queencfthestarsdrfoster:

He was killed by the hands of his abuser too. That’s what makes me sick the most. Thanos tortured and abused Loki to the point of desperation. Then after all that character development, after finding a potential path for a healthy life style, he gets killed physically by Thanos.

Yep. The amount of abuse apologism the Russos are bringing to Infinity War/Avengers 4 is utterly revolting.

tomhiddleston-gifs:

“The next chapiter of Loki’s journey honours what has come before, but will be surprising for the audience in terms of what they expect next. It doesn’t get bigger than this. Avengers: Infinity War, everybody’s on the field, everybody’s playing to win. And I think it is the culmulation of the dream.”

Why you lying, Tom?

asgardiankingofmischief:

nikkoliferous:

asgardiankingofmischief:

nikkoliferous:

asgardiankingofmischief:

queencfthestarsdrfoster:

isaalacrymosaa:

Loki protecting Jane Foster deleted scene

this shows that loki really cares about jane 

he is with a hand in her back, telling her that he is there and no one will hurt her 

but again Marvel cut that why marvel! i really hate you

the movie was so rushed and short and they still cut scenes xd

ohh i can handle my lokane feels *-*

gifs from: http://whereareyouravengers.tumblr.com/post/76064738337/friendly-reminder-that-this-fucker-wanted-to-kill

Damn. So many details.

Tom, what were you and Natalie planning with these two characters?

Yeah, I concur with you @sir-quack-alot
Which is even more beautiful in my opinion cause he doesn’t necessarily have strong feeling towards her but he’ll still do what he can for her and Thor. 

I agree with @sir-quack-alot and @asgardiankingofmischief as well. I never saw this as any romantic/sexual chemistry between Loki and Jane. I viewed it much more as he knows his brother cares for her deeply, and so he’s willing to literally put his life on the line to protect her.

And the fact that he did this just after having warned Thor not to get too attached… you know, his whole, “Today, a thousand years… it’s nothing, it’s a heartbeat” speech. (In fact, I find that bit of dialogue interesting for so many different reasons, but that’s for another post). Anyway, my point is, he puts aside whatever personal feelings he might have about the impracticality of their relationship and doesn’t even hesitate to defend her–multiple times–with his life. I think that’s entirely because he loves Thor, and has little if anything to do with Jane.

And then of course, like so many other things, Thor: Ragnarok came along and fucked that over good. 🙄

Yes! Good point, @nikkoliferous Wow, that line makes this 1000x better. It’s funny cause I feel like Avengers Loki (you know the one where he’s clearly out of his mind) would leave her to fend for herself. And not show any care but like literally any Loki after or before wouldn’t do that.

Some vague examples:

Thor (2011) : On Jotunheim, he puts the Warriors Three and Sif’s safety before everything else, even Thor’s ambitions.

Thor: The Dark World : As mentioned, he protects Jane first even when he doesn’t necessarily need to. (They already got the Aether out and he wanted Malekith dead more than anything)

Thor: Ragnarok (I know I hate it too) : Even here, we see Loki come back for the Asgardians and lead them to safety, before that in the beginning of the movie, Loki tries to take Hela out in the Bifrost/Rainbow bridge so both he and Thor can escape but also keep her from Asgard.

Infinity War: Literally sacrifices the space stone so his brother could live.

And the worst part about this is? Everyone keeps treating him like he’s Avengers Loki regardless of the circumstances at the time.

Ehhhhh, I’m iffy on the Hela-Ragnarok one because calling for the Bifrost at that moment, to begin with, was about as out of character as you could possibly get. 😒 So I kind of prefer to just forget that ever even happened. Lol

But yeah, aside from Avengers (where he clearly wasn’t even fully in control of his own mind), his actions across the franchise as a whole don’t really support the whole “Loki is a narcissist” narrative that exists? We don’t count the play and the statue of himself in Ragnarok because 1) that was bad writing, not bad characterization and 2) he likes to pretend like he’s unaffected and self-centred (which is a defense mechanism) but if you solely analyze his behaviour–or hell, even just his body languagethe idea that he only cares about himself is nearly laughable.

I suppose you could maybe make an argument for post-identity crisis Thor (2011) Loki. Maybe. But even then, he may not be being controlled by an external force, but he is essentially having a psychotic break, so… honestly it’s not a significantly different circumstance.

And hell. Even Avengers!Loki has rare moments of clarity where you can plainly see that he doesn’t want any of what’s happening. Right before he stabs Thor, for instance, he looks around and his face has legit panic and horror written on it. Which is sort of foreshadowed by Coulson’s “you lack conviction” line.

So hey, you know, I just want to put it out there that Ragnarok!Thor is actually not even equally bad but is a worse person than any not-minded-controlled Loki is. Because under any normal circumstance, I can’t fathom Loki electrocuting Thor and then stand over him gloating while Thor writhes in agony (literal description straight from the script).

Ehhhhh, I’m iffy on the Hela-Ragnarok one because calling for the Bifrost at that moment, to begin with, was about as out of character as you could possibly get. 😒 So I kind of prefer to just forget that ever even happened. Lol

Yeah, I feel you, though I was thinking more in the sense that even completely ooc and in the movie that calls him out for being all self interested and unchanging, he’s still better than what Thor thinks of him.

I suppose you could maybe make an argument for post-identity crisis Thor (2011) Loki. Maybe. But even then, he may not be being controlled by an external force, but he is essentially having a psychotic break, so… honestly it’s not a significantly different circumstance.

Also, yeah, nah, I don’t think there is an argument for that Loki either. Everything he does in that film is to gain his father’s acceptance and love. He’s clearly lacking in the self-importance department even then (unless people are willing to argue that Loki somehow doesn’t deserve his father’s love? :/) He becomes king not by his choosing either, and even if it was, his father straight up told him he was born to be a king, that makes it sound like Loki has a chance at the throne. Killing the Frost Giants? Thor makes it sound like Loki feeling like he has the right to kill all of them is wrong, but he literally shared that same viewpoint just three days before. So if anything, they would have had about the same amount of self importance. 

And hell. Even Avengers!Loki has rare moments of clarity where you can plainly see that he doesn’t want any of what’s happening. Right before he stabs Thor, for instance, he looks around and his face has legit panic and horror written on it. Which is sort of foreshadowed by Coulson’s “you lack conviction” line.

And ha! Right, even then he wasn’t so full of himself. All the actions he’d taken in Germany were a distraction for Barton, which worked, mind you. I think even getting caught was a part of the distraction right? So basically even while completely out of his mind, he was just putting on a show for the Avengers, making them see what he wanted them to see. Plus, all his choices of words were meant to give of the same reaction I believe, because again, he never ever says anything like the dialogue we see in that first Avengers. 

So hey, you know, I just want to put it out there that Ragnarok!Thor is actually not even equally bad but is a worse person than any not-minded-controlled Loki is. Because under any normal circumstance, I can’t fathom Loki electrocuting Thor and then stand over him gloating while Thor writhes in agony (literal description straight from the script).

Yeah, I think I agree with you, tbh. I was contemplating it for a while but everything Thor does in that movie is manipulative, cruel, and self-centered. And I’m legit starting to hate Thor in general cause I feel like his actions have always been condoned and that gets tiring when he’s constantly making the wrong decisions. :/ The weirdest thing is, I feel like he’s the only hero that this happens to? I just don’t get it. 

Yeah, I’ve said it before elsewhere, but Loki has always gotten the short end of the stick from Marvel, since day one. Ragnarok took it to a whole new level of outright character assassination, but Marvel has always been shitty in how they frame his actions in the final versions of their movies.

They cut numerous scenes from Thor (2011) AND Avengers that gave any context to his actions. Frigga being the one who named him king (hence showing that his rule is legit), the pre-coronation scene where he calls Thor his brother and friend, the conversation with Barton in Avengers that explains why he intentionally gets himself caught… hell, they cut out something as TINY as his surprise at being invited to go with Thor and the Warriors to Jötunheim. It was obvious in the deleted version of that scene that he hadn’t expected Thor to want him there too and was ecstatic at being included. And that was maybe a freaking SIXTY SECOND extension of the scene. There’s no way that was cut for time. I just can’t believe that’s the real reason; it’s illogical. It seems way more likely that it was cut to muddy the waters about Loki’s character motivations and make him look like more of a schemer than he was actually being, at least that early on in the story. 

I can’t recall if there were any equally significant scenes cut from The Dark World. I know they did have a deleted scene where Thor goes down to the dungeons and basically attacks Loki, assuming he had something to do with the mass breakout… even though, you know, he’s the only prisoner who didn’t escape. Which I feel like would have demonstrated that Loki’s not the only toxic one in their relationship. But we can’t have golden boy Thor looking bad, could we? 😒 So I guess in a roundabout sort of way, you could kind of count that scene amongst them as well.