Sunday, June 28, 2026

Release: Luke Cage: The Purple Man

 

Luke Cage: The Purple Man
Genre: Action / Superhero / Crime
Director: George Tillman Jr.
Writers: Jimmy Ellis & Dwight Galo
Based on Marvel Comics characters
Cast: Omari Hardwick, Olivia Munn, Nathalie Emmanuel, Matthias Schweighofer, Sabrina Carpenter, Fred Williamson, Meagan Good, Colman Domingo (cameo)

Budget: $81,000,000
Domestic Box Office: $148,978,102
Foreign Box Office: $101,000,004
Total Profit: $72,115,611

Reaction: This sequel managed a nice little numbers uptick in every box office category compared to the first Luke Cage film - always nice for a sequel to accomplish.


"The film’s psychological angle is compelling, but the pacing dips and the stakes can feel diffuse. The nightclub sequences impress visually, though the story occasionally loses focus. Olivia Munn and Nathalie Emmanuel are strong, while Sabrina Carpenter’s Dazzler feels underwritten despite her presence. Killgrave is unsettling, but not always commanding enough." - Frank Washington, Comicbook.com




"Dropping the blaxploitation tone of Power Man for a disco-infused thriller, The Purple Man feels like a superhero take on Nighthawks—stylish but uneven. The tonal shift doesn’t always land, but the supporting cast (Munn, Emmanuel, Schweighöfer, Carpenter) elevates the material. It’s an imperfect but bold evolution." - Cooper Wilson, The Earl Hays Press




"Luke Cage is back at it again in a more superhero type plot that may not offer anything new to the returning characters or more than a decent plot but great action, confident direction, Sabrina Carpenter shines as Dazzler and Matthias Schweighofer chews scenery as its mind controlling villain." - Mary Bloomington-Grant, Associated Press







Rated R for language, sexual content/nudity, and violence






Saturday, June 27, 2026

Comic to Film: Luke Cage: The Purple Man

 

Welcome back for another Comic to Film! This time around we are going to take a look at the disco-dancing cast of Luke Cage: The Purple Man, the sequel to surprise Season 24 hit... Luke Cage: Power Man. Returning behind the camera this Marvel Universe production will be director George Tillman Jr. (Big George Foreman, Luke Cage: Power Man) and writers Jimmy Ellis (Rubicon Lies, Coriolanus) and Dwight Gallo (The Punisher: Purgatory, X-Men: Age of Apocalypse). 











LAST RESORT FILMS JUKEBOX: LUKE CAGE: THE POWER MAN

 

Friday, June 26, 2026

Now Showing: Luke Cage: The Purple Man

 

Luke Cage: The Purple Man
Genre: Action / Superhero / Crime
Director: George Tillman Jr.
Writers: Jimmy Ellis & Dwight Galo
Based on Marvel Comics characters
Cast: Omari Hardwick, Olivia Munn, Nathalie Emmanuel, Matthias Schweighofer, Sabrina Carpenter, Fred Williamson, Meagan Good, Colman Domingo (cameo)

Plot: At the entrance of the famed nightclub Studio 54, Zebediah Killgrave (Matthias Schweighofer) arrives, dressed in a sharp purple suit. He is in awe of the spectacle outside the club. He approaches the velvet rope, but is stopped by the doorman. Killgrave then commands the doorman to let him in. Under mind control, the doorman is compelled to let Killgrave into the club. Inside, Killgrave immediately begins dancing along to the song being sung by the entrancing Alison Blaire / Dazzler (Sabrina Carpenter) on stage. As her voice sings along to the disco beat, beams of colorful light erupt from her hands. The crowd cheers. Killgrave faces the crowd with a smile. One by one, the dancers all fall into perfect unison, their dance movements no longer their own. Dazzler hesitates, but her lights continue to flow. Killgrave watches with satisfaction as he controls the entire crowd, dancing at his whim.

Misty Knight (Nathalie Emmanuel) walks through the entrance in streetwear slick clothes. She scans the room, seeing bodies grinding and spinning under the pulsing lights. The two officers beside her peel off as she heads for the floor.

Onstage, Dazzler takes the mic - a halo of light seems to erupt from her hands as the beat drops. Misty stops dead in her tracks. The crowd doesn’t just dance - they continue to move in sync, every twist and sway is identical. Misty mutters into her radio - static and no signal. She pushes through the dancers, but they just drift with her, blocking her path without even noticing.

Upstairs, Killgrave lounges in a velvet chair, one hand swirling wine in a crystal glass. He watches Misty, admiring her as if a movie he has memorised. Misty tries to cut toward the back hallway, but two men intercept her. She flashes her badge and demands entry but they just smile, polite and vacant. One of them tells her there’s nothing shady going on - just a good time. Behind her, the dancers close in again. A hand rests slightly on her shoulder and guides her back to the dance floor. She breaks free and runs out the door into the Harlem night.

Luke Cage (Omari Hardwick) arrives at a Harlem Clinic visiting Claire Temple (Meagan Good). Temple is flat-out busy tending to many young people. Cage approaches mentioning to Temple that he has been seeing a lot of young people seemingly high walking around Harlem. Temple leads on that these people aren’t high on drugs, testing negative to every drug on the market. Cage questions if it could be something new. Temple shakes her head, she believes its all in their minds.

Luke Cage stacks planks beside a half-built basketball court behind the Harlem Community Center. Neighborhood kids drill nails into the fresh plywood. A radio plays some Marvin Gaye under the sounds of hammers. He jokes with the kids as he spots Jessica Jones out of the corner of his eye. She watches from the curb, coffee in hand. She crosses over and stands next to him. He asks if she’s here to help; she shakes her head and says she’s got something to tell him. Her voice drops - she says there’s a name making the rounds: Purple Man. No one’s seen him, but strange things are happening. He turns and looks at the kids, making sure they can’t overhear. He tells her about the clinic - he’s noticed it too. Jessica says whatever it is, it’s spreading fast.

The crowd at Studio 54 ripples like water under a kaleidoscope sky. Dazzler glides across the stage in sequins, beams of light stream from her hands, bouncing across the mirrored ceiling. Killgrave watches from the edge of the dance floor. He isn’t dancing - he’s feeling, absorbing every note like it’s made just for him. As the music swells, he steps forward, uninvited. The band stumbles, confused. Dazzler falters mid-verse. But Killgrave lifts a mic and speaks - not sings - in a low, rhythmic command. The crowd stills, mesmerized. His pheromones pulse outward like an unseen fog. The beat shifts beneath him. A bassline slithers into place. Killgrave begins to move - a slow, hypnotic groove - and as he does, his voice curls through the air like smoke. He tells them to dance. They do. Dazzler’s hands tremble as light pours from her again, brighter this time, no longer entirely hers. Her pupils dilate. Her breath catches. Killgrave steps closer, wraps one arm behind her waist. His voice intertwines with hers, not musically, but viscerally. She tries to resist, blinking fast, stumbling back — but his presence wraps around her mind. Her lights sync to his rhythm. Her power bends with his will. The club becomes a single, breathing organism. Killgrave smiles, brushing a strand of hair behind her ear. He tells her she belongs to him now. And she does.

Claire moves briskly through the cramped halls of her Harlem clinic, clear exhaustion on her face. The examination rooms overflow with teenagers and young adults - bodies twitching as if still dancing, voices murmuring incoherently, eyes flickering with unseen light. One boy grips the edge of his bed, rambling about the lights and a voice he can't escape. Claire checks his vitals, but the results are unchanged: clean tox screens, no head trauma, just blank stares and haunted mutterings. She steps into the hallway and finds Luke leaning in the doorway. Pulling him aside, she lowers her voice to tell him that things are escalating. Luke looks around, seeing the chaos for himself. Claire places a hand on his arm and pleads with him - whatever is behind this, she needs him to track it down and stop it.

Luke invites Misty and Jessica into the backroom of the half renovated Community Center. The three of them stand around a makeshift table, the kids hammering is still in the background. Luke explained what he’d seen at Claire’s clinic - room after room of young people staring into nothing, muttering about lights and a voice, none of them testing positive for any known drug. Misty listened carefully. Jessica leaned against the wall. When Luke finished, there was a moment of silence before Jessica said what they were all thinking: “Studio 54.” Misty nodded. She’d been hearing the same whispers - something happening in those lights, in the music. Not just parties. Luke looked between them. Whatever this was, it was pulling people apart at the seams, and it was coming from inside that club. They all knew it.

Inside Studio 54, Luke and Jessica blend into the crowd, posing as clubgoers. Dazzler is on stage, singing a slow, romantic number. Her hands cast golden and violet beams across the room, her powers syncing with the music. Luke tries to stay sharp, watching the room, but quickly feels it: the haze, the pressure behind his eyes. Jessica looks dazed beside him. Their fingers lace together without thought. Dazzler’s light pulses intensify as the song continues. The crowd moves as one, their dancing slow and sensual. Luke and Jessica are pulled into the rhythm against their will. Luke and Jessica find themselves back at Luke's home where they have passionate but hypnotic sex together.

In the morning, Luke sits up in bed. Jessica stirs beside him, tangled in the sheets. They both look around slowly, disoriented - no memory of the night before. They get dressed and exit the bedroom. In the kitchen, Luke's dad, James Lucas (Fred Williamson), is making coffee. Without looking at them, James tells them to get a hotel room next time.

Killgrave has been watching the heroes watch him. Night after night, Luke, Jessica, and Misty take turns posted near Studio 54. He never confronts them - just notes the pattern and waits. When Luke walks away from the club one night and catches the subway uptown, Killgrave follows. The trail leads to Harlem, where a bustling street festival is underway. Luke weaves through the crowd, eventually making his way to the clinic where Claire is helping a festival-goer with some bandages. Luke chats with her briefly, asking if she needs any help. Minutes later, Dazzler appears on the main stage. He mutant lightshow being to blanket the crowd. The festivalgoers slow, their bodies beginning to sway as though possessed. In the haze, two of Killgrave's men abduct Claire. Luke sees this in the distance, but they escape before Luke can push his way through the crowd. He gets just a fleeting glimpse of Killgrave - recognizing him from Studio 54.

Luke sits across from his father. He tells his father about Claire's abduction, about the lights, the hypnosis and the man in purple watching it all from the shadows. Luke is frustrated. Things used to be simpler - beat up some pushers, scare off some dealers, and call it a night, but this is different. James tells his son to suck it up - if he can use his brain as much as his muscles, protecting Harlem from some clown shouldn't be so hard. Luke takes a deep breath and gives his father a big hug.

Luke rallies Jessica and Misty, telling them straight that Claire's been taken and everything points back to Studio 54. He saw the same purple-suited man from the club at the Harlem street festival. Misty asks how he could have taken Claire with so many witnesses around. Luke says that bastard used Dazzler's lights to scramble the crowd's senses - just like at the club. They begin plotting out a plan to infiltrate Studio 54, rescue Claire, and stop the Purple Man.

Luke Cage smashes through the entrance of Studio 54 with Misty and Jessica trailing closely behind. Inside, hypnotized dancers move in perfect synch to a pulsating rhythm, eyes vacant. Dazzler glows on-stage. Luke charges through the crowd, pushing them aside like ragdolls. Jessica follows, fending off bell-bottom-wearing henchmen who try to strike. Misty steps in and help take them out with a baton. As the trio push toward the stage, Dazzler steps in their path, her light intensifying, disorienting Luke. Misty and Jessica move towards Dazzler on different sides, striking in tandem, dodging beams of light. Jessica slams into Dazzler to knock her down, while Misty activates a sound dampener. Dazzler gasps. She suddenly realizes what she's done under Killgrave's control. She turns toward the crowd of dancers. She fires a massive burst of light across the dance floor, which breaks the psychic hold over the crowd. Clubgoers, suddenly coming to their senses, flee the nightclub.

In the DJ booth, the trio chases the echoes of Claire's cries for help. Once they enter the room though, the world around them distorts. Killgrave's voice fills the air like a bad trip. Luke suddenly finds him back in Seagate Prison. The guards taunt him, reminding him of how helpless he was before his powers. The walls close in around him. He punches through them though, shattering the illusion. Jessica senses Killgrave whispering in her ear, controlling her limbs, making her walk toward a tall building's edge. She screams and the skyline around her cracks like a mirror. Misty stands along at a crime scene - her arm is gone, her badge stripped, the bodies of her fellow NYPD officers dead around her. She pulls her gun and fires into the hallucination, making it vanish. The room snaps back to normal. Claire lies in front of them bound, but alive. Misty frees her while Luke scans the shadows.

Killgrave bursts out of a side door at Studio 54, staggering into the alley, his sharp purple suit now torn and sweat-streaked. His voice trembles as he shouts at the panicked stragglers to block Luke’s path, but they’re no longer under his control. The freed clubgoers scatter into the night. From the far end of the alley, Luke Cage emerges, his massive frame silhouetted in neon. Killgrave sneers, trying to disguise the rising panic in his chest. He taunts Luke with arrogant bluster, insisting he still owns the neighborhood - every breath, every heartbeat, even Luke himself. Luke closes the distance step by step, fists clenched like iron, his jaw set. Without breaking stride, he tells Killgrave that Harlem belongs to no one like him. Killgrave makes one final attempt to command him, voice sharp with desperation - but Luke doesn’t so much as blink. He cocks back his fist and drives it upward into Killgrave’s jaw with bone-shattering force, sending him crashing into the brick wall behind. The wall cracks, glass shatters, and Killgrave crumples unconscious in the rubble. Luke stands over him, breathing steady. The war is over. He mutters a final warning through clenched teeth - this place is off-limits.

Inside the club, silence hangs heavy over the wreckage. Glass crunches underfoot, lights flicker, and the once-hypnotized dancers shuffle out into the Harlem night, dazed but free. Jessica leans against the bar, catching her breath, while Misty helps Claire to her feet. Dazzler sits slumped against a broken pillar, sequins dulled, her mascara running. Luke strides in, dragging Killgrave’s limp body like discarded trash before tossing him at Misty’s boots. He tells her the threat is over. Misty cuffs him, though the gesture is more about closure than restraint. Claire steps forward, her eyes shimmering, gesturing at the survivors still filing out of the club. Dazzler rises, guilt written across her face. She admits she was manipulated - that she believed she was spreading joy, when really she had become a weapon in someone else’s hands. Jessica meets her gaze, softer than usual, and reminds her that they’ve all been turned into pawns at one point or another - but what matters now is what she chooses to do going forward. Dazzler nods, her voice regaining strength as she vows to use her gifts with purpose. Misty studies her a moment, then offers a small nod of acknowledgment. She tells her she expects her to follow through.

A sleek yacht carves through the waves of the Caribbean Sea. On deck, Cottonmouth (Colman Domingo) reclines in the shade of a white canopy, a cigar between his fingers. Crates marked with South American and U.S. insignias are pried open by armed men, revealing bricks of narcotics and rifles stacked like treasure. A nervous lieutenant approaches, bowing his head slightly. He informs Cottonmouth that everything is in place, and their next destination is Kingston, Jamaica. Cottonmouth exhales a plume of smoke, his grin sharp.


Writer Commentary: The Hammer of Thor

 

The Hammer of Thor
Genre: Action/Fantasy/Superhero
Director: Roar Uthaug
Writer: Roy Horne
Based on Marvel Comics characters
Cast: Channing Tatum, Sam Riley, Phoebe Dynevor, Mark Hamill, Sophie Lowe, Danila Kozlovsky, Laurie Davidson, Denis Menochet, Sung Kang, Jeanne Tripplehorn, Caitriona Balfe, Ulrich Thomsen, Adam Nagaitis, Jóhannes Haukur Jóhannesson


Plot: Odin (Mark Hamill), the King of the godly realm of Asgard calls upon his sons Thor (Channing Tatum) the God of Thunder, Balder (Danila Kozlovsky) the God of Light and Loki (Sam Riley) the God of Mischief. Odin sits upon Hlidskjalf, the throne of the ruler of Asgard, and tells his sons that he has received word that an army of ogres have attacked Nidavellir, the realm of the dwarves. Thor questions why they should care about the dwarves. Balder then reminds his hot-headed brother that the dwarves hold a valuable place in the Ten Realms as the finest forgers and blacksmiths. Odin asks his sons to go and defeat the rock trolls to keep the dwarves as friends of Asgard. Loki asks why he is being sent as he is not a warrior like his brothers. Odin tells Loki that it is never too late to learn something from his older brothers. [1]

[1] Welcome to The Hammer of Thor - I'm the writer, Roy Horne. I purposely didn't give a ton of backstory right away. One thing I was very conscious of here was introducing all three brothers as efficiently as possible. Thor asks why they should help the dwarves because he's still arrogant and doesn't understand responsibility yet. Balder immediately sees the bigger picture because that's who Balder is. Then Loki questions why he's even there because he's already convinced he's the least valued son in the room. Those three reactions basically tell you everything you need to know about the characters before anybody picks up a sword.

The three Odinson brothers make their way toward Bifrost, the rainbow bridge that can transport them to other realms where they find Lady Sif (Sophie Lowe) and the Warriors Three - Fandral the Dashing (Laurie Davison), Volstagg the Valiant (Denis Menochet) and Hogun the Grim (Sung Kang) - waiting to accompany them to battle in Nidavellir. The group crosses over Bifrost and finds themselves in Nidavellir where they quickly find themselves in the midst of the rock troll attack. Balder tells everyone to cover their eyes for a moment and uses his powers to momentarily blind the rock trolls with a bright blinding light. Sif and the Warriors Three take the chance and attack the disoriented trolls with their weapons. Thor summons bolts of lightning from the heavens to strike down several trolls. Loki uses his gift of sorcery to make several trolls attack each other. They all make pretty quick work of the trolls. Their victory is celebrated by the dwarves, who invite the heroes into their kingdom for a feast. [2]

[2] This scene isn't about defeating trolls. It's about showing how everybody approaches conflict. Thor uses force. Balder uses leadership. Loki uses manipulation. The Warriors Three use experience. Sif uses discipline. Once you understand how each character fights, you understand who they are. I also didn't want to spend twenty minutes introducing everybody individually. The Warriors Three work best when they feel like old friends you've dropped into the middle of an adventure.

During the feast, the dwarves gift the sons of Odin each with a special weapon to show their appreciation. Thor is given Mjolnir, a mighty hammer that can harness the power of thunder. Balder is given Svraden, a majestic sword that can emit the brightness of a star. Loki is given the Laevateinn, a staff which can channel his natural sorcery into powerful energy blasts. Thor, Sif and the Warriors Three get drunk on dwarven mead. The calmer Balder goes outside away from the revelry to get some peace and quiet. [3] While drinking and partying, Thor and Sif steal away for a romantic encounter. Loki follows Balder outside and brings up a conversation about what should happen if their father, Odin, goes into Odinsleep anytime soon. Balder suggests that it is not their business what happens as their father will decide on a plan. Loki states that he believes Odin will select Balder or Thor to maintain the throne, but certainly not himself. Balder tries to reassure his younger brother, but Loki suddenly stabs Balder in the back with a poison dagger. Balder is stunned by Loki's actions and uses what little life he has left to question why Loki would choose to murder him. Loki explains that since Odin would never choose him to rule Asgard over Balder or Thor, he must take matters into his own hands to assure himself of the throne. Loki then runs back inside and frantically tells everyone that an assassin has murdered Balder. Thor runs outside to see Balder's body, trying in vain to bring life back to his brother. [4] Loki announces that he will head back to Asgard immediately to inform Odin and their mother. Thor grabs Mjolnir and proclaims that he will start searching for the assassin and beat him with his hammer. Thor, Sif, Volstagg, Hogun and Fandral all spread out around the dwarf kingdom in search of Balder's murderer.

[3] This whole sequence was designed around contrast. I wanted Balder to walk into the movie looking like the hero everybody expected Thor to be. Danila has this incredible movie-star presence. He's calm, handsome, noble, thoughtful. He looks like he stepped out of a fantasy painting. Channing's Thor, meanwhile, is getting drunk, chasing women, and generally not acting like a future king. That wasn't an accident.

[4] I think a lot of people had this image of Thor as the finished product. The noble king. The wise ruler. But if you read enough Thor comics, especially the early stuff, Thor spends a lot of time being arrogant, impulsive and emotionally driven. Taum was perfect for this starting point, which is ultimately what led to his casting over more obvious choices like Charlie Hunnam. I was casting the Thor at the beginning of it. Balder is the man Thor wishes he already was, and that's why losing him hurts so much.

Loki returns to Asgard, informing Odin and his mother Frigga (Jeanne Tripplehorn) that Balder has been murdered. Odin questions who could have been cunning or powerful enough to kill a fine warrior like Balder. Loki tells his parents that he suspects that Thor is the one responsible. Odin uses his powers to immediately summon Thor back to Asgard, demanding to know what happened to Balder. Thor regretfully confesses that he and his friends were celebrating and consuming libations following their victory over the rock trolls, so he was not witness to Balder's murder. Odin reveals that Loki suggested that Thor may have been the killer. Thor bristles at this revelation, insisting it isn't true. Odin states that while he does not believe that Thor was the murderer who physically wielded the knife that killed Balder, he still believes that Thor should have been there to help protect Balder. Loki enters that throne room. Thor angrily claims that Loki must be orchestrating all of this to claim the throne of Asgard for himself. Thor then attacks Loki, violently hitting him with Mjolnir. Loki is sent hurtling across the room into a pillar. Odin, in a rage, decides to banish Thor to Midgard and strips him of his godly powers, as well as his mighty hammer Mjolnir. Odin tells Thor that the way back home to Asgard will present itself once Thor has proven himself worthy of his godhood. [5]

[5] One of the things I was trying to do with Odin throughout these films is make him a very good king and a very flawed father. Those aren't the same skillset. Odin sees the larger problem with Thor immediately. Thor is reckless, impulsive, and wasn't where he needed to be when his brother died. Odin correctly identifies that. What Odin completely misses is the son standing right next to him... Loki.

Thor's body crashes down to Midgard, the Asgardian name for Earth, in a bolt of lightning. The year is 802 AD. When he finally wakes up, he finds himself in a clearing in a forest. As he wanders the forest, disoriented, Thor is confronted by a hunting party led by Anders (Adam Nagaitis) and Wulfgar (Jóhannes Haukur Jóhannesson). Without powers or any weapons, and still confused from being thrown into Midgard, Thor is overpowered by the two Viking warriors and captured in a large net. They drag him back to their village, Heorot. They bring Thor before King Hrothgar (Ulrich Thomsen), who demands to know what village Thor hails from. Thor claims he is Asgard and is a son of Odin. Hrothgar scoffs at this claim, stating that Odin is a god and all he sees before him is a foolish man. Hrothgar orders Wulfgar and Anders to chain Thor up outside until he decides what should be done with him. Hrothgar's daughter, Johanna (Phoebe Dynevor), watches. Her eyes catch Thor's eyes for a split moment. Thor is immediately taken with Johanna's beauty, boasting that he will make her love him, even if it is the last thing he does. When Anders sees how Thor and Johanna look at each other, he angrily tightens Thor's chains. [6]

[6] Setting the story during the Viking Age was easily the biggest swing I took in crafting the entire movie. Everybody knows Thor landing in modern America. Everybody knows Donald Blake. I wanted to know what happened if Thor landed among the people who would eventually tell stories about him. Instead of a superhero visiting Earth, it became a legend being born. The idea was that Thor wasn't arriving in the middle of his mythology—he was earning it. Most Thor adaptations start with the legend already existing. I wanted to tell the story of how the legend started. When I thought of the previous takes on the Marvel version of the character - MCU, NYC, etc. - I kept asking myself why we always rush Thor away from the people who actually believed in him as a God with a capital G. I also wanted the Vikings to react like real people. If some naked stranger fell out of the sky claiming to be the son of Odin, you'd probably chain him up too.

Loki secretly travels to another realm, Vanaheim. Deep in the dense forests of the realm, Loki rendezvous with his lover, Amora the Enchantress (Caitriona Balfe), who tells her that the dagger she gave him was successful in killing Balder. She asks what has become of Thor. Loki informs her that Odin stripped Thor of all his powers and gifts and banished him to Midgard until he is "worthy". Amora asks if Loki is worried about that. Loki laughs, insisting that everyone in Asgard knows Thor is a joke. Loki states that he will send a Fenris Wolf to kill Thor in his new realm, solidifying himself as the next ruler of Asgard once his father enters his Odinsleep. [7]

[7] This is probably the scene where I had to eat my vegetables as a writer. There's a lot of exposition here. We have to explain Loki's plan, establish that Amora was involved in Balder's murder, set up the Fenris Wolf, and make it clear what Loki thinks happens next. Normally I try to avoid spelling things out that directly, but I was also introducing Amora, who I'd wanted in the movie from the beginning. So the compromise became using the exposition to accomplish something else at the same time. If the audience is going to sit through a plot-explanation scene, they should at least get a new character and a new realm out of it.

Thor is still imprisoned in the courtyard of the village. Johanna brings him bread and water. Thor quickly eats it all up, thanking her. She asks why he claims to be the son of Odin. Thor says because it is the truth. Just then Wulfgar and Anders come running through the village toward the armory, clearly preparing for battle. Hrothgar demands to know what is going on. Anders informs him that a beast lurks in the woods beyond the village. Thor asks him to describe the beast. Anders struggles to describe, finally settling on it looking like a giant wolf with eyes as red as fire. Thor knows this is a Fenris Wolf and pleads with Hrothgar to free him to help fight it as he is familiar with the beast. Anders suggests that maybe Thor lured the beast here. Thor simply asks for a sword so he can help fight. Hrothgar orders Wulfgar to free Thor. To arm him, Anders gives Thor a dull sword. [8]

[8] This is the first scene where Thor starts earning people's respect instead of demanding it. Earlier in the film he keeps telling everyone he's the son of Odin, as if that should solve every problem. Nobody cares. What finally gets him taken seriously isn't his title—it's his knowledge. He recognizes the Fenris Wolf immediately. That's one of the reasons I liked setting the movie during the Viking Age. The villagers already believe in monsters and gods. They just don't believe this particular guy is one of them. Thor has to prove it. There aren't a lot of jokes in this film, I loved the idea that they free him, but Anders still gives Thor the worst sword he can find because Anders still thinks Thor is a fraud. It's not an "LOL" moment, but it made me chuckle as I wrote it.

Thor helps the warriors of the village track the Fenris Wolf into the deepest parts of the forest from its giant paw prints. The tracks eventually cease though, putting Thor and the vikings on high alert. The vikings decide to split up, even though Thor advises against it. Soon, Anders and Wulgar are cornered by the Fenris Wolf. Just as the wolf is about to crush Anders and Wulfgar with its giant canines, Thor leaps into action from a nearby tree and stabs the beast in the eye. Anders and Wulfgar are frozen in fright as they watch Thor grapple with the giant wolf. Thor hangs onto his sword which is protruding from the wolf's eye. He calls out to Anders and Wulfgar, asking them to give him one of their swords. Wulfgar tosses his sword up to Thor who uses it to stab the Fenris Wolf's other eye, blinding the creature. [9] Thor feels a slight burst of lightning power which he is able to use to stun the Fenris Wolf. The rest of the Vikings finally show up and begin firing arrows at the wolf with their bows. Thor grabs the swords from the wolf's eyes and uses them to stab it in the heart, killing it. [10]

[9] This might be the most "Viking" thing in the entire movie - and frankly probably pushed the studio's preferred PG-13 rating a bit. This version of Thor is not a master strategist like Balder or schemer like Loki - his solution to the monster problem is simple but effective: stab the giant wolf in the eyes.

[10] This is the scene the whole movie was built around. I always felt Thor needed to prove he was worthy before he got Mjolnir back, not after. He's got no armor, no hammer, almost no powers, and he's fighting a monster that everyone else is terrified of. If he only becomes a hero once the lightning returns, then the movie doesn't work. The lightning showing up is just the universe acknowledging what Thor has already become. I never wanted Thor's powers to come back all at once. I wanted them to return the way a muscle returns after an injury. If Thor can't be heroic without Mjolnir, then Mjolnir is the hero—not Thor. So this was the title character's real hero test.

Once they have discovered what has happened to Thor and that Loki claimed Thor killed Balder, Sif informs the Warriors Three that Thor could not have killed Balder that night since he was lying with her at the time. Volstagg wonders why Loki would make up such a thing. Fandral quietly suggests that Loki must know the real killer. Hogun grimly adds that Loki may be the killer himself. Sif suggests they keep this conversation between themselves as Odin may have banished Thor, but he would not hesitate to simply smite them from the ten realms. [11]

[11] This is the scene where the audience catches up to the movie. We already know Loki is guilty. Now the people closest to Thor are starting to figure it out too. I especially liked giving that progression to the Warriors Three. Volstagg asks the obvious question, Fandral starts connecting the dots, and Hogun immediately jumps to the worst possible conclusion—which of course happens to be the correct one. It's also one of the first scenes where Sif really emerges as the most perceptive person in Asgard. She's the only one with proof that Loki's story doesn't add up as she know what tawdry thing Thor was up to at the time instead. I felt like the Warriors Three really were underutilized in another company's Thor films, so making them active and important was one of my biggest goals with this story.

Loki tells Amora that he clearly underestimated Thor as he has managed to defeat the Fenris Wolf even without his powers. Amora asks Loki what should be next. He tells her that must go all-out now and summon Jormungand the World Serpent. Loki pulls out the dagger he killed Balder with, using drops of Balder's blood from it to begin the process. He drips the blood onto the head of a small snake. The snake begins to convulse and grow in size. Loki assures Amora that no amount of cunning and luck will be able to help a powerless Thor this time. [12]

[12] This is the point where Loki crosses a line even he can't really come back from. Earlier in the movie his goals are political—he wants the throne, he wants recognition, he wants control over his own future. Summoning Jormungand isn't political. It's madness. The Fenris Wolf failing forces Loki to confront something he doesn't want to believe: that Thor might actually be becoming worthy of the things Loki envies. So instead of adapting, he escalates. I also knew if I was making a Thor movie it might be my only chance, so there was no chance I was leaving Jormungand out of it. Thor and the World Serpent is one of the great rivalries in all of mythology.

 Thor and the Vikings return to Heorot with the severed head of the Fenris Wolf as a trophy. Anders and Wulfgar inform the village of Thor's bravery as he saved their lives from the beast. King Hrothgar thanks Thor, stating that he may not really be the son of Odin, but that doesn't mean he isn't a fine warrior and an honorable man after all. Hrothgar then proposes they celebrate and welcome Thor into the tribe. At the village's mead hall, Anders proposes a toast to Thor for saving his life, which Wulfgar seconds. While all the other vikings get drunk on mead, Thor sits down next to Johanna. She begins asking him more questions about Odin and Asgard. They spend all night talking to the point where they are the only ones still awake as all of the Vikings have passed out from over-consumption of mead. Johanna and Thor go outside and watch the sun rise. Thor admits that he has never seen a sunrise from Midgard before, but it might just be the second most beautiful thing he's ever seen. She asks what the first is. Instead of answering, Thor passionately kisses Johanna. [13]

[13] This is the scene where Thor finally stops trying to get back to Asgard. Earlier in the movie he's constantly talking about who he was—the son of Odin, the God of Thunder, the prince of Asgard. Here he's just Thor. That's one of the reasons I liked setting the story during the Viking Age. These two characters can literally spend an entire night sitting in a mead hall talking about the stars, the gods, and their lives. Hrothgar's acceptance is important too. He doesn't decide Thor is a god. He decides Thor is an honorable man. For me, that's actually a much bigger step in Thor's journey than him returning straight to godhood.

Odin informs Frigga that it will soon be time for him to enter his Odinsleep and asks her if she thinks that Loki can rule Asgard for a short while. Frigga confesses that she thinks Loki is a bitter, angry young man, but he is an Odinson so he will probably figure it out in the end. Odin confesses that he has become worried that whoever killed Balder may look to kill Thor now that he is powerless. Frigga hopes that Thor will prove himself worthy and his powers will find him again, but Odin says that he isn't holding his breath. [14]

[14] This scene became much more important after the sequel. At the time it looks like a simple conversation about succession, but it's really about parenting. Odin keeps evaluating his sons the way a king would—who can rule, who can protect the realm, who can handle responsibility. Frigga is the only person looking at them as people. She recognizes that Loki isn't really a political problem, he's an emotional one. One of the recurring themes I go back to multiple times in these Thor films is that Odin is a great ruler, but not a particularly good father. Even here, he's worrying about who can sit on the throne while completely missing what's happening inside his family.

Sif and the Warriors Three witness Loki sneaking onto the rainbow bridge in the dead of night. They decide to follow him as he traverses into the realm of Vanaheim. They sneakily follow him through the forest and to Amora's lair where they see the growing Jormungand, which is now nearly 100 feet long. Hogun believes it to be the start of Ragnarok. Fandral doesn't follow, so Hogun reminds him of the legendary stories that said that the death of Odin's favorite son will lead to Ragnarok - the cataclysmic destruction of all the realms that starts with a giant serpent. [15] Sif and the Warriors Three hurry back to Asgard to inform Odin, who finds their claims dubious at best. Frigga pleads with Odin to help Thor out in some way just in case what they are saying is true. Odin relents and says that he will send Thor's hammer Mjolnir to Midgard for him to find. [16]

[15] Up until now the characters have been dealing with murders, monsters, and political intrigue. Suddenly Hogun recognizes the signs of Ragnarok and everything gets much bigger. One thing I liked was tying Balder's death directly into that prophecy. In Norse mythology, Balder's death is one of the major warning signs that the end is coming, and I wanted that event to have real weight.

[16] This is a major shift in the story - bringing more of the myths to Earth. It's also a deeper dive into the relationship between Odin and Frigga - the most powerful royal couple in all of Marvel Comics. One thing I wanted to hint at here as well  is that Mjolnir isn't just a weapon for Thor - it's his destiny.

While Thor and Johanna are still enjoying the sunrise, they see something fall from the sky and strike a nearby mountain. Thor tells Johanna that he knows somehow that he needs to head to that mountain as soon as possible. Anders and Wulfgar stumble out of the mead hall and insist on tagging along with Thor on his trip to the mountain. They head there on horseback and find the hammer of Thor, Mjolnir. Thor tries to lift the hammer, but it doesn't budge from the rock of the mountain. Anders and Wulfgar each try as well, but can't even lift it an inch off the ground. Thor realizes that he hasn't quite deemed himself worthy to wield it yet. [17]

[17] Everybody knows what's supposed to happen here. Thor finds the hammer, picks it up, lightning starts flying, crowd goes wild. The whole reason I wrote the scene was so that wouldn't happen. He hasn't quite earned it just yet. The entire purpose of this scene is to deny the audience the payoff they're expecting. Everybody knows Thor is eventually getting Mjolnir back. The question is when. I always felt that if Thor became worthy the moment he defeated the Fenris Wolf, the story would be over too early. He's made tremendous progress, but he still has things to learn. I also liked that Thor doesn't throw a tantrum here. The Thor from the beginning of the movie would've blamed Odin or tried to force the hammer out of the stone. Instead he immediately understands why it won't move. That's probably the strongest sign yet that he's changing. It's all part of his hero's journey.

Loki and Amora open up a portal from Vanaheim to Midgard. Jormungandr slithers through the portal, now a massive serpent thousands of feet long. The portal opens up on a lake near Heorot and Jormungandr emerges from the lake, towering over the village. The creature is so massive that Thor, Anders and Wulgar can see the creature from the mountain. They hurry back to Heorot to find that the serpent has already started to destroy everything in the village with its fiery breath. Johanna leads all the women and children to the mead hall for safety, while all the men of the village grab their weapons - even King Hrothgar. When Thor makes it back, he immediately rides straight for the serpent and throws his sword at the beast. Thor is suddenly struck by lightning, re-granting him all of his god abilities. Mjolnir shakes free from the rock of the mountain and propels itself straight into Thor's hand. [18]

[18] This is really the payoff to the entire movie. The important thing isn't that Thor gets Mjolnir back. The important thing is that he's stopped caring about getting Mjolnir back. Earlier in the story he wanted the hammer because it represented his power, his status, and his old life. Here he rides straight at Jormungandr with nothing but a sword because there are people in danger. That's why the lightning returns. That's why the hammer comes to him.

King Hrothgar leads the vikings into battle, charging at the giant serpent. Jormungandr roars, causing an earthquake. The shaking earth causes a building to collapse onto Hrothgar, crushing him. He pleads with Thor, not to save him, but to save his people from this evil. [19] Thor promises and summons a bolt of lightning to strike the serpent. Seeing that Thor has had his powers restored, Loki comes through the portal to Midgard. Loki has Jormungandr set fire to the mead hall after blocking the doors, killing everyone inside - including Johanna. Anders and Wulfgar also die trying to rescue them. Thor cries in anger and flies at Jormungandr, hitting the serpent with thunderous blows from Mjolnir. Jormungandr bites Thor, poisoning him. Thor uses a stream of lightning bolts to charge his powers, before grabbing Jormungandr by the head and snaps its neck. [20] Jormungandr collapses before shrinking back down to its original size, revealing a small dead snake. Thor then turns to Loki, telling him that he is next in line to feel his wrath. Loki warns Thor that Jormungandr’s poison will kill Thor in nine steps. Thor doesn’t believe Loki, but Loki informs him that it is the same type of poison he used to kill Balder - the only poison strong enough to kill a god. Thor takes eight steps toward Loki. Loki smiles, just out of Thor’s reach. Thor uses his last step to strike Loki with Mjolnir, before succumbing to the poison. [21]

[19] I've long been a fan of Ulrich Thomsen, so I wanted to give him a really good moment even if the role isn't a major one for the overall Marvel Universe. It was important to me that Hrothgar never really cared whether Thor was the son of Odin - he simply cared whether Thor was honorable.

[20] Disney's MCU has had eight major appearances of Thor now but never bothered to include or mention the freaking MIDGARD SERPENT aka the WORLD SERPENT aka Jormungand. Always on the bench.

[21] "Before I had a finished outline, before I knew who Johanna was, before I knew how Thor would get banished, I knew there was one scene I wanted in the movie. If Thor fought Jormungandr, I wanted the nine steps. Once I decided Jormungandr was the villain, I knew I wanted to honor one of the most famous moments in all of Norse mythology. The trick was finding a way to do it without ending Thor's story completely. That's why Loki is standing at the end of those steps. In the myths, Thor's final act is killing the serpent. In our version, Thor's final act is reaching his brother. I admittedly had to remind myself a few times that this is the Marvel Universe - not a dark Norse myth - at its core.

Odin, Sif and the Warriors Three arrive in Midgard amongst the destroyed village. Odin uses his powers to revive Thor, killing the poison in his veins. Thor pleads with his father to save all the dead of Heorot. Odin says that is something he cannot do as he is not allowed to use his powers to affect Midgard. Odin then apologizes to Thor for not believing him about Loki. Odin adds that Thor has earned his powers and that Balder would be proud of him. Odin brings the injured Loki back to Asgard and imprisons him in the Yggdrasill, an empty void that binds all of the realms together. The Warriors Three begin helping Thor clean up Heorot while Sif helps bandage the injured people of Heorot. The people begin bowing down before Thor, proclaiming him as their new king. Thor, however, is unsure if he wants the responsibility. [22]

[22] The end of this scene is really the entire payoff to Thor's arc through the film. At the beginning of the movie he thinks he's ready to rule Asgard. He never even questions it. In his mind, kingship is just the next reward waiting for him. Then Balder dies, Hrothgar dies, Johanna dies, and Thor spends the entire film learning what leadership actually means. So when the people of Heorot start calling him king, he doesn't feel triumphant. He feels uncertain. Ironically, that's probably the first moment in the movie where he's actually worthy of being one. 

Back in Asgard, an official funeral is held for Balder. Thor is depressed at the loss of Johanna as he had never been in love before. Frigga informs her son that it may take hundreds or even thousands of years, but his love would one day return to Midgard. Thor asks for a more exact time frame. Frigga displays a vision of a woman who looks identical to Johanna in the 21st century working as a nurse. A surgeon calls her Ms. Foster. This makes Thor smile slightly. He tells his mother that he would like to wait in Midgard for Johanna’s eventual return. [23]

[23] This is probably the most obvious sequel setup in the entire film, and honestly that was intentional. The Johanna storyline was always designed to lead into Jane Foster eventually. The challenge wasn't setting up the sequel—it was making Johanna matter enough that audiences understood why Thor would choose to wait for her to be reborn. I never wanted Johanna to feel like a placeholder. She needed to feel like the great love of Thor's life. The vision of Jane isn't there to replace her. It's there to tell Thor that the story isn't over yet.

Well, that's all I've got. Thanks for joining me and taking another trip through The Hammer of Thor. I appreciate you spending your time with me, and who knows—maybe we'll have another story to talk about soon. Thanks for listening.


Thursday, June 25, 2026

Release: Echoes of Red

 

Echoes of Red
Genre: Thriller / Crime
Director: Emerald Fennell
Writer: Mo Buck
Cast: Cate Blanchett, Jeffrey Wright, Luke Evans, Jessica Barden, Vanessa Kirby, Robin Wright, Mark Strong, Ben Whishaw

Budget: $42,000,000
Domestic Box Office: $50,719,934
Foreign Box Office: $32,094,203
Total Profit: $10,590,000

Reaction: Mo Buck's first film since Season 30 didn't set the box office on fire, but it did score a little profit at least.



"A slick, psychologically rich thriller that leans heavily on mood and fractured memory, Echoes of Red thrives on its atmosphere and a commanding lead turn from Cate Blanchett, but occasionally loses clarity in its deliberately disorienting structure. The nonlinear storytelling and unreliable perspective are compelling at first, though the film risks repetition as it circles the same beats without always deepening them. Emerald Fennell’s direction keeps tension simmering, but the payoff feels slightly muted compared to the buildup. Still, it’s a stylish, performance-driven mystery that lingers even when it frustrates." - Brenton Smalls, Playboy


"Echoes of Red is a hypnotic, slow-burning thriller that thrives on atmosphere and psychological unease. Emerald Fennell leans into fractured memory and unreliable perspective, crafting a narrative that feels as disoriented as its protagonist. Cate Blanchett is, unsurprisingly, exceptional—balancing control, vulnerability, and quiet dread with precision. The film’s structure demands patience, but its layered reveal and haunting tone make it a rewarding experience." - Elena Sorrento, Velvet Frame



"While Echoes of Red has a compelling central idea, its execution can feel overly convoluted and self-indulgent. The fragmented timeline and repeated memory lapses, while intentional, become repetitive rather than illuminating, slowing the narrative to a crawl. Blanchett carries the film, but several supporting characters feel underutilized, and the mystery loses some of its impact by the time the pieces come together. It’s intriguing, but uneven." - Clint Avery, Backlot Review





Rated R for language, some violence, and thematic content.






Top 10 Cate Blanchett Films

 

Sherman J. Pearson here for another Top 10. Echoes of Red makes film number 11 for star Cate Blanchett, so I figured I might as well look at and rank the previous 10 films on her resume....

Top 10 Cate Blanchett Films
10. Hope, Sadness and Anger
9. The Water Cure
8. Made in Abyss
7. Mass Effect: Cerberus
6. The Queen of the Night
5. For Those Who Don't Read Me
4. The Betrothed
3. An Honest Mistake
2. Guilt
1. Mass Effect 3 - Part 2