Iowa Wesleyan College
The Iowa Source
Home arrow Articles arrow Movies, Movie Reviews, Filmmakers arrow Thor: Perfect Summer Fare!
Print E-mail

Thor

A Bit Silly, But the Perfect Summer Movie!

by Neil Fauerso

thor, thor movie, chris hemsworth
Hunky Chris Hemsworth plays the title role in Kenneth Branagh'sThor.

We’ve entered a new phase in comic book movies in which the semblance of reality is no longer sustainable. You can make a somewhat believable Superman or X-Men film, but those movies have already been made and studios are now digging into C- and D-class comic books that are usually far more mystical. Enter Thor. The absurd, vaguely psychedelic comic with  bubblegum Norse mythology has finally been given the $150 million treatment.

Honestly, I’m amazed it got made. Thor has what I call the “Dune problem,” where a film with an exceptionally complicated mythology or backstory requires a long introductory exposition. And Thor’s mythology is, well, very Aryan—with the whiff of Wagner, so to speak.

But Marvel made a very smart choice: they recruited Kenneth Branagh as director. This may seem like a strange choice, but Branagh is experienced with epic and often light-hearted theater, and he brings the same sensibility to Thor. Tacking exactly opposite from the gun-metal brutality of Nolan’s Batman movies, Thor is a corny, retro romp. It’s pretty dumb, but it’s fun and, really, that is the alpha and omega of criterion for summer tent-pole flicks.

Thor is a classic fish-out-of-water young man’s quest story. Thor (Chris Hemsworth) is an impossibly ripped beefcake prince in the mystical sky-land of Asgard. He’s supposed to become king, taking over from his wizened and wise father Odin (Anthony Hopkins). But Thor does something stupid: he attacks the frost giants (don’t worry about it). As punishment, Odin takes his awesome hammer and casts him out of Asgard to earth. There, he has to figure out a way to get his hammer back.

It’s a pretty simple set-up but Branagh knows his strengths. First, he makes Asgard a glittering fantasia. It’s completely fake looking, but it has an elegant sheen to it. Second, Chris Hemsworth is a charming and likeable mythical god. Third and most importantly, the film doesn’t take itself too seriously. This is light-hearted camp, comfortable in its own skin.

Thor is by no means memorable. But sometimes you want to see movies like this: silly, fun, with a touch of class and imagination. Thor passes the summer movie test—it’s simply a decent way to spend two hours. Sometimes that’s enough.  B

Add this page to your favorite Social Bookmarking websitesTwitter! Facebook! Free social bookmarking plugins and extensions for Joomla! websites!
Comments (0)Add Comment

Write comment
quote
bold
italicize
underline
strike
url
image
quote
quote
smile
wink
laugh
grin
angry
sad
shocked
cool
tongue
kiss
cry
smaller | bigger

security code
Write the displayed characters


busy
< Prev   Next >

Follow us on facebook