Honestly Thor in Endgame is so much closer to a realistic aftermath to having to witness your entire planet get exploded than Star Wars And people keep using this as a girl power thing to pump up Leia but it really just does her a disservice as a character
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Replying to @arthur_affect
My discomfort with Thor was how everyone else reacted to him. Rocket was one of the few who didn't mock him getting fat, he just addressed Thor feeling like a failure by reminding him everyone failed to stop the Snap.
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Replying to @N7IRL @arthur_affect
Steve "I hate bullies" Rogers let multiple Avengers mock Thor without saying a word.
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Replying to @N7IRL @arthur_affect
One of the (relatively few) "because that's how the comics work" things the movies keep without really ever spelling out or changing is Thor being one of the Avengers the others are generally less "close" to because he's usually not around and they're hyper-aware of his otherness
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I mean, it makes sense if you think about it for a minute, but it's a detriment that they don't explain or incorporate it more that everyone else are neighbors/roomies/coworkers but Thor is a literal god-alien who sometimes appears for a weekend, usually when it's bad news.
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Replying to @the_moviebob @N7IRL
Hell the (extremely silly) origin story for the whole concept in Avengers #1 in 1963 is Loki manipulating Thor and Hulk into fighting just to fuck shit up, and everyone else getting involved to try to put a stop to it
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There's always been this subtext that the whole team exists as a "Thor and Hulk containment unit"
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