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Cake day: June 11th, 2023

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  • To be honest I still find their whole romantic situation a bit weird. Not just that they’re variants of each other and so are probably genetically related, but also that I didn’t think Loki really needed to get into a relationship in the first place.

    It’s almost hard to remember why I actually liked the show at this point. I do think Tom Hiddleston is a good actor who does a good job putting himself into the role, which is one of the most important things about a show for me; some of these shows you can tell the actors are phoning it in and it kills the vibe. But the more I think about the writing choices the more I find them… questionable.

    I’m hoping that they’ll learn from the reactions to the more recent shows and movies, and put less effort into setting up a Kang war or whatever and just have Loki do more Loki stuff.


  • Yes, exactly. I’m perfectly happy to watch fun characters semi-competently flounder through time and space (I enjoyed Legends of Tomorrow), but I feel like there are other characters that would be more suited to that kind of thing. Sylvie especially should be in her element, she’s supposed to be a major thorn in the TVA’s side since she was a child, which should be a significant feat. But she doesn’t really seem to know what she’s doing any more than our Loki does, and that’s already less than you’d think he should.

    I’d almost forgotten about the building thing; when I first watched it I thought it might be a hint that the whole situation was an illusion — Loki was tricking Sylvie, or Sylvie was tricking Loki, or someone else was tricking them both, and that would explain all the oddness — but that wasn’t at all the case in the end. I had all these theories about what at least one of the Lokis might be planning and they never paid off. It’s almost as bad as when Evan Peters’ Quicksilver turned out to just be a guy named Ralph Bohner.




  • This is a great take! It’s very close to what I was getting at, yeah.

    I think Loki being good now was rushed, but isn’t entirely unbelievable given that Loki does tend to turn good every so often anyway. But even if he does decide to be the good guy for a bit, he’s still Loki — like you said, we’re expecting “trademark grandiosity, sick fight scenes, and surprise turnarounds,” and we didn’t really get that, I totally agree.

    One of the scenes that frustrated me in the show was when Loki got kicked off the train on Lamentis. First of all you’d think he’d be way too powerful to lose to train security, even drunk, but you can handwave the power levels for whatever reason; more importantly, it just felt like a dumb move so the plot could happen. I thought he might have some kind of plan behind what he was doing, but it seemed like he didn’t, unless I missed a reveal somewhere?



  • I liked it overall but thought the ending was fairly meh; it didn’t feel satisfying to me. Though I’ve been disappointed with almost all the finales of the Disney+ Marvel shows, even of the shows I mostly liked overall. It wasn’t really about too much exposition, just that I didn’t feel like it really wrapped up the season properly. I’m getting a bit tired of every show ending in a way that teases what comes next instead of just giving that story a proper conclusion.

    Really what I was hoping for was for Loki to pull off some kind of satisfying plan after feeling pretty out of his depth the whole season. I get that’s sort of the theme of the show, that the TVA and Kang situations are above even Thanos and Asgardians, but he’s still a thousand-year-old trickster god whose whole thing is schemes. There were a few times I expected him to have something more going on, but the payoff never really happened. But I digress a bit. I’m still looking forward to season 2; Tom Hiddleston is fun to watch.