Indeed, she’s anything but a “faded photocopy” of her more famous counterpart, even if they have rather more in common than they’d probably care to admit. She’s charismatic, funny and always ready with a withering put-down, but crucially she never tries to be a caricature of Tom Hiddleston. Sophia di Martino’s Sylvie has had less than an hour of screentime so far, yet she’s already starting to feel as integral to the Loki TV show as the (original) title character. If Marvel did intimate character pieces, they’d probably look something like this. Although it features epic moon-scapes, some beautifully choreographed fight scenes and a clock ticking towards an impending armageddon, all the fireworks come in the talkier scenes – Loki even conjures up some magical fireworks to illustrate the point. We’ve got used to MCU TV shows jumping between multiple character arcs, but this episode never loses focus on its two leads. The episode’s plot couldn’t be simpler, as the two Lokis realize they’ll have to overcome their trust issues and work together to reactivate the TVA TemPad that can transport them home – before the moon is destroyed in an apocalypse that, history claims, nobody escapes alive.
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