Thanos is a "dark mirror" of the heroes themselves. He sacrifices everything he loves to achieve his goal—most notably, his "favorite" daughter, Gamora (Zoe Saldana), on the planet Vormir. The scene where Thanos tearfully throws Gamora off the cliff to obtain the Soul Stone is arguably the most emotionally complex moment in the MCU. In that instant, the film asks a terrifying question: What if the villain is willing to pay the price that the heroes are not?
The snap echoed through pop culture. For one year, fans debated who survived, who was truly gone, and how the Avengers could possibly reverse the irreversible. Whether you are revisiting it for the tenth time or watching it for the first, The Avengers - Infinity War remains a stunning, brutal, and beautiful testament to the power of long-form storytelling. The Avengers - Infinity War
In a silent, horrifying sequence, we watch heroes disintegrate into ash. First, Bucky Barnes. Then, T’Challa (Black Panther)—a death that felt particularly shocking given his solo film had just broken box office records. Then, Groot, Scarlet Witch, Falcon, and finally, in the arms of a devastated Iron Man, Spider-Man. Thanos is a "dark mirror" of the heroes themselves