Tom Hiddleston and Jonathan Majors discuss Kang The Conquerer in Marvel Studios: Assembled

The actors confirm that He Who Remains' scary variant is definitely Kang The Conqueror

TV News Kang The Conquerer
Tom Hiddleston and Jonathan Majors discuss Kang The Conquerer in Marvel Studios: Assembled
Jonathan Majors in Loki Photo: Chuck Zlotnick/Marvel Studios

Lovecraft Country’s Jonathan Majors swiveled into the Loki finale with a charming smirk and the power of delivering lengthy monologues about time and the infinite multiverse. The character is revealed to be He Who Remains a.k.a. the protective architect of the Time Variance Authority. After 30 minutes of back-and-forth, he is killed by Sylvie (Sophia Di Martino), who’s been seeking revenge ever since the TVA destroyed her life. Before his death, He Who Remains warns Sylvie and Loki of the arrival of his nefarious variant(s) from another timeline. In the third episode of Disney+’s Marvel Studios: Assembled, which goes behind-the-scenes of Loki, Majors and Tom Hiddleston both confirm that the next iteration the latter will play is, in fact, Kang The Conqueror.

Majors was originally cast in Ant-Man And The Wasp: Quantumania in September 2020, and rumored to be playing the film’s villain. Later that year, Marvel President Kevin Feige confirmed Majors was portraying Kang The Conqueror in Quantumania. The film is scheduled for a 2023 release, but Majors made a surprise cameo—a surprise only if you’ve stayed away from constantly theorizing over Loki—in the sixth episode, “For All Time. Always.” Only he didn’t exactly appear as Kang, although He Who Remains does tell Loki and Sylvie with flair that he’s been dubbed “a ruler” and “a conqueror” before.

In the Assembled special about the making of Loki, Hiddleston is the first to reveal that the scary variant of He Who Remains, the one he’s been talking about and is afraid of, is Kang. “Kang is bent on destruction and I’m so curious to see what Jonathan does in the future,” Hiddleston says. Marvel Studios executive Kevin Wright reveals that the energy on set during the filming of the finale was thrilling because the crew knew they were “watching the flowering of the next phase of the Marvel Universe.”

Kang is a time-traveler with genius intellect. His time-hopping abilities allow him to access advanced technology that provides him with strength and force-field projection, among other abilities. As his name promptly suggests, his goal is to conquer all the worlds instead of snapping the population by half. In Assembled, Majors says the chance to play Kang’s many iterations is what grabbed and pulled him into the role. “The objective was to give me the largest canvas as possible and then from that, as Kang begins to rear his head and do his deeds, in so many ways he has no choice but to be in opposition and be different from He Who Remains.”

It hasn’t been officially announced whether Majors will return in Loki season two, even though it’s all but confirmed by the massive finale cliffhanger. Loki tries to warn his new best friend Mobius (Owen Wilson) and Hunter B-15 (Wunmi Mosaku) of the threat posed by He Who Remains, but they don’t recognize the God Of Mischief (if that’s what he’s still going by in this new timeline). The TVA’s headquarters also look slightly different. Instead of the statues of the three (non-existent) Time-Keepers, there’s one of a He Who Remains variant. This statue is wearing the Kang costume with a different robe than He Who Remains, and with a big neck ring and shoulder pads. Looks like we’ll see Kang even outside of Ant-Man 3.

The rest of the hour-long special features interviews with the cast and crew of Loki, and the process of bringing the show to life. Di Martino and director Kate Herron discuss the inspirations behind Sylvie, which are more in line with Sylvie Lushton a.k.a. The Enchantress from the comic books. Series creator Michael Waldron talks about the origins of Alligator Loki, and Richard E. Grant talks about his beloved cameo as Classic Loki. Hiddleston charts his 11-year journey of playing and evolving this character and how Loki has changed the direction of the MCU going forward.

10 Comments

  • ifsometimesmaybe-av says:

    I don’t really get what distinction we’re drawing by calling him “Kang”- the “He Who Remains” character felt like he drew a distinction for himself as much as Sylvie drew one for herself. I’d assume we aren’t getting anything more of that character, so he’s pretty much “He Who Remains” for all it’s worth. Jonathan Majors is Kang, perhaps Immortus, maybe Nathaniel Richards, but saying “He Who Remains” is Kang doesn’t seem like it’ll ever really inform us anything more about Majors’s character in Loki.

    • mumurumum-av says:

      On the other hand, He Who Remains definitely called Sylvie “Loki” so if people want to call him Kang then that’s fine.

      • ifsometimesmaybe-av says:

        I may be full of myself, but I never thought I’m going to be able to police anyone’s wont. I’m just curious if confirming He Who Remains as Kang has any value, because A) Loki pretty well established that variants have enough autonomy to be distinct persons from one another, and 2) our knowledge of what Kang is going to be in the MCU is pretty fuzzy regardless of your knowledge of comic source material- much of it’s likely cut, and they might just do an amalgam of 37 other characters over this phase, just like they did with Sylvie (only she seems to be just a couple characters blended together).

        • sinister-portent-av says:

          But Loki also showed us that variants tend to share certain qualities, so confirming He Who Remains and Kang are variants of each other does give us some insight into potential characteristics Kang in the MCU may have. 

          • jdonnaught-av says:

            The writers have multiple universes to pick the next variant from – and they can pick and choose the characteristics the characters share. I doubt that we know much, beyond the fact that they’re all likely to be megalomaniacs.

  • therealteddyray-av says:

    “…Majors and Tom Hiddleston both confirm that the next iteration the latter will play is, in fact, Kang The Conqueror.”I believe you meant the former, not the latter. Unless Tom Hiddleston is going to be playing Kang.

  • mshep-av says:

    Nice to see that the tradition of MCU retconning has made it into casting news and making-of specials, because . . .
    https://screenrant.com/loki-show-jonathan-majors-cast-kang-antman-3/

    • mshep-av says:

      Actually reading that article again, it seems that it’s likely that Majors was cast as HWR and then also Kang before Loki started shooting, so, just, like, never mind.

  • deb03449a1-av says:

    I feel like I watched a different episode, because I did not find his performance interesting or engaging.

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