10/10
Some of y'all need therapy. Even MCU characters need therapy.
5 January 2024
Warning: Spoilers
A lot of other reviewers were upset that a character had a redemption arc that exemplifies how being in the right place at the right time can create a spectrum of variations. How in one universe you could be the villain in someone else's hero arc but in another universe you're having your own hero protagonist story under those circumstances. The whole concept of a multiverse in either Marvel or DC reminds me of that Gwyneth Paltrow film "Sliding Doors." And that film was a romantic comedy/ sci fi drama about multiverses forking out from different decisions. Like the series and especially this episode shows what happens when people stop making bad choices and start maki g good choices. Basically Hela gets the therapy and friends that she actually needed in this universe that she could've used in the prime timeline.

A lot of the other reviewers probably hated ghostbusters 2016 as well if I was going to bet money on it. And I could probably raise enough money that way to run as a female candidate for president. That's how much I think a lot of those reviewers are upset about this episode. Anytime there is a female protagonist they come out screeching like angry howler monkeys. Like to them they act like female characters are only acceptable to them as attractive sidekicks or as attractive villainesses: never the protagonist and she has to be either supportful or defeated. In this episode it shows people making good choices regardless of their gender or subjugation in some kind of hierarchy. To paraphrase Taylor Swift these reviewers that hated this episode just need to relax.
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