Ah, I see what you mean. Although I think
Loki hiding out on Earth with Karnilla in the final scene
is sort of going to be the "tie in" to the Avengers.
^ You should put that post into spoiler tags or remove the "dying" part. That's pretty spoilery.
You have to type [1spoiler] before and [/1spoiler] after your text to put it in spoiler tags (without the "1"s)[/quote
You may be right about that I mean he is a God.
Its a hole to me cause first Thor 2010, Avengers 2011. If he just continues to live from the Ancient Norse time to present day on the same mission that the script ends on. What has he be doing this whole time, through WW1, WW2, and all other current wars? Why didn't he protect? He would then going back on his word to a dying Eric.
Is that something Thor should be depicting or explaining? Or is it more something that Avengers should be explaining? I think its Avengers.
Maybe but Iron Man and Thor all had connections to the Avengers at some point during the movie.
I haven't read the script that has floated around, so I am likely missing some details that are meant to address these kinds of things... but I would like to see Thor's initial involvement in serving as protector on Midgard, come from a directive given by Odin. The backstory would be that Odin has a certain affinity for Midgard... and he observes events unfolding that pose a danger to the people of Midgard (perhaps something with Loki, or just an awareness of other super-powerful bad-guys, such as someone in possession of the Cosmic Cube). Likewise, he wants to educate Thor on humility, sacrifice, responsibility...
So, Odin tells Thor that there are major events occuring on Midgard, and Thor must serve the mortals... thereby, he will learn to understand that life gains value, when it has a just cause. Sort of a two-birds-with-one-stone type of scenario. Midgard needs help, and Thor needs to understand the importance of commitment to the 'right' path (and knowing what is 'right'... sort of a "Categorical Imperative" ala Kant, type of thing). He may also divluge that Thor is made of Midgard (energy from Gaea) thus, he has a certain obligation, as well (the mortals are your brethren).
The categorical imperative aspect could be the over-arching theme of a Thor film series.
Is that something Thor should be depicting or explaining? Or is it more something that Avengers should be explaining? I think its Avengers.
How did Thor get to modern day in the comics and why can't that same explanation be used?
JMC has Thor reappearing on Earth after Ragnarok trying to reassemble the Norse gods. Easy enough
Simple, he didn't get dumped into the modern world until the modern age. He lived his life as a regular gimp doctor, not knowing he was a God until he went on vacation in Norway and got stuck in that cave.
I knew that. I meant it rhetorical, because there seems to be a lot of people stressing the idea of how Thor gets from his solo to the Avengers movie when it has already been laid out in the comics.
I always thought, and maybe it was just me, you leave the gimp doctor out of the sceanario compleatly.
I agree.... Look KB said they are trying to figure out how to "present a different kind of world". I don't think he want to go the Doctor route.