Umm... what the hell?FaxModem1 wrote:Bruce has probably washed his hands of all of it. In Age of Ultron, he wanted to run away and never have to deal with saving the day again. He would also probably be against Tony's side, as Natasha is on there, and she both broke his heart and betrayed him. He's also seen Tony's mad science and his running into a course of action without informing others.The Romulan Republic wrote:I'm actually be really interested in what Thor and Hulk's view of the whole thing is.
Thor in particular has pretty much been where Cap. was with Bucky. Having someone close to him turn against you, and being torn between your love for them and your duty to fight them. Of course, Loki was a willing villain, while Bucky was not.
Hulk, on the other hand, might identify with Bucky's situation- a good man who is turned into a monster against his will.
How did Natasha break Bruce's heart or betray him? As I recall, it was his decision to walk away from the relationship, not her's.
Is their something big from the movie I'm forgetting? Because that's not the vibe I got from his leaving.
I doubt Hulk would want to get involved in this shit, I agree, but he has personal attachments (and reasons for animosity) with people on both sides.
That's more or less true. I'm thinking, though, in terms of similarities between Cap's relationship with Bucky and Thor's with Loki. And I think that Thor would empathize with what Cap. is going through here.A similarity between Loki and Bucky is pretty thin. At all points, (unless the new Thor or Avengers movies reveals otherwise)Loki has pretty much signed up for what has happened to him, in a quest to make himself stronger, to have more power, or to be loved by his father. While he is sympathetic, he makes these choices rather selfishly. Bucky's biggest choice has been either keeping Steve safe, or giving him praise to make his fellow GIs stand behind him. Any evil actions he's done has been through severe brainwashing and torture, and was only able to break free due to his personal connection with his target. It's a difference between selfishness and selflessness.
And if nothing else, loyalty to a comrade is clearly something Thor understands very well.
To be honest, I don't recall any indication that Thor gives two shits about Earth politics in general. He'll help Earth out against an alien threat (especially when Asgard is partly to blame), and he cares about people on Earth, but I honestly wonder if he might see Earth's internal politics as beneath his involvement for the most part, or just none of this business.In regards to son of Odin, Thor's big arc has been focusing on the bigger picture, and what is best for the cosmos as a whole, rather than the individual. Whether the Sokovia Accords allows or is bad politicing is what would determine where Thor stands. I see him taking the role he did in Avengers 2, stopping the fight and pointing out that Thanos is out there.
It really says something about the state of things when Thor, god of thunder, is the best case for a mediator between the heroes.