Английская Википедия:Glorious Purpose (Loki season 2)
Шаблон:Use American English Шаблон:Use list-defined references Шаблон:Use mdy dates Шаблон:Infobox television episode "Glorious Purpose" is the sixth episode and season finale of the second season and twelfth episode overall of the American television series Loki, based on Marvel Comics featuring the character Loki. It sees Loki working with Mobius M. Mobius, Hunter B-15, and other members of the Time Variance Authority (TVA) to navigate the multiverse in order to find Sylvie, Ravonna Renslayer, and Miss Minutes. The episode is set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), sharing continuity with the films of the franchise. It was written by head writer Eric Martin, and directed by Aaron Moorhead and Justin Benson.
Tom Hiddleston reprises his role as Loki from the film series, starring alongside Sophia Di Martino (Sylvie), Gugu Mbatha-Raw (Renslayer), Wunmi Mosaku (Hunter B-15), Eugene Cordero, Tara Strong (Miss Minutes), Neil Ellice, Jonathan Majors, and Owen Wilson (Mobius) reprising their roles from the first season, alongside Rafael Casal, Kate Dickie, Liz Carr, and Ke Huy Quan. Development of the second season had begun by November 2020, which was formally confirmed in July 2021. In February 2022, Benson and Moorhead, and Martin were revealed to be directing and writing, respectively, the majority of the season.
"Glorious Purpose" was released on Disney+ on November 9, 2023.
Plot
Loki attempts to avert the Temporal Loom's explosion at the Time Variance Authority (TVA) headquarters by repeatedly time slipping to moments in time before the explosion and using his experience to take different actions. After centuries of learning from Ouroboros the science behind the Throughput Multiplier, Loki takes actions that result in Victor Timely successfully approaching the Loom, activating the Throughput Multiplier, and returning safely. However, the Loom still explodes, as no adjustment to it can accommodate the infinite timeline branches.
Changing his strategy to wanting to prevent the Sacred Timeline from branching, Loki time slips to the moment before Sylvie kills He Who Remains.Шаблон:Efn Loki repeatedly tries to stop her, but she says he will have to kill her to stop her; he does not, and she always succeeds. When Loki asks He Who Remains why he never fights back, He Who Remains freezes Sylvie in time, recognizing Loki's time slipping and indicating that he "paved that road". When Loki shows the ability to freeze time, He Who Remains reveals that the Loom is a fail-safe; overloading it protects the Sacred Timeline by deleting the branched timelines along with the TVA. Loki is left with two choices: destroy the Loom and risk an apocalyptic multiversal war by He Who Remains' variants, or kill Sylvie to protect He Who Remains and the Sacred Timeline.
Loki consults MobiusШаблон:Efn and SylvieШаблон:Efn for advice at different moments in time. Mobius tells Loki to accept burdens for the greater good, while Sylvie urges Loki to let He Who Remains die to maintain free will. Loki time slips again,Шаблон:Efn choosing to replace Timely in approaching the Loom. Loki destroys the Loom, magically rejuvenates the dying timelines and rearranges them into a tree-like structure i.e Yggdrasil, committing himself to oversee the branches alone at the End of Time.
After Loki's actions, the TVA accepts the infinite timeline branches and now tracks He Who Remains' variants, with Mobius reporting that one of them has been stopped at Earth-616's "adjacent realm", i.e. the Quantum Realm.Шаблон:Efn Hunter B-15 becomes one of the TVA's leaders. Ouroboros reactivates a now-friendly Miss Minutes and writes a new TVA Handbook with Timely as co-author. In one timeline, a young Timely does not receive the TVA Handbook in 1868. In the Void, Ravonna Renslayer awakens near a TVA crest and sees Alioth. Mobius retires from the TVA; he and Sylvie observe his variant Don and his children.
Production
Development
Development on a second season of Loki had begun by November 2020,[1] which was confirmed through a mid-credits scene in the first season finale, which was released in July 2021.[2] In February 2022, the directing duo Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead were hired to direct a majority of the episodes for the second season.[3] Eric Martin, a first-season writer who took over some of series' creator Michael Waldron's duties during production on that season,[4] was set to write all six episodes of the second season.[3] Executive producers for the season include Marvel Studios' Kevin Feige, Stephen Broussard, Louis D'Esposito, Victoria Alonso, Brad Winderbaum, and Kevin R. Wright, alongside star Tom Hiddleston, Benson and Moorhead, Martin, and Waldron.[5] The sixth episode, titled "Glorious Purpose",[6] was written by Martin.[7]
Writing
The episode shares its title with that of the series' first episode, which was a deliberate decision. Hiddleston stated that the creative team had used the phrase "Glorious Purpose" as a mission statement for the series, adding that every character had been wanting to seek purpose in their lives, which was "in the DNA of the show".[6] Following the conclusion of the first season and during the production of the second, the creative team had understood that the season would end with Loki ascending to the throne. The team also wanted to show Loki being stuck in time loops, with Kevin Wright comparing it to Run Lola Run (1998). Wright also credited the idea of time loops to editor Paul Zucker and stated that the final scene in the episode had deviated from the original script.[8] Eric Martin described the episode's big idea as "taking Loki from a lowercase-g god, to a capital-G God" and felt that it had culminated when Loki decides to become the overseer at the End of Time, as he had sacrificed "the thing he wants most" so that the other people could live with free will.[9] Elaborating upon this notion, Martin went onto compare him to Atlas and wanted to make the journey "difficult" for Loki, as Loki had decided to give up his autonomy in order to safely preserve the multiverse. He attributed the episode's ending to being connected to the ending of the first season, wanting to explore whether Loki or Sylvie's perspective was correct. The creative team held numerous meetings deciding how sequences of Loki destroying the Loom and ascending to the citadel's throne would be written.[10]
The opening scene features Loki time-slipping back to the TVA to speak with Mobius, which paralleled the scene from the series' first episode. Hiddleston felt it made sense for Loki to go "right back to the beginning of the story", while Kevin Wright described the scene as having Loki say "goodbye" to Mobius as a result of the "story pick[ing] up" following Loki going into the Temporal Core control room. He also noted that the scene was an inversion from the series' first episode, as Loki was asking Mobius many questions. Meanwhile, Eric Martin stated the scene involved Loki "engaging emotionally" with Mobius.[11] Martin had characterized Mobius as being "in turmoil through all of this", and noted that his devotion to his role in the TVA had resulted in him ignoring other possibilities for his own life until the episode, in which he realizes that he doesn't want to work for the TVA and is willing to "go explore and figure out the opportunities that are out there". He also added that Sylvie would now take responsibilities for her action in a more proactive manner and ultimately "go in a direction".[9] Meanwhile, Wright interpreted Mobius' scene in Ohio as him "overcoming a personal obstacle" and expanded upon Martin's sentiment by saying that Loki had helped provide him with opportunities beyond his TVA life.[8]
During Loki's confrontation with He Who Remains, he recites two verses from T. S. Eliot's poem "Little Gidding" (1942) from his Four Quartets collection: "We die with the dying. We are born with the dead; See, they return, and bring us with them". Hiddleston had enjoyed Eliot's work and felt the poem was very symbolic of Loki's overall character, and had previously referred to his works with the production team throughout the development of the series.[12]
Casting
The episode stars Tom Hiddleston as Loki, Sophia Di Martino as Sylvie, Gugu Mbatha-Raw as Ravonna Renslayer, Wunmi Mosaku as Hunter B-15, Eugene Cordero as Casey, Rafael Casal as Hunter X-5 / Brad Wolfe, Tara Strong as Miss Minutes, Liz Carr as Judge Gamble, Neil Ellice as Hunter D-90, Jonathan Majors as Victor Timely and He Who Remains, Ke Huy Quan as Ouroboros, and Owen Wilson as Mobius M. Mobius.[13]Шаблон:Rp Also appearing in the episode are Nasri Thompson as a young Victor Timely and Caleb and Blake Johnston-Miller as Don's children.[13]Шаблон:Rp
Filming and visual effects
Filming took place at Pinewood Studios in the United Kingdom, with Benson and Moorhead directing.[14] Scenes from the episode were amongst the first to be filmed for the season, particularly the scene in which Loki time slips back into the TVA with Mobius.[11] Filming in the "loom room" had occurred for a few days, as the production team had been reshooting variations of Loki's time slipping.[6] The team was also worried about filming scenes with He Who Remains, as they felt it would be "retreading the same ground as season 1". As such, Kevin Wright decided to stop filming and reconvene with the production team, during which Hiddleston had discussed possible ideas with the script supervisor and was able to rework the scene with the writers and Jonathan Majors. Additionally, Hiddleston had also improvised the line "For you, for all of us" as he steps toward the loom, which was an allusion to Thor (2011).[6][8] While filming the scene in which Loki transports the timelines while ascending the steps, Hiddleston had taken some time to re-watch Loki's prior MCU experiences in order to prepare himself for the scene at the suggestion of directors Benson and Moorhead.[15]
Visual effects for the episode were created by Trixter, Framestore, Rising Sun Pictures, Industrial Light & Magic, Cantina Creative, FuseFX and Lola VFX.[13]Шаблон:Rp[16] The idea for Loki to weave the multiverse into the shape of Yggdrasil had emerged in January 2023, with the post-production team spending seven months working on the scene. Wright had felt the idea had emerged from "playing with this idea of this whole thing being a closed loop" and envisioned Yggdrasil as being the "perfect encapsulation of it".[10] The animated What If...? team helped create the tree's design, as Marvel Studios had asked that series to include the tree at the end of their season two finale instead of another image of the multiverse they had planned, with What If...? director Bryan Andrews believing the two teams were "informing each other" on its design.[17]Шаблон:Rp
Reception
Audience viewership
According to Nielsen Media Research which measures the number of minutes watched by United States audiences on television sets, Loki was the most watched original series across streaming services for the week of November 6–12, 2023, with 753 million minutes watched,[18] which was a 34.5% increase from the previous week.[19]
Critical response
Шаблон:Copy edit The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reports a 73% approval rating based on 15 reviews.[20]
ColliderШаблон:'s Therese Lacson wrote that Marvel unexpectedly "managed to stick the landing" with Loki, as the show actually focused on Loki, instead of being a "stepping stone to the wider MCU" like many other Marvel television shows. Hiddlestone brought an "emotional performance" showing "desperation" to save the multiverse in this finale. Lacson praised Loki's character for showing growth by gaining selflessness, with his "love for Sylvie" preventing him from killing her to save the multiverse, causing him to "sacrifice himself rather than anyone else", a decision of immense consequence for the multiverse, yet within a "contained story". Ultimately, the episode "brings together all the elements of the series and of Loki's life" for a "fitting" and "poetic" ending, wrote Lacson.[21]
The A.V. ClubШаблон:'s William Hughes gave a "A" rating for the episode, as it was "very close to perfect Loki, in each of its three very different acts: funny, fast, ambitious, heady, a little silly, and acted, written, and shot as well as anyone could want." Hughes praised directors Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead "having broken Loki free from conventional Marvel storytelling" by getting "abstract, obtuse, glorious" and "genuinely weird", by letting Loki rescue the timelines and "seize a throne for himself—in the most beautiful possible way", as the overseer of the timeline tree, "a truly mythical act, transcending plot in service of raw, emotionally affecting story". For a show of two seasons of loveless "systems" of control and evil, which included the Temporal Loom, the show ends with Loki's system loving its inhabitants, highlighted Hughes.[22]
GizmodoШаблон:'s Sabina Graves wrote that this season finale sees Loki having "his destiny fulfilled" as "everything falls into place". Loki initially refusing to approach the Loom himself and having Timely repeatedly do it showed his character growth, wrote Graves, as he was "selflessly trying to change everyone's fate without stepping in". When Loki saves the timelines and becomes "the God of Stories—finding his glorious purpose", it was a "truly earned arc", according to Graves. However, Graves was critical of the writing of Sylvie's character as having failed to evolve, with Graves calling Sylvie's choice to work for McDonald's as "unbelievable; she has literal magic powers and could have made anything for herself if she no longer wanted to be a fighter and was seeking peace."[23]
Space.com's Fran Ruiz described the finale as "the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) at its best", in contrast to the MCU film The Marvels just released before this episode. The episode was "fun" and finished "on a bittersweet note in the best possible way, giving the titular character and his closer allies a logical and satisfying conclusion that feels both emotive and logical all the way through." Ruiz praised Hiddleston's performance as Loki as "one of the best (if not the best) performers in the MCU", bringing a new facet to the character by "perfectly embodying a guy who's seen and learned too much but is growing impatient" during his repeated time slipping.[24]
VultureШаблон:'s Siddhant Adlakha rated the episode 2 stars out of 5, as it has "some grand ideas", but is "burdened by a reliance on symbolism without meaning, and on plot mechanics without a human core." The underlying problem of Loki season two arises from the Temporal Loom, wrote Adlakha, as it is "a device theoretically representative of the dilemma between one timeline and many — between determinism and free will — but it's only ever treated as a machine"; then when Loki saves the timelines, their portrayal as "enormous strings" fails to properly convey "what they represent in terms of people saved, or life lived". Finally, in Adlakha's view, the most "unimpeachable" positive of Loki across two seasons is its musical score by Natalie Holt.[25]
The reviews by Collider, The A.V. Club, Space.com and Vulture interpret Loki's shifting of the timelines into a tree-like structure as a reference to Yggdrasil, the Norse tree of life.[21][22][24][25]
Notes
References
External links
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