Saw the movie Wednesday after work.
Don't bother with the 3D, it was phoned in at best, and done in post rather than shot in 3D, AFAICT.
However, the movie was pretty outstanding. Thor's a funny character for me. I should like him, as I like Norse mythology and such. However, they always saddle him with a huge cast of Norse name-dropping, which makes it a pain in the *** to follow, or they stick him on Earth where I always get the sense of, "why the hell isn't he wiping the floor with everything?"
This movie handled both admirably. It kept the Norse cast to a manageable number (9 named characters) of highlights, and then the plot allowed earth-boundiness to make sense.
So it took a character that I'm generally "meh" about at best, and turned it into an entertaining movie I'd watch again. That's a success in my book.
Loved how they handled the language; it was that step removed from modern usage and idiom without going all the way to "Why hath thou..." territory. It was distinct enough that I could definitely tell which speech bubbles were in the flowery script, as it were, without making me think I was watching Shakespeare.
Hemsworth had a fantastic charisma that suited the character beautifully, and did a good job of delivering the flowery lines smoothly and naturally while keeping a straight face. He definitely wore the role like a well-tailored suit. I'm with 'Skee, though, I don't see anything anytime soon stacking up to the way Downey was just born to play Stark. That's not a slight on those who don't equal that, though.
Loki was portrayed very well. I was quite satisfied with both the writing and the performance in that role. Everything was very much in character for the odd logic behind machinations, motivations, and relationships with Loki. It was a very good introduction for him to (properly so) feature in the formation of the Avengers.
_________________ "Aaaah! Emotions are weird!" - Amdee "... Mirrorshades prevent the forces of normalcy from realizing that one is crazed and possibly dangerous. They are the symbol of the sun-staring visionary, the biker, the rocker, the policeman, and similar outlaws." - Bruce Sterling, preface to Mirrorshades
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