- Back to Home »
- Anthony Hopkins , Chris Hemsworth , Christopher Eccleston , hollywood , marvel comics , Natalie Portman , thor , thor 2 , Tom hiddleston , Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures »
- Thor 2 - The Dark World
Posted by : Unknown
Saturday, November 9, 2013
But before she knows what’s happening, Portman is sucked into a portal and her blood stream is infected with the aether. Guess ‘burying stuff’ isn’t the security measure everyone seems to think it is. And now, Malekith, the leader of the dark elves of Svartalfheim, is awake after his prolonged hibernation and looking for his aether. Enter Thor to smash his hammer, save his woman and defeat the cloud of smoke. Played by Chris Hemsworth, Thor is a strapping young man with a gravelly voice, stringy blonde hair, blue eyes and angst. About fifteen minutes into the movie, Thor is shirtless (as superheroes are wont to be from time to time) and I fleetingly understood why a friend had told me that ‘Thor 2 is the girl’s superhero movie’. Hemsworth is a good looking guy, and though I find the term ‘girl’s superhero movie’ slightly sexist, if there were to be a girl’s superhero movie, a shirtless Hemsworth would be in it. But the most interesting character, of course, remains Loki, who really deserves his own movie. Played by Tom Hiddleston, Loki is a wiry bundle of evil and angst.
With his slicked-back hair and zingers (Loki has the only worthwhile one-liners in the movie), Loki is too much fun to keep locked away as a prisoner. Thor enlists him into helping defeat Malekith, and the brothers’ trust issues are on full display for the rest of the movie. Thor isn’t the best movie in the franchise, but it isn’t the worst either. It lacks the light touch of the first Iron Man, but Hemsworth, as the forthright manly man, has a good screen presence (even with his armour on) and has a fantastic voice.
But Hiddleston’s Loki, all malevolence and sibling rivalry, is by far the brightest presence on the screen. The special effects in Thor 2 are like something The Hulk might dream up – smash, bang, crash, cars falling, hammers hammering – there is enough action to keep viewers’ mouths slightly open for an hour and 52 minutes. I personally loved how Thor’s hammer frantically finds its way back to him even if they’re in different realities. Another good hammer point/fish-out-of-water joke: Thor enters a London flat and seeing a coat rack, hangs his hammer on a peg. Audiences might find themselves drifting off into the aether as well at times during some of the battle scenes (I spent ten minutes debating cheese versus regular popcorn during a key sequence), but it’s an enjoyable watch all the same – just the sight of a 62-year-old Stellan SkarsgĂ„rd running naked around Stonehenge as a deranged scientist is worth the ticket price.
Let us know your review through your comments below if you already have watched this movie and if not, tell us if you are willing to watch it this weekend!