In the comics, whenever Foster turned into
Each time she uses the hammer, it progresses her cancer until she is far worse than what she was before using Mjolnir. The reason for this is that the magic needed for the hammer was draining Jane's mortal body, which made her weaker against cancer. She dies in Thor's arms, and dies a god, entering Valhalla.
The chemotherapy is attacking the cancerous cells but Mjolnir doesn't identify the cancer as an illness just as another part of her it needs to protect. Plus chemotherapy really does weaken Jane and make her sick so it's easy to see as an illness on it's own.
At first it appears that Jane has solved her issue but it soon becomes evident that the hammer is hindering her healing process rather than helping, because it drains her life energy every time she wields it.
The hammer, which can be picked up by those it deems “worthy,” helps her transform into Thor and gives her health and strength—at least for a time. Jane and Thor, after reuniting as a couple, eventually discover that the hammer is, in fact, sucking the life force from her.
Interestingly though, it is actually Thor's oath that brings back Mjolnir. When Thor and Jane are still dating, Thor asks Mjolnir to always protect Jane no matter what.To keep its promise to Thor, the hammer calls to Jane telepathically, guiding her back to New Asgard.
One possibility is the simplest one available, which would hinge on the rules put on the hammer by Odin's enchantment, which are “Whoever holds this hammer, if he be worthy, shall possess the power of Thor.” Jane was able to take Thor's place in the comics because she became worthy enough to wield Mjolnir, so if the ...
In the film, Mjolnir “chooses” Jane not because of her own worthiness, but because of what we see in a flashback to when she and Thor were still a happy couple.
Odin placed several enchantments upon Mjolnir prior to Thor wielding the hammer: This is reflected in the inscription on the side of Mjolnir, which states: Whosoever holds this hammer, if he be worthy, shall possess the power of Thor. For almost the entirety of Marvel continuity, this has exclusively been Thor.
Is Thor still worthy in Thor: Love and Thunder? It is pretty clear that Mjolnir chose Jane, not because Thor was unworthy, but because Thor's oath had instructed it do so. Sadly, the hammer cannot cure Jane's cancer, and can only transform and temporarily empower her.
It's her cancer diagnosis and her struggles with chemotherapy that make her worthy to wield Mjolnir in the comics, given that her powers block the treatment, and the cancer progresses every time Jane Foster wields Thor's power – yet she persists to fulfil the role the universe needs her to, and this may unfold ...
3 She Controls Electricity On Her Own, No Mjolnir Needed!
However, even when she doesn't have this weapon, she can create and throw lightning bolts. For instance, she's able to conjure lightning from the inside of a frost giant's head in Thor #3 in order to escape the monster.
While Thor made Mjolnir promise to always protect Jane, this likely wasn't the only reason why she could wield the hammer.
Who Plays Love? Gorr's daughter is played by India Rose Hemsworth, the daughter of Thor himself, Chris Hemsworth, and actress Elsa Pataky.
Despite the film's polarizing qualities, there is one element of the film that is built with a surprising amount of nuance for such an in-your-face film: Dr. Jane Foster's (Natalie Portman) battle with terminal cancer.
Unfortunately, since chemotherapy is essentially a foreign poison to the body, it was purged from her system as well. The reason that the hammer didn't rid Jane of the cancer in her was due to it naturally occurring and it not being an outside ailment afflicted upon her.
Odin is furious that Thor has dragged Asgard back into war, and tells Thor he is not fit to be king. He strips him of his power, banishes him to Earth and sends his hammer, Mjolnir, after him a few seconds later, saying that whosoever wields the hammer, and is worthy of it, shall have the power of Thor.
Odin attributes his inability to lift the hammer to the Storm Mother he had implanted in it as he seeks to wield it to defend Asgard from an apparent attack, revealed just to be the fiery Phoenix. Recently, Odin's enchanted to make Mjolnir only accessible to those deemed worthy has apparently been lifted.
Origins and enchantment of Mjolnir
In the MCU, Mjolnir initially belonged to Thor's sister Hela, who used it in battle alongside her own weaponry to subjugate the Nine Realms alongside Odin. However, Odin banished her to Hel once his expansionist desires faded.
It is revealed that Thor and Jane broke up sometime after the events of Avengers: Age of Ultron. When a fangirl tells Thor she's sorry that Jane dumped him, he sheepishly replies that it was a mutual breakup.
Like Stormbreaker, Mjolnir also allows Thor to wield thunder and lightning; however, it's not capable of summoning the Bifrost. The magic hammer did develop a power Stormbreaker couldn't, though, and it's able to detach its broken pieces to attack multiple enemies at once, before coming together again.
Jane does not transform into a god-like being like Thor himself. While she does get to wield his powers while in her Mighty Thor form, she is not permanently altered. Instead, she returns to her weakened human form once she lets go of the hammer.
Mysteriously, the broken pieces of Mjolnir, the hammer of the thunder god, transformed her into the Mighty Thor and gifted her the superpowers of Thor, to battle threats internal and external. Wielding Mjolnir herself, she had become a godly protector and a new hero was born!
He was rendered unworthy, because in his heart he believed what Fury said was true. In effect, Thor knew “how it feels to be mortal” and in his mind mortals are unworthy of Mjolnir and the powers of Thor. It's important to note here that Thor's unworthiness was of his own design.
Gorr's Daughter Love is Chris Hemsworth's Real-Life Daughter
Jane Foster promises Gorr with her own dying breath that Thor will take care of the child, and Thor, now heartbroken and alone, chooses to adopt the child. But in real life, the actor that plays Love is actually Chris Hemsworth's real daughter.