“It's one of those things that Loki comes up with spontaneously,” he tells. “Love is an imaginary dagger? Terrible metaphor.”Įven Tom Hiddleston agrees it’s a pretty bad comparison to make. “Love is a dagger,” Loki elegantly explains to Sylvie, “It’s a weapon to be wielded far away or up close. As the two banter back and forth, and trade Loki-adjacent stories, eventually it comes to: What is love?Īt first, Sylvie suggests that “love is hate,” then wonders maybe it’s just mischief? Loki, meanwhile, can’t come up with anything until he’s had another drink to figure it out and then it hits him. Loki, being Loki, is game to spill just about everything, while Sylvie is a little more reserved. At first, that’s the beginning and end of information Sylvie is willing to divulge to Loki, but as the two trek across the crumbling moon in hopes of finding a way off of it, more information comes out. In Episode 3 of Marvel Studios’ Loki, “Lamentis,” Loki finds himself trapped in an apocalypse with the last person he’d willingly choose: The Variant (The Variant doesn’t want to be called ‘Loki,’ and would prefer the name ‘Sylvie’). What is love? He leaves his response open-ended for a while - at least until he’s got a few figgy ports in him. What is love? It can be a simple question to answer, but here it gives Loki a long pause.
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