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#576 | |
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Side-Kick
Join Date: May 2011
Posts: 262
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Invisibility is, I think, the simplest explanation. And honestly, I think it's the one that the GA is most likely to assume was the case. Therefore, if they had wanted the entire audience to get that he was doing something different, they would have had to explain it a bit more. They didn't, so... I think they were fine with the GA assuming he was just invisible. And I think you are right here, that the "trying to lift Mjolnir" bit is the best example of where everything is framed as if he's invisible. A more complex explanation might be that he put a glamour on everyone, which I think seems reasonable as part of Loki's box of tricks. To be clear, I don't think he was just in disguise; meaning, he just put on an Earth suit and bluffed his way in. Wearing the Earth clothes would have HAD to be accompanied by some magic to make the people he was meeting perceive him as someone who was "supposed to be there", and to perceive whatever he did as something he had a right to do. It would be similar to the Doctor's use of the psychic paper in the new series of Doctor Who -- it's not a complicated trick to make people think you are someone who ought to be there. However, I think if that had been the intent, the movie would have needed to show us some little interaction between Loki and the SHIELD guys, to show them treating him as "someone who should be here". If that's a deleted bit that we get on the DVD later, fine; but it's not in the movie right now. Another magical possibility would be... a glamour that just acts as, in effect, "just a hedge, citizen; move along". It wouldn't be Loki specifically tricking everyone into thinking he is someone he's not (a gov't VIP for example). It would just be making it so that everyone would perceive him as... not worth noticing. I'm trying and failing to come up with an example of this being done elsewhere, but I know I've encountered it. The only reason I consider it a possibility is that it would explain the suit, aside from Loki's vanity. To pull off that level of glamour, you would need to be dressed unremarkably for the setting.... I'll tell you something that bugged me about that sequence -- and I apologize if this has been brought up and discussed elsewhere already, I'm still in the process of digging through everything here. So, SHIELD has Thor as a prisoner. They're interested in who this guy is. Coulson is going to interrogate him. Why would they not be recording him in that room? Audio and visual, that is. Why not have a camera on him during the interrogation, so that SHIELD superiors, who are elsewhere, can also view it later? This only bugged me because the first time I saw the scene, I thought that Loki's appearance, and thus the extended sequence of Thor "talking to nothing", was going to factor into SHIELD's assessment of him. "We left him alone in the room and he had a whole conversation with thin air". And thus, I thought that was part of Loki's plan -- to appear to his brother, but invisibly, so as to make Thor look crazy. (And I hadn't even read the Ultimates series at that point!) I figured it was going someplace, and then it seemed not to, as it wasn't brought up by anyone. Yet, I couldn't figure out why they wouldn't be recording the interrogation. |
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#577 | |
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Side-Kick
Join Date: May 2011
Posts: 262
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Quote:
It kind of struck me that the point there was that Loki was lashing out indiscriminately... perhaps much as Thor had early on (when he became so distracted in his battle with the Frost Giants that he failed to really notice the collateral damage to his friends... let alone the wider implications). I mean, if the Destroyer was JUST sent to kill Thor, and if the Destroyer is basically indestructible, then all it had to do was land, walk to where ever Thor was, and blast him. If it was only targeted at Thor, there was no reason for it to blast all the SHIELD guys just because they started talking to it, and there was no reason for it to be destroying the town as it went, either. (Which it was doing long before the Asgardians showed themselves and tried to stop it.) Considering the kind of tech it is, if ALL Loki had wanted it to do was kill his brother, it could have been much more surgical about it. And it still would have come across as an object lesson to the mortals, through its implacability and unstoppability. You could argue that Loki had it go on the offensive immediately because he knew the other Asgardians were on the scene. (And he was clearly following its actions and directing it to some extent.) But even that doesn't really make sense when you consider that Loki should have known as well as anyone that Sif and the Warriors Three were really not enough to stand up to the Destroyer, nor would they have been enough to prevent it from killing Thor, even if he hadn't gotten them to back down. |
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#578 | ||
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Gotham Attorney
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: In a courtroom or tied up in a warehouse
Posts: 7,833
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So am I.
__________________
RIP Heath Ledger, the Best Joker Ever. Quote:
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#579 | ||
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Gotham Attorney
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: In a courtroom or tied up in a warehouse
Posts: 7,833
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Quote:
__________________
RIP Heath Ledger, the Best Joker Ever. Quote:
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#580 | |
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Side-Kick
Join Date: May 2011
Posts: 262
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Quote:
Loki knows that they have left Asgard, before he sends the Destroyer off. In fact, it seems like the main reason he sends the Destroyer is because he assumes they went to Earth to fetch Thor back. (I can't recall right at the moment whether he knows for sure where they went, or if he only knows that they went somewhere, and would be assuming the rest. It seems like such a safe guess for him to make, though.) The implication being that if they hadn't gone, Loki would have proceeded with his plans feeling sure that his lies to Thor in the interrogation room would be sufficient to take care of the problem of his brother. But once the four warriors go... Loki knows they can tell Thor the truth about Odin (although they can't necessarily contradict Loki's claims about Frigga's feelings, nor about Thor's exile being the price of truce with the Frost Giants). That's the point at which Loki just sends the Destroyer, with, as I say, the final instruction to "destroy everything". I'm thinking the "everything" included Sif and the Warriors Three, too, now that I mull it over. First, because he knows now that they have willingly betrayed him and won't take his orders as king. Second, because he can't afford to have them come back and deliver a story to Odin and Frigga that contradicts what Loki plans to claim. Yet if they talk to Thor, Loki has to know his lies to Thor will come out. So even if the Destroyer kills Thor, they can come back and tell Odin and Frigga that Thor told them that Loki came and lied to him. Their word against Loki's, but... why take the risk when it's easier to let the Destroyer take care of all of them? To be clear... I also think that the way the scene actually played itself out (with Thor's "last words" to Loki through the Destroyer), perhaps Loki would have had it stop there. Not sure. I don't think Thor's appeal to Loki, and Loki's own reaction to it, figured into his plans originally. |
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#581 |
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Side-Kick
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: In Loki's Castle
Posts: 429
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What the ironic thing about Loki sending the destroyer was , if he never done it Thor would not have gotten his powers back and still be mortal. So even when Sif and the warriors three told Thor the truth he would not been able to do anything about it .
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#582 | |
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The First Avenger Mod!!!
SHH! Global Moderator
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: In the neighborhood!
Posts: 36,243
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Quote:
__________________
My Review of The Dark Knight Rises Rating MCU films: Iron Man - 4/5, The Incredible Hulk - 4/5, Iron Man 2 - 3/5, Thor - 4.5/5, Captain America: The First Avenger - 5/5, The Avengers - 5/5 |
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#583 | |
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Guts and Glory
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Fighting the good fight.
Posts: 4,528
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Tom Hiddleston....*drool, drool, drool* Okay...I'm alright. I apologize for my fangirlish behavior. Now I forgot what I wanted to say.
*edit* I just thought of what I wanted to say! As much as I love Tom Hiddleston's portrayal of Loki I've been introspecting about it. You know how Odin said that Thor was a vain, childish boy before banishing him? I think in the end he should amend that statement and tell Loki that he was wrong and that Loki himself was really the vain, childish boy. Quote:
So humanity needs to be eliminated immediately? Last edited by Godzilla2000; 08-21-2011 at 10:18 PM. |
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