I'll spare you the details. Here's the Cliff Notes version of my review:
Loki: I wouldn't kick him out of bed.


Loki: I wouldn't kick him out of bed.



Hey, Quesada told me "It's Magic", good enough. Just go with it.![]()
Um...I'm pretty sure Loki can fly...and I'm definitely sure he can create illusions. I doubt it would be that hard.
So here's a nitpicky level question. How did Loki and Selvig manage to get to the top of Stark Tower and set-up the device without anyone knowing? Even if the police and any security or staff working on/in the tower were evaded wouldn't at the very least Jarvis had noticed and called Tony? "Um... Mr. Stark there's some men here setting up some odd piece of machinery on your balcony. I don't have any interdimensional portals scheduled for construction today do you know anything about this?"
Either that, or the very first thing they did was lock Jarvis out of Stark Tower's systems.
So here's a nitpicky level question. How did Loki and Selvig manage to get to the top of Stark Tower and set-up the device without anyone knowing? Even if the police and any security or staff working on/in the tower were evaded wouldn't at the very least Jarvis had noticed and called Tony? "Um... Mr. Stark there's some men here setting up some odd piece of machinery on your balcony. I don't have any interdimensional portals scheduled for construction today do you know anything about this?"
Loki still had that Quinjet they escaped the Helicarrier in, so I imagine they could have just landed with the machine already intact, pushed it onto the Stark Tower platform, and took off.
Jarvis might have called Tony offscreen as soon as it happened but after Tony had already guessed where they would be going.
So here's a nitpicky level question. How did Loki and Selvig manage to get to the top of Stark Tower and set-up the device without anyone knowing? Even if the police and any security or staff working on/in the tower were evaded wouldn't at the very least Jarvis had noticed and called Tony? "Um... Mr. Stark there's some men here setting up some odd piece of machinery on your balcony. I don't have any interdimensional portals scheduled for construction today do you know anything about this?"
Loki still had that Quinjet they escaped the Helicarrier in, so I imagine they could have just landed with the machine already intact, pushed it onto the Stark Tower platform, and took off.
Jarvis might have called Tony offscreen as soon as it happened but after Tony had already guessed where they would be going.
It also seemed odd that it took Tony so long to figure out Stark tower is where they would be going. "Well he's going to need a huge power source to open the portal but where is he going to get that kind of energy? Hey, Banner! You should come to my new tower and see the awesome self-sustaining massive power source I've built!"
To be fair, it makes more sense to us than to them because we know it's a movie. Before they narrowed it to New York, Stark Tower would be, at best, a lucky guess.
To be fair, it makes more sense to us than to them because we know it's a movie. Before they narrowed it to New York, Stark Tower would be, at best, a lucky guess.
I guess... But... Stark is boasting about this nearly limitless power source that will make his building self-sufficient for at least a year and then they determine Loki is trying to open a portal to the Chitauri and he'd need a massive amount of energy to do it with. It seems like it shouldn't be too hard to draw the line between "guy needs a massive amount of energy" and "building with a nearly limitless source of energy."
Heck, just knowing the level of energy he'd need should narrow down the places to look greatly. How many places in the world could there be that generate extremely high levels of energy?
To be fair, it makes more sense to us than to them because we know it's a movie. Before they narrowed it to New York, Stark Tower would be, at best, a lucky guess.
I guess... But... Stark is boasting about this nearly limitless power source that will make his building self-sufficient for at least a year and then they determine Loki is trying to open a portal to the Chitauri and he'd need a massive amount of energy to do it with. It seems like it shouldn't be too hard to draw the line between "guy needs a massive amount of energy" and "building with a nearly limitless source of energy."
I think Alidor's point is that the direct line from Stark Tower to Loki's use of said tower is clear to us because we see it as a linear narrative progression: Chekhov's rule about the gun in Act 1 being used by Act 3. In real life, there are always other possibilities and nothing is linear. Guessing he was going for the very recent power source rather than, say, the Hadron Super-Collider would be lucky in our world, which doesn't follow narrative rules.
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