rescueironman: (Default)
I'm slowly in the process of transferring some of my meta from Tumblr onto here. This one comes from a discussion that [personal profile] falsecaterpillar and I had about what it means to be worthy enough to lift Mjolnir? 

She said:

I get such a warm feeling when I think to myself “Tony wasn’t worthy enough to lift Mjolnir so he ended up creating someone who is.” It’s so representative of who Tony is as a person. Always about progress. Pushing for betterment. He wants to be left in the dust – just like he told Dr. Helen Cho (”That’s the plan”) just like he told Peter (”I wanted you to be better”). 

My interpretation of that moment was as follows:

Have you considered that the “worth” could also mean self worth?
 
Hear me out: In Thor, when Odin cast Thor out, he said he wasn’t worthy to lift Mjolnir. When Thor broke into that Shield facility and failed to lift the hammer, I think he was still feeling guilty at his actions.
 
He realised that his hotheadedness undid centuries of peace between the Aesir and the Jotuns, and he personally disappointed his father. When Loki sent the Destroyer to New Mexico, Thor offered himself up to atone for his mistakes. He probably thought all of his actions ultimately led to that moment and he accepted his pending death - and in doing so, he cleared the guilt festering at his conscience. And boom, his powers were restored because he suddenly felt worthy again.
 
When you fast forward to Age of Ultron, every Avenger who tried to lift the hammer carried with them personal guilt.
 
Tony - his guilt over the destruction Stark Industries-made weapons sowed on innocent lives, the deaths of Yinsen and the American soldiers, his inability to save Obadiah etc.
 
Steve - his guilt over not being able to save Bucky in the 1940s and then having to watch what Hydra did to his best friend for decades.
 
Rhodey - he was an Air Force pilot who had been in combat situations before. He probably had lingering guilt over lives he couldn’t save, lives that were lost unnecessarily.
 
Bruce - his guilt over all the innocent lives that perished under the Hulk’s rampage.
 
Clint - though we don’t have much of his backstory, apart from the secret family that was shoe-horned into the narrative, he worked for Shield. He had to have done something dubious in his past over which he still bore some guilt.
 
Widow didn’t even bother trying.
 
The point is that all of the Avengers still harboured guilt they hadn’t made peace with - and, as a result, they each thought themselves unworthy (subconsciously). Hence, why none of them could lift the hammer*.
 
Vision, meanwhile, was just born and he was an android. He processed guilt and worthiness in a different way than the Avengers. Hence, why he could lift it.
 
*Even Loki tried to lift the hammer in Thor but couldn’t because he bore the guilt of betraying Asgard.
 
I know this is probably a reach on many levels but I’ve always wondered about what exactly it meant to be worthy enough to lift Mjolnir.

rescueironman: (Default)
I’m watching Iron Man and I really like the interaction between Tony and Yinsen.

Yinsen is neither irreverent toward Tony nor does he coddle him. When Tony wallows in self-pity, and says he’ll be dead within a week, Yinsen basically tells him to stfu and do something about it.

This is a man who probably watched his family get killed either by one of Tony’s missiles or by the Ten Rings, who were armed with Stark manufactured weapons. Yinsen could’ve raged at Tony. He could’ve guilt tripped him or blamed him for his family’s death. Instead, he tried to change Tony’s mind, to challenge him to do better and create a legacy that’s more than just blowing shit up. For context, in their previous encounter, a drunk Tony not only made fun of his name (“I finally met a man named Ho”) but also completely blew him off in front of his guests.

Ho Yinsen is entirely responsible for Tony’s change of heart. He chose to see the inherent good in a cocky man who was “America’s most famous mass murderer.” He believed that even someone like Tony Stark could change for the better. Maybe there was understanding on Yinsen’s part that taking out his rage on Tony would not bring his family back. Or maybe Yinsen knew enough about Tony to realize that he would never willingly sell weapons to the Ten Rings. Whatever it is, Iron Man (the character) would not have existed if Yinsen didn’t dare Tony to do better.

Before y'all turn around and blame Wanda for her reaction, let’s make one thing clear. In the film, Yinsen was probably in his mid-40s or early 50s. He was mature enough to understand over the years that Tony personally did not pull the trigger, which killed his wife and kids. Wanda was literally a child when her parents died, so there is no comparison here. Her anger, no matter how misplaced, shouldn’t be judged against Yinsen’s level-headedness when they came face to face with Tony. So, just don’t even go there.

Anyway, the bottom line is Yinsen is an amazing character. I absolutely love Shaun Toub and wish he’d have a cameo in Avengers 4 - to properly wrap up Iron Man’s decade-long arc.

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