A ton of fun, notwithstanding its fashionably dark title, Thor: The Dark World features great baddies, ample turnabout, strong women and one mighty powerful hammer. My theater really enjoyed it, dates even more than dudes, judging from all the female laughter. That was mostly triggered by two terrific female characters and the relationship one has with what can only be described as The Ultimate Boyfriend.
That would be Thor, God of Thunder and Crown Prince of the Kingdom of Asgard, the most bitching celestial realm imaginable. IOW, quite a catch for an Earth girl, even one played by Natalie Portman.
Thor himself doesn’t appear for damn near the first half hour, then gets only a quarter of the screen time. That’s OK, since the supporting cast are almost all terrific, starting with Portman’s astrophysicist/girlfriend, who must deal with Anthony Hopkins’ King Odin as her potential father-in-law; Kat Dennings as her sassy intern; Chris O’Dowd as her comically lame suitor; and Tom Hiddleston as a deliciously venal baddie.
Robust praise aside, Thor 2 obviously isn’t for everyone. It’s really great for Thor fans like me and great for general Marvel fans, but not so great for those who think Marvel movies aren’t worth watching if Robert Downey Jr. isn’t in them. However, if you fall into one of the first two groups, it’s hammer time!
PS – This marvelous Marvel movie ups the end-credit ante by delivering several post-script scenes, one of them teeing up next year’s Guardians of the Galaxy. Entertainment Weekly has a detailed ending analysis of all the last minute moving parts, albeit it includes several spoilers. Beware.
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Saw it in downtown San Jose at Camera 12 from row 5 up in a third floor theater for the 3D showing.
Felt kinda like a superhero vaulting up those long escalators to make it in time.
Chris Hemsworth, Anthony Hopkins and the rest of the core cast reprise their roles in fine fashion, with Natalie Portman and Tom Hiddleston being significantly better than in the origin story. Perhaps that’s because they have more and better lines this time out.
For instance, Hiddleston is given the richest trove of fun lines and doesn’t fumble a single one. Heroic action movies rise only as high as their villains are low down. Hiddleston’s Loki, along with some evil-incarnate characters, more than hold down their end of the bargain.
Portman once again strikes an ideal balance as a highly capable woman who nonetheless pines for the perfect man. Her scene reuniting with Thor captures this perfectly, as shown in the nearby video.
Regular Supporting Cast
Episode Specific Supporters
Cameos
One mainstream critic damned The Dark World for having nothing to say, meaning it doesn’t have much to say about our world. Most of it takes place in Asgard and other heavenly realms, visiting Earth only briefly towards the beginning and then cataclysmically at the end. Instead it says much about Thor’s world, making it intensely interesting to we fans of Thor and his insanely heroic existence. Not a fan of insanely heroic existences? Thor 2 is gonna top out disappointingly low for you.
Marvelous Marvel proves once again that they know how to tell marvelously entertaining stories, including mixing in plenty of humor. For instance:
A cast of dozens and crew of thousands is what it takes to bring fantasy alive. The latter includes hundreds of stuntmen and thousands of artists.
The movie is presented with such good cheer that we can forgive it for mixing swordplay with laser guns. What!!