Ke Huy Quan's brilliant first scene in Loki season 2 helped the team figure out the show's time travel rules

Oct. 9, 2023



Exclusive: Loki executive producer Kevin Wright recalls how they kept track of the Marvel series' time travel antics during production

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.

This article contains mild spoilers for Loki season 2 episode 1.

One episode intoLoki season 2, and things have already gotten… very timey wimey. With Sylvie having killed He Who Remains in the season 1 finale throwing the Sacred Timeline out of whack, the new chapter opens with the titular hero trying to fix the TVA’s Temporal Loom before it’s overloaded with branches and well, basically, destroys everything.

But ‘Ouroboros’ isn’t only concerned with timelines. Turns out, since that fateful day at the End of Time, Loki has been’time-slipping', so his and Mobius’s first task in season 2 is trying tostop that. To do so, they pay a visit toKe Huy Quan’s O.B., in a brilliant scene that proved pivotal in establishing the Marvel series' time travel rules, according to executive producer Kevin Wright.

During their chat with O.B., who runs the Repair & Advancements department all by himself, Loki (Tom Hiddleston) time-slips back to 400 years prior, before Mobius (Owen Wilson) gave Ouroboros his nickname. As Loki in the past explains what’s happening and insists on the TVA tinkerer’s help, O.B. in the present suddenly starts “remembering” that he’s seen time-slipping before and that, rather handily, he’s already made just the device they need: Temporal Aura Extractor.

“It started in season 1, and it took a lot of whiteboards and a lot of diagrams,” Wright laughs, when we ask how they keep track of all the sci-fi shenanigans. “That Miss Minutes video at the start of season 1, I think, was the culmination of a lot of people’s brain power going, ‘How do we most elegantly justtellthe way that time works in the show?’ Oftentimes that was about making it as simple as possible with the aid of visuals.

“Going into season 2, we deliberately made it harder for ourselves; we’re exploring multiverses, we’re looping through time, we’re doing all this,” he continues. “So, we always would go back to the guiding principles of season 1, try to expand them outward. We would write really detailed explanations of how all this works, then cull them down and try to present the idea with as few words as possible. So, a character might say something in a sentence or two, then a graphic could help? We figured that was going to be better to the narrative that we’re telling than really trying to lay it all out where, maybe, we trip ourselves up on logic or things like that.”

Sign up for the Total Film Newsletter

Sign up for the Total Film Newsletter

Bringing all the latest movie news, features, and reviews to your inbox

Loki is hardly the first MCU title leaning into such complicated themes, what with Iron Man, Captain America, and co. using time travel to beat Thanos inAvengers: Endgameand Doctor Strange getting swept up in cosmic chaos inMultiverse of Madness. But given that it’ll presumably act as a springboard for future big bad Kang and what’s to come in the future of the franchise, there’s no wonder Wright was so keen to figure everything out so clearly.

“We would always have this paradigm of intrigue,” he says. “Intrigue and simplicity versus, like, homework and confusion. The second that it starts to go to that other way, we know something’s wrong, and we’ve got to find a way to simplify what we’re trying to do.”

Loki season 2 episode 1 is streaming onDisney Plusnow. Hear more of our interview with Kevin Wright on the latest episode of theInside Total Film podcast. For more on the show, check out our spoilery deep-dives on:

I am an Entertainment Writer here at GamesRadar+, covering all things TV and film across our Total Film and SFX sections. Elsewhere, my words have been published by the likes of Digital Spy, SciFiNow, PinkNews, FANDOM, Radio Times, and Total Film magazine.

Daredevil: Born Again star reveals that the MCU series is set five years after the Netflix original

Kathryn Hahn says Agatha All Along was a “satisfying” way for her to say goodbye to Agatha Harkness, but offers one ray of hope: “We’ll see what the future holds”