Thor Ragnarok - 2

Thor: Ragnarok 2 – Why We Need the God of Thunder to Go Full ‘Mad Max in Space’ (Again)

After the events of Love and Thunder (yes, we’re skipping over the screaming goats for now), Thor is a single dad to Love, the adopted daughter of Gorr. He’s got a new purpose, but he’s also restless. New Asgard is boring. Earth doesn’t need him. The Guardians are busy. So where does a god go when he’s out of villains?

Here’s my pitch:

But then Infinity War and Endgame happened. Thor got sad, got fat (respectfully), got a gut, and then got a axe. Now, with the MCU moving into a new phase, the question isn’t if we get a Thor: Ragnarok 2 , but what in Odin’s name would it even look like?

Do we need Thor: Ragnarok 2 ? Not really. The MCU is crowded. But do we want it? Absolutely. Give Taika Waititi a synthwave soundtrack, a bigger budget, and let him go wild. Sometimes the best superhero movies aren’t about saving the universe — they’re about having a good time while the universe burns. Thor Ragnarok 2

But here’s the twist: The villain isn't a big purple guy. It’s — a horse-faced alien who wields an even bigger hammer than Thor. Bill has been trapped on Sakaar for centuries, and he blames Thor for not freeing him sooner. It’s a grudge match of cosmic proportions, but also… a buddy comedy.

The Multiverse, baby.

Ragnarok 2 opens with Thor and Love chasing a distress signal from the one place he never wanted to visit again: Sakaar . The Grandmaster (still alive, obviously) has lost control. The planet is now a chaotic, crumbling war zone run by a faction of former gladiators who worship the ghost of The Hulk.

Let’s be honest: when Thor: Ragnarok hit theaters in 2017, none of us expected it to be the funniest, brightest, and most rewatchable movie in the entire Marvel Cinematic Universe. Taika Waititi took a stuffy Shakespearean god and turned him into a leather-jacket-wearing, hair-chopping, friend-zoned hero who actually had chemistry with a giant rock man. Thor: Ragnarok 2 – Why We Need the