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#unworthy thor
schizophreniadream · 6 months
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(It should be 'to you')
Sorryyy. Eng isnt my first language orzz
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Finished loki s2.
Although I know this is the end to my boisss (Tom n Chris as Loki n Thor) and admit the fact that the sun will never shine on them again, STILL! I BELIEVEEEE! ONE DAY! THEY SHALL!
( •̩̩̩̩_•̩̩̩̩ )
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the-mjolnir-owner · 4 months
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Unworthy Thor by Olivier Coipel
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samasmith23 · 8 months
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I've always loved the big plot twist at the end of Unworthy Thor #5 where we finally learn the answer to the long-running mystery of what exactly Nick Fury whispered into Thor Odinson's ear during the Original Sin crossover which made him unworthy to lift Mjolnir.
It was only three simple words: “Gorr was right.”
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It’s so simple yet so effective, and perfectly makes sense from a thematic and character standpoint. I've seen a lot of fans argue that this twist is either underwhelming or comes out of nowhere, but if you’ve read Jason Aaron's Thor run in its entirety up to this point, it is clear that Odinson was experiencing a downward spiral & questioning his own worthiness as a god ever since his initial encounter with Gorr the Godbutcher at the very beginning of Aaron's tale. Nick Fury’s whisper was simply the final nail in that coffin for the doubt Odinson was already experiencing.
From Unworthy Thor #5 by Jason Aaron & Oliver Coipel.
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avengerscompound · 2 years
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Thor during the Axis crisis
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vertigoartgore · 24 days
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2005's Ultimates 2 Vol.1 #5 cover by Bryan Hitch, Paul Neary and Laura Martin.
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magnusmodig · 2 months
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rough childhood headcanon qs / anonymous / accepting !
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╰┈➤ 6 . what was the worst / most traumatic moment in their childhood?
||. Oh, I am sure that there are multiple that Thor can recount (if he ever bothered to) and the list could fill up a very long and detailed tome. But were I to try and summarize most of them, I would end up with one word: Gungnir.
Disagreed with something your father said? Gungnir. Went against the grain because you felt it better to do things your own way? Gungnir. Have the gall to talk back (regardless of whether your point was valid or just genuine childish disrespect)? Gungnir. Make a mistake? Bound to get scolded? You've spoken out of turn? Gungnir. Dare to defy Odin and you will hear the sound of urdu thudding against the ground, because very likely you aren't talking to your father at all. You're talking to the All-Father, and he is not a very patient manner of beast.
And I would imagine that Thor, being the temperamental, strong-willed, passionate individual that he is (not to mention a perfectly bright and excitable creature as a child, the lovely lamb) wouldn't have known the difference at first. How would he have? His father was his hero. He answered a great many questions and told the history of his father and fore-father. He took Thor's hand in his and squeezed it tight, and showed him the great treasures of Asgard and the spoils of its righteous conquests as heroes of the Great Wars. ...So how was Thor to know the difference between the father who held his hands and spoke with a fond twinkle in his eye, and the All-Father who spoke with authority heavy in his tone and the slam of urdu on the ground? So Thor would speak up as any child might, interrupting and asking questions and never exactly listening, because Thor has his own thoughts and opinions and he would very much like to share them all. And father would listen, but the All-Father does not. And Thor would argue and debate and counter when he feels something unjust, unfair or otherwise downright vexing for a little one who knows no better about the world than that which consists of himself and his brother and his parents, and maybe sometimes he was eloquent enough to earn an impressed hum or a begrudging acquiescence — if he was debating with his father, at any rate.
Thor was oh-so very often not speaking to his father at all.
And it was very much his own mistake for not catching on to the difference.
But at some point, Thor learned better. Fight back, but maybe not so blatantly out of line. Defend your point and speak your mind, but beware of the All-Father's command. Do what's right, but in the shadow of rebellion ; keep your head down, and your eyes lower, as you slip around the politics of the rulings – for rules are made to be broken , after all. Most of all: when Gungnir sounds, bite your tongue and hold your breath.
You will speak when spoken to or you will not speak at all.
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fryordie · 5 months
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it's also past time i did this, but whenever i find the muse to write for thor again, i'll probably shave off all mcu verses & stuff, and stick to my own comics version instead
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smillingcartoonist · 1 year
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The Unworthy Thor 3 #
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writeshite · 7 months
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Unworthy Thor in the comics in general is very 👀
Unworthy Thor is so beautiful
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aparticularbandit · 9 months
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I just thought about something. There was the whole thing with moving Thor's hammer in Age of Ultron... but remember that Widow refused to even try, saying it wasn't something that she wanted to try... do you think, assuming that Steve could have lifted Thor's hammer at the time and simply backed down because he didn't really see a reason to wield it, since it could cause trouble with Thor, that Widow would have been considered worthy or not? I'm guessing the answer is 'no she's not worthy' but I'm still curious~
I think Nat rightfully assumed it was a pissing contest and didn't want to join in.
I also think that Nat wouldn't have thought herself worthy and didn't need Mjolnir to tell her that (or to affirm the assumptions she was sure most of the others would have with regards to her worthiness - whether those assumptions were founded or not).
Beyond that, we'd have to look at the characters we know Mjolnir did qualify as worthy for commonalities between them (Thor, Vision, Steve (I'm not taking Jane into account here because although she WAS worthy, TLAT went a weird way of "she's worthy because Thor told Mjolnir to take care of her" and also she's much more complicated and also we're talking about characters defined worthy at the period of time in AOU (as opposed to potential worthiness later))) - and the main commonalities I see between those three is their innocence in doing good and their belief in the goodness of people.
Hope and faith and love, mainly, towards the normal person and a desire to protect that, which is roughly how Thor regains his worthiness in his first movie - he sacrificed himself for the common man, who he had grown to love and had faith and hope in their being good, etc. (It's been a while since I've seen the movie, don't judge me.) You can also see all of these in Steve and Vision VERY LOUDLY.
I think by Endgame, Nat's sacrifice very clearly demonstrates all of the above - or at least those as given to her fellow Avengers - and at that point, yeah, I would say she was worthy.
And I certainly think she has those in abundance towards her fellow Avengers in AOU (and I think Civil War semi-supports this - she sides with Steve because she trusts her Avengers family over the government, and she turns on Tony because she trusts in Steve and the validity of what he says about Bucky).
But I think, as a spy, Nat has a level of distrust and suspicion towards average people that you're not going to find in either Steve or Vision. Not that she believes everyone she runs into is bad, but that she's used to seeing everyone else as a potential antagonist or spy or something else in disguise. And she's definitely using Hulk instead of Banner, quite against what Banner specifically wants (we see this later on in AOU in the Battle of Sokovia), which is a clear decision of what she thinks they need to win over trusting in her fellow Avenger to know what is best for him.
So I would say that no, in AOU, I don't think Mjolnir would consider her worthy. (But that's character arcs! Progression! I think it's possible she's worthy in CW, but there's still that learning to trust the other Avengers to know what they need - which is the Steve choice - and then trusting them fully in Endgame - there's the progression of worthiness there!)
...which isn't getting into everything else, etc.
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samasmith23 · 4 months
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I absolutely love the sequential storytelling on display in these panels right here! Witnessing a cancer-ridden Jane inching closer and closer to Mjolnir as she’s forced to choose between continuing her treatments or sacrificing her life to become Thor one last time to save Asgardia from the Mangog's wrath is so powerful!
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From Mighty Thor (2017) #703 by Jason Aaron & Russell Dauterman.
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avengerscompound · 2 years
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Odinson
Avengers (2012)
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Thor’s struggle over what it means for him to be worthy is one of my favourite things about the character. It’s a real shame that this wasn’t explored in a more interesting way in the MCU. (We get a bit of it in Endgame but Love and Thunder in general struggled to pull back the goofiness and deal seriously with Thor or Jane, which is frankly a crime.)
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worstloki · 2 years
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Thor: *does something so inexplicably ridiculously out there, completely careless, insipid and asinine, that could in no way end on a high note*
Loki: *following behind him* ah. regrettably, this is my life.
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vertigoartgore · 2 days
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2017's Generations: The Unworthy Thor & The Mighty Thor Vol.1 #1 variant cover by Olivier Coipel.
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