-100 / 10
I watched Thor: Love and Thunder in fast forward. The -100 reflects honest evaluation of one of the worst major studio releases of the past decade and the completion of the Thor character’s systematic degradation across the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Taika Waititi returned as director after Ragnarok in 2017 and pushed the comedic register past the point of audience tolerance. Christian Bale delivers one of the better MCU villain performances as Gorr the God Butcher, trapped inside a film whose tonal mismatch prevents his work from landing. The film also represents the most explicit single example of the emasculation pattern discussed in The Emasculation Of The MCU essay, with Mjolnir being reassembled and transferred to Jane Foster while Thor himself is reduced to comedic buffoonery throughout the runtime. The film’s audience reception confirmed that the franchise had pushed the comedic-decorative pattern past the point at which paying audiences would continue to participate.
The Setup
The film opens with the death of Gorr’s daughter on a desert planet and his subsequent encounter with the Necrosword, an ancient weapon that grants him the power to kill gods. Gorr begins a campaign of cosmic deicide against the various gods who he believes have failed their worshippers. Meanwhile, Thor has been traveling with the Guardians of the Galaxy following the events of Endgame. He is summoned back to New Asgard when Gorr begins kidnapping Asgardian children to lure Thor into combat.
Thor’s former girlfriend Jane Foster has been diagnosed with terminal cancer. The reassembled fragments of Mjolnir from Thor: Ragnarok have responded to her, granting her the powers of Mighty Thor and apparently keeping her alive during the brief periods she wields the hammer. The middle act follows Thor, Foster, Valkyrie, and Korg pursuing Gorr while navigating the complicated romantic dynamics between the two Thors. The third act involves the team’s confrontation with Gorr in the Shadow Realm, where Foster’s body has reached terminal collapse and she dies after destroying the Necrosword and saving the kidnapped children. Thor inherits Foster’s adopted daughter (Gorr’s resurrected child) at the conclusion.
The Thor Degradation
The film completes the Thor character’s degradation from Shakespearean prince in 2011 to comedic buffoon in 2022. Chris Hemsworth plays Thor in this film as a fundamentally different character than the one Kenneth Branagh introduced. The voice is the same. The physical presence is the same. The character is not the same. The 2011 Thor was allowed to be earnest about royal heritage, family responsibility, and moral obligation. The 2022 Thor cannot be earnest about anything without the script immediately undercutting the earnestness through comedic deflation.
The opening sequences establish the current Thor’s emotional state through montage. He has been traveling with the Guardians of the Galaxy. He has been writing self-help diary entries. He has been participating in increasingly absurd combat situations played for slapstick. The Thor of these sequences operates in a register that the 2011 Thor would have rejected. The character has not developed across the intervening eleven years. The character has been replaced with a different character who shares his name and appearance.
The film also includes the “screaming goats” running gag, the Korg companion comedy, the alternate-deity comedy involving Russell Crowe as Zeus, multiple sex jokes involving Thor’s specific anatomical features, the Stormbreaker weapon’s jealousy of Mjolnir, the various Asgardian-children-as-comedy-prop sequences, and approximately a dozen additional comedic elements that operate at register Thor’s Phase One and Two appearances would have considered embarrassing. The cumulative effect is a film whose comedic density has exceeded the audience’s tolerance threshold.
For Writers
Love and Thunder demonstrates the point at which comedic register becomes incompatible with established character continuity. The Thor character had been established across eleven years of MCU productions with specific dramatic capacity. The film treats this established capacity as obstacle to be overcome through comedic deflation rather than as foundation to build on. The audience that had invested in the Thor character across multiple films found this version of the character unrecognizable. The lesson for writers in serialized fiction is that character continuity has limits beyond which audience investment cannot be recovered. If your sequel treats the protagonist as fundamentally different character than previous appearances established, your sequel is operating with a different protagonist who shares only superficial similarities with the audience’s previous investment. Love and Thunder pushed past this limit. The audience response was documented in critical reception, social media discussion, and the broader Phase Four commercial decline. The character that Branagh and Hemsworth established in 2011 could not survive the cumulative comedic erosion across Ragnarok, Infinity War, Endgame, and Love and Thunder. The character that ended Love and Thunder was a different protagonist than the one who began the Thor sub-franchise. The trade was creative and the cost was substantial.
The Mjolnir Transfer
The reassembled Mjolnir responds to Jane Foster and grants her the Mighty Thor powers. The transfer is positioned as Foster’s heroic emergence rather than as Thor’s diminishment, but the framing requires Thor himself to be reduced to a comedic figure unworthy of his own weapon’s continued exclusive use. The film acknowledges this dynamic explicitly through Thor’s repeated reactions to seeing Foster wield his former hammer.
Natalie Portman returns to the Jane Foster role after substantial absence from the franchise. Foster had appeared briefly in Thor: The Dark World (2013) and had not been a major MCU presence in the intervening years. The film positions Foster’s return as triumphant feminist arrival, with substantial marketing emphasis on her becoming Mighty Thor and her physical transformation for the role. Portman’s performance is professionally committed within the limits of the material she was given.
The material itself does not support the framing. Foster’s character arc operates as overlaid feminist messaging on what is structurally a tragic illness narrative. The cancer subplot, the hammer transfer, the eventual death: all of this functions through emotional manipulation rather than through earned character development. The audience receives the framing as decorative empowerment rather than as substantive character growth. The pattern matches the broader Phase Four-Five emasculation framework discussed in the emasculation essay.
Christian Bale As Gorr
Christian Bale plays Gorr the God Butcher with substantial dramatic commitment and the performance is one of the few elements of the film that genuinely works. Bale brings specific physical menace, emotional accessibility, and ideological coherence to the role. Gorr operates with clear motivation tied to his daughter’s death and his realization that the gods he worshipped were indifferent to his prayers. The character has more interior life than most MCU antagonists receive.
The performance is genuinely strong. The character is genuinely compelling. The film around the character does not deserve the performance. Bale operates in dramatic register that the surrounding Thor comedy actively undermines. Sequences featuring Gorr have substantially different tonal weight than sequences featuring Thor, Foster, Valkyrie, and Korg. The audience experiences cognitive whiplash between the two registers. The film cannot decide whether it is a cosmic horror thriller about a god-killing antagonist or a comedic adventure film with romantic complications. The two registers do not coexist effectively.
Bale’s specific physical commitment to the role (substantial weight loss, prosthetic makeup, vocal modulation) places him among the more dedicated actors to take MCU villain roles. The performance level is comparable to Hugo Weaving as Red Skull or Michael B. Jordan as Killmonger. The surrounding film prevents the performance from achieving comparable impact. The Gorr material in this film is the strongest individual element. The Gorr material cannot save the broader film.
The Tonal Catastrophe
The film’s central structural problem is the impossible combination of registers it attempts to maintain. The Gorr material operates as cosmic horror about a grieving father who has decided to kill gods. The Thor-Foster romantic material operates as cancer-illness tragedy with feminist empowerment overlay. The Korg-Valkyrie-Thor comedy operates as broad slapstick. The Russell Crowe Zeus sequence operates as parody. The Asgardian-children-as-prop sequences operate as family-film comedy. Each register requires different audience engagement and emotional response.
The film transitions between registers without warning across the runtime. The audience is asked to laugh at Thor’s screaming goats and then immediately to grieve Foster’s terminal illness and then immediately to fear Gorr’s cosmic-scale threat and then immediately to laugh at Zeus’s vanity and then immediately to mourn Foster’s death. The transitions do not work. The audience cannot make the emotional pivots quickly enough to maintain investment in any single register.
The aggregate effect is a film whose individual elements may have functioned in separate films but cannot coexist within the same runtime. Bale’s Gorr would have worked in a serious cosmic-horror Thor film. Foster’s cancer storyline would have worked in a dramatic Thor-Foster reunion film. The Korg-Valkyrie comedy would have worked in a Ragnarok-style adventure film. The Russell Crowe Zeus would have worked in a satirical comedy about MCU mythology. The four films that Love and Thunder attempts to be simultaneously generate the tonal catastrophe the released version exhibits.
For Writers
Love and Thunder demonstrates the cost of attempting multiple tonal registers within a single runtime without integration. The film operates as cosmic horror, illness tragedy, broad comedy, mythological satire, and feminist empowerment piece simultaneously. The five registers do not coexist effectively. The audience cannot make the emotional transitions quickly enough to maintain investment in any single register. The lesson for writers is that tonal commitment matters more than tonal ambition. Films that commit to a single register and execute it well produce stronger audience engagement than films that attempt multiple registers and execute none of them at full craft level. Love and Thunder could have been multiple successful films. Love and Thunder as released is one unsuccessful film. The compression of multiple registers into a single production generated the tonal catastrophe that defined audience response. If you have material that requires multiple tonal registers, consider whether the material requires separation into separate productions rather than compression into a single production. The compression usually fails. Separation usually succeeds.
The Audience Response
Love and Thunder generated substantial audience resistance even by the standards of late Phase Four MCU productions. The Rotten Tomatoes audience score dropped below the franchise’s previous audience floor for major Thor releases. The CinemaScore audience grade was a B+, the lowest for any Thor film in the franchise’s history. The social media discussion was substantially negative, with specific criticism focused on the comedic register, the Thor character degradation, the screaming goats, the tonal whiplash, and the perception that the film operated as feminist messaging rather than as Thor adventure.
The commercial performance was substantially weaker than Ragnarok’s. The film grossed approximately seven hundred sixty million dollars worldwide on a budget of approximately two hundred fifty million. The performance was profitable but represented a substantial drop from Ragnarok’s eight hundred fifty-four million on a lower budget. The decline was particularly notable given the broader audience appetite for major MCU releases that had persisted through the Phase Three peak.
The audience response to Love and Thunder was one of the clearer early indicators that the Phase Four-Five problems extended beyond individual film quality into broader franchise audience confidence. The Marvels’ subsequent catastrophic commercial failure in 2023 represented the completion of this audience-confidence collapse. Love and Thunder was the inflection point at which committed Thor fans began withdrawing from the broader franchise’s productions.
Craft: The Comedic Pivot’s Terminal Acceleration
Craft Note
Love and Thunder is the film at which the MCU’s comedic pivot exceeded the audience’s tolerance threshold. The pattern that began with Thor: Ragnarok in 2017 and accelerated through Phase Four reached the point at which paying audiences would no longer participate. The franchise had assumed that the comedic register would continue generating commercial success based on Ragnarok’s eight-hundred-fifty-four-million-dollar performance. The assumption did not survive Love and Thunder’s audience response.
The specific problem was cumulative. Each comedic pivot in the franchise had spent dramatic capital that previous installments had built. Ragnarok spent Thor’s Shakespearean register. Endgame’s Fat Thor spent the character’s heroic dignity. Love and Thunder spent everything remaining. By the end of the 2022 release, the Thor character had no dramatic capital left for subsequent installments to draw on. The character was a comedic figure operating in comedic register without the audience investment that the original Branagh-era foundation had provided.
The lesson for franchise filmmaking is that comedic register has diminishing returns when applied to established dramatic characters. Audiences accept comedic moments within dramatic frameworks. Audiences reject comedic frameworks that displace established dramatic foundations. The MCU’s Thor sub-franchise demonstrated this pattern from 2017 through 2022. The audience tolerance was substantial through Ragnarok. The tolerance declined through Endgame’s Fat Thor sequences. The tolerance collapsed through Love and Thunder. The pattern is documented across multiple data sources including audience scores, commercial performance, and qualitative social media response.
Love and Thunder’s -100 rating reflects the cumulative failure across multiple dimensions: tonal catastrophe, character degradation, decorative empowerment framing, screaming goats, Mjolnir transfer mismanagement, and the broader franchise audience-confidence damage that the film accelerated. Christian Bale’s Gorr performance is the film’s only genuine successful element, and the surrounding production prevents the performance from achieving the impact it deserved. The rating reflects what the film actually delivers as a complete production rather than what individual elements suggest about its potential.
For analysis of the broader emasculation pattern Love and Thunder exemplifies, see The Emasculation Of The MCU. For analysis of the broader Phase Four collapse, see How The Multiverse Destroyed The MCU.
The Verdict
A -100. Thor: Love and Thunder is one of the worst major studio releases of the past decade and the completion of the Thor character’s systematic degradation across the MCU. Taika Waititi’s direction pushed the comedic register past the point of audience tolerance. The Mjolnir transfer to Jane Foster operates as decorative empowerment rather than as earned character development. Christian Bale’s Gorr is the film’s only genuine successful element. The tonal catastrophe of attempting cosmic horror, illness tragedy, broad comedy, mythological satire, and feminist empowerment within a single runtime generated audience resistance documented across multiple metrics. The screaming goats, the Korg comedy, the Russell Crowe Zeus parody, and the various other comedic elements operate at registers that the established Thor character cannot accommodate.
I watched it in fast forward. I do not plan to watch it again at any speed. The -100 rating reflects honest evaluation across every dimension where the film fails. Other viewers may rate the film slightly higher based on individual elements they appreciated. The -100 reflects what the film actually delivers as a complete production and the broader franchise damage the film accelerated. The MCU has not recovered from the audience-confidence damage that Love and Thunder represented.
FAQ
Why is this rated -100?
Because the film fails across multiple dimensions simultaneously while also causing additional damage to the broader franchise’s audience confidence. The Thor character degradation is comprehensive. The tonal catastrophe is sustained. The decorative-empowerment framing is decorative rather than load-bearing. The commercial and critical response confirmed that the Phase Four-Five problems extended into Thor’s specific sub-franchise. The -100 reflects the cumulative production failure and the broader franchise consequences.
Is Christian Bale’s Gorr performance really that strong?
Yes. Bale brings substantial physical commitment (weight loss, prosthetic makeup, vocal modulation) and dramatic engagement to the role. The character has specific motivation tied to his daughter’s death and clear ideological coherence. Bale’s performance level is comparable to Hugo Weaving as Red Skull or Michael B. Jordan as Killmonger. The film around the performance does not deserve the work Bale put in. The Gorr material is the film’s only genuine successful element and is consistently undermined by the surrounding comedic register.
How does this compare to Ragnarok?
Love and Thunder pushes Ragnarok’s comedic register past the point of audience tolerance. Ragnarok (rated 6 in this review series) succeeded commercially while damaging the franchise long-term. Love and Thunder amplified the comedic register and lost both the commercial success and the long-term damage management. The two films share the same approach with different audience responses. Ragnarok’s eight-hundred-fifty-four-million-dollar performance suggested the approach was viable. Love and Thunder’s reduced performance proved the approach was not sustainable.
Is the Mjolnir transfer to Jane Foster problematic?
By the load-bearing versus decorative framework, yes. The transfer is positioned as Foster’s heroic emergence but requires Thor himself to be reduced to comedic figure unworthy of his weapon’s exclusive use. Foster cannot become Mighty Thor without Thor first becoming someone the hammer can leave. The framing operates as decorative empowerment rather than as earned character development. The pattern is discussed in detail in the emasculation essay.
What is the screaming goats thing?
Thor acquires two giant alien goats named Toothgnasher and Toothgrinder as steeds during the film. The goats scream in distinctive high-pitched tones that the film uses as recurring comedic element across multiple sequences. The screaming goats became one of the most-mocked single elements of the film and represented the broader audience reaction to the comedic register exceeding tolerance. The goats appear in numerous sequences across the runtime, with their screaming consistently undercutting the dramatic moments they accompany.
How does the cancer subplot work?
Jane Foster has been diagnosed with terminal cancer before the film’s events. The reassembled Mjolnir responds to her and grants her Mighty Thor powers that appear to keep her alive during the brief periods she wields the hammer. The hammer is also accelerating her cancer through some mechanism the film does not fully explain. Foster eventually dies in the third act after destroying the Necrosword. The subplot operates through emotional manipulation rather than through earned development. The cancer narrative was widely criticized for handling terminal illness through superhero conventions that the gravity of the subject did not warrant.
Should I watch this if I’m completing the MCU?
Reluctantly. The film completes the Thor character’s degradation and establishes Foster as Mighty Thor for any potential subsequent appearances. The Gorr antagonist may return based on the film’s mid-credits sequence. The broader narrative contribution to subsequent MCU productions is minimal. Completists can fast-forward through the comedic sequences and engage primarily with the Bale Gorr material. Most viewers can safely skip the film without missing essential franchise context.
How did the audience respond?
Negatively. The Rotten Tomatoes audience score dropped below the franchise’s previous floor for Thor releases. The CinemaScore was a B+, the lowest for any Thor film. The social media discussion was substantially negative across specific elements including the comedic register, the character degradation, the screaming goats, and the perceived feminist messaging. The audience response to Love and Thunder was one of the clearer early indicators that the Phase Four-Five audience-confidence problem was developing.
How does this fit Phase Four?
Love and Thunder is one of the Phase Four entries that most clearly demonstrated the franchise’s collapse. The phase had begun with Black Widow (rated 0) and Eternals (rated 1). Love and Thunder pushed the pattern further. Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (rated 3) and Multiverse of Madness (rated 3) followed with similar problems. The phase has the lowest average rating in this review series at 0.0 across the rated entries. Love and Thunder is one of the entries that anchored the phase’s catastrophic average.