Thank you, Mischief Makers, we are back with our first recap of our favorite “I’m not a Liar” show Loki Season 2 Episode 3. I will do my best to guide you in this Marvelous show as we’re actually picking up where Episode 2 ended with the temporal loom still being overloaded by the many branches of reality that now exist causing all sorts of issues, Brad AKA X-5 being all sorts of a dick, and the TVA finally getting a hit on the whereabouts of their former leader Revonna Renslaer.
“Loki” Season 2 picks up in the aftermath of the shocking season finale when Loki finds himself in a battle for the soul of the Time Variance Authority. Along with Mobius, Hunter B-15, and a team of new and returning characters, Loki navigates an ever-expanding and increasingly dangerous multiverse in search of Sylvie, Judge Renslayer, Miss Minutes, and the truth of what it means to possess free will and glorious purpose.
In Marvel Studios’ “Loki,” the mercurial villain Loki (Tom Hiddleston) resumes his role as the God of Mischief in a series that takes place after the events of “Avengers: Endgame.” The starting point is the moment in “Avengers: Endgame” when the 2012 Loki takes the Tesseract. From there Loki lands in the hands of the Time Variance Authority (TVA), which is outside of the timeline, concurrent to the current day Marvel Cinematic Universe. In his cross-timeline journey, Loki finds himself a fish out of water as he tries to navigate—and manipulate—his way through the bureaucratic nightmare that is the Time Variance Authority and its by-the-numbers mentality.
In summary, “Loki” Season 2, Episode 3, sets the stage for an exciting narrative with strong character dynamics and intriguing time travel mechanics. However, viewers are left with questions and eager for the development of certain plot points. The episode successfully builds anticipation for what lies ahead in the season.
Loki Season 2 Episode 1 DEEP DIVE and REACTION
- Acting – 8/10
- Cinematography/Visual Effects – 8/10
- Plot/Screenplay – 8/10
- Setting/Theme – 8/10
- Watchability – 8/10
- Rewatchability – 7/10