Director: | Kenneth Branagh |
Writers: | Ashley Miller, Zack Stentz, Don Payne |
Stars: | Chris Hemsworth, Anthony Hopkins, Natalie Portman |
Basic Information
Thor is a 2011 superhero film based on the same-named character from Marvel Comics. It is the fourth film in the Marvel Cinematic Universe and the fourth installment in the first phase. The film was released worldwide on April 27, 2011, and in the United States on May 6, 2011.
Thor (Chris Hemsworth), son of Odin (Sir Anthony Hopkins), challenges his brother Loki (Tom Hiddleston)’s claim to the throne of Asgard. To teach him humility, Odin casts the young warrior down to earth to live among the people. Stripped of his powers, Thor falls in love with scientist Jane Foster (Natalie Portman). While Loki usurps the throne of Asgard to gain evil and plot his revenge, Thor’s love for Zen and his lessons in humility makes him a true hero and a great and immortal warrior protector of the people of Earth, which saved them from destruction.
Thor Cast
Chris Hemsworth starred alongside Natalie Portman, Tom Hiddleston, Stellan Skarsgard, Colm Fore, Ray Stevenson, Idris Elba, Kat Dennings, Rene Russo, and Anthony Hopkins. After resuming a dormant war, Thor is banished from Asgard to Earth, stripped of his powers and his hammer Mjolnir.
Plot Summary
Three scientists, Jane Foster (Natalie Portman), Eric Selvig (Stellan Skarsgard), and Darcy Lewis (Kat Dennings), study the aurora-borealis phenomenon in a four-wheel-drive van in the New Mexico desert. Suddenly there was a huge tornado/lightning and they headed there. The van collided with a man inside the maelstrom and they stopped. The man, a well-built and handsome blonde, is self-centered.
A voice-over in AD 900 describes a war between the Jotun, the giants of Jotunheim, and the Asgardians; The Asgardians win, grab the power box, and return to their base. The speaker Odin (Anthony Hopkins) is talking to his two sons, one is Thor with a powerful beauty, and the other is a very intelligent boy with dark hair named Loki. Odin says both are worthy but only one can be king.
Years later, an elaborate celebration of Asgard took place. Thor (Chris Hemsworth) is now officially recognized as the Crown Prince of Asgard. Loki (Tom Hiddleston) watches with envy. Before Odin can announce, alarms go off; There are raiders in the safe rooms that keep Jotense’s energy box. A sizeable destructive robot kills the attackers and saves the electrical box. Examining the remains, Odin seems unfazed, yet Thor is enraged and wants to attack. Odin forbade him.
Also, Read: The Incredible Hulk (2008) Review and Plot Summary
Thor gathers Loki and his closest friends, Volstagg (Ray Stevenson), Federal (Josh Dallas), Hogun (Tadanobu Asano), and Sif (Jamie Alexander), and they go to the Bifrost Bridge. The caretaker, Heimdall (Idris Elba), lets them through and the six are taken to the great frost planet, Jotunheim, a frozen, crumbling place. Suddenly he confronts King Loffy (Collum Four), who is taunting the Asgardian warriors. Many frost giants surround Sixth and a fight ensues. Loki survives with some magic and has a strange reaction when touched by the ice giant. Luffy frees the monster and the Asgardians run for their lives. Thor kills the Beast but the group is disbanded again and things look dire. Odin arrives to save the day; He apologizes to Luffy for intruding and attempts to restore peace, but Loughry insists that he is above diplomacy and that the Frost Giants are now fighting Asgard. He tries to stab Odin, who blasts Luffy and sends the group of teenagers back home.
On the Asgard side of the portal, Odin lets his four friends go and confronts Thor and Loki. Enraged that Thor dragged Asgard back into battle, Odin tells Thor that he is unfit to be king. He strips off his power and exiles her to Earth, sending his hammer, Mjolnir, seconds later, claiming that the wielder of the hammer, worthy of it, possesses the power of Thor.
On Earth: Thor is enraged and Darcy captures him and knocks him out. Three scientists put him in their van and took him to the hospital. When he wakes up he starts fighting again and finally calms down. Eric tries to talk Jane out of it, saying she’s crazy, but she’s intrigued and attracted to him. They return to the hospital, but Thor has escaped. As they get into the van, the Asgardian is beaten and dragged out again, but this time they take him with them. Jane gave her some of her ex-boyfriend’s unusual clothes. After talking to the locals about a crashed satellite 50 miles to the west, Thor decides to head there and Eric tries to leave Jane alone again. Thor tries to find a horse in the shop to walk around town. Jane came and rode him; The two-headed west in the van.
A crowd has gathered at the site of the satellite crash – literally where Thor’s hammer fell to Earth; People try to lift the parties and take the hammer out of the pit. Stan Lee poses as one of the locals trying to get a hammer out of his truck. Government agents of SHIELD storm the place and seize Jane’s research notes and computer. After dark, Jane (Natalie Portman) and Thor (Chris Hemsworth) arrive on the scene. Now the pit is surrounded by guards and tents. Thor attacks and Jane fights for protection. After beating several agents, Thor finally reaches the hammer but is unable to lift it. She falls to the ground, regretting her powerlessness, without putting up a fight when SHIELD agents arrive and take her away.
On Asgard: Thor’s four friends begin to suspect that Loki has something to do with Thor’s exile. Loki realizes that he is not a pure Asgardian, and Odin accepts that Loki was taken from Jotunheim as a child and raised as his own. Loki is confused and angry as Odin falls into a coma (“Odinsleep”). Loki became the acting king.
On Earth: Agent Coulson (Clark Gregg) interrogates Thor, leaving him alone for a while, and Loki appears in the room. Loki tells Thor that Odin is dead and cannot return to Asgard. Thor worries. Eric arrives to tell SHIELD agent Thor that Jane’s ex-husband is under the influence of steroids. Somehow he got his driving license. Coulson allows Eric to take Thor, who has secretly captured Jane’s letter. Back in town, Eric takes Thor out for drinks; The two boilermakers were Chuck and Bond. Thor brings a drunk Eric to Jane’s car. Thor and Jane go to the terrace to look at the stars, and Thor tells Jane about the Nine Realms and the Bifrost Bridge. Jane says the bridge is a wormhole of the Einstein-Rosen Bridge.
On Asgard: Loki stops Heimdall and then meets Loffy. Loki was the one who allowed the Frost Giants to quickly retrieve the power box on Asgard. He makes a deal with Lofi so that they kill Odin and let them re-enter Asgard to take his chest, in return, they go home in peace. Loki orders the Destroyer to go to Earth and kill Thor.
On Earth: The Destroyer arrives in the desert of New Mexico and begins destroying everything with a heat ray. Thor and the three scientists try to get everyone out safely. Thor confronts the Destroyer and tells Loki to leave the humans alone to recover. Loki can see and hear what is going on in Asgard. The Destroyer delivers a vicious slap to Thor’s back and sends him to the ground, apparently dead. Jane runs to the body crying. However, Thor’s selfless act to protect his friends proves him worthy of wielding Mjolnir again, freeing himself from the hole and returning it to Thor’s hand. He is brought back to full life and strength and put back into his red cap and armor. He defeats the Destroyer and tries to return to Asgard
On Asgard: After Frozen Heimdall, the Frost Giants attack through the portal. Lofi goes to Odin’s room, and as he prepares to kill the Norse god, Loki heroically kills Lofi. Despite being frozen, Heimdall is always alert and able to break free. He brings Thor back to Asgard. Thor quickly flees to fight the Frost demons.
Loki goes to the Bifrost portal and sets out to destroy the ice planet Jodunheim. Thor tries to stop her and the two fight. Thor swings into Loki and Mjolnir and begins destroying the portal to stop the process, breaking the bridge. As everything collapses, the two brothers fall into space, but Odin is there to capture Thor, who has hired Loki’s staff. Loki gives up and allows himself to disappear from the Bifrost Bridge into the abyss of no return.
Everything is back to normal in Asgard, although Odin is upset about how things have changed. Thor pines for Jane but Heimdall assures her that he wants her. Back on Earth, Jane is in a new laboratory with new equipment.
After the credits, Selvig is taken to the SHIELD facility, where she meets Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson). Fury shows the item in the bag, which it says will be a source of unlimited power. Loki then appears, unseen by Selvig and Fury, and Selvig says again, “Well, it’s worth watching.”
Thor Movie Review
“Thor ” failed as a film but was a commercial success, an example of an ancient carnival trick that would do anything to ruffle a tent. “You won’t believe what these girls pick up on!” A bitter trickster promises me and my horny friends a hot night at the Champaign County Fair. that was close. We couldn’t believe what he had left.
The failure of “Thor” begins at the story stage with a screenplay that includes special effects. Some of the dialogue is sarcastic and some winks with sarcasm. It backfires on Stan Lee’s original Marvel strategy.
The story leads to a children’s animated film starring Thor, Odin, and the other piglets. In the realm of movies about comic book superheroes, it’s a wasteland. Nothing interesting happens, nothing interesting is said, and special effects are not space or time, but only special effects.
Thor is not an interesting character, to begin with. The gods of Greek, Roman, and Norse mythology have the same problem, namely that what you see is what you get. They are defined by their characteristics, not by their personality. Odin is Odin, acts like Odin, and cannot function without Odin, etc. Thor is a case in point. What are you doing? He uses a hammer. That’s what he does. You don’t have to be very smart to use a hammer, just like Thor (Chris Hemsworth) doesn’t look like a bright light on Asgard in the movie.
Asgard is described in Norse mythology near Troy or perhaps in Asia Minor. In the movie, as far as I can tell, it is not of this earth, it must be somewhere else in the universe. It has tall towers and buildings connected by bridges and shows no sign of population, with thousands of Asgardian Odin (Anthony Hopkins) standing guard like a Nazi robot to take orders from the throne.
Asgard’s ancient enemies are the Frost Giants, from Jodenheim. I believe Jotunheim and Asgard are connected by a bridge, but cannot confirm this, although the bridge appears to be Thor’s way to Earth, perhaps a portal to time and space, which would explain That’s why the Asgardians are crossing. Intergalactic light years and null arrivals in New Mexico.
Thor arrives first and meets three human scientists. Is he human, that’s a question the film sets aside. We know from mythology that gods sometimes associate themselves with humans, which is an optimistic sign. Astrologer Jane Foster (Natalie Portman), her friend Darcy (Kat Dennings), and Dr. The famous Erik Sevic (Stellan Skarsgard). I say you’re an astrophysicist because you pretend to be a storm chaser, drive through the desert in a van and look up at the sky, that doesn’t get you very far in astrophysics. Unfortunately, his van hit him after landing in front of Thor. It’s not meat cute for the gods. Then in the meteorite event, Thor’s hammer hits Earth, embedding it so firmly that not even a van or the federal government can remove it.
So now Thor is on Earth, his hammer is stuck, and I’m in a big shock. Thor, fortunately, speaks English, and Jane and his friends take him to a local restaurant, where he eats a lot of Pop-Tarts, and when he finishes his coffee, he smashes the empty cup on the floor. “We don’t do that,” Jane explains as if explaining to a child, and instructs him to order another cup, after which he apparently internalizes human behavior and the film’s taming of the Thor angle. leave it.
Three good scientists. Jane flirts with Thor, stands by, and doesn’t do anything important, and Dr. Sevic looks up at the low-angle camera as he looks at them slyly and wisely. There is also a government agent (Clark Gregg), whose every action is a solution to the urgent need of the plot.