LOKI's first season is The best of MARVEL without any doubt

Loki Marvel Studios had some great shocks for its fans as its first six-episode TV series finished on Wednesday. Future spoilers. For his title, the God of Mischief (Tom Hiddleston), the God of Mischief, the most significant was to meet Sylvie (Sophia Di Martino) and fall in love with himself. It may be a romantic interest twisted and nasty, as the best buddy and time detective Mobius (Owen Wilson) dubbed Loki's new (and now former?) on Loki Episode 4, but it is fit in a sense too. Only Loki could tumble down for himself a narcissist as large. A deity who could not perceive his arrogant self beyond is simply a mirror of himself that would realize that the Universe is more.


The second important new figure on Loki enabled this final bit: Kang the winner (Jonathan Majors). Technically all right, He Who Remains — a Kang variety that put a stop to all that conquesting undertaking, terminated the Multiversal War with the assistance of the purple-cloud entity Alioth. Through several (never-ending) monologues in episode 6 of the Loki episode, Kang finally reached Loki, showing him to strive for more if he does not want to be locked in his unending cycle of sorrow and devastation. Loki is a transformed guy at the end of the season. He moves from hating on the TVA to becoming a ready ally for this reason.


It is a new story for Loki as well as an old one. In 2011 the God of Mischief began to adore his brother, the God of Lightning, and to take care of his God, the Thor Family Say — Thor: The Dark World in 2013 and Thor: Ragnarok in 2017. So far, in Avengers, he risked his life: infinite war and paid the last cost. Yes, it also includes self-preservation, but it is possible to envision a previous Loki truly committing his loyalty towards Thanos (Josh Brolin). The Loki in Loki was not so safe personally, as Marvel removed this variation from The Avengers of 2012. But via a series of TVA videos, he learned about his errors and failings. Mobius briefly stated it then in episode 1 of Loki, he exists in order for others to reach their best.



Loki perhaps cares here, and why Sylvie is taken care of — it's all about self-preservation (with the exceptions of TVA) and great ambitions (overthrowing the timekeepers), but Loki starts fighting for Sylvie after understanding the agony and tragedy of her existence. 'I want you to be all right,' he adds, welling up, at the 1-final Loki Season. However, Loki's love blinds him also to Sylvie's belief, deluding him into thinking that he can prevent her from carrying out her purpose for her whole life. You may be the same, they may be the same person from many realities, but certainly, you are not the same person." But I'm not you," said Sylvie, answering Loki's pleadings. Loki is not simply a voyage of Loki, it is also a journey of Sylvie. And they're her deeds that lay the stage for something else to come.

It's quite crazy. Fortunately, however, Loki was not too preoccupied with MCU's future (though it certainly owed a lot to the past, what with Loki literally watching older movies). Indeed, for the most part, it has been gone. Blade Runner, which was influenced by the design of TVA and everything else and Natalie's theatre-led background scoring, was completely separate from the Marvel fare, created an identity for Loki thanks to its forward-thought Mad Men. Loki has created the same identity. And he was not scared of becoming strange, even though his swings did not match the daring of WandaVision. After all, episode 5 of Loki gave Loki and Thor a frog (with Chris Hemsworth voicing him)


Although this conclusion may not click boxes for everybody, it offers the MCU an intriguing, unpredictable future with unlimited opportunity for all its films and TV shows. Although we have plenty to digest, 'Loki' provides us with a most provocative, rewarding and thoughtful climax to the MCU series so far.

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