Thor Ragnarok Review

This visual shift is ideological. The crumbling murals in Odin’s vault—revealing a history of bloody conquest hidden beneath gold leaf—mirror the film’s visual strategy. The monumental is unmasked as gaudy propaganda. By setting 60% of the film on a garish junkyard planet, Waititi visually equates Asgard’s “noble” history with the detritus of the universe. The apocalypse thus becomes a cleaning crew.

Apocalyptic Parody: Deconstructing Asgardian Mythos through Postmodern Comedy in Thor: Ragnarok Thor Ragnarok

Thor: Ragnarok uses the comedic register to perform an ideological demolition of the heroic monarchy. By refusing to treat Ragnarok as a tragedy, Waititi dismantles the colonial, patriarchal structures of the Thor mythos, leaving behind a smaller, more human (or more cosmic) community of survivors. The final shot—the refugees aboard a ship, heading toward Earth—is not a new kingdom but a new beginning without a throne. In the age of franchise cinema, where destruction is often hollow spectacle, Thor: Ragnarok argues that the most heroic act is to laugh as the old world burns. This visual shift is ideological

This narrative move inverts the standard superhero climax. Victory is not the preservation of the homeland but its orchestrated annihilation. By allowing Ragnarok to occur, Thor accepts the Nietzschean truth that the gods were never benevolent—they were colonizers. The film’s comedy thus serves a radical purpose: it prevents the audience from mourning Asgard as a noble loss. When the planet explodes, we laugh at Korg’s deadpan “The foundations are gone. Sorry.” The joke is the funeral. By setting 60% of the film on a

Traditional Asgard, depicted in earlier films as a golden, sterile cathedral to warrior glory, is systematically defaced in Ragnarok . Waititi replaces the gilded CGI of previous films with the psychedelic, angular designs of artist Jack Kirby—specifically his 1970s “Kirby Krackle” aesthetic. The planet Sakaar, a trash-heap universe ruled by the Grandmaster, is a carnivalesque dystopia of bright pinks, yellows, and blues.