Thor: Ragnarok
Dir: Taika Waititi
2017
*****
Thor has been regarded by many as The
Avenger’s weakest element. I disagree. I know many didn’t like Thor: The Dark
World but I thought it was pretty good but it was certainly time for a change
of direction. While the Marvel films have taken on a slightly lighter tone in
Phase III of the MCU, Thor has always been quite serious. You can just about
get away with anything in comics and as a child I never questioned why a God
would be fighting alongside a giant green man and man in a robotic suit, it was
what it was and what it was was cool. However, when making a more serious live action
adaption that has to be unique as well as adhering to a bigger thread of
continuity, it’s hard to work out where to place such a character such as Thor.
I’m not convinced Marvel have ever actually 100% succeeded with this, at least
not until now. The announcement that Taika Waititi was going to be the director
of Thor’s third outing was met with excitement and confusion. What was Marvel
thinking? I remember being shocked when I learned that Kenneth Branagh was
going to direct the original Thor in 2011 but it sort of made sense due to his
experience with epics and costume period pieces. It was less surprising when
Alan Taylor directed the second film, not because of his film credits but
because of his rich experience working in TV. Waititi has made a few of my
favourite films of all time (What We Do in the Shadows, Eagle vs. Shark, Hunt
for the Wilderpeople) but they were very low budget comedies. I was terrified
when it was announced that Peyton Reed was announced as the Ant-Man director
and that turned out brilliantly but Waititi seemed like a fantasy director.
I’ve had serious conversations with other comic/film nerds about who our
fantasy Avengers directors would be and I always say Lars von Trier – Captain
America, Werner Herzog – Hulk, Alejandro Jodorowsky – Avengers, Andrei
Tarkovsky – Guardians of the Galaxy, Takeshi Tikano – Iron Man and Stanley
Kubrick – Thor. I guess I’m something of an anarchist, the MCU would go down in
flames if I were in charge but Waititi directing Thor, could that really work?
It turns out it was a genius idea. While Waititi didn’t write the story of
Thor: Ragnarok he developed the tone and the style and the overall direction
the characters should go. When you think about it, it makes perfect sense.
While Thor: Ragnarok has a totally different tone to Captain America: Civil
War, it does bring the colourful and otherworldly playfulness of Guardians of
the Galaxy closer to the fold. It’s nice to get away from Earth too, like the
comics do quite often. The film incorporates classic stories from across
various different threads. It follows elements from Ragnarok – which was part
of the Civil War story; the Surtur saga – which is classic golden age stuff
from Stan Lee and Jack Kirby from the 60s; the Contest of Champions story – a favourite
of mine from the 80s; and Planet Hulk – one of the greatest ‘What if’ scenarios
Marvel have ever produced. It is the perfect amalgamation of Thor/Marvel
through the ages and something the hard-core fans of the comics have always
wanted. Ragnarok featured a clone of Thor, Contest of Champions saw Captain
America, Talisman, Darkstar, Captain Britain, Wolverine, Defensor, Sasquatch,
Daredevil, Peregrine, She-Hulk, The Thing and Blitzkrieg fight in a tournament
against Iron Man, Vanguard, Iron Fist, Shamrock, Storm, Arabian Knight, Sabra,
Invisible Girl, Angel, Black Panther, Sunfire and the Collective Man in a sort
of pre-civil war story that was a bit like Planet Hulk’s Gladiatorial story but
featuring the Elders of the Universe. While it is not quite the same as those
comics, it certainly retains much of what made them exciting. You certainly
don’t have to be a Marvel expert to enjoy the merge of ideas but it is lots of
fun for those that are. As much as fans would want to see a pure adaption of Planet
Hulk and World War Hulk, it wouldn’t fit into the bigger story and Marvel
clearly know what they are doing. I never thought characters like The
Grandmaster, The Collector, Surtur or Korg would have a place in the MCU, and
I’m fine with the exclusion of characters like Beta Ray Bill for instance – it
really could be far more confusing than it is. What Marvel has done is
encourage a bunch of talented writer/directors from a cross section of genre
and styles, to use their back catalogue as well as develop their own ideas.
Apparently Ruben Fleischer, Rob Letterman and Rawson Marshall Thurber were in
the running alongside Waititi for creative director. I’m not sure what they saw
in either We’re the Millers, Goosebumps or Zombieland that made them think
they’d be perfect for Thor but supposedly Waititi created a sizzle reel that
won them over, even though sizzle reels are something that Marvel strongly
discourage. He kind of broke all the rules from then on. Thor: Ragnarok is
technically a comedy. Waititi keeps it authentic, adapts elements from the
Golden age of Marvel, as well as the cool stuff they did in the 80s and the
more modern works that brought fresh new ideas to the characters, and also
tells it like it is. That is, he, the writers and Marvel finally admit that
much of Marvel’s history/stories/characters are absurd. Thor is a ridiculous
character who meets other ridiculous characters in ridiculous places in
ridiculous scenarios. Waititi’s film embraces the nonsense and the nostalgia
and makes a fun film out of it. It fits perfectly in the MCU, right in-between
Guardians of the Galaxy and Infinity War, while balancing the tone of Guardians
and Civil War. Thor and Hulk took a backseat during Civil War, it is only right
we be told why they were absent and what they were doing and Ragnarok is a
pretty good excuse as excuses go. Thor’s character had become stale and a
little one dimensional, it makes sense that he develop and it makes sense that
he lightens up following his time on Earth with the other Avengers. Loki has
also had time to mature and reflect and finally we have a significant
development of The Hulk – rather than Bruce Banner. Waititi’s tone is a mix of
neon sci-fi and soft-focus fantasy and it works perfectly. The humour and
banter between characters works surprisingly well, which won’t win everyone
over but is something that the franchise needed in my opinion. He’s brought a
lot of his own style to the mix but the classic comics are there as well as
other sci-fi influences, the work of Harry Harrison immediately springing to
mind. Thor is a bit like Jack Burton from Big Trouble in Little China, as
Waititi puts it "What's the version of Thor just wanting to get his truck
back? He's the one looking at the world and bringing a certain sarcasm and irony
to this cosmic landscape." It totally works for me. This is about as
authentic as the space/fantasy side of the classic comics gets. They have
achieved everything I never thought they could all in one film. I thought the
idea of Guardians of the Galaxy was unfilmable but that is nothing compared to
what they do with Thor. The best part of The Avengers was when Hulk threw Loki
around Stark Towers and that is what Waititi and co have given us more of. Korg
is one of the dullest, most boring characters ever created by Marvel but he is
now one of my favourite characters in the MCU and I can’t wait to see more of
him in Infinity Wars. Cate Blanchett’s Hela is easily one of the most
interesting villains the MUC has had so far, her character built from the brilliant
Jason Aaron’s Hela and Gor from Thor: God of Thunder. She looks as she did in
Aaron’s comic but Blanchett gives her her personality. Likewise, Tessa
Thompson’s Valkyrie almost steals the show – which is really saying something
given the strong competition. I’ve never thought of Valkyrie with much regard,
there are so many different versions of her, none of which have ever really
stood out, but Thompson’s take on the character is brilliant and I can see her
being a key player in the new Avengers. Much has been said of the absence of
Natalie Portman’s Jane Foster but in my opinion the franchise is better off
without her. She didn’t bring anything to the Thor films, the romance between
her and Thor stunted the stories and she clearly had no love for the part
anyway. He’s a much more interesting character without her and other characters
can now develop. I’m not sure the MCU ever needed Kat Dennings in the first
place and Stellan Skarsgard will return I’m sure, it just didn’t make sense to
involve his character here. My biggest gripe, and it is quite big, is that my
favourite Lady Sif is missing. Not a bad thing as it turns out regarding the
story but only if she returns to the franchise in the near future – if she
doesn’t I’m out. Thor and Hulk – the two Avengers no one ever knows what to
with – make a great double act and raise a surprising amount of laughs. Certain
scenes had the entire cinema I was sitting in roar with laughter, something I
would never had expected but loved when it happened. None of the humour is
forced either, it’s all very natural and remarkably casual. Waititi has said
that around 80% of the script was improvised and with a director like him such
an idea actually works for the best. It’s a sci-fi, fantasy, super-hero, action
romp with all the entertainment you could hope from such a film. The sets are
either retro-pop – the kind you’d find in any Jack Kirby classic, and utterly
gorgeous fantasy landscapes that reminded me of Simon Bisley’s Slaine comics
from the 90s mixed with the Sistine Chapel. The film is full of brilliant
electro-synth riffs and opens and closes with Led Zeppelin’s amazing Immigrant
Song which I dare say will now be known as Thor’s theme tune. I saw so much of
what I love about comics in it, I saw a big franchise taking a risk and I saw
cinema changing the formula for a change. This is evolution. I don’t think I
suffer superhero movie fatigue as much as most people because I watch heaps of
other films from various different genres and so far Marvel haven’t made a bad
film. I think lessons were learned from Iron Man 2 and since then it’s just got
better and better. I’m sick of trailers giving away too much, I’m sick of
little independents getting overlooked and I’m sick of other franchises (DC,
Star Wars) copying Marvel but I’m certainly not sick of the MCU, with each of
their films outdoing the last, always moving onwards and upwards and evolving.
I would argue that instead of taking over, Marvel is paving the way for new
ideas and aren’t just an inspiration for superhero/comic adaptations but cinema
as a whole. At least film makers are now actually reading the comics they are
turning into films, which they certainly weren’t doing in the 80s and 90s.
No comments:
Post a Comment