Despite his status as a fan-favorite Marvel antihero, demigod Loki has rarely had the opportunity to shed light on his own story. We know the basic beats: He’s the abandoned son
of a Frost Giant, he’s power-hungry and deceptive, and he can’t ever quite decide if he loves or hates his adoptive brother, Thor. But otherwise, he’s operated chiefly as a chaos architect, the Tesseract thief who, however unintentionally, sets the Infinity War plot into motion. The Loki we know from The Avengers, Thor: Ragnarok, and the like ultimately gave his life for a higher cause, succumbing to death at the hands of Thanos. But, as is his custom, the God of Mischief has returned—though perhaps not in the form we expected.
Loki, the upcoming series from Disney+, follows in the footsteps of WandaVision and The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, promising a closer look at a side-character whose powers nevertheless hold huge implications for the future of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Here’s what we know about Tom Hiddleston's sneering Son of Laufey.
Loki will premiere this summer.
Disney announced that the first episode of Loki will land on Disney+ on Wednesday, June 9, 2021—two days earlier than officially reported. That gives you plenty of time to rewatch all the MCU films, in order, before we dive in. Don’t pretend you don't want to.
Episodes will release each Wednesday.
In a humorous segment released by Marvel on May 5, 2021, Hiddleston revealed he was feeling a bit left out by Loki’s absence in many of
">Marvel’s famous montages. “[Loki]’s incredibly heroic,” Hiddleston argues in the clip. “Cunning. Charming. I could go on, but maybe, why not I just prove it to you? Wednesdays are the new Fridays.”
The news was a classic play on the demigod’s deception, shifting the release date from the expected Friday, June 11, to Wednesday, June 9. Subsequent episodes will land each Wednesday, rather than on Friday, as was the schedule with other Marvel Disney+ shows including WandaVision and The Falcon and the Winter Soldier.
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The show will follow a different version of the demigod.
And here’s where that MCU rewatch is really going to serve you, because things are getting a wee bit sticky. Let’s dive in.
First, remember the multiverse? Y’know, the one Jedi Tilda Swinton reveals to Bruce Banner in Avengers: Endgame?
“The Infinity Stones create what you experience as the flow of time,” she explains. “Remove one of the stones, and that flow splits,” creating a new, alternate reality.
Well, Steve Rogers might have returned to the past to put all the Infinity Stones back in their chronological timeline before prancing into wedded bliss with Peggy Carter, but there’s still one problem. When the Avengers travel back in time in Endgame to retrieve the Tesseract,they arrive at Avengers Tower moments after their doppelgängers finished defeating Loki and his Chitauri army. Their plan to nab the glowy blue block and quietly slip away doesn’t exactly pan out, and Loki circa 2012 grabs the Tesseract and escapes. Which means he’s created a new reality, one Loki will explore.
What does all that nonsense mean? To put it simply: Loki is about the 2012 version of Loki, the demigod who betrayed his brother and family, and unleashed hell on New York City. He hasn’t exactly redeemed himself, to say the least, and he certainly has yet to reckon with Thanos. It's possible the Loki we know is still dead, and this Loki “variant” has an entirely different path set before him.
The show will introduce the Time Variance Authority.
Because Loki’s escape with the Tesseract “broke reality,” as Owen Wilson’s character Mobius M. Mobius puts it, the Time Variance Authority is none too happy. These mysterious folks protect what they call “the proper flow of time,” much in the way Stephen Strange and his cohort protect the multiverse. Mobius needs Loki’s help to set things right—but as we know, goodwill doesn’t come naturally to the slippery trickster. There’s no guarantee he won't make an even bigger mess of this new reality.
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Loki’s time has come. ⌛ Watch the brand-new trailer for #LOKI, and start streaming the Marvel Studios Original Series June 11 on @DisneyPlus. pic.twitter.com/6bnfo5C2R1
In typical spoiler-fearing style, the creators have kept their lips sealed about exactly who will make an appearance in Loki. We know, of course, Tom Hiddleston will return as the God of Mischief, and I, for one, am ecstatic to see Lightning McQueen—erm, Owen Wilson—play a time guardian. Other confirmed cast members include Erika Coleman as Florence Schaffner—who could be the flight attendant from the tale of D.B. Cooper—as well as Sophia Di Martino, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Richard E. Grant, and Wunmi Mosaku.
We have a sneak preview of the chemistry between Wilson and Hiddleston.
In a new clip released during the MTV Movie & TV Awards, we get to see Loki adjust to his new TVA surroundings, as well as the concept that the flow of time is controlled “at the behest of three space lizards.” Wilson’s reaction is delightful. Check it out below.
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Like the rest of the Disney+ shows, Loki will likely fit neatly into the rest of Marvel’s Phase Four.
If we’ve learned anything from the last decade of MCU films, it’s that ~everything is connected~, even if the threads seem loose at best. WandaVision set up a new story (and possibly villain) for Doctor Strange and the Multiverse of Madness. The Falcon and the Winter Soldier could link indirectly to Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings. Loki seems poised to bring the multiverse again to the forefront, connecting it to the Doctor Strange sequel as well as the next Spider-Man movie, and Thor: Love and Thunder. Plus, if the trailer is any indication, Hiddleston looks to be at his best, which makes this next offering from our Marvel overlords yet another must-watch.
Lauren PuckettLauren Puckett is a writer and assistant for Hearst Magazines, where she covers culture and lifestyle.
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