Skip to main content

Asgardians of the Galaxy? Thor: Love and Thunder adds Groot and the Guardians

Marvel's Guardians of the Galaxy - Trailer 2 (OFFICIAL)

In a bit of news that should make Marvel movie fans shout “I am Groot,” it’s looking increasingly likely that we won’t need to wait until Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 to see everyone’s favorite a-holes back in action.

Star-Lord, Groot, and the rest of the team will appear in Thor: Love and Thunder, according to Groot voice actor Vin Diesel.

While promoting his upcoming movie Bloodshot (based on the comic book of the same name), Diesel told ComicBook Now that Groot and the Guardians will have a role in November 2021’s Thor: Love and Thunder.

Taika Waititi is going to use the Guardians of the Galaxy in Thor 4.

And Groot is evolving.#FirstPrintingpic.twitter.com/iFVZWKBr0J

— BD (@BrandonDavisBD) March 9, 2020

Diesel admitted that he might be spilling details on something that wasn’t supposed to be known quite yet, and indicated that plans for the film are still at an early stage — so nothing is official yet.

However, Diesel didn’t stop there, and also suggested that the version of his character, Groot, that appears in the Love and Thunder will be different than any form we’ve seen the sentient tree take so far. Following the original Groot, then baby Groot, and, most recently, teenage Groot, Diesel teased the next evolution of the character as “Alpha Groot.”

There’s no character named “Alpha Groot” in Marvel Comics lore, so it’s anyone’s guess what Diesel is hinting at, but the character’s history does include several story arcs in which Groot takes a gigantic form for one reason or another — which could be where the “Alpha” comes in.

The Guardians of the Galaxy’s involvement in Love and Thunder shouldn’t come as much of a surprise for anyone who watched Avengers: Endgame, as Thor was seen heading off into space with Star-Lord and the team at the end of the film. Marvel’s god of thunder even joked about renaming the team “Asgardians of the Galaxy.”

Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 was initially expected to premiere in 2020, but was later delayed due to the departure of writer and director James Gunn. The filmmaker later returned to the project, but the film has yet to be given an official release date by Marvel.

Thor: Love and Thunder is directed by Taika Waititi, who directed the previous, critically acclaimed Thor: Ragnarok. The film is scheduled to hit theaters November 5, 2021.

Editors' Recommendations

Rick Marshall
A veteran journalist with more than two decades of experience covering local and national news, arts and entertainment, and…
Guardians of the Galaxy never needed the MCU to be successful
Star-Lord leads the Guardians of the Galaxy as they walk out of a spaceship in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3

Before James Gunn moves entirely to DC, he has one last ride to fulfill with the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Gunn will premiere Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 this week, finalizing the trilogy he began nearly 10 years ago with the unexpected box-office hit and critical darling Guardians of the Galaxy. Gunn single-handedly raised one of Marvel's most obscure teams into the mainstream, turned Chris Pratt into a star -- for a while, anyway -- and launched the cosmic corner of the MCU with a healthy dose of humor and an overabundance of heart.

The Guardians movies are silly and funny, with several large-scale set pieces of flashy lights and boom-boom-pows meant to fulfill the MCU quota. But there's an emotional center to them -- it's not just a collection of characters in tight spandex jumping around, but a group of well-defined, three-dimensional figures relating to one another while saving the universe. In many ways, the Guardians trilogy is everything the MCU should be, to the point where it's not an overstatement to say these films would've succeeded with or without the Marvel connection -- if anything, the MCU needs them more than they need it.
Heart meets stupid

Read more
Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 introduces Marvel’s best villain since Thanos
The High Evolutionary stands up in a red-walled room in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3.

Nowadays, it’s not all that controversial to say that the Marvel Cinematic Universe has been stuck in a bit of a rut for the past few years. In the wake of the climactic high that it hit with 2019’s Avengers: Endgame, Marvel has repeatedly struggled to consistently deliver films and TV shows that feel as cohesive as the titles that built up the studio’s reputation in the first place. That hasn’t been due to a lack of trying, either. In just the past four years, Marvel has released around 20 new feature films and Disney+ MCU shows.

While opinions may vary about the MCU’s latest offering, Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3, the general consensus surrounding the James Gunn-directed film seems fairly positive right now. At the very least, many seem to agree that it’s the first MCU film in quite a while that feels like it was actually made with real, palpable amounts of love and passion. It also, notably, introduces the most memorable and compelling villain who has shown up in the MCU since Josh Brolin’s Thanos was dusted out of existence in Endgame.

Read more
James Gunn made 600 versions of Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3
Pom Klementieff, Chris Pratt, and Karen Gillan as Mantis, Star-Lord, and Nebula in Guardians of the Galaxy.

Do you love any film enough to watch it 600 times? Because according to The Hollywood Reporter, director James Gunn has created 600 unique versions of his final Marvel movie, Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3. However, there's no need to freak out and try to watch every single version. Gunn didn't change any scenes or plot points between them. Instead, this effort was meant to ensure that movie lovers will get to see the film in the best aspect ratio possible in any given theater.

If 600 versions sound like a lot, keep in mind that James Cameron's Avatar: The Way of Water reportedly had 1,065 versions in theaters all over the world. Gunn's Guardians variations are a record for a Marvel movie, and he apparently played with the way the aspect ratio will change during the movie itself. For example, the first 45 minutes of the movie was shot in a flat 1.85 aspect ratio, while the remaining parts of the film are in a 2.39 ratio. This means that Gunn specifically picked moments in the later part of the movie where the action on-screen will appear to get bigger.

Read more