion of TR, like @foundlingmother, have decided for the purpose of fanfiction (or avoiding despair) to read the play as Loki’s self-therapy, his attempt to come to terms with his heritage and achieve some kind of catharsis regarding his sacrifice… but that’s an extremely generous interpretation, and I doubt very much that it’s the one the film’s creators (screenwriter Eric Pearson as well as director Taika Waititi) intended. The film doesn’t even acknowledge that Loki’s Jotun heritage was ever a problem for him or for Asgard; if the revelation in the play was intended to show reconciliation of himself and/or Asgard to the idea, it might have alluded to the fact that Asgardians (used to) regard Frost Giants as monsters. It also seems implausible that it’s supposed to help him move past his near-death experience, because the movie never acknowledges that Loki was actually stabbed, whether or not he believed he was going to die. Loki never contests Thor’s claim that he “faked his death” – suggesting that he staged the whole thing – and the movie invites us to think that the only reason he did it was to usurp the throne, and that the only reason he did that was so he could glorify himself and live in luxury, rather than, say, hiding from Thanos and trying to keep the Infinity Stones away from him, or even taking (not totally unjustified) revenge on Odin for his lies and maltreatment.

Someone else pointed out recently that the play has Loki say “I’m sorry about that thing with the Tesseract. I just couldn’t help myself,” and then his next line is “I’m a trickster,” which seems to be intended as an explanation. I guess I can see why he wouldn’t want to reveal to all of Asgard that he was under severe pressure from a bigger supervillain… but he didn’t have to mention it at all. This, and the implied explanation for Loki’s seizing the throne, is a general pattern: TR consistently reduces Loki’s motivation to “I’m a trickster, it’s in my nature” – or, effectively, “I did it for the lulz” – when his motivations in previous films have never been that simplistic. Arguably, letting the Frost Giants in to disrupt Thor’s coronation and goading him into trying to go to Jotunheim might have been partly out of mischief (“to ruin my brother’s big day”), but it was also because he wanted to prove to Odin that Thor wasn’t ready to rule – and he wasn’t wrong about that. His reasons for lying, betraying Thor, and causing destruction throughout Thor are envy and resentment, the desire to prove himself to Odin, and emotional pain over the revelation of his origins. His reasons for invading Earth in The Avengers are ambition, anger at Thor and Odin, and some level of coercion from Thanos.

There are definitely respects in which Loki acts like a trickster in earlier films, weaving complicated schemes, delighting in chaos, and hiding his true intentions; but he always has comprehensible, psychologically realistic motivations for his crimes and betrayals. What’s more, it should be clear from watching the previous movies that he almost never enjoys betraying Thor. FFS, he’s crying while he fights him at the end of Thor; he’s obviously affected, even tempted, by Thor’s pleas for him to come home in The Avengers, he hesitates before he drops the cage, he has tears in his eyes when he stabs Thor on the tower. As I’ve discussed elsewhereTR ignores all of that and scrapes Loki’s psychology paper-thin, essentializing him as a simplistic version of the trickster archetype who just can’t resist the urge to betray people for shits and giggles.

It’s only because of this denial of Loki’s psychological depth and motivational complexity that TR can set up the bit where Thor “tricks the trickster” and gives that lecture about change. As @endiness (and others, probably) has speculated, the creators seem to have ignored all of Loki’s character development in previous films precisely so that Thor can get all the credit for his “reform” and “redemption.” It’s not at all clear why Loki betrays Thor on Sakaar; again, people trying to rescue the movie’s characterization can speculate that it’s because Loki is pissed at Thor for dismissing him, or maybe to keep Thor from what Loki thinks of as a suicide mission to fight Hela, but I think (and Thor’s little speech strongly suggests) the movie wants us to assume Loki did it for the same reason it claims he went after the Tesseract: “I just couldn’t help myself. I’m a trickster.” It’s really kind of rich that Thor is preaching at Loki about growth and change, considering how much Loki has changed over the course of the films, while TR regresses Thor back to the brash arrogance of the first film – no, worse; it makes him narcissistic and cruel in a way he wasn’t even at the beginning of Thor, as oblivious and insensitive as he could be. Many of the people who condemn TR are people who love Thor (almost) as much as they love Loki, and all of them agree that it ruins Thor’s character even more than Loki’s. I kind of don’t understand how the “Thor stans” can still call him a kindhearted little ray of sunshine in light of his behavior toward Bruce/Hulk as well as Loki… but as I said before, I think they’re motivated to like the movie and the version of Thor that together put Loki in his place.

As I’ve said, it’s possible to give the portrayal of Loki a more generous interpretation than I’ve offered, but part of the reason I seriously doubt it’s intended that way is that if you put the text of the movie, including the mocking tone of the little play, together with Taika Waititi’s interviews and other conduct, you get a picture of someone who is contemptuous of the rest of the Thor franchise, of Loki as a character, of Tom Hiddleston as an actor, and of Tom Hiddleston-as-Loki’s mostly female fans. Of course, people who are more gung-ho than I am about “the death of the author” have a policy of ignoring the artist’s intentions entirely, and that might be a good strategy if you want to stay positive about the movie.

This is the most direct addressing of the points I raised that I have ever got, so thank you. I hadn’t thought about framing Loki’s actions and motivations throughout Ragnarok through the lens of the specific wording in the play. Hm. The play is one of those things I’m still thinking on – because I agree entirely with everything you have to say about the complex psychological motives behind all of Loki’s past actions.

As to Thor…I admit I have devoted most of my energy to thinking about Loki in this film, and haven’t perfectly worked through my conflicting feelings on Thor’s characterization. I do feel like I understand why Thor is acting this way, considering that Loki has hurt him in the past, but their problems run both ways, and I would have liked it a lot better if Thor would have acknowledged this at all and tried even once to genuinely reach out to Loki. I get that the film is trying to say that sometimes if a relationship is toxic, it’s better to cut off contact than continue to try to help someone who refuses to change, à la A&E Intervention. The execution could have been done better, because I don’t think Thor has given Loki a proper chance at communication first or recognized his own role in the problem yet, before deciding to just leave him vulnerable on Sakaar. So, yes, much of what Thor does in this film sometimes feels unkind or thoughtless, if not cruel.

I disagree on the part where you say it is entirely unclear why Loki betrays Thor on Sakaar again. I thought there a good number of signs that Loki was anxious about Thor going back to Asgard, from reminding Thor that “our sister destroyed you hammer like a piece of glass, you’re not seriously thinking of going back” to his anger that Valkyrie had helped Thor escape. 

But you bring up a lot of good interesting points…I understand a little better now why people take issue with the film. I don’t disagree with you that the mocking tone of the play and Waititi’s words don’t mesh very well with my interpretation. I am aware of what Waititi has said, I guess I had kind of decided to throw that out. I usually am a stickler for authorial intent, but in this case I’m willing to make an exception, because Ragnarok is not only Waititi’s creation, it’s also the actors’ and furthermore must be understood within the wider context of previous movies. Like, I am pretty sure Loki was not meant to have faked his death in TDW – so, since Ragnarok implied he did, but never makes any definite statement on it either way, I will continue to assume that he did not. 

Another thing I am not doing is taking Thor’s words and interpretation within the film as the framing for the narrative of the film, even if I suspect that authorial intent intended the film to be read that way. So when Thor talks down to Loki and accuses him of not changing and growing – I am not assuming that that is the interpretation of Loki that the film says is correct. I’m just taking it as presenting Thor’s opinion on Loki. Thor’s POV, and not necessarily the film’s POV. Thor also believes that Odin is “stronger” (that was a WHATT??!? moment for me) even after learning about all the bloodshed and lies he kept, and I don’t think that the film is condoning those lies and bloodshed. Well maybe that all sounds a bit convoluted. Call it mental gymnastics if you will, I guess, it’s the interpretation I enjoy better.

Well, I am an academic philosopher. Addressing points directly is kind of what we do.

There are more problems with Thor’s characterization than just the way he treats Loki, though of course the electrocution scene is the most glaring example of how callous, self-satisfied, and careless of others’ well-being he is in TR. The way he manipulates Hulk and Bruce, telling each that he likes him better than the other, is meant to be funny, but he really just comes off as an insensitive jerk. Likewise with the “Is he though?” about Bruce being powerful and useful. All the self-congratulatory “That’s what heroes do” crap… it feels like a disdainful parody of the actual heroism that Thor and the other Avengers have shown throughout the MCU. It’s one thing to be self-aware about the inherent silliness of superhero movies (which Marvel generally is); it’s another to mock one’s own franchise, both narrowly (the Thor films) and broadly (the MCU), at every turn. And regarding Thor’s “tough love” in “cutting off a toxic relationship” (which, BTW, I’ve been convinced was not actually the goal; Thor was just manipulating Loki by giving him what looked like an ultimatum, and fully expected him to fall in line)… I encourage you to read this post if you haven’t already.

I can’t use the block quote indentation thing to quote from your post because Tumblr has been making the font huge (why?!), so I’ll use italics:

“Another thing I am not doing is taking Thor’s words and interpretation within the film as the framing for the narrative of the film, even if I suspect that authorial intent intended the film to be read that way. So when Thor talks down to Loki and accuses him of not changing and growing – I am not assuming that that is the interpretation of Loki that the film says is correct. I’m just taking it as presenting Thor’s opinion on Loki. Thor’s POV, and not necessarily the film’s POV.”

It seems perfectly clear to me that the film does intend for us to read Thor’s interpretation of Loki’s actions and character flaws as correct, and to applaud him for turning the tables on Loki, telling him what’s what, and getting him to grow up and get over himself and just do what Thor wants him to. As a writer of canon-compliant Thor/Loki fanfiction, however, I find myself in a bind: given that Ragnarok is now part of canon, how can I continue to write in a way that makes both of them basically sympathetic (while acknowledging their flaws)? So for the purpose of fanfiction, I’ve been making interpretive moves similar to yours; I’ve had Loki (and Heimdall!) reproach Thor for his actions, and I’ve had Thor recognize that he overreacted in anger and feel guilty about it, even though I know that the Thor of TR (whom I’ve been calling Thor* because I consider him a completely different character than the Thor of the previous films) probably still thinks he’s perfectly justified, and Loki* (to use the same convention) probably agrees. But the difference between our approaches is that I’m being unrealistically charitable only for the purpose of fanfiction, while my default interpretation of the movie takes into account the authors’ intended interpretation and is therefore almost wholly negative (except that I like what they did with Heimdall and mostly like Valkyrie).

saygoodbye-not-thisday:

juliabohemian:

saygoodbye-not-thisday:

You know, I get all the criticisms of Ragnarok, I see where they are coming from, I agree with a number of them, and they’re all valid even if I don’t agree with all of them, but…

I just wish there was a little more positivity around the film… for instance, I would love to read some in-depth positive discussion around it, because I personally enjoyed it, I think it did some new interesting things with the direction of Thor and Loki’s relationship and characters and I don’t think it butchered their characterizations. I do think that the style feels like a radical departure from the previous films, and that humorous style in which the narrative was painted jarred at times with the emotions it conveyed.

Most of the positivity I see on Tumblr tends to come from more pro-Thor, anti-Loki blogs (which I care absolutely nothing for) or from shippy blogs. Among the blogs I tend to relate more to (more gen-focused and Loki-supportive) the only discussion I can seem to find is discourse on how bad Ragnarok was. Which, again, I can understand, but at times it’s just a little downing.

I don’t like to be a downer, because I totally understand how it feels to be looking for positivity and coming across negativity instead. I consider myself to be more analytical than negative. Unfortunately, analysis can often result in pointing out the negative aspects of something.

However…I think I can explain why it is that you notice positivity coming from the pro-Thor anti-Loki blogs. Simply put -there’s a reason why people like the things that they do.

Thor appeals to a certain kind of person. More specifically, the manner in which he’s been characterized appeals to a certain kind of person. And that is the kind of person who finds movies like Ragnarok amusing. Thor is not a deep thinker. He’s not stupid by any means, but he’s not introspective. He’s not intellectual. And there’s nothing wrong with that. That’s just who he is. He’s a physical guy, for the most part. He’s a jock. He acts based on gut instinct. He doesn’t look below the surface of things. He sees no need to. He’s ego driven. And thus -he appeals to people who function similarly. The protagonist electrocuting his no good brother? That’s hilarious. Using the no good brother as a battering ram? He had it coming, of course. He’s no good. Duh!

To be perfectly honest, if one doesn’t dig TOO deeply, Ragnarok is a very entertaining movie. It’s visually stunning. The music is great. The dialogue is witty. If you completely disregard the established canon for the characters and don’t think too deeply about the implications of anything they are saying or doing, the movie is great fun. Thor fans are looking for what is explicit and Ragnarok is full of it.

Now -Loki fans are the opposite of that. They are deep thinkers. They take things very seriously. They want to to know the WHY of everything. They are largely made up of people who know what it is to be rejected and despised, or at the very least, to feel different. They see the pain that is unspoken. Behind every one of Loki’s words or actions, they see the contributing trauma. They see more than what is shown. Loki fans are always looking for what is implicit. Give them a film directed by a Shakespearean actor like Sir Kenneth Branagh and they will are happy as a pig in shit.

So, Ragnarok is not without merit. But you’re not likely to find many die hard Loki fans who don’t have at least some criticisms of its treatment of their favorite character.

I think maybe my calling certain blogs “anti-Loki” is a bit strong, through they are definitely pro-Thor. I don’t believe that people who prefer Thor are necessarily more shallow or less introspective, or that people who prefer Loki are deeper thinkers. It feels too much like generalizing and slapping a label on people. I have encountered a number of intelligent analytical people who loved Ragnarok and who also see Loki as a complex character more than a villain and who are pro-Loki AND pro-Thor (What do I even mean by pro-Thor? I guess I mean that they didn’t see Thor’s actions/characterization in Ragnarok as mainly problematic). I wish there were more of those people.

I’m not saying I want to see zero criticisms, I’m saying I want to see some other discussion mixed in as well. A lot of the problems Loki fans on here have seem to be with Ragnarok dismissing Loki’s past sufferings, experiences and depth as a character, when I don’t feel it did that. I feel like Loki changed and grew in this film, as he does in every film he has appeared in. To say that Loki has been moving beyond his past pain and trauma is not the same as belittling those experiences, even if I agree that it is easy to read the film as saying that Loki should “just get over it.” And that is one legitimate interpretation of the film, but it is not the only one, and it is not mine. I take issue with the concept that, if you can move on in any way from your past pain, if you can get better, then your pain and struggles must not have been real in the first place. It’s invalidating. That kind of thinking has got me stuck a long time before. It has got many people who suffer from mental illness stuck.

I appreciate Loki in Ragnarok, because he has clearly done some healing for himself in the interval, has started being willing to discuss some of what he went through (in the play and in his convo with Thor in prison), some of the sharpest pain has worn off, but he is still recovering, still struggling with how exactly to move on from it and who exactly he is in the aftermath. This is not unusual for those who have gone through trauma/mental illness, this is part of the recovery period where they are looking to build their life back. 

Loki was afraid to confront Hela, which has been criticized as a cowardly characterization of the character – but I disagree. Fear is not cowardly, fear is a survival mechanism. Loki in the Avengers and in TDW would probably have thrown himself recklessly into the fight, regardless of the odds (and in this case I’m certain the odds are that Hela would have easily defeated them both and Loki KNOWS the odds because he isn’t actually stupid), because he was self-destructive and didn’t truly care about his life. In contrast in Thor 1, before he learns the shattering truth and even before he gives up all hope on the Bifrost, Loki clearly favored non-confrontational methods first, as on Jotunheim when he preferred to placate rather than provoke Laufey. In moving past some of his self-destructiveness, Loki is in a way going back to who he was before. There was nothing to be won from confronting Hela then and there, what he couldn’t account for in his panic was her following.

In my opinion, Loki was seeking his sense of direction in this film. He has overcome some of his past self-destructiveness, but without yet having a clear idea of where to go from here. Like I said, he’s been recovering, it’s a tenuous period where he is rediscovering and redefining himself, he’s going back and looking at his memories and taking back his own narrative – where he was once “the monster that parents tell their children about,” he chooses to be the “savior of Asgard” – but it’s a process and he was just not ready yet to confront Hela and save Asgard.

Loki says “Take US back” which means him AND Thor, and this is key. Loki was trying to get Thor to stay on Sakaar, and I’ve discussed this before, but I personally think Loki’s main, selfish goal throughout most of the film was to keep Thor alive, to not lose the last of his family. On the one hand, I consider this bravery, that Loki seems to have reached a level of honesty with himself, that he does value his family, the family that let him down and hurt him, inadvertently or not, and that could still reject him (see again his conversation with Thor, he had to know that Thor might still reject his help and invalidate his sincerity), rather than simply pushing them away and running from the pain of past and potential rejection.

Ragnarok is not perfect, obviously. The dynamic between the brothers is unbalanced, and Loki might not have returned to Thor’s side for the healthiest of reasons – their relationship will always have a flavor of codependency to me. But for me, this does not invalidate what I consider to be good character development and progress on Loki’s part. Besides, I love that I have a reflection of how messed-up and hurtful relationships can be in real life, even when the other person does love you. I also disagree that the narrative affirms Thor at every turning, he is mocked plenty as well while he flounders in Sakaar at the mercy of Valkyrie and the Grandmaster. The film stops mocking both Thor and Loki once they are back on Asgard working towards a selfless goal, rescuing the survivors on Asgard. 

It’s just my opinion. I get most people will probably disagree with me, and that’s okay.

I can’t speak for other Loki fans who have been criticizing Ragnarok, but my problem with its depiction of Loki’s psychology is not that it shows him having “moved past” his trauma; rather, it either ignores it, or actively mocks and minimizes it. A few people who have a negative overall opinion of TR, like @foundlingmother, have decided for the purpose of fanfiction (or avoiding despair) to read the play as Loki’s self-therapy, his attempt to come to terms with his heritage and achieve some kind of catharsis regarding his sacrifice… but that’s an extremely generous interpretation, and I doubt very much that it’s the one the film’s creators (screenwriter Eric Pearson as well as director Taika Waititi) intended. The film doesn’t even acknowledge that Loki’s Jotun heritage was ever a problem for him or for Asgard; if the revelation in the play was intended to show reconciliation of himself and/or Asgard to the idea, it might have alluded to the fact that Asgardians (used to) regard Frost Giants as monsters. It also seems implausible that it’s supposed to help him move past his near-death experience, because the movie never acknowledges that Loki was actually stabbed, whether or not he believed he was going to die. Loki never contests Thor’s claim that he “faked his death” – suggesting that he staged the whole thing – and the movie invites us to think that the only reason he did it was to usurp the throne, and that the only reason he did that was so he could glorify himself and live in luxury, rather than, say, hiding from Thanos and trying to keep the Infinity Stones away from him, or even taking (not totally unjustified) revenge on Odin for his lies and maltreatment.

Someone else pointed out recently that the play has Loki say “I’m sorry about that thing with the Tesseract. I just couldn’t help myself,” and then his next line is “I’m a trickster,” which seems to be intended as an explanation. I guess I can see why he wouldn’t want to reveal to all of Asgard that he was under severe pressure from a bigger supervillain… but he didn’t have to mention it at all. This, and the implied explanation for Loki’s seizing the throne, is a general pattern: TR consistently reduces Loki’s motivation to “I’m a trickster, it’s in my nature” – or, effectively, “I did it for the lulz” – when his motivations in previous films have never been that simplistic. Arguably, letting the Frost Giants in to disrupt Thor’s coronation and goading him into trying to go to Jotunheim might have been partly out of mischief (“to ruin my brother’s big day”), but it was also because he wanted to prove to Odin that Thor wasn’t ready to rule – and he wasn’t wrong about that. His reasons for lying, betraying Thor, and causing destruction throughout Thor are envy and resentment, the desire to prove himself to Odin, and emotional pain over the revelation of his origins. His reasons for invading Earth in The Avengers are ambition, anger at Thor and Odin, and some level of coercion from Thanos.

There are definitely respects in which Loki acts like a trickster in earlier films, weaving complicated schemes, delighting in chaos, and hiding his true intentions; but he always has comprehensible, psychologically realistic motivations for his crimes and betrayals. What’s more, it should be clear from watching the previous movies that he almost never enjoys betraying Thor. FFS, he’s crying while he fights him at the end of Thor; he’s obviously affected, even tempted, by Thor’s pleas for him to come home in The Avengers, he hesitates before he drops the cage, he has tears in his eyes when he stabs Thor on the tower. As I’ve discussed elsewhereTR ignores all of that and scrapes Loki’s psychology paper-thin, essentializing him as a simplistic version of the trickster archetype who just can’t resist the urge to betray people for shits and giggles.

It’s only because of this denial of Loki’s psychological depth and motivational complexity that TR can set up the bit where Thor “tricks the trickster” and gives that lecture about change. As @endiness (and others, probably) has speculated, the creators seem to have ignored all of Loki’s character development in previous films precisely so that Thor can get all the credit for his “reform” and “redemption.” It’s not at all clear why Loki betrays Thor on Sakaar; again, people trying to rescue the movie’s characterization can speculate that it’s because Loki is pissed at Thor for dismissing him, or maybe to keep Thor from what Loki thinks of as a suicide mission to fight Hela, but I think (and Thor’s little speech strongly suggests) the movie wants us to assume Loki did it for the same reason it claims he went after the Tesseract: “I just couldn’t help myself. I’m a trickster.” It’s really kind of rich that Thor is preaching at Loki about growth and change, considering how much Loki has changed over the course of the films, while TR regresses Thor back to the brash arrogance of the first film – no, worse; it makes him narcissistic and cruel in a way he wasn’t even at the beginning of Thor, as oblivious and insensitive as he could be. Many of the people who condemn TR are people who love Thor (almost) as much as they love Loki, and all of them agree that it ruins Thor’s character even more than Loki’s. I kind of don’t understand how the “Thor stans” can still call him a kindhearted little ray of sunshine in light of his behavior toward Bruce/Hulk as well as Loki… but as I said before, I think they’re motivated to like the movie and the version of Thor that together put Loki in his place.

As I’ve said, it’s possible to give the portrayal of Loki a more generous interpretation than I’ve offered, but part of the reason I seriously doubt it’s intended that way is that if you put the text of the movie, including the mocking tone of the little play, together with Taika Waititi’s interviews and other conduct, you get a picture of someone who is contemptuous of the rest of the Thor franchise, of Loki as a character, of Tom Hiddleston as an actor, and of Tom Hiddleston-as-Loki’s mostly female fans. Of course, people who are more gung-ho than I am about “the death of the author” have a policy of ignoring the artist’s intentions entirely, and that might be a good strategy if you want to stay positive about the movie.