Loki’s “death”

lokirevenger:

A lot of
people here, have been theorizing about iw and just some of these things that
they’ve pointed out made me think here are the points they made and things i’ve
noticed

1. The “the sun will shine on us again,
brother” feels like such an odd phrase, referring to a future that Loki is so
certain of coming to pass 

2. Loki “disappears” for a while, when the
hulk is fighting Thanos and then suddenly appears again, seeming a lot more
confident than he was before? 

3. Loki’s last word “you will never be a
god” are also odd, considering thanos never considers himself a god or strives
to be one. 

4. Tom has another movie contract + he was
confirmed for avengers 4 

5. Some behind the scenes pics of avengers 4
appear to be flachbacks to the first avengers, with loki in it 

6. The phrase “no more ressurections” obv
refers to the fact that Loki has “died” before and magically resurrected.
But the fact is, he never really “died”, he faked his death twice and came
back. if he had sad “no more trick”s like what he said to doctor strange,
it would have been a direct referrence to this? 

7. Loki’s plan to just cut thanos with a dagger
he summons behind his back after seeing him beat the hulk to the ground? I’m
sorry what was that supposed to be 

8. Doctor Strange saying “this was the only way”
seems to be hinting at a “great master plan” and considering he has/ha the time
stone…

Ultimately
I think that the speculations about time travel are actually pretty spot-on?
They have to reverse at least some deaths, tom holland has another spiderman
movie coming up, seb stan has a contract for like 2 more films? Guardians of
the Galaxy 3 has been confirmed but idk how they gonna do that with literally
two guardians left. The only thing I fear, is that the only deaths they
will reverse, are the ones who were killed by Thanos “finger snap”. That
the “confident” loki we suddenly see appearing, is actually a Loki from
the past (or future depending how you look at it or how they actually do it).
if that’s the case, he’s going in knowing he’ll die or knowing
that after everything is done, he will never have died in the first place (much
like his first two “resurrections”)

My friend is currently in the middle of a break-up, and my ugly ass brain decided to insert a very inaproppriate parallel to this scene from Thor: Ragnarok.
My friend is Hulk, her ex is Loki, and her current boyfriend is Thor
And I’m here ugly wailing/laughing because it’s funny and I’m a bad person.
The only thing that makes me feel better is the knowledge that she’d appreciate the joke.

cell113:

luminis-infinite:

ladyoftheteaandblood:

quoting-shakespeare-to-ducks:

mizkit:

hawxkeye:

mcu meme  – 4/10 scenes.

It’s the unspoken truth of humanity that you crave subjugation.

I see this scene reblogged a lot off the one Hiddleston blog I follow, but it almost always ends with Loki’s “There are no men like me” line, which is completely missing the fucking point of the scene. And I get that it’s about the Hiddleslove, which is great, but it’s completely missing the fucking point of the scene. And it is a very important point.

This is one of my favourite moments in the whole MCU because of its incredible power and strength. This is not Captain America with his super soldier serum juice standing up to a god. This isn’t even a young man who might think he’s somehow got a chance against the prick with the horns. This is an old, old man who knows, who knows, that he’s probably going to die because of what he’s doing, but he is not going to kneel to another man like Hitler.

Maybe he did, seventy years ago. Maybe that’s why he would rather die now than remain on his knees. Maybe he *didn’t*. Maybe he fought against his own countrymen, because he wouldn’t kneel to a man like this. Maybe he’s always been one to stand up. Maybe he lost everything once because of it. Everything except his integrity, and maybe he’s ready to die instead of risking losing that now, at the end of his life. Maybe his integrity cost him so fucking much seventy years ago that he hopes he’s going to die for it now because he almost wishes he’d have died for it then, but if he’s going to die for it, he’s goddamn well going to die with it.

Maybe he’s a Holocaust survivor. Maybe he’s Jewish. Maybe he’s gay. Maybe he’s Romani. We don’t know.

We don’t know anything about this man, except he’s the bravest goddamn person in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

And that’s why it bothers me every time I see this scene go by with his response cut from it. Because it’s missing. the. point.

“the bravest goddamn person in the Marvel Cinematic Universe“

Auto reblog

Always. Always. Always. This is a scene that will always hit me. 

I need this so bad, because this reminds me that not everyone has forgotten, not everyone has turned to violence, not everyone has turned their backs on history.

This may be a comic book film, but those comics were made by people, and many of those people made the heroes they wanted or needed when things were at their very worst.