Lokis Season 2 Renewal Is a Clue to Marvels Multiverse
Heretofore, Marvelâs Disney+ shows have been snacks. Amuse-bouches to keep fans in the cinematic universe in between their trips to the cinema. These shows are also usually ways to tie up loose ends and let beloved characters go on side quests. In WandaVision, Wanda Maximoff got to imagine a life with Vision following his death in Avengers: Infinity War. The Falcon and the Winter Soldier is about Sam Wilson taking on the mantle of Captain America, after Steve Rogers gave him the shield in Endgame. Loki was meant to show what happened when the God of Mischief took off with the Tesseract in Endgame. It didnâtâ"instead, it turned all of those loose ends into a frayed knot.
But wait, thatâs jumping too far ahead. First, the good news: During a mid-credits scene in Wednesdayâs Loki season finale, Marvel announced that, yes, âLoki will return in Season 2.â To date, this is unprecedented. Disney+ has yet to renew any other Marvel series. It also leaves a lot of open and compelling questions, including, but not limited to, which Loki or Lokis will be returning in the second seasonâ"and/or in other MCU films. Considering that the renewal news was delivered via a message written in the Time Variance Authority (TVA) file of Loki Laufeyson, Hiddlestonâs Loki, presumably heâll be back. The fates of others, including Sophia Di Martinoâs Sylvie and the internetâs favorite alligator, remain to be seen. Loki just blew up the timeline of the Marvel multiverse.
This, presumably, is all part of Kevin Feigeâs master plan. Like Lokiâs Time Keepers, the Marvel honcho makes sure the MCU keeps ticking, and makes sure all the movies and shows work in concert. But as Wednesdayâs finale showed, sometimes even the puppetmaster needs to be swapped out. (Spoiler alert: Details from the Loki season finale follow.) Toward the end of the episode, Sylvie has a somewhat heartbreaking duel with Loki, and then kills He Who Remains (Lovecraft Countryâs Jonathan Majors), the supposed mastermind of the TVA that sheâs been seeking all seasonâ"and the person known to comic-book fans as Kang the Conqueror. Like Se7enâs John Doe, He Who Remains has manipulated Sylvie into mistrusting Loki and stabbing him, thereby unleashing multiple timelines in which a much more evil, warlord-like Kang exists, ready to wreak havoc.
My colleague Adam Rogers likes to warn that âthis will end in tears.â All this timey-wimey multiverse stuff can only conclude with a âcataclysmic pendulum-swing of epic violence.â Heâs right, of course. (I have to say that; Adam outranks me. Not that he would do something drastic to stop me from speaking my mind ⦠Iâm fine ⦠::blink:: ::blink::) For me, multiverses are a hoot. Yes, they cause nerds to wring their metacarpi over which one is real or true, but I trust Doctor Strange. Remember that whole bit where he gave Thanos the Time Stone because he said it was the only chance the Avengers had? That turned out (mostly) OK, and itâs my instinct to go with the guy who looked at every timeline and chose this one. If Feige says âmultiverse,â sure why not?
Also, multiverses allow for a lot more of the side quests and quirky character explorations Loki played like a fiddle. Technically, WandaVision happened on the main MCU timeline, but if Wanda hadnât used her sorcery to create an alternate world, fans wouldnât have had hours of more time with Visionâ"and they never wouldâve even met the now beloved Agatha Harkness. Loki gave us more Lokiâ"a couple dozen of them, in fact, revealing all of the characterâs wonderfully queer forms. Wrapped up in that is the Marvel that exists on this timeline: Earth in 2021. Opening up the multiverse allows characters to be alternates of who they were in the comicsâ"they can be gender-swapped, or of a different race or sexuality. Yes, all of this script-flipping can induce chaos, and it will leave more split ends than a bad perm, but what Iâm saying is: Donât say âmultiversal warâ like itâs a bad thing. It sounds like a gas.
Multiversal war is, of course, where all this is going. Thereâs literally a movie slated for next year called Doctor Strange and the Multiverse of Madness, a movie in which Hiddleston is rumored to appear. Cool! Fans had presumed for a while now that Kang would be a big foe in Marvelâs Phase 4, and after Majorsâ epic bit of exposition in this weekâs Loki finale, in which he laid out exactly what would happen if Kang died and all of his variants came looking for a fight, fisticuffs are certainly nigh. Prepare the popcorn.
When I spoke to Loki director Kate Herron a few weeks ago, one of the things she stressed was that her show was, at the core, about identity: who is good, who is evil, who can change, who can be trusted. The other strand of that helix is nature vs. nurture: Will someone turn out differently under alternate circumstances? Roll your eyes at the multiversal mumbo jumbo if you like, but it might provide the best way to find out.
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