The MCU has brought us some remarkable superheroes throughout its many films, all-encompassing a variety of admirable traits and amazing abilities that make them worthy of the mantle. From Thor’s formidable God of Thunder to Rocket Raccoon’s mouthy mercenary, there has been no shortage of charismatic members. It’s also brought us some memorable villains, from the beguiling Hela to the mischievous Loki to give our heroes some spectacular conflict.
But none so frightening yet so complex as Thanos the Mad Titan, a world-conquering cosmic being defined by his own moral compass and rules of conduct. Throughout Avengers: Infinity War and Avengers: Endgame, he presented himself as both an intergalactic thug and a philosophical warrior. With the launch of Disney+ now allowing fans of the MCU to dive into the world of the Mad Titan, fans are reliving the epic two-part movies in the comfort of their own home. Proving to be the most iconic villain in MCU history, Thanos provided some memorable lines.
Updated on December 3rd, 2021 by Kayleena Pierce-Bohen: With the rise of new content on Disney+ like WandaVision, Loki, and Hawkeye, the MCU's stories are only continuing to build on the foundation set by the Infinity Stones saga. There's never been a better time to revisit one of the most iconic villains to shape its narrative. The best Thanos quotes have a signature delivery that manage to combine both paralyzing fear and poignancy.
A powerful harbinger of the pain that would come in Avengers: Endgame, this quote from Thanos in Avengers: Infinity War shows that the Mad Titan is not one to mince words. In one phrase, he both acknowledges the might of the Avengers and that their combined power is nothing in comparison to the power of the Infinity Gauntlet in Thanos’s hand.
Infinity War ended with Earth’s Mightiest Heroes and all their allies, from Doctor Strange to T’Challa and all his Wakandan forces, facing down the mighty Thanos and finding themselves falling victim to his use of the Infinity Gauntlet. He snapped his fingers, and half the Earth’s population vanished almost instantly.
As Avengers: Infinity War explored, Thanos was a man on a mission. Though he could have been written off as a two-dimensional Big Bad, he was a villain that was driven by a complex purpose. While most saw him as a destroyer of worlds, he saw himself as their creator and redeemer. He leveled entire planets so that they could rise anew out of the ashes, societies with a chance at more with far fewer inhabitants competing for resources.
This line was never spoken in Infinity War, but it was a humorous precursor to other similar lines he would utter in his final showdown with the Avengers in Endgame. It also echoes what the villain Top Dollar said to antihero Eric Draven in The Crow before he attempted to kill him, "...if it's any consolation to you, you have put a smile on my face."
While striving for balance can be considered a noble objective, when it comes out of the voice of Thanos it just sounds chilling and disturbing. Discussing how his mindset and ideas will bring balance to the world was a very memorable moment from Thanos' time in the MCU.
All of Thanos' ideas come from a place of good in his own warped mind. He doesn't truly believe any of his actions are evil and showing Gamora all about balance as a child was his creepy way of trying to convince others that his way was correct as well.
No matter if you loved or hated Thanos, he wasn’t a typical villain. He was driven by his own sense of morality, and his own code of conduct. When Tony Stark/Iron Man engages him in hand-to-hand combat for what will be the last time, it seems appropriate given Thanos first appeared in the pages of an Iron Man comic book. Unfortunately, he’s no match for the Mad Titan, who stabs him in the chest.
Thanos' line, which could just as easily have included, “...when I’m done, half of humanity will die”, but he chose to give Tony hope that the people of Earth would move on. The respectful but ominous phrase about them remembering Tony provides eerie foreshadowing to Tony’s sacrifice in Endgame.
Speaking of Thanos' interaction with Iron-Man in Avengers: Infinity War, another great piece of Thanos' dialogue is, "You're not the only one cursed with knowledge." This moment comes when Iron-Man and Thanos first cross paths and it becomes clear that they already know each other's names.
It's an interesting take that Thanos immediately tries to gain sympathy from Tony Stark and his issues. Knowledge is something that is seen as a major power within the MCU and life in general, so to see someone who is very intelligent admit that it can be a curse is a very interesting take.
Thanos addressing the Asgardians in Infinity War with commentary on failure seems strange given the context of being a Titan, a race of eternal cosmic beings. While it may be hard to imagine Thanos feeling desperate, the statement is profoundly poignant in its relatability, and echoes sides of his character revealed in comics like The Death of Captain Marvel or Thanos Rising.
After Thanos uses the Infinity Gauntlet to make half of Earth’s population disappear, the Avengers seem to do exactly as he describes; run from their failure to have stopped him. But whereas he proclaims himself the “destiny” that their future is made of, they decide to use their desperation as strength, a symbol of never giving up, and forge a new destiny in Avengers: Endgame.
During a particularly heartfelt moment between Gamora and Thanos, he carefully elucidates the way he plucked her from obscurity and poverty by taking her from her home planet, a planet he stripped of its population. Where she saw a vibrant world full of happy inhabitants, he saw a planet in denial of the socioeconomic and political problems that brought about its inevitable ruination through scarcity of resources.
By removing most of the population, there was enough food to go around and access to resources previously fought over. His “paradise” was created stepping in and deciding what was best for a planet whose population couldn't decide that for themselves.
The storyline between Thanos and Gamora is one of the most interesting and emotional throughout the entire MCU. In Avengers: Infinity Wars that moment comes to a boiling point when he sacrifices her in order to retrieve the soul stone.
He then sees a baby version of his daughter and she asks him what it cost him to get what he wanted. Thanos gives a simple, one-word answer, "Everything." It might not be a long line or a thought-provoking quote, but that one word shows the vulnerable side to him and just how much he truly did care for Gamora.
Thanos never came across as a wholly impulsive being. Every decision he made was carefully thought out, its repercussions measured, its outcomes weighed. He knew for every action there was a consequence, and on cosmic scales that the Avengers and people of Earth couldn't even fathom. Therefore when he set out to destroy planets, he knew he would need the resolve to do it, or the guilt that came with empathizing with their populations could be too much to bear.
Thanos had strong willpower, but the Avengers’ resolve was stronger. Though he destroyed the Infinity Stones, they pooled their resources and came up with a way to get them back. At every turn, their resolve was equal to his, which he ultimately respected.
After Thanos used the Infinity Gauntlet to snap his fingers and erase half of the Earth's population, he fled to a paradise he had created for himself to live in peace. His peace didn't last long, and the Avengers tracked him to the refuge with Nebula’s help. He waxed poetic about what he'd done, and why what had worked on other planets failed to work on Earth.
Where he had destroyed entire worlds before and rebuilt them as thriving civilizations, eliminating half of Earth didn't work because the remaining half didn't go on to thrive. Resistant to change, they remained stagnant, unable to progress because they were so crippled with grief and loss.
Thanos' exchange with Dr. Strange is one of the most terrifying moments in MCU history; bringing together two powerful minds as Thanos reveals what he did to his planet, making the decision to wipe out half of its existence. They have an amazing back and forth conversation which leads to several brilliant quotes.
However, the best moment occurs when Thanos tells Strange that what he predicted came to pass. Strange quickly bites back by congratulating him for being a prophet, but the Mad Titan doesn't want that crown, saying simply instead, "I'm a survivor." In that one line, fans get a clear look at the ethos of Thanos.
On several occasions, Thanos has said the chilling words “I am inevitable”. Like fate and destiny, Thanos knows the most crushing blow to the Avengers is the thought that no matter what they did or didn't do right or wrong, his damage to the human race would be a certitude.
This is clearest when the Avengers locate him after he's used the Infinity Gauntlet to wipe out half the Earth's population. He explains that after he used the stones on Earth, he used their power to destroy themselves, an act that nearly killed him. But it finalized his destructive purpose and made the damage he caused irreversible.
Though Thanos had destroyed the original Infinity Stones after using the Infinity Gauntlet to kill half of Earth, the Avengers had combined Pym Particles with Time Travel to locate each stone again. What they didn’t count on was a Thanos from the past following them back to their present and trying to take the stones again.
Where Thanos took half the population last time, he was going to take all of it this time. He was going to tear apart the very universe Earth resided in so that he could create a new one with inhabitants who knew nothing of what he’d done to create it, only that it was by his idyllic design.
This isn't just one of Thanos' most iconic lines, but it has become one of the most iconic quotes in the entire MCU. The moment comes right at the end of Avengers: Infinity War and leads to the snap actually taking place, which changes everything.
At this point in the film, it seems like Thor has saved the day, killing Thanos just in time. Unfortunately, one of Thor's worst decisions was to attack the wrong body part, as Thanos smartly tells him, "You should have gone for the head," proving he is still alive and able to click his fingers before disappearing.
The time after Thanos used the Infinity Gauntlet is a bleak one for everyone on Earth, but life becomes especially hard on Earth's Mightiest Heroes. The average citizen wasn't aware of the cost of Thanos succeeding in getting all the Infinity Stones, but the Avengers were, and they felt the failure of their mission more keenly because they hadn't been able to stop him.
Dealing with the consequences of failure is a theme that ripples through the entirety of Endgame, as is the concept of destiny. To Thanos, they are one and the same for the Avengers, who he feels cannot progress when their expectations of themselves are shattered. His gloating comments spur them into finding a way to rectify the damage and loss he caused.
Where the Avengers were (for the most part) an optimistic group, Thanos wasn't just a pessimist -- he was a realist. He knew that he couldn't expect perfection, but he strove for excellence in his ambitions because he knew they were achievable provided he kept his expectations grounded in what was possible. By his definition life was always going to be disappointing, so he had to strive for something better.
That's what was so disconcerting about the Avengers falling apart after Thanos snapped his fingers -- their boundless can-do sense of determinism had been effectively broken and they were forced to look at the stark and depressing reality of their situation. Ironically, Thanos had to re-evaluate his own reality too, as the pessimistic aftermath was an outcome he didn't entirely anticipate.
The MCU's most powerful cosmic characters (including the Eternals) operate on a scale almost inconceivable to superheroes that dwell on Earth. When Thanos became the primary Big Bad for the Avengers, they were dealing with someone who perceived cause and effect in a way that had real repercussions throughout the galaxy and beyond.
When Thanos discusses tipping "the cosmic scales into balance", it's not a lyrical turn of phrase; it's the perspective of an omnipresent being and intergalactic conqueror who knows the weight of sacrifice involved in trying to stabilize a chaotic universe.
Few would dare try to cheat The Mad Titan out of something he wants, but The Collector does just that when he claims to have sold the Reality Stone. When Thanos doesn't believe him, he coyly asks, "Why would I lie?" to which Thanos replies, "I imagine it's like breathing for you."
This Thanos quote demonstrates the dry humor Thanos is capable of, especially given that Thanos knows The Collector is such a chronic liar that the action is a natural bodily response. The Collector does indeed have the stone and he does know what it is, proving Thanos correct after all.
Thanos often didn't even need the Infinity Gauntlet to disarm an opponent; he could do it simply by stripping away all of their confidence and make them question their reality. In short, Thanos played psychological games, often getting inside the heads of those who would attack him, like Scarlett Witch, from whom he "took everything."
When she informs him of this fact, the Thanos line "I don't even know who you are" completely invalidates her pain, making her feel small and inconsequential. It seems as though Thanos has borrowed out of the playbook of General M. Bison, the villain from Street Fighter who, after having been informed by a captive that the childhood trauma from his raid on her village has defined her entire life, he shrugs and says, "I'm sorry. I don't remember any of that...For me, it was Tuesday."
After Thanos snaps his fingers and plunges the world into chaos, the Avengers have a hard time reconciling the pain of their shared loss, and they find it difficult to keep a fragmented world together when they can't even do the same. Even Captain America, ordinarily the one Avenger who maintains his optimism, finds it difficult to keep collected.
People like Cap, who refuse to give up and give in to the new world around them will be the ones to fight and rail against Thanos and his objectives. Normally, people refusing to adopt progress and change would be considered as clinging to the past, but in Cap and others' cases, it means keeping alive the memories of those they've lost to spite Thanos' master plan. Their act of defiant grief turns out to be one of the strongest defenses against him that they have.
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