Save this story Save Save this story Save You wouldnāt necessarily know it, but Thor: Ragnarok features three queer characters. One is Valkyrie, the female warrior played by Tessa Thompson. Another is Korg, the Kronan gladiator who befriends Thor and is played, via motion-capture and CGI , by the filmās director Taika Waititi. Then thereās Loki, the Asgardian god of mischief, played by Tom Hiddleston. Three queer characters. Crazy, right? Itās true. You just have to know where to look. Let me explain. In the comics, Valkryie kisses women , and recently Thompson (the hero of Thor: Ragnarok on nearly every level) has confirmed that she played her as a bisexual character. Meanwhile, an issue of The Incredible Hulk a few years back revealed that Korgās ābelovedā was the warrior Hiroim. When I asked Waititi about his characterās sexual orientation a few months ago, he said he didnāt think of his character as gay when he played him, but āhe could be.ā And while Loki hasn’t had any romantic entanglements in the Marvel movies and presents as a cisgender man, in the comics he’s a gender fluid character . Are all of these characters explicitly, obviously queer in Ragnarok ? Noāexcept maybe Valkyrieābut that’s not the point. There has been talk for quite some time about if and when Marvel would finally introduce an LGBTQ person into the cinematic universe. Queer characters have been present in the comics for years; in addition to folks like Valkyrie and Korg, the entirety of the X-Men franchise serves as a metaphor for the lives of LGBTQ people. Theyāve even started popping up in the Marvel TV shows (see: Jeri Hogarth on Jessica Jones ). But in the movies? Nope. And at a time when inclusion and representation is at the forefront, every new blockbuster that omits queer peopleāand women and people of colorābecomes more obvious. So for a movie like Ragnarok to have even a glimmer of LGBTQ visibility means something . X content This content can also be viewed on the site it originates from. Most Popular Health and Fitness The Best Running Underwear to Beat Burn on Your Bits By Kieran Alger Gear How to Use Parental Controls in Your Google, Apple, and Microsoft Accounts By David Nield Phones How to Use Appleās Genmoji to Create New Kinds of Emojis By Brenda Stolyar Does it mean enough ? Thatās a tougher question to answer. Considering queer people havenāt seen themselves in any Marvel movie thus farāand donāt get represented in film much at all āthe fact that Thompson is even saying she played Valkyrie (Valqueerie?) as bisexual feels revolutionary, even if itās a quiet revolution. Everything changes slowly, and itās a step in a more inclusive direction. But it also comes with a heavy dose of plausible deniability. Similar to the āexclusively gay momentā that popped up in this yearās Beauty and the Beast , itās there, and queer people who yearn to see themselves onscreen might pick up on it, but itās not obvious or even acknowledged within the movieās narrative. Granted, the filmmakers behind comic book movies are in a bit of tough spot when it comes to LGBTQ representation. With all the fighting and whatnot, superheroes and villains have little time for love lives or discussions about gender identity. Tony Stark and Pepper Pottsā relationship has resulted in, what, a couple of scenes and a half-dozen lines of dialogue? Thorās breakup with Jane Foster gets a single line in Ragnarok . Time and distance have kept Steve Rogers and Peggy Carter and Bruce Banner and Natasha Romanoff apart throughout many films. Thereās Gamora and Peter Quill, but beyond that, a lot of the characters that populate these films donāt have any love lives at allāthey could all be gay and no one would even know. But because Peter and Gamora are already a thing, thereās no reason Thor and Hulk couldnāt take their bromance to the next level, so that excuse isnāt going to hold out much longer. And many characters could be retconned into transgender heroes. Related Stories Movie Review Thor: Ragnarok Makes Superhero Movies Fun Again Angela Watercutter Movies What It’s Like Directing Thor: Ragnarok in a Mo-Cap Onesie Angela Watercutter Movies That New Thor Trailer Proves Marvel Really Knows What You Want Angela Watercutter In fact, Thor: Ragnarok tried to be more overt than it is. After pitching Waititi on making Valkyrie bisexual in the movie, Thompson got him to film a shot of a woman walking out of the warriorās bedroom. It was ultimately cut, but āthere were things that we talked about that we allowed to exist in the characterization, but maybe not be explicit in the film,ā the actress told Rolling Stone . There is, she added, another scene where one of her fellow female warriors is slain in battle and Valkyrie is shown falling away from her; “in my mind,” Thompson explained, “that was my lover.” Queer fans have been imagining off-screen relationships among characters for years, just to find some semblance of representation. These scenes fill Tumblrs and fanfiction (remember Science Bros ?). They get wished for and anticipated with the hope that subtext becomes canon. For a while, superhero movies, behind Star Trek ( sorta ) and now even Beauty and the Beast (again, sorta ), has been one of the last subsets of moviemaking to not have a an openly LGBTQ character. Thatās why Gal Gadotās Wonder Woman kissing Kate McKinnon on Saturday Night Live was so painfully funny. So where does the genre go from here? There were whispers one might show up in Black Panther . Marvel head Kevin Feige has said he thinks the MCU could have a queer character sometime in the next decade . Thompson has said she doesnāt know where Valkyrie goes from here. Fans probably wonāt know for a whileāat least not until Avengers: Infinity War ābut for now, Thor: Ragnarok has built a rainbow bridge to the future. More queer heroes Power Rangers ‘ gay moment was a good step , but a small one How Batwoman’s big decision fit into the history of gay superheroes




