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Photo: Kevin Winter / Getty Images
Playing Thor, the North American divine superhero hammering the hammer in seven Marvel films, Chris Hemsworth ended up being physically defined by his undulating musculature: honeydew melon-sized deltoid, six-pack abs, a bicep able to curl a barrel of beer. That's one of the reasons he was so shocked – at what can only be described as Marvel Studios' breathtaking Comic-Con panel Saturday night – that Natalie Portman, a five-foot-three-inch person , has been announced as the female character of Thor, Mighty Thor, in the studio to come Thor: love and thunder, which should be released in cinemas on November 5, 2021.
Portman, plays the former girlfriend of Thor, Jane Foster, in the first two Thor movies – and, before this weekend, the obvious choice to represent the seasoned warrior who balances the insurmountable mjolinir despite the precedent of history was hardly evident. Why? Well, there is the widespread perception that Portman has bad press with Marvel. After initially subcontracting three films for the studio, she suggested Marvel to hire Patty Jenkins Thor 2. But when the studio would have frustrated the filmmaker with countless revisions of the screenplay, Jenkins walked and Portman would have triggered the march in protest – avoiding the overtures that forced Hemsworth's wife, Elsa Pataky, to play the role of double Thor: The World of DarknessThe final credit sequence.
But Saturday, not the slightest trace of antipathy. Thor: director Love and Thunder Taika Waititi explained that the next film will borrow a plot from the Thor graphic novel written by Jason Aaron representing a woman, god of thunder. "For us, there is only one person who can play this role and she is here," said Waititi.
As Portman paced the scene, the more than 7,000 people in Hall H. Hemsworth gave him his signature, Mjolinir. "I've always had the urge for a hammer," Portman said with a mischievous smile.
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