It occurs
to me that the MCU really doesn’t have too much in the way of actual family
relationships (plenty of the-family-you-choose relationships, but here, we’re
talking about biological and/or legal families.) There have been a few prominent instances –
Hank & Hope and Scott & Cassie in Ant-Man,
the Maximoff twins, Gamora & Nebula in Guardians
of the Galaxy (in a “hey, we were both abducted by the same guy who waged
war against our home worlds and then raised us” kind of way,) and now Spidey
and Aunt May (and I hear T’Challa has a sister?
We gonna meet her?), but really, the MCU is full of people with empty
branches on their family trees. Lots of
orphans, lots of only children, lots former child assassins raised by Russian
operatives (okay, so many just one of those.)
So that
leaves us with the Asgardian royal family, and most importantly, brothers Thor
and Loki. The interplay between these
two, and the incredibly screwed-up drama therein, is the best part of the Thor movies, and while the Cate
Blanchett and Tessa Thompson of it all is awfully enticing, it still tops the
list of reasons why I’m looking forward to Ragnarök. (Thor-and-Loki-related spoilers.)
It’s a
time-honored sibling dynamic:
charismatic golden boy Thor (who, in his first film, is too cocky for
his own good) and bitter also-ran Loki (who, of course, goes progressively
further off the rails over the films.)
Thor is his father’s heir, wielder of the mighty Mjolnir, and he has no
problem expecting to get whatever he sets his mind to. Loki, meanwhile, festers at the slights he
perceives against himself and delights in psychologically manipulating his less-cunning
older brother.
I’ve said before that Loki is a great villain for Thor, because he creates situations
that Thor can’t simply fight his way
out of. Untangling himself from one of
Loki’s stratagems requires Thor to think harder and plan more carefully, and he
needs to stretch different muscles in order to succeed. The more often they face off against each
other, however, the more difficult an opponent Thor is becoming for Loki. I’m not sure if Loki still thinks of Thor as
a self-involved oaf or if his increasing off-the-rails-ness is tripping him up,
but he doesn’t seem to realize how much wiser Thor is getting to his tricks,
and he’s not stepping up his game accordingly.
But when he’s on, no one can play Thor like Loki, who know just what
knives to twist.