While Thor: Love and Thunder may not have seen the same critical acclaim as Ragnarok, it is still one of the MCUs most endearing movies. Here is why.
Thor has had quite the journey in the MCU. A tragic hero by every measure, the God of Thunder has lost everything he holds dear, but nonetheless perseveres. Much of Thor’s story development and growth is due to Chris Hems worth collaborating with Thor: Ragnarok director Taika Waititi . After five appearances as the God of Thunder, Hems worth informed Waititi he was bored with the character which Waititi echoed, as Goliath reports. With the third installment of the Thor saga came humor and chaos amidst tragedy.
In the aftermath of Avengers: Endgame, the legend of Thor was left wide open. The first solo superhero film in the MCU to get a fourth installment the pressure was on for the studio, the director, and the cast of Thor: Love and Thunder. As the Avengers were virtually disassembled, it was pertinent that Thor’s story moved forward in a way that both honored his time with the Avengers and focused on his future. By flying off into the sunset with the Guardians of the Galaxy, both Thor and the Guardians could begin anew in the MCU. Whatever fans and critics may feel about the fourth installment, Love and Thunder is ultimately one of the MCUs most endearing movies, offering a symphony of love stories, new landscapes, and plenty of laughs out loud moments As the MCU continues to expand so do the characters and planets audiences meet.
Until Guardians of the Galaxy, audiences hadn’t seen worlds beyond As gard or the Nine Realms in the Thor films, nor had they met other MCU gods. Omnipotence City shifts what audiences understand about the gods and worlds mentioned in previous films. The city was first introduced in the Thor: God of Thunder Vol. 1 no 3 comics, as Looper explains. In Thor: Love and Thunder, Omnipotence City is home to all the gods of the universe. Covered in gold and marble, the gods gather for orgies, as Zeus .
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