Certain superheroes have very little difficulty in making the leap to the big screen. Sure, you need a little set-up for Superman, Batman, and Spider-Man to work as a movie, but visually speaking, these are special guys who wear cool costumes and fight crime. As far as "suspension of disbelief" is concerned, those heroes have it pretty easy. But then there are the superheroes who, beloved on the page though they may be, have a much tougher time "translating" to the world of the walking and talking. Fantastic Four, for example, is tougher to take seriously on the big screen (the characters are just a touch TOO goofy), and I felt fairly certain that the Norse God of Thunder might have similar problems while finding his way into the movie world. Yes, Marvel's version of the legendary Thor now has his very own movie, and despite my early concerns that the character would be mishandled (and goofily), it turns out to be one of the coolest Marvel movies since Iron Man.
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I'd fully expect Kenneth Brannagh to go all "Hamlet" on this material, but I'm pleasantly surprised to hear it works as well as it does.
Looking forward to this...
Agree. Could've been awful, but really not that bad. The best lines were definitely reserved for Kat Dennings. Portman and Hemsworth were watchable AND Asano!, which was the best surprise. Didn't know Norse gods could look so, well, Japanese.