Thor The Dark World 2013 Hindi REPACK
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Thor: The Dark World premiered at the Odeon Leicester Square in London on October 22, 2013, and was released in the United States on November 8, as part of Phase Two of the MCU. The film was a commercial success, grossing over $644 million worldwide and becoming the tenth highest-grossing film of 2013. It received praise for the performances of Hemsworth and Hiddleston, visual effects, and action sequences, but was criticized for its generic villain and lack of depth. Retrospectively, Taylor has expressed dissatisfaction with the film, stating that Marvel substantially altered it from his original vision during post-production. A sequel directed by Taika Waititi, Thor: Ragnarok, was released in 2017, while a fourth film, Thor: Love and Thunder, was released in 2022.
In September 2011, Tom Hiddleston confirmed he would return in the sequel, speculating that in the film, "[Loki will] have to take responsibility for what he's done".[16] Patty Jenkins, the director of Monster and the pilot episode of AMC's The Killing, entered early negotiations with Marvel Studios and Disney to direct the film, after Kirk had passed due to contractual sticking points that arose during negotiations.[66] Later in the month, Feige stated the sequel would "take Thor literally to other worlds" and would "primarily be the journey of that character, of he and Jane Foster and how the new dynamic with his father is working out, as well as what are the broader stakes for The Nine Worlds".[67] On October 13, 2011, Marvel confirmed that Jenkins would direct the sequel and Natalie Portman would return to star.[10] Disney also moved the release date for the film to November 15, 2013.[68]
Principal photography began on September 10, 2012, in Bourne Wood, Surrey, England,[90] under the working title Thursday Mourning.[86][87] A few weeks later, Clive Russell was cast as Tyr, and Richard Brake was cast as an Einherjar captain.[55] At the end of the month, Jaimie Alexander was injured on the London film set, after she slipped while walking in the rain.[91] On October 12, 2012, production moved to Iceland with filming taking place in Dómadalur, Skógafoss, Fjaðrárgljúfur and Skeiðarársandur. Iceland Review described the shoot as being among the most extensive film projects to have ever taken place in Iceland.[92] The film's official synopsis was released, which revealed that Christopher Yost and Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeely had also contributed to the screenplay.[93] Markus and McFeely said Feige had approached them in between writing drafts for Captain America: The Winter Soldier (2014) to work on the Dark World script.[94] Three days later, Disney announced that the film would be released in 3D.[95] In late October, filming commenced at the Old Royal Naval College in Greenwich, London.[96] Filming also took place at Shepperton Studios and Longcross Studios in Surrey between October and December 2012.[14][97] Other filming locations included Wembley, Borough Market, Hayes and Stonehenge.[14] Alexander tweeted that principal photography wrapped on December 14, 2012.[98] In a 2013 report on film production costs for films from FilmL.A. Inc., indicated a gross budget of $170 million, with a UK tax offset of $17.3 million for Thor: The Dark World.[2] In 2016 Disney company accounts stated the budget spend was $237.6 million on Thor: The Dark World but $37 million of this was offset by payments from the UK tax authority.[99]
The world premiere of Thor: The Dark World took place on October 22, 2013, at the Odeon Leicester Square in London.[131] The film was released theatrically in the UK eight days later, on October 30.[132] The film held its North American premiere at the El Capitan Theatre in Hollywood, and was released into U.S. theaters on November 7, 2013.[133] Thor: The Dark World is part of Phase Two of the MCU.[134]
: Tweets about "#Thordarkworld"Movie VideosReady for Hollywood's action bonanzaFasten your seat belts as a string of films like Thor: The Dark World, Getaway and Gravity are all set to pump action this season.PhotosPremiere of Thor: The Dark WorldThe film directed by Alan Taylor features Chris Hemsworth and Natalie Portman.Being a god must be tough as it is. Being a god thrust with the challenge of playing out a Hollywood superhero must be tougher. Most of the comicbook lot that come with super powers wrapped in their capes are nothing short of screen gods anyway.Chris Hemsworth's hammer-brandishing heroics as Thor, the Norse god of thunder, primarily draw saleability from an exotic origin. The series also finds a USP in Tom Hiddleston's act as Loki, Thor's adoptive brother and the god of mischief who continues giving the franchise a wicked edge.But life as a superhero in Hollywood is unimaginable unless you acquire all-American attitude. Even Norse gods - good or wicked - have to be given a suitable Yankee twist in swagger for the right impact.Thor:The Dark World maintains the cocky Americanised tempo for all its protagonists just as the first film of the series. The Mighty Thor and wily Loki especially continue basking in the campy makeover, mouthing some really witty lines.The sequel reveals a classic second-film syndrome. It makes no effort to push the envelope in any way. Rather, the focus is on recreating all that worked the first time (as well as in The Avengers, the Marvel multistarrer delight that featured Thor among a battery of superheroes). Director Alan Taylor does a fine job retaining the balance of action, CGI effects and humour that Kenneth Branagh fashioned for 2011's Thor. A whiff of the unpredictable, though, is missing this time.Read Rohit Khilnani's reviewThe CGI-heavy current adventure was obviously far tougher to shoot than write given the formulaic story it delivers. The ancient race of Dark Elves led by the evil Malekith (Christopher Eccleston) wants to plunge the universe into eternal darkness. Thor has no option but to join hands with the evil god Loki to save all life.The situation of course gives scope for a crackling chemistry between Hemsworth and Hiddleston, and the film ends up a nice commercial cocktail of melodrama served amid all the action and humour, even as all major characters return. Thor's love track with Jane Foster (Natalie Portman) and his duty towards father Odin and stepmother Frigga (Anthony Hopkins and Rene Russo) are smartly used to elevate the emotion quotient.The Dark World belongs to old-school superhero filmmaking that focussed solely on the fun factor rather than also trying to give its specific world a deeper context as, say, The Dark Knight flicks did for Batman. Still, the film remains enjoyable. It regales with a resounding good-versus-evil thwack, imagining the Thor myth with stunning visuals and a grand finale.Chris Hemsworth as Thor gives his action deity an impressive hunky turn once again but Tom Hiddleston's Loki robs all thunder from the entire cast. The impact all the actors create, you realise, is more about apt casting than well-penned roles.The focus here is not so much about narrating an original adventure as it is about how engagingly the film narrates a predictable storyline. The climax as well as its build-up make for all-out fun.Bring on Thor 3, but serve it with a few surprise spins.
Still, more often than not, "Thor: The Dark World" is more busy than exciting. There are a couple sub-plots too many, like the one with frequently-naked super-scientist Erik Selvig (Stellan Skarsgard). And too many characters that are introduced with a promising scene, like Rainbow Bridge guardian Heimdall (Idris Elba), are forgotten during the film's climactic battle. The film's world also generally looks slapped together, especially the dark elves, who look like a cross between "Land of the Lost"'s Sleestaks and "Doctor Who"'s Cybermen. Visually, "Thor: The Dark World" is a step back after "Thor," which at least looked unique enough. 2b1af7f3a8