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I can also pinpoint the exact moment when I tired of Waititi's character, which was fortunately about ten minutes from the end of the movie.
Was it when he
repeated his "we have a spaceship, wanna come?" invitation to the fleeing Asgardians?
Because that was my enough already, you have a climactic fight to direct! moment with the character.
No, it was when
they were leaving on said ship and he was giving the speech about Asgard's foundations because it was so clearly telegraphed what was going to happen
. And the the bit with
Meek being dead was just gross
.
IMHO, YWaititiMV.
I agree. It was very disconcerting and cartoony.
I enjoyed Goldblum's performance and the whole 80's video game/pro wrestler aesthetic of that world.
I swear Goldblum at one point had just gone to the director and said
"So this scene, love it, just one thing: can you make sure that every time the camera comes back to me I'm doing something weirder. No, I'm open to suggestions, just - weirder."
I loved Korg, but
agree about that foundations crack. (So to speak.) It was too obvious a joke, and I'm not sure Korg would've been in for the lofty inspirational speech in the first place.
Yeah, the bits I had problems with were those bits, where it was really obvious where the joke would land.
I thought the bit with
his dead friend was hilarious, though.
One of my favorite moments is a little thing, but when the
not-Revengers were fleeing in the Grandmaster's orgy spaceship and Valkyrie was already on top of the ship kicking ass and Thor decided to go out there, too.
Because
Valkyrie was doing just fine on her own and didn't actually NEED help, but I think Thor really just wanted to fuck some stuff up, too, so out he went.
I am sticking with my headcanon on that one.
I enjoyed that, but
it was another instance that really underlined how much Thor's power and competence varied from scene to scene depending on whether the director wanted it to be dramatic or comedic. The Thor who can take down Surtur singlehandedly, wreck half a giant arena using the Hulk as a croquet ball, and knock spaceships out of the sky by leaping from one to the next is not the same Thor who can be dropped by an electrified net, restrained against his will like the various non-superpowered gladiator mooks, or terrorized by Stan Lee with bionic barber scissors.
I really liked
"Are you the god of hammers?" Though being able to fly was very handy. I don't know if jumping far is the same thing.
The bit in the trailers where Hela says "What were you the god of again?"
was diluted quite a bit with Thor reclaiming his powers in the arena.
I think the trailers deflated a lot of cool bits.
In Dr. Strange, just before the car crash, Steven's finder-of-cool-cases (very Dr. House) was going over possibilities, and the first one was an Air Force Colonel with spinal damage from an accident with "some kind of experimental armor." Steven Strange turned down helping Rhodey! Which is just as well, I guess, because he wasn't going to be helping anybody.
If a film director is a comedian, they're acting in their own film, then there's nobody on set to let them know when they need to dial it back.
I think the trailers deflated a lot of cool bits.
Did
Hela actually even say "Asgard is dead" in the movie?
It was in the trailer, but I don't remember it in the movie.