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| I seldom have anything bad to say about the MCU because I am a devoted Marvel fan, but this was a huge letdown. As Ragnarok is one of my favorite Marvel movies, I was very looking forward to watching it, but I was really disappointed. I didn't find any of the jokes amusing since it was so boring. I found myself hoping the movie would end or wanting to leave for the first time ever while watching a Marvel movie. Gorr, the god-killer, has been used horribly. The parts about Zeus and Mount Olympus were particularly offensive. I have no idea how this was created, but it was. It's hardly even garbage, in my opinion. Marvel Studios and Disney have in fact robbed their dedicated following of every dollar Thor: Love and Thunder makes. About spoilers, trust me when I say that there is nothing in this pointless comedy to reveal. We never really witnessed Gorr—the Deity Butcher—kill anyone, much less a deity, despite his moniker. If such an obvious insult had been made to any other piece of property, there would have been outrage or derision, but in the MCU, anything goes. Due to a constant barrage of awful and repetitive jokes and plot problems the filmmaker couldn't be bothered with, Thor: Love and Thunder—which is really named after Chris and his daughter—is a box of candies only good for producing a visual sugar high, albeit without the high or the sweetness. The MCU is no longer a franchise that is merely liked; it is now worshipped. As a result, it can get away with producing pointless and inane things and yet receive plaudits and be eagerly gobbled up. This movie had no purpose other than to stroke the egos of Chris Hemsworth and Taika Waititi and give them a chance to talk about their children. Nevertheless, please don't interpret what I'm going to say as "beating" their children because they are innocent victims of their narcissistic parents. Thor: Love and Thunder was made only out of nepotism and egotism and is devoid of any genuine plot, purpose, or direction flagle The slogan of the Avengers in the last act is that "Whatever It Takes" was once spoken. Thor says to Love and Thunder, "Anything." This is the best approach to describe the object, which is only a movie by name. Chris Hemsworth and Taika Waititi's remarks that the movie is something a seventh-grader could have created and that youngsters six and above are its target demographic show how Marvel is so self-assured and disdainful of its audience that it doesn't even mind bragging about it.
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