The Borneo Post

Infinity War’s Thanos the most compelling Marvel film villain yet

- By Michael Cavna

IF THE Marvel Cinematic Universe has had a weakest link during its unpreceden­ted decade-long winning streak, that has arguably been the depth of its villains. Fortunatel­y for the studio, though, 2018 has been a very good year for Marvel baddies.

In March, “Black Panther” delivered an exceptiona­lly engaging villain in Killmonger ( Michael B. Jordan), the abandoned American son of Wakandan royalty who fights his way to his ancestral homeland to claim the throne.

Now, after years of teasing, Marvel has given us the character who stands to become the studio’s greatest multipictu­re villain: Thanos, the hulking, mauve Mad Titan as played by Josh Brolin, in “Avengers: Infinity War .”

Brolin’s Thanos might be homicidal, bent as he is on destroying half of each planet’s species to promote survival by “balance,” but he is also soulful, and perhaps even sympatheti­c when he must make a personal sacrifice.

Yet just what is it about Thanos on the screen that makes him so uncommonly compelling?

Well, one key element in his larger mad makeup is his deep, reflective intelligen­ce.

“He’s wise. He’s 1,000 years old,” says Joe Russo, while passing through Washington, D.C., on Wednesday to promote “Infinity War” with his brother and co- director, Anthony Russo.

Joe Russo amends that. In a universe featuring such intellects as Tony Stark ( Robert Downey Jr.), Doctor Strange ( Benedict Cumberbatc­h) and Shuri ( Letitia Wright), Thanos is “the wisest character in the movie,” he says.

The interestin­g wrinkle when it comes to wisdom, the director says, is the degree to which Thanos has absolute belief in his sociopathi­c conviction­s — to the idea that killing half is for the greater good of all.

“He’s been a world conqueror — sort of the Genghis Khan of this universe. He does have a philosophe­r side to him,” Russo says. “What’s interestin­g about him is that he’s wholly committed to that philosophy ... and his entire philosophy is about random execution.”

As proof of how deeply rooted that belief is, Russo points to how Thanos plots out his path to genocide, as the Titan gathers six Infi nity Stones that increase his power. “He has many opportunit­ies throughout the film to kill the Avengers,” Russo says. “He doesn’t do it because he feels like they can’t stop him. He also doesn’t want to display animus.

“There’s one moment where there’s one (Avenger) standing in his way who he’s willing to finally execute, but he needs to on a practical level.”

And this profound adherence to a belief system makes Thanos perhaps the MCU’s greatest villain ever.

“When villains have a code that you can respect because they are wise and determined to adhere to their philosophi­cal principles,” Russo says, “it makes them more interestin­g.

“His means for achieving it are psychotic. That’s where it gets complicate­d. He wants to save the universe. The plan that he has is insane. But it makes for complicate­d viewing — and makes him a three- dimensiona­l villain.”

 ??  ?? Thanos (Brolin) has made his plans clear: Half the universe has to go. — Courtesy of Marvel Studios
Thanos (Brolin) has made his plans clear: Half the universe has to go. — Courtesy of Marvel Studios

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