lucianalight:iamanartichoke:louehvolution:The only woman whose love you prize will be snatched from
lucianalight:iamanartichoke:louehvolution:The only woman whose love you prize will be snatched from you.Can we talk about how careful Loki is when he leaps at Jane? There’s an instinct, I think, when one heroically leaps on top of someone, to just land wherever they happen to land, out of the way of the danger. But Loki - he points his feet so that when he skids to a stop, he doesn’t skid into her. He’s still holding a dagger, but he throws that arm out, away from her, with the blade pointed in the opposite direction. Which is even more notable because he needs those arms a second later, because he positions himself to land with the brunt of his weight on his arms, kind of propping himself up so that he leaves a bit of space between Jane’s body and his. He does all of this in a split-second, which implies that it’s second nature to him to try not to hurt anyone if he can help it. If we’re considering “canon” weights, then Loki landing all of his 525 pounds directly on Jane would seriously injure her, if not kill her. For reference, that’s about the weight of three average refrigerators, or one and a half fancy, industrial refrigerators that have all the bells and whistles. And even if we’re not considering the canon weights, it would still probably hurt a lot if Loki - who is not only heavier but it’s a dense heavy, bc he’s muscley - just splat-landed on her. Jane is so tiny, especially in this film; Loki’s weight could snap a few ribs or rupture her spleen, at least. My point being, not only does Loki - in a split-second - realize that Jane needs protection, but he himself gives that protection because Thor can’t, and while he’s at it, he’s going to make sure that he doesn’t hurt Jane if he doesn’t have to. And I just. Loki is soft, okay. It’s the little things he does, instinctive things, that give away the inherent kindness in his nature. He’d deny it if you confronted him, but them’s the facts. I just felt like bringing attention to this. All of this! Just a reminder that according to MCU canon, AOS to be exact, Asgardians have different internal anatomy than humans and also their bones, tissues and skin are several times denser than humans. So Thor and Loki canonically are heavier than humans. -- source link