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Thor: Ragnarok is the Fun, Funny Marvel Movie We’ve Been Waiting For

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Thor: Ragnarok is the Fun, Funny Marvel Movie We’ve Been Waiting For

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Thor: Ragnarok is the Fun, Funny Marvel Movie We’ve Been Waiting For

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Published on November 3, 2017

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“Fun” isn’t a word that’s spent a lot of time around the Thor movies thus far. Oh sure, the first two are both a good time; Natalie Portman, Kat Dennings, and Stellan Skarsgard are great as the human supporting cast, there are some rock solid Coulson scenes in the first one and they both sprint right along. But, for all the Shakespearean majesty of the characters and the romantic doom and gloom of Viking myth and dynastic intrigue, the first two Thor films still feel a little lightweight at times.

Thor: Ragnarok changes things up quite a bit, but the biggest change is its approach to humour, and wholehearted embrace of fun. This is possibly the funniest movie Marvel has ever produced—but it’s also shot through with a welcome dash of pragmatism, compassion, and some moments of genuine heart and depth.

[Note: this is a non-spoiler review, and does not discuss major plot points, although there may be spoilers in the comment section.]

Whether you come to the movie as longtime fan or just a casual viewer, this is the best take on the character of Thor to date. The largely improvised dialogue allows Chris Hemsworth to really cut loose and invest Thor with an immensely likable combination of arrogance and sweetness. He’s been tempered by his experiences but is still, at heart, an Asgardian King and kind of a dudebro, to the manner born. The movie makes that clear, then takes it all away, and explores what happens on his journey to get it all back. This narrative finally gives Thor the emotional depth that Tony Stark and Steve Rogers achieved over the course of their core trilogies, and positions him as a major player in the next stage of the universe.

It’s also an extraordinarily well-balanced movie. Mark Ruffalo is fantastic both as a newly articulate Hulk and a shell-shocked Bruce Banner and his arc here is an expertly executed mix of acceptance, courage, and total panic. Ruffalo has talked a lot about how Hulk’s story over the next three movies begins here, and if this is going where it seems to be, it’s going to give both Banner and The Other Guy room to explore the pathos, humour, and complicated relationship they richly deserve.

Elsewhere, the cast is just as impressive. Jeff Goldblum is magnificently sleazy as the Grandmaster and his recurring inability to say Thor’s correct title is one of my favorite running jokes. Cate Blanchett is equally great as Hela and, unlike the previous villains of the series, is allowed actual depth and context for her character and actions.

Hela and Thor end up on very different sides of possibly the most interesting conflict in the MCU. A vast amount of this film is about myth, both personal and societal, and what happens when the lies that underlie and sustain myths are exposed. Hela is a terrifying antagonist (and the action sequences are extraordinarily good), but she’s also a function of a story. The central struggle of the film is whether Thor, and Asgard, will follow in her footsteps or break from the prison of tradition and expectation. This struggle is expressed in terms of colossal wolves, fire demons, and vast amounts of brutal swordplay, but the ideological dimension is very much there and gives the film weight when you least expect it to.

Best of all, though, are Tessa Thompson as Valkyrie and Taika Waititi as Korg. Thompson gets one of the best introductions in the entire franchise’s history and plays the role with tangible relish. Valkyrie’s background ties effortlessly into the overall plot, and both her arc, and how it relates to Thor’s own, are vastly satisfying. Plus Thompson is really funny here. She’s always been a rock solid comic actress, and the film also gives her plenty of dramatic moments and some of its very best lines, making Valkyrie the most instantly charming lead character these movies have had in a long time.

If anyone steals the movie, then, it’s Valkyrie. If anyone taps the audience on the shoulder and politely asks whether the movie wants to come along with them, though, it’s Korg. A colossal, softly-spoken alien played by director Waititi, Korg is completely sweet, has no filter whatsoever, and is massive fun to watch, especially as Waititi’s laconic, off-kilter timing shines through. It seems weird to say that an eight-foot-tall rock-based alien is the most sensible person in the room most of the time but…well…he is.

The cast is rounded out by a great turn from Karl Urban, a surprising and very effective subplot for Idris Elba’s Heimdall, a couple of very fun surprise guests, at least two members of the Hunt for the Wilderpeople cast (Wilderpeople is Waititi’s previous movie, and is an absolute must-see) and Sir Anthony Hopkins actually showing up for work and showing some life for the first time in this franchise. Each character is well-served, each one has a clear, distinct voice, and the way their plots wrap around one another allow the film to finally achieve the scope and cosmic stakes the previous two tried for and never quite reached.

And, somehow, the movie manages to do all this while simultaneously being three different films at once. It’s a fantastic standalone adventure. It’s a great capstone to an uneven trilogy. It’s also the sound of massive gears moving and clanging as the MCU is changed forever in some truly major ways and Infinity War begins to barrel towards us in earnest. It would have been so easy for the film to fall on any of these fronts—instead, it soars, crammed full of character, humor, action, and sweetness. The end of the world has rarely, if ever, been this much fun.

Alasdair Stuart is a freelancer writer, RPG writer and podcaster. He owns Escape Artists, who publish the short fiction podcasts Escape PodPseudopodPodcastleCast of Wonders, and the magazine Mothership Zeta. He blogs enthusiastically about pop culture, cooking and exercise at Alasdairstuart.com, and tweets @AlasdairStuart.

About the Author

Alasdair Stuart

Author

Alasdair Stuart is a freelancer writer, RPG writer and podcaster. He owns Escape Artists, who publish the short fiction podcasts Escape Pod, Pseudopod, Podcastle, Cast of Wonders, and the magazine Mothership Zeta. He blogs enthusiastically about pop culture, cooking and exercise at Alasdairstuart.com, and tweets @AlasdairStuart.
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Vincent Archer
7 years ago

“A colossal, softly-spoken alien played by director Waititi, Korg is completely sweet, as no filter whatsoever, and is massive fun to watch, especially as Waititi’s laconic, off-kilter timing shines through.”

Totally best line: “Another day, another Doug”

krad
7 years ago

Cate Blanchett is equally great as Hela and, unlike the previous villains of the series, is allowed actual depth and context for her character and actions.

Um, Loki? Y’know, the best villain in the entire fucking MCU

I know nobody liked Dark World, but there’s been a tiresome tendency since its release to lump the first Thor movie in with that as a disappointment, and the collective amnesia is irritating. The MCU’s villains have mostly sucked, but the major exception is Loki, and he did appear in another movie before Avengers…….

—Keith R.A. DeCandido

 

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joelfinkle
7 years ago

I thoroughly enjoyed this movie, with the caveat that this isn’t the comic book Thor (at least not when I was reading it in the 70s and 80s).  Thor isn’t glib, he isn’t “in the vernacular.” This seemed more like the Ultimate version of Thor, who was originally a surfer dude before finding the hammer (versus the very serious Dr. Don Blake of the early Kirby creation). Comic Book Thor wouldn’t have screamed at the end of the “Meet the Grandmaster” ride (tip of the hat to whoever licensed the music — no spoiler except listen to the soundtrack), Comic Book Thor wouldn’t have said, “We’re friends, from work!”

And that’s fine… except that the previous movies showed a much more serious, less glib Thor too.  That seriousness is part of what made Dark World a plod, but it seems like a a radical (even if it’s needed) shift.

Anthony Pero
7 years ago

@3:

One can infer that spending several years kicking around on Earth with Tony Stark may have corrupted Thor’s speech patterns a bit. Like what happened to Teal’c in Stargate.

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7 years ago

@3 MCU Thor has never exactly been Comic Book Thor – he never says “Verily” or anything of that nature. In the first Thor he’s much more formal with his speech patterns though, and as mentioned spending years on Midgaard with humans such as Tony Stark and Darcy the Intern (is her last name ever mentioned?), he’s picked up some slang.

I’ve read that the “He’s a friend from work!” line was something that came from a child who was on set during filming as part of his Make A Wish deal. I liked the line regardless, but even if I didn’t, that would make me cut it a bit of slack.

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7 years ago

Agree with the review. It was a fun film, not perfect, but fun. And Hela is an amazing villain, Blanchet is obviously having a great time.

@2 – krad: Yeah, Loki is awesome too.

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7 years ago

Glad to hear the trilogy ends on a better (quality) note than its middle chapter suggested it would.

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Nitpicker
7 years ago

*manor

Sunspear
7 years ago

An argument could be made that Hiddleston’s best/most fun performance as Loki was at this Comic-Con:

 (apparently linking doesn’t work. search “Loki comic con 2013”)

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7 years ago

I do love Loki and hate to see him forgotten, as other commenters have mentioned, but this is the first MCU movie I’ve been genuinely excited about seeing. I’ve seen them all to date, and I have enjoyed them – in fact, some I’ve enjoyed much more than I anticipated, such as the newest Spider-Man – but they were always movies I was totally fine to wait for the rental and have no desire to see them again (I might actually go out and purchase Spider-Man though…).  But this one I’m kind of sad that we’ll have to wait for rental (we generally go through the hassle of getting a sitter and all that for one movie a year, and, well, it’s a Star Wars year…).   Maybe I’ll see if somebody will be willing to watch the kids while we’re at my husbands’ parents for Thanksgiving…

I am really excited for Hela, if for no other reason than she reminds me of Dark Galadriel, haha :)

 

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Cool Bev
7 years ago

I haven’t watched this yet, but aren’t the Marvel movies getting sillier and more fun? It might have started with Deadpool, or maybe Ant-Man, or maybe just the parts of Iron-Man that people liked the best. Guardians of the Galaxy was pretty silly, and GoG II was just a romp. Haven’t seen the latest Spider-Man, how goofy is that one?

As long as they balance with more serious titles (Logan), I like this trend.

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7 years ago

Logan and Deadpool are based on Marvel characters, but they are not “Marvel movies”, because they are not made by Marvel Studios. That said, while not all Marvel Studio movies are comedies, they do have a humorous component most of the time, starting probably with Guardians I.

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Arthur
7 years ago

Sure Loki has been the best Marvel villain up to this point, but it’s not like it’s been much of a horse race. Who’s second place? That…guy…? You know…the one with the…thing…? I think his name was…Jeff?

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7 years ago

@11 – not quite as goofy as Guardians of the Galaxy II, but pretty goofy.  Or really, it’s just that it’s fun and to me feels fairly optimistic (and Tom Holland is completely adorable in the part) – most of the destruction is fairly small scale and I believe there is only one confirmed on screen death in the whole movie.

But – especially the ‘high school’ parts – it does also have a lot of humor going for it.  Some of it rather dry – I actually found the academic decathalon coach to be one of the funniest characters.

I actually also think the villain in that movie is one of their better and more nuanced/well drawn ones.

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7 years ago

Agreed, Lisamarie. Also, a Spider-Man movie, particularly the first one of a particular incarnation, MUST have humor. It’s Spidey.

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7 years ago

I guess I’m one of the few who thought Dark World was Okay.  Not the greatest, but enjoyable.  Sure, Thor was a bit sullen throughout (but also more careful and mature), and the main Villain was more than a bit cliche (but Loki was there to liven things up), but it was entertaining and had some fun humor as well.  

I haven’t seen this movie yet, but it looks from the trailers like they have “Gardians of the Galaxified” the story quite a bit;  thrown everything on the alter of “fun” (or silly, depending on your perspective and tastes) and mix it up with a soundtrack and one liners.  While the first GotG was fun (the second one was already getting tiresome, though still kind of fun), and I’m sure glad that they are not going down the lugubrious path DC seems to favor, I hope they don’t overdo it. 

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duh
7 years ago

I… liked all of the Thor movies.  Seriously.  About the only MCU movie I didn’t like was… Dr Strange (but by the time I found that out, I’d paid for a ticket so Marvel got what it wanted from me).  

Korg and Miek are adorable.  “didn’t print enough pamphlets” indeed.  

 

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7 years ago

I remember enjoying Dark World too.  The first Thor movie was okay, although not one of my favorites.

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7 years ago

The first two Thor movies may not have been home runs, but both of them were solid base hits, and very enjoyable entertainment. I am still amazed that the MCU has done such a good job with Thor.  Like the skintight superhero suits that look good in the comics, but silly on screen, Thor’s character could have easily gone wrong. I hear Chris Hemsworth was getting tired of the role, and of the time it took in makeup to get his long hair applied. He had fun filming a little joke reel about where Thor had been during the Civil War movie, and showed some excellent comedic timing in that project. So he was well prepared to shift the tone and lose the hair. 

When I first heard that the third movie was doing Ragnarok, I was a bit concerned that the resulting movie would be a bit too serious and a bit too ponderous. Then I heard that they were adding in a Planet Hulk subplot, which I thought was perhaps too much to tack into a movie that would already have a lot to do.  And then I heard about lots of jokes. But despite a lot of elements with wildly different tones, the whole thing worked out very well.  Kind of like salted caramel; different flavors that end up working well together.

Karl Urban did a great job as Skurge, and while they simplified it a bit, they did a pretty good job of recreating the redemption arc that Walt Simonson gave him in the original comics, and the scene of him blasting away with the M-16s was a spot on portrayal of one of the greatest comic book moments of all time.  And Tessa Thomson was a great fallen Valkyrie, with a nice redemption arc of her own. Cate Blanchett was a solid Hela, obviously enjoying her role. Jeff Goldblum was, as always, a delight. Doctor Strange got a nice cameo, and Loki was good as always. A lot of folks forget that Loki is not a god of evil; he is a trickster god, and a bringer of chaos, so they shouldn’t be surprised that he veers from good to bad and back again. I recently saw that the characters in that little play Thor sees upon his return were some interesting actors: Hemsworth’s brother Luke was Thor, Matt Damon was Loki, and Sam Neill was Odin.

In the end, Taika Waititi pulled off things in a quite impressive fashion. The movie was well worth seeing, and I may go again to see some of the details I missed the first time around. I hope Marvel gives Waititi more work in the MCU. They would be fools not to.

Anthony Pero
7 years ago

The Collector: So, brother, what’s your favorite Marvel movie.

The Grandmaster: It’s a… it’s a tie.

———————————

The was the first post-credits scene that the entire theater just busted out laughing hysterically. Jeff Goldblum is the best.

@19: I noticed Sam Neill and Luke Hemsworth, but I completely missed that Loki was Matt Damon. One of those details I caught was the statue they were building to Hulk… the one beneath him was Thanos.

Anthony Pero
7 years ago

Other thing that caught my eye.

Loki totally stole the Tesseract from Odin’ vault when he went back to throw that crown into the Eternal Flame. I mean, they made it obvious, but there was a lot going on in that scene. Were any other Infinity Stones on Asgard at the the time? i wonder what would have happened if Surtur had destroyed Asgard with the Space stone still there?

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7 years ago

@20 — Wasn’t there also a Beta Ray Bill face on the building?

I liked it quite a bit; then again, I also liked Dark World well enough, and while I miss Darcy, I’ve been happiest when Thor’s been away from Earth.

My one minor complaint is the kind of off-hand way in which a number of supporting characters from the previous films were culled, although I realize it was a combination of playing for laughs and showing that Hela was a Big Deal.

Anthony Pero
7 years ago

@22:

Not Sif, though. She’s still around for future reuse. That’s probably not an accident.

Yeah, there was  a Beta Ray Bill as well, but that was more fan service, I’m sure. Thanos is actually around in the MCU. And was apparently set free by the Grandmaster, or broke free. Given the connection to the Collector, that might actually have some play in the future.

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7 years ago

@23 Actually, Sif was engaged with her TV show, and not available when they asked her if she could appear. But judging from the way the Warriors Three were dispatched, I am glad she wasn’t in the movie. Although these are Norse gods, so perhaps they are only mostly dead…

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7 years ago

In the comics, the entirety of Asgard died, not just the place, and it was restored by some magic. In Oklahoma instead of Norway, which was way better for contrast.

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7 years ago

I definitely have some Odin family tree questions once we get to spoilers. Great movie, Hela was fantastic. I love that underneath it all it is a small story: Hela doesn’t want to destroy the universe or anything silly like that, she just wants to take Asgard in a different direction. An old testament direction, if you will. Her and Thor are the two halves of Odin’s life, with the deciding factor coming down to the third child who is maybe most like his father of all.

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7 years ago

@21 – I think that was the only Stone on Asgard. Vision has on on Earth, there’s one on Xandar with the Nova Corps, one with the Collector on Nowhere, and Doctor Strange has the fifth. We’ve never seen the sixth and final.

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7 years ago

@27 Asgard only had possession of the two stones, and they deliberately moved the red one off Asgard in the post-credit bit for The Dark World. It might have been the first time the movies used the name “infinity stone.”

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7 years ago

I have deeply loved all the MCU movies, and I adored this one as well. It was everything I hoped it to be and then some.
I totally love Thor; Loki can be a real bastard sometimes, but for some strange reason, I love him even more. I must have something with the scoundrels.

I was a bit shocked that they wiped the Warrior’s Three out so offhandedly, it’s good that Sif was away. And it did seem to me that Asgard was … well, a bit underpopulated. The refugees of all of Asgard could manage on a single spaceship, however big? And why, WHY they had to do the eye thing?! But I’m not complaining, I totally loved the movie with all its humour and its action. Valkyrie kicked ass and Banner was adorable, not to mention Korg. And, to be repeating myself, Lokiiiii!!!! *fangirl squeal* And Thor!!!

PS I catched Matt Damon, but managed to miss the others (I think. Or maybe I got Luke, too. Perhaps?).

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7 years ago

As I continue thinking about it, the one other thing that bothers me a bit — that the Hulk has not just been champion in the gladiatorial arena all this time, but that he’s been champion in fights to the death during which he’s actually killed a bunch of dudes, many of whom were probably slaves who didn’t have the option not to fight him.  It all happened offscreen and before the events of the movie, obviously, but it still seems a bit uncharacteristic.

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Lee Jones
7 years ago

“Thor: Ragnarok” was such a massive disappointment for me.  Very disappointment.  Marvel had a movie that had the potential to be on the same level as “Captain America: The Winter Soldier” – especially in regard to its subject matter.  Instead, Marvel turned it into a damn comedy.  A comedy with weak characterizations and some plot holes.  

With the exception of “Ant-Man”, Marvel has been disappointing me since “The Avengers: Age of Ulton”.  I don’t know what else to say.  

krad
7 years ago

Interesting — of the movies since Age of Ultron, I’ve found Ant-Man to be the only disappointment……………….

—Keith R.A. DeCandido

 

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7 years ago

Really? I liked Ant-Man, but found Age Of Ultron sub par and boring.

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7 years ago

Okay, saw it, loved it, and can now look at the rest of the comments.
@20 – Speaking of Matt Damon, the only reason I recognized him is because the trailer that showed directly before the movie featured Matt Damon, and he always sticks in my head (thanks, Team America). So I recognized him right away.

I totally did not catch the Thanos head in the skyscraper – I actually thought it was just another stylized version of Hulk’s head.

@21 – oh, you know he stole the Tesseract. I actually thought I had recognized another Infinity Stone but I was actually completely misremembering what it looked like and it was just something else.

@23 – I was wondering where Sif was and if she had just been forgotten or what.

I guess I’ll chime in, but I have been enjoying the most recent crop of Marvel movies. I thought Ant-Man was fun, if slighly different with the whole heist feel, although I will grant it’s not in the top quadrant of movies, although I’m really ready for Wasp to have more of an active role instead of being shunted aside like she was for most of that movie. I actually preferred Ultron to the original Avengers, but I found Civil War to be a bit ponderous. I can appreciate all the meat it brought to the characters and the general plot but I’m not sure I would watch it again if I were looking for a movie to relax/unwind to. Wheras I was pretty genuinely entertained by the Guardians of the Galaxy vol 2, Spider-Man and Ragnarok.