The review was written only for the first season. If I ever watch the second one, I will.
In the beginning, the series leaves a strong impression. It is beautifully shot, tasty, a lot of dynamics, a lot of good dialogue, there are strong scenes. Alas, but a day after viewing the impression weathered and remains perplexed. The series contains a lot of nonsense and strong contradictions with the rest of the Marvel Cinematic Universe and even with himself.
- If Kang the Conqueror did not allow the multiverse to exist, leaving only one reality, then WHERE did the Avengers travel for the stones in Endgame? Marvel’s official position was that it was not just the past, but an alternate past.
- Some would say that the timekeepers were cleaning up these realities after they jumped. But no, we know that Cap went to return the stones. These realities continued to exist.
- In the movie universe, aliens have always been pretty negligent. Almost none of them were really aliens, they were just people of different colors and with folds on their foreheads, like in Star Trek. But in this series, the authors finally scored even this. Now that the characters are on a dying planet, it just depicts... the population of Pluke. Aliens are just people dressed as bums or glamorous cops. You know? Loki got Pluke!
- If there are continual offshoots of reality that are supposed to be suppressed by "fascists," why is this happening only on Earth? In Marvel, the universe is densely populated, therefore, the department should be almost endless and with agents of various races.
The Loki woman says she created some petty turning point that they wanted to kill her for. But a minute, the difference in her sex is already different from the main chronology, so her event is her birth or rather even conception. But she talks as if she could live in some kind of reality if she didn’t. I couldn't.
- Loki got drunk on the train, danced, was thrown out of the car, broke the clumsiness of the teleport. You know what this is? It's a different character. To somehow explain getting into a difficult situation, the authors forced the hero to behave in a way that he does not behave in principle. The god of deceit, the secretive calculating intriguer? Forget it. In this scene, he's suddenly a stupid irresponsible slut.
- Marvel for some reason fell in love with the new trope "bummer McGuffin" and shove it into every second project. Previously, movies were made in such a way that characters all the way look for some very necessary thing, at the end they find it, and it solves the problem. And now they find it, but it doesn’t help. Thor made a Thunder Sequira, but it didn't kill Thanos, Strange was looking for a good book, but it was destroyed under his nose. Here the object is a ship that has not gone anywhere.
- Extra realities, it turns out, were not destroyed, but referred to the end of time. So why does it all fit on one planet?
- The party of different versions of Loki is just nonsense for children, and she absolutely did not lead to anything. If you cut all of this into a bucket, the series will lose nothing at all.
- The world eater is the ghost of a bear? Really? Hey, bear!
- Why does a cartoon in Kanga Castle propose a blue pill? After all, immediately after that, Kang meets them to make a much more important offer. So did he risk taking away the opportunity he needed?
In general, the series is not bad. It turned out to be exactly what I expected: games with reality, fascination with the personalities of the characters, games of "friends / not friends / friends again", stupidities, inconsistencies, unfunny jokes. But -- he's badly knocked down. Watching is not exhausting. If the series, at least, you can watch the whole volley, then it is worth something. If they brought more logic here and removed pea jesters, it would be good.