Joss Whedon's 2012's "The Avengers" was a delightful franchise record, and 2013's "Iron Man 3" also received rave reviews for the impostor played by Sir Ben Kingsley. "Thor 2" continues this style, the hero is fake, the entertainment is real. Brother Xia Liba and younger brother Yangchun Baixue, one red and one green, complement each other. List a few points of view, and ask who resonates.
1. Grandpa Stan Lee ran a trick in the mental hospital this time. Isn't this self-sacrifice amazing?
2. The so-called bad guy Malekith is actually just a Smith elf wearing a mask, isn't he?
3. Wouldn't it be great to have a naked old Swedish man do a travel promotion for Stonehenge?
4. Did Thor shove his long-winded brother out of the high-speed flight deck and remind you of Goku's fight against Master in 1994?
5. Does Thor take the subway to Greenwich to save the universe too much to believe in the accuracy of the London subway? What does Mayor Bao think?
6. When Natalie Portman used two iron bamboo sticks to stop the Big Hadron Collider from the Big Bang, did she ever ask Sheldon Cooper whether it was scientific or not?
7. Thor's shy and delighted expression after being spoiled by a woman in the subway, is the actor Chris Hemsworth's true feelings revealed? It makes people sigh that at the moment of beauty, the longevity of Shinto can only be empty ears.
8. Thor's ubiquitous younger brother who likes to make big fuss and long stories has become the protagonist. He is both good and evil, happy and angry, happy and sad, true and false, and dead. Let him do it alone. At the beginning of the movie, the two brothers appeared together, and in the last scene, the scene was obviously given to the younger brother. Thor 3 should be renamed "Rocky" directly, right?
No wonder island moviegoers are courting like this: Loki, you little shit, I love you!
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