Halloween Costume Guide
Hela spends most of Thor: Ragnarok reminding everyone that Asgard’s peaceful history was built on a war she helped fight, and she’s not interested in apologizing for it. The bodysuit and cape carry the costume’s overall shape, but the spiked headdress is the detail that makes it unmistakably her rather than a generic dark queen. As the first major female villain in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Hela has stayed visible well past the film’s 2017 release, which makes this one of the more broadly recognized costumes on this site rather than a niche pick.
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The headdress is what people clock first, so keep it centered and secured rather than letting it slide back off your forehead as the night goes on. Skip it entirely and the bodysuit alone can read as a generic dark sorceress costume, which is a real risk at a party with a lot of fantasy villains in the mix. Carry the necrosword loosely instead of gripping it the whole night. A relaxed hold reads more confident than a tight one.
Hela tears down Asgard’s painted ceiling mural the moment she’s back in the throne room, exposing the bloody history underneath the version everyone had been shown. She doesn’t raise her voice doing it. She just states it as fact and moves on, the same way she later tells Thor he now matches their father after taking his eye.
Test the headdress fit before the actual event
Cheap spiked headpieces can sit too far forward or pinch after an hour, and that’s not something you want to discover mid-party. Try it on with the wig underneath at home first and adjust any straps so it sits level rather than tilting back.
Plan for the cape catching on things
A full-length cape snags on chairs, doorframes, and other people’s costumes more than you’d expect in a crowded room. If you’re going somewhere tight on space, a slightly shorter cape or one you can pin back for part of the night will save you some trouble.
Couples Idea
Excellent couples idea with built-in visual contrast. Hela’s black and gold, sharp-edged look sits directly against Thor’s brighter armor, and the two are siblings with a violent history rather than a romance, which actually makes the pairing more interesting to explain than a typical couples costume. Anyone who’s seen the film will get it instantly.
Duo Idea
Strong duo if you commit to the dynamic and not just the costumes. Skurge starts the film as a coward looking to survive and ends it sacrificing himself against Hela’s army, so the pairing only really lands if the Skurge half plays both sides of that arc rather than just standing next to Hela looking intimidated.
Group Idea: Thor: Ragnarok Core Cast
Strong group if everyone commits, since this covers the main cast of one specific, widely loved film rather than a loose theme. Valkyrie has a dedicated guide here. Thor, Loki, and Grandmaster don’t yet, so those three are build-it-yourself for now. The range from Hela’s dark armor to Grandmaster’s loud Sakaar fashion gives the group real visual variety.
Group Idea: Powerful Women
Strong group for a crowd that likes their villains commanding rather than campy. None of these characters share a film or franchise, so the connection is purely “women who run the room they’re in” rather than anything visual, but each one is recognizable on her own, which means the group doesn’t depend on everyone knowing the same source material to land.
This is one of the few costumes here where most of the items genuinely need to be bought rather than thrifted, since the headdress and bodysuit are both fairly specific shapes.
Hela is calm, certain, and a little bored by anyone who doubts her. She doesn’t yell to make a point. She just states things as settled fact.
Start with the bodysuit and cape costume set, then add the cosplay boots for the silhouette. The black wavy wig and the spiked headdress are what actually sell the look, and the necrosword replica gives you something to hold for photos.
Yes, broadly. Hela was the first major female villain in the Marvel Cinematic Universe and Cate Blanchett’s performance is still one of the most quoted in the franchise, so the look stays recognizable well past its 2017 release. The black, spiked aesthetic also photographs as a costume on its own even for people who haven’t seen the film.
Her most quoted line is the one she delivers right before cutting out Thor’s eye: “I’m not a queen, or a monster. I’m the Goddess of Death. What were you the god of, again?” Right after shattering Mjolnir with one hand, she shrugs it off as “a redirection of energy.” Her entrance line back on Asgard is just as cold: “I thought you’d be glad to see me.”
Cate Blanchett plays Hela in Thor: Ragnarok (2017) (IMDb). She took the role partly because her children were big Marvel fans, and trained in capoeira to develop the character’s fluid, weapon-summoning fight choreography.
She can summon obsidian blades and spikes out of thin air, which lets her cut through entire armies without much effort. Her hair forms into a massive spiked helmet during combat, and the longer she stays on Asgard the stronger she gets, since her power is directly tied to the realm itself.
Thor and Loki realize they can’t beat her in a straight fight, so they trigger Ragnarok on purpose by summoning Surtur, the fire demon meant to destroy Asgard. Hela tries to fight him off to protect her power source, but Surtur is too big and too late to stop, and the explosion that levels Asgard appears to take her down with it.
Yes, she’s Odin’s firstborn child, which makes her Thor and Loki’s older sister. Asgard never knew about her, since Odin erased her from the official history after banishing her for refusing to stop their joint conquest of the Nine Realms.
What does Hela do to Thor’s hammer Mjolnir when they first meet?
Which actress plays Hela in Thor: Ragnarok?
What is Hela’s relationship to Thor and Loki?