IMDb RATING
5.2/10
3.9K
YOUR RATING
Two Viking kids join Thor and Loki on a quest to Valhalla, where they must help the gods battle Fenrir wolf and the Jotnar giants to prevent Ragnarok, the end of the world.Two Viking kids join Thor and Loki on a quest to Valhalla, where they must help the gods battle Fenrir wolf and the Jotnar giants to prevent Ragnarok, the end of the world.Two Viking kids join Thor and Loki on a quest to Valhalla, where they must help the gods battle Fenrir wolf and the Jotnar giants to prevent Ragnarok, the end of the world.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 3 wins & 6 nominations total
Salóme Gunnarsdóttir
- Freja
- (as Salóme R. Gunnarsdóttir)
Silja Eriksen Jensen
- Freja
- (voice)
Kailie Strutin
- Roskva
- (English version)
- (voice)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
I LOVE mythology, so i was VERY disappointed. First of all There were exactly 4(!)
mortal citizens in whole movie, so called "Valhalla" was empty place with just few guards, who looks as mortals despite fact, they werent (or shouldnt).
Should also mentioned, that Gods (7?) are tired drunkies and perverts. Who wouldnt love this? And btw, Loki had dark hairs not dark skin, his skin was pale.
There's no mistaking it, the Norse Eddas are composed of some brilliant stories. If your only exposure to the vibrant world of Norse mythology has been the highly entertaining yet very inaccurate MCU films, the original stories should definitely be on your reading list. Neil Gaiman's retelling is highly recommended. I was hoping that this film would be a fairly faithful retelling of the myths...I was wrong. To be fair, it was OK but only up to a point. I'm not familiar with the Danish comic book retelling that was the main source for this adaptation, but I am not inspired to read it having watched this. Too much emphasis is placed on two kids who barely get a mention in the original myths and there has been the totally pointless inclusion of a cutesy giant character who doesn't even provide the comic relief he was probably intended to bring (think Viking era Jar Jar Binks). On the plus side, the film looks good. Some people are stressing about the appearance of the Aesir in the film. In Norse mythology the deities were shape shifters so I'm not too bothered about casting choices (no, not all the Norse gods were fair skinned blonds as one reviewer on here mentioned; Thor in the Eddas was a redhead and Loki even took on the form of a female horse in one tale). Whereas Norse mythology presents gods and goddesses who have wonderfully human traits that make them rounded personalities, there is very little character development of what are, in this version, clueless, bickering two-dimensional tyrants. I have studied Norse culture and myth for over 30 years. I didn't hate this film, but found myself picking it to pieces as I watched it. I'm hoping that one day there will be an accurate adaptation of the Eddas. They are all such great stories, they don't need embellishment for a modern audience. These are stories that have endured for hundreds of years.
As I say, the production design was decent and reflected the Norse view of their mythology before the later Christian influences crept in, but if you want to learn more about Norse mythology, for the time being at least, turn off the TV and read a book or listen to the BBC radio dramatisation of Neil Gaiman's retelling.
-Compared to other interpretations of the nordic mythology - this was spot on. allthough I missed a lot of details, eg I missed the lowered ocean levels after thors drinking competition and the running contest with ones own shadow. What about Frey, I'am always looking forward to see the film-makers imagination of her.... very disappointing. Anyway, this ways a good experience, a film cut to the bone, trustful to the story. (one last thing - a wooden door should be built with a diagonal braces starting from the top of a door - away from the hinge and downwards. ending close to the lower hinge - otherwise it would collapse within few weeks.... ohh please dont make that mistake again, Ive seen it made false soo many times)
Well, have been waiting to see this movie ever since I heard it went into production, I grew up reading the comics and have seen the animated version many times which in Denmark is a classic. So thought either they would mess it up completely or hit the spot, neither happened, it is like stuck in between, they changes the story a bit to make it new a fresh, it is a bit off here and there when you know about the old scandinavian culture, but it still makes it watchable! So all in all a decent flick, specially good for kids that needs an easy story, decent acting, apart from a few roles that could have been casted better.
I love Nordic Mytology, but this is not that---
I'd wish the people making this movie would had read just a little about Nordic Mythology, before they made the movie, Thor is not spelled this way, he is Thundergod and in nordic his name is Tor. Loke is not dark skin, all our old gods were pale and had blond hair.
The movie are strange and far from our old gods,
Did you know
- TriviaWILHELM SCREAM: During the final battle, one of a giant jumped off the cliff, before fenrir kills him.
- ConnectionsRemake of Valhalla (1986)
- How long is Valhalla: The Legend of Thor?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Also known as
- Valhalla: The Legend of Thor
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- DKK 34,300,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $70,821
- Runtime
- 1h 45m(105 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1
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