Easter eggs you missed in WandaVision

2021-11-04 03:17:01 By : Mr. Jack L

WandaVision is finally here, it's not like anything we have seen in MCUs before. Vision (Paul Bettany) not only returns from the synthetic grave he was sent to in Avengers 3: Infinity War in 2018, but he and Wanda Maximov (Elizabeth Olsen) is also inexplicably transplanted into a world based on classic sitcoms with laughter. 

WandaVision distinguishes it from other Marvel TV shows and movies in many ways, and the show’s Easter eggs are no exception. The live-action version of Marvel Media almost always generously uses its sneaky hints and allusions, but due to its unique nature, WandaVision's Easter eggs are a bit different. Not only did we get a common treasure trove of reference comics and Marvel movies, but we also got Easter eggs from sitcoms decades ago. To learn about the hidden content in this fascinating TV show, read on for the Easter eggs you missed in WandaVision.

When WandaVision's preview images began to appear, it was clear that part of the show was inspired by fans' favorite but short-lived comic book series. 

In early 2016, Marvel Comics released the first issue of Tom King and Gabriel Hernandez Volta's vision. Before that, the synthesizer had watched several miniseries, but this was unique. Vision has found its protagonist-just like Wanda and Vision in the TV series-trying to establish an idyllic ordinary life in a quiet suburb. However, Vision did not marry the Scarlet Witch, but established his synthetic family-his wife Virginia, his son Wen, and his daughter Weiwei. 

Unlike the heroes of WandaVision, the synths and their families did not try to hide their content in Vision, which caused some complications. I hope WandaVision will have a happier ending than Vision, because Vision did not see all the regular characters survived. 

The style of the first episode of WandaVision is based on sitcoms from the 1950s and early 1960s, and the fake introduction includes a funny Easter egg, recalling one of those classic shows, the Dick Van Dyke Show. However, the reference is not so much about what happened as it is about what didn't happen. 

Fans of The Dick Van Dyke Show may notice the similarities between the theme music and WandaVision. They will also remember that the introduction of the Dick Van Dyke show often included the nominal star tripping Osman and falling down in his living room. In WandaVision's introduction, Vision almost found himself making the same mistake because he carried Wanda into their living room. However, unlike Van Dyke, the ability of Vision allows him to walk directly through unstable furniture and send Wanda to the living room without injury.  

In the first episode of WandaVision, Wanda uses her psychic power to clean the dishes and she accidentally smashes Vision's head. Vision looked at his wife and joked, "My wife and her flying saucer." 

This is not just a stupid one-liner. Vision also cited the 2004 Marvel Comics full-line event "Avengers Dismantling", in which Wanda Maximov was eventually exposed as the villain. Maksimov used her reality-distorting power to try to destroy the Avengers, and she successfully killed some of them. Scott Long was killed in the explosion, and the illusion was torn apart by the violent female Hulk. 

However, Vision's joke was not about his death, but about the death of Hawkeye. When Wanda's forces suddenly summoned a fleet of Cree warships, Clint Barton died in a battle with alien invaders. They are not saucer boats, but the reference is still clear.

In the third episode of WandaVision, the pregnant couple argued whether their newborn son was called Billy or Tommy. Thankfully, they don't have to choose, because Wanda gave birth to twin sons. This is not surprising to Marvel comics fans. In the comics, we finally learned that Wanda’s "pregnancy" was not born, but the product of her ability to distort reality.

There are many twin images in the first two episodes of WandaVision, usually in the form of matching jewelry, furniture, and other objects. In some cases, matching pairs are lost. For example, when Agnes (Catherine Hahn) introduced herself to Wanda, she noticed that Wanda was not wearing a wedding ring-even though Wanda dealt with it at the end of the episode. There were also two lobsters that Wanda accidentally flew out of the kitchen window, but Vision could not be found. There are two single beds and two other sets of furniture for the couple, and even the matching toast in the Toast Mate 2000 advertisement.

Since the first trailer for the WandaVision miniseries went offline, there has been speculation that it will involve Billy and Tommy in Wanda Maximov’s twin son comics, and they are both ultimately proved to be products of Wanda Power. This seems to be a good bet. All these twin images point to these sons who have not yet been discharged from the hospital. Wanda's sudden pregnancy at the end of episode 2 seems to have contributed to the deal.

The third episode is full of more twins and references to twins-a bunch of them are just in the introduction. For example, the new theme song contains the lyrics "one plus one is greater than two". Vision is building a set of swings with matching swings, as well as a two-seater swing. In addition, before the end of the credits, we saw Vision walking down the street reading a book about pregnancy. The strange thing was that the cover and back cover were exactly the same. Later in the episode, just before Wanda's contractions caused their power to disappear, we got a brief shot at Phil and Dottie's home with some twin references. Phil is reading a newspaper, the front page of which announced the addition of two fire hydrants on Westview’s main street, a nearby light showing twin angels, and Doty asked her about her new earrings-we think, and big Most earrings are the same, they are the same-do they make her "look fat."

Both the first two episodes of WandaVision contained a fake advertisement. In episode 1, we received an ad for Toast Mate 2000. Among other things, it shows for the first time that WandaVision may occur in the same world as the rest of the MCU, because we discovered that the device was made by Stark Industries. 

Toast Mate 2000 is also an ingenious reference to Vision and Wanda's comic book twin sons. After all, the vision is Wanda's "partner"-like a toaster, he is a part of the machine. The toaster made two matching pieces of toast, like—if they really had twin sons born to Wanda in the comics—Wanda and Vision’s "matched" twin boys. Who made Toast Mate 2000? Stark Industries. Just as Tony Stark is one of the creators of Vision in "Avengers: Age of Ultron". 

There are many allusions about witches and witchcraft in WandaVision, which is appropriate considering that Wanda's other self is the Scarlet Witch. An interesting Easter egg is part of the artificial WandaVision project format. 

At the end of the first two episodes of WandaVision, the couple of the same name was framed in a hexagon as the ending credits scrolled. In episode 3, we use introduction points to obtain them instead. This is uncommon in sitcoms of any era. One explanation is that it quotes Wanda's power. Although we have never heard such descriptions in MCU movies or TV shows, Wanda’s remote explosions are called hexagon bolts in the comics. Not to mention that in addition to Scarlet Witch’s own history, “hex” outside of the comics usually refers to spells or curses cast by witches.

In the fourth episode, "Let's Interrupt This Show", the magic begins to appear outside of WandaVision's strange sitcom reality. The joint task force trying to figure out what happened in Westview was equipped with multiple monitors that showed the energy field surrounding the town in a hexagonal shape. At least one investigator noticed. One of the questions on the whiteboard of Agent Woo (Randall Parker) is "Why a hexagon?"

In fact, the hexagon will overflow further. When Director Hayward took Monica Rambo into his office at the SWORD headquarters, his various degrees and certificates were displayed on the wall opposite his desk, arranged in a hexagon.

When Agnes helped Wanda create an unforgettable romantic evening in the first episode, she used the technique of a women's magazine called Glamorous. Now, you can understandably think that there is nothing to do with this title...until we get to episode 2. Wanda and Vision volunteered to participate in a talent show in favor of Westview Elementary, and they performed magic tricks. Vision plays the magician and Wanda plays his lovely assistant Glamour. 

This is another reference to witchcraft. Although usually when we talk about "charm", we are talking about someone's attractiveness or their lifestyle, the word has another meaning. Charm can also mean mysterious charm-in particular, it is usually an illusion. For a perfect MCU example, think of Loki. When Loki disguised himself as Thor, Schiff, Captain America, etc., that would be called a charm. Considering how much you question the reality of what is happening in WandaVision, this term has a certain weight.

When Wanda and Vision desperately prepare dinner to impress the Hart couple, things get worse and worse. The Harts waited too long, and Mrs. Hart (Debra Chorup) complained of dizziness and said her head was spinning. Her husband Arthur (Fred Melamed) complained to Vision: "Did you hear? My wife's head is spinning. Generally speaking, I don't like her head doing this."

Considering all other mentions of witchcraft and occultism, this may be an allusion to the classic 1973 movie The Exorcist, in which a teenage girl was possessed by a demon. One of the most creepy scenes in the movie-without a doubt the most ironic moment in the movie-is the power of the devil that keeps the girl's head around her neck. Thankfully, Mrs. Hart never really experienced it at dinner.

One of the stupidest moments in the WandaVision premiere cited one of the most heartbreaking scenes in the MCU. 

When Wanda used her ability to prepare dinner, she used her ability to cook a chicken quickly, but it was over cooked, so the bird was burnt and crisp, she sighed wildly that it was a mistake, "Oh. , No, too much." Then she used her power again, and the chicken became a basket of eggs, at which time she exclaimed: "Oh, no! Not enough!"

It's impossible to think of Vision's death—especially because in Episode 1, we still don't know how he lived. In Avengers: Infinity War, Wanda destroyed the Mind Gem to prevent Thanos from obtaining it, and killed Vision in the process. However, Thanos just got the time gem and used it to recombine the mind gem and vision together, just to kill the synthetic man again by tearing the mind gem from his head.   

When we met Phil Jones (David Lengel) for the first time, he was fired by Computational Services, Inc. for not hosting an attractive dinner for Mr. Hart and his wife. In episode 3, we learned that Phil is Dottie's husband. Considering Phil's name and all the witchcraft images in WandaVision, this couple may be more important than we realize.  

Phil Jones was a relatively minor role in the Miniseries Supreme, created by the late Mark Grunwald from 1985 to 1986. Often regarded as the conceptual precursor to more well-known game changers such as "Watchmen" and "Batman: The Dark Knight Returns", Squadron Supreme has a set of alternative reality Marvel heroes (DC-based Justice League) decided that they would "repair" "The world does not matter whether the world likes it or not. 

In Squadron Supreme, Phil's wife is the mysterious superhero Arcanna, and her story has very interesting similarities with the story of the Scarlet Witch. In the comics, Wanda’s sons are finally revealed to be the product of Wanda’s power. At the same time, in Squadron Supreme, Arcanna was really pregnant, but she used her ability to hide this from her teammates so that they wouldn't let her sit on the bench. Considering that there are already some interesting theories about Dottie's character pointing to Marvel mystics, if this is a coincidence, it would be a surprise.

At the final moments of the WandaVision premiere episode, we stepped back from the screen showing the sitcom and saw a table. The screens playing man-made sitcoms are surrounded by more modern technology, and we can’t see people sitting there watching weird shows. More importantly, on the monitor on the left side of the TV screen—and on the notepad on the desk—we saw symbols familiar to Marvel comics fans. 

As shown in the figure, the symbol with the blade belongs to SWORD, and its acronym stands for "Sentient World Observation and Response Department". The agency made its debut in Jos Weeden and John Cassadi’s "Amazing X-Men", when they were introduced as S.H.I.E.L.D.'s space counterparts-and S.H.I.E.L.D. deals with threats on Earth, The sword deals with threats from the stars. 

For many years, fans have been conducting theoretical analysis of MCU SWORD, and the symbols at the end of episode 1 let us know that they are finally here.

If you are familiar with the popular sitcom Bewitched-the witch starring Elizabeth Montgomery, who uses her power to solve family problems while trying to keep the secret of her witch identity-it is impossible not to miss this drama while watching WandaVision. It came to mind early in the premiere episode, when Wanda was using her psychic power to put her plates away. But the similarities were raised a notch in the opening subtitles of Episode 2, when WandaVision used animations reminiscent of Bewitched's unique style, instead of using The Dick Van Dyke Show as inspiration.

For some reasons, this is a particularly suitable program to choose from episode 2. The most obvious fact is that both shows involve witchcraft. The other is that, just as WandaVision's world changed from black and white to color at the end of the second episode, Bewitched started the life of a black and white program in 1964 and changed to color in 1966.

Marvel usually does a very good job in casting, and in the case of Wanda Vision, some of the casting choices seem to be not only because of ability, but also because of the previous roles of each star. 

Considering that most of WandaVision's content will obviously consist of sitcoms from different eras, Debra Jo Rupp is the perfect choice for Mrs. Hart, the wife of Vision's fussy boss. She is best known for playing Kitty Forman in the popular sitcom That '70s Show. She is the mother of Eric of Topher Grace. Therefore, not only is she no stranger to sitcoms, but like Wanda and Vision, she starred in sitcoms decades ago (1998-2006). 

More interesting is that Emma Caulfield Ford plays the housewife Dotti. Her iconic role is not in a sitcom, but in the horror/action/comedy series "Buffy the Vampire Slayer". She plays the revenge demon Anya, she was a villain at first, but eventually joined the hero team. This is worth noting because of the widespread occult references on WandaVision and the less subtle hints of Agnes. When Dottie got together with other housewives, she said, "Details determine success or failure, Bev!" Agnes leaned against Wanda and whispered, "He's not there."

In the early days of episode 2, we mixed some colors with black and white, and it was both eye-catching and meaningful. 

After practicing magic with the phantom, Wanda was tidying up the living room, and suddenly heard whirring and popping outside. In the bushes in her front yard, she found a toy helicopter. Unlike everything else in this black and white world, the helicopter shows some colors. It is red and gold, mixed with some metallic silver. The number 57 is on its side and the SWORD symbol is painted on the front. 

The SWORD symbol again emphasizes that we will eventually learn about the MCU version of the organization, and the other Easter eggs seem to point directly to Vision. The numbers on the helicopter are not chosen at random. Vision's first comic book appeared in the 57th issue of the Avengers in 1968. Once again, just as Toast Mate 2000 reminds us of Tony Stark, this helicopter is painted in the classic colors of Iron Man. Judging from the sound it made when it arrived, the arrival of the helicopter was the result of an accidental crash. Most of the second half of this episode involves vision problems after swallowing a piece of gum.

In episode 2, especially during the talent show, we can see a lot of Westview corporate footage. One of the only commercial logos without a common name is Wentworth, which has a certain weight in Marvel comics. 

Especially Deidre Wentworth (Deidre Wentworth), also known as the super villain Superia of pranks. Wentworth is not the most famous bad guy in Marvel, but she has weakened continuity. In her earliest appearance, she confronted Captain America and his allies while trying to enslave all men under the rule of women. She later disguised herself as Ms. Marvel as a member of Norman Osborne’s Dark Avengers team. 

Although Superia is not particularly connected to the history of Vision or Scarlet Witch, she does tend to deal with a lot of time travel and alternative reality stories. Considering this and the uniqueness of Wanda's vision, naming this store after her is a mistake, which is questionable. Time will prove that this is just an Easter egg, or Wentworth himself may appear.  

Just like the premiere WandaVision series, the second episode let us see another fake advertisement. This time, it was not a toaster, but a watch made by a company called Strücker, with advertisements full of Easter eggs.

First, there is the most obvious reference. Baron Von Strucker-his short MCU life ended with Avengers: Age of Ultron-was responsible for the experiments that provided power to Wanda and her late brother Pietro. He is part of Hydra, and its evil symbol is visible on the dial. The hands of the watch are arranged as they are, similar to Loki's scepter, from which the power of Wanda and Pietro was born.  

Then it's time. The watch shows the time of 2:42. If you are looking for Easter eggs on Marvel Media, please pay attention to the numbers. Therefore, the Avengers in 1984 #242 is very important for the team-especially for Vision and Scarlet Witch. When Vision's body finally recovered after the injury he suffered, the two reunited.

When Vision tried to join what he thought was a local neighbourhood observation event, he discovered that it was actually just a group of husbands gathering in the library, eating Danish food and exchanging gossip. Herbert told the group that another husband named Johnson apparently lied about the construction of his son's tree house, and that it was a "prefabricated job." Phil Jones added, "That idiot can't even swing a hammer."

Well, maybe Johnson can't, but we know Vision can. This line is a callback to the Avengers: In the era of Ultron, there was only a momentary vision to become the first non-Asgardian in the MCU we saw to be able to lift Thor's Hammer. It will take us four years to learn in "Avengers: Endgame" that Cap can do the same, but in "Age of Ultron", Vision is the only Avenger who wields a hammer. He actually It was used in the final battle with Ultron.  

In the second episode, Wanda and Vision practice their magic show for the talent show in the living room. Later we saw that when a piece of gum was swallowed, the internal organs of Vision were so messed up that his performance was completely cheated like a drunkard. . 

In these two scenes, we also saw Vision's so-called mysterious cabinet, which was equipped with a secret door, so that the people inside seemed to have disappeared. Decorating the cabinet is a photo of the soul gem attached to the head of Vision. 

It is not just an Easter egg, but a meaningful reference. After all, we still don't know how or why Vision did not die, or why the soul gem was with him. His mind stone was destroyed by Thanos outside the camera, and the past stone was probably returned by Captain America. So mind gems and illusions are things that should disappear—just like when Wanda tried to use the mystery cabinet—but none. At least not completely.

When Wanda and Dottie face off between episode 2, the hit single "Help Me, Rhonda" by the Beach Boys in 1965 is playing on a nearby radio. It may look like a song chosen because of the times, until you consider the song title and some lyrics at the same time. 

The first is the title-"Rhonda" sounds a lot like "Wanda". Then the beach boy was singing. On the surface, this song is about a man who was completely broken down by his fiancée deceiving him, and asking Rhonda to "wipe her out of his heart". But if you consider it in the context of the common history of Vision and Wanda, it will become a darker story, especially these lyrics: "She will be my wife/I will be her man/but she will make another A man came between us/it broke our plan." In "Avengers: Infinity War", the last thing that Vision and Wanda talk about before being attacked by the Black Order is to make their relationship better. lasting. Then the "other person", Thanos, not only shattered their plan, but also literally shattered their vision.

If you don't consider the classic sitcom The Brady Bunch from the late 1960s to the mid 1970s, it is impossible to watch the third episode of WandaVision. The font used in "WandaVision" reflects the font of The Brady Bunch, and even borrowed the colorful "In Color" at the end of the film. Once the credits are over, similarities will continue to appear, and the interiors of Wanda and Vision's houses reflect the unforgettable 70s aesthetics of real sitcoms.

Of course, the most striking thing in the reference material may be the obvious difference between the two programs. Although the backstory of The Brady Bunch is all about a man and a woman-everyone has three children of their own-they get married to build a family that can break the bank at Christmas, but the main role of WandaVision is until the end. Without children in this episode, they shouldn't even be physically pregnant. Not only is half of their pair a synthetic person, he should also be dead. 

Vision's death in Avengers: Infinity War actually gave us another similarity to the Brady family. At the beginning of the sitcom, Mike Brady, played by Robert Reid, became a single-parent family because of the death of his wife. It was never mentioned how she died, but to be fair, we guess her death was not because a purple-skinned alien warlord tore a stone from her forehead.

Towards the end of episode 3, Wanda mentioned her late brother Pietro. But this kind of communication is actually not the first time he has been mentioned in a drama. When he was alive, Pietro had super fast speed. Similarly, Vision has shown super fast speed throughout Episode 3, although he has never shown this ability in an MCU before, nor has he shown super fast speed in comics. In the credits, he grilled a lot of burgers at super fast speed and quickly assembled the backyard swing. When Wanda was in labor and was practicing diaper changing, he sent the doctor to his home at a super fast speed. Earlier, he joked that Wanda was pregnant at an abnormal speed, saying: "Well, boy, I thought I was super fast!" In addition, in human form, Vision's hair shape is a bit similar to Pietro's.

Why does Vision show the quality of Pietro? We are not entirely sure, but we know they have a lot in common. When they were alive, most of their power was attributed to the Mind Stone, they were all murdered by the super villain, and their deaths were traumatic to Wanda. 

Considering that Vision is showing the attributes of Wanda's lover and her brother, there may actually be some half-joking mentions of The Brady Bunch. Anyone who has watched the 1995 "Brady Movie" may remember this uncomfortable comedy selected from the sexual tension between step-siblings Marcia and Greg Brady-even in the movie Before, fans of the original sitcoms often joked.

While working in her nursery, Wanda accidentally turned the mobile phone butterfly above the crib into a real butterfly. This is a reference to the popular Marvel comics miniseries, and may even serve as a foreshadowing for characters that have not yet been made public.

One of the comic book series most compared with WandaVision is the 2005 miniseries House of M. In fact, Paul Bettany once said that WandaVision was specifically recommended to him as a mashup of the comic book The Vision and House of M. In the latter series, Wanda used her reality distortion ability to completely transform the world. With a few notable exceptions, most people in this new reality don't know that the world has been transformed, but one exception is Laila Miller-you guessed it, she is called a butterfly. Laila was a mutant before M House. Somehow, Wanda's distortion of reality allowed her to "awaken" people and let them know that they live in a wrong world.

We also don't think this is the last time Layla is mentioned in episode 3. When they talked about naming what they thought was their newborn son, Wanda joked that he hoped to be "a girl." Later, when Vision practiced changing diapers, he used a blonde girl doll—just like Laila—despite the fact that he and Wanda seemed convinced that their child would be a boy.

After Vision completed the diaper changing exercise, Wanda immediately experienced that Vision had determined that it was Braxton Hicks contractions. The synthesizer quickly found a description of them in the book. Although contractions are real and uncomfortable, they are not signs of childbirth and are often referred to as "false childbirth." When Vision continued to read the origin of the word, Wanda interrupted him, suggesting that he should get to the point.

It seems likely that Braxton Hicks mentioned Wanda’s pregnancy more specifically than it sounds. In the comics, it is not true that she is pregnant. Her twins created her power to distort reality. If the same is true in the show, then all her labor is in a sense "fake" labor. 

It is also worth noting that Wanda interrupted Vision as he tried to learn more about fake labor. Considering other hints that Wanda is manipulating him—such as when she seems to be reversing time—whether intentionally or unintentionally, she might want him to learn as little as possible about “fake” labor.

There are many images in WandaVision's third episode that do not necessarily point to a specific comic book, movie or TV show, but are ancient myths and common symbols. 

As early as in the opening credits, the image of animals is very obvious. Vision is holding a soft toy giraffe. He and Wanda leave Wentworth with their new crib. There is a giraffe statue above the fireplace. Giraffes have long necks and usually symbolize people whose minds and hearts are far apart-this is easy to describe Wanda, especially if Wanda's visual world is her creation. When she saw Wanda wearing a coat, Geraldine said it looked "cunning" and the fox was often regarded as a liar. A lion statue guarding the entrance of their home didn't seem to matter until Geraldine angered Wanda at the end of the episode. 

Once Wanda's water breaks, the water reference (pun is definitely deliberate) overflows. In addition to the obvious sprinkler, Vision mentions childbirth in the water, the fish mark on Geraldine's pants, the boss in Geraldine's story-Mr. Haddocks-is named after a fish, and her story about the boss includes mentioning him Do a handstand near the office water dispenser. The stork is a water bird with a strange appearance. Wanda blamed her ice machine for the stork's call. Water is usually associated with the creation of chaos, and the power of Wanda in comics is often called chaos magic.    

Of all the strange things that happened in the third episode of WandaVision, the appearance of the stork is one of the most seemingly random. Wanda sees it as a destructive element, desperately trying to make it disappear, but no matter what we see her do, somehow it fails. Compared to reversing time or cleaning the house telepathically, getting rid of a pesky bird seems to be a breeze. So why can't she get rid of it?

If you replace the O in Stork with A, it will become a very familiar name. Does this have anything to do with this fact? 

Let us remember that in "Don't Touch That Dial", it reminds us of Tony Stark-the Iron Man color toy helicopter that crashed in the bushes of Wanda-is also regarded as an external Destructive elements. This is the first thing we saw in that episode. It is not black and white, so it stands out as an alien. At the same time the stork appeared, another outsider, Geraldine, also appeared. Perhaps Wanda could not get rid of it because it was the only thing in this strange world that was not created by her.

The ad for episode 3 is based on an old Calgon ad, in which women will exclaim: "Calgon, take me away!" After the spell is spoken, they will be transported to the bathtub, where they will be very comfortable. 

In this ad, a busy mother can't even eat breakfast without the kids knocking down her cereal with a football. A dog reminiscent of Sparky, Vision's pet in The Vision comics-minus the green fur-peeing on the wall. When the narrator asked her mother "Do you need a rest?" She replied, "You understand my thoughts", of course Wanda can do it. 

The woman in the ad is taken to a bubble bath, and a man in a Roman robe is obsessed with her like a slave. Among other things, the narrator says, "When you want to leave, but you don't want to go anywhere", this may be a description of what happened to Wanda and Vision. He also talked about a place where "your problems go away in the wind", just like Wanda lets things do whatever they want. Mom, similarly, blowing bubbles from her hand, as if she had similar power. 

The final product was announced: "Hydra Soak". The slogan is "Find the inner goddess!" It clearly mentions the powers that Hydra has given Wanda, and these powers are clearly expanding. It’s also interesting to say “Made in America” on the product box, because this is not the birthplace of Hydra, nor is it where Wanda was when it gained power.

"Let's interrupt this program" opens with an expanded description of Blip on the screen for the first time-everyone who was killed by Thanos in Avengers: Infinity War is resurrected. We saw some resurrected people in "Avengers: Endgame." "Spider-Man: Far From Home" lets us know how this event is called "Blip" and some of its consequences, but this is the first time we have an in-depth understanding of the chaos that followed.

Specifically, we saw Monica Rambeau come back from the dead in a hospital ward, where her mother was hospitalized during the Infinity War. With Rambo’s body reform, we heard the conversation of Captain Marvel in 2019-especially the scene where the young Monica persuaded her mother to help the titular hero, and Carol Danvers (Bri Lal Sen) told Monica "When they handed her the most difficult child to deal with-Lieutenant Trouble."

This is the proper way to start this episode, considering that one of the biggest mysteries presented by the story is how the composite Vision came back from the dead, just like Monica and the other confused victims of Blip we saw in the hospital.

Considering all the hints in the first three episodes, it was learned in "Let’s Interrupt This Show" that Monica Rambo-even though the rude security guard didn't think so-worked in her scene with director Hayward. Not surprisingly (Josh Stamberg strongly hinted that she was the frontrunner of his work before the events of Infinity War, but Thanos’ snapshots made this impossible. 

However, although she may not have the highest position, it is not that Monica is not ranked in SWORD. After Monica’s security badge does not work at the headquarters, Director Hayward appeared and introduced her to the security guard as "Monica. Captain Rambo". 

The ranking is not accidental. When she appeared in Marvel comics, Monica was another captain. After gaining the ability to transform into any form of energy, Monica was called Captain Marvel, a few years before Carol Danvers won the title. She put the name aside for Genis-Vell (the son of Mar-Vell, the son of Mar-Vell, the original Captain Marvel of Marvel Comics), and has adopted a series of alternative names over the years, including Photon, Pulsar, and Spectrum.

In the opening scene of "Let's Interrupt This Show", we learn that Maria Rambo (Rassana Lynch) is dead. From the conversation between Monica and Dr. Highland (Lana Young), we learned that at some point between the Captain Marvel incident and the Infinity War incident, Maria was diagnosed with cancer. When Thanos made a decisive decision, Maria had just received surgery to treat cancer and was considered a success. Because Thanos’s pops wiped Monica from her existence, she woke up unaware that her mother’s cancer recurred soon, and she died three years before the Blip incident.

But when Monica returned to SWORD, it was obvious that her mother had not been forgotten. When Director Hayward led Monica into the headquarters, they passed many portraits, including one by Maria Rambo, whose call sign was "Photon." Maria is not just a senior member of SWORD. Hayward said that she "built this place from the ground up", which makes sense. After all, SWORD deals with alien threats, and as far as we know, Maria is one of the first few MCU Earthlings to consciously come into contact with any alien.

With "We interrupted this procedure", Agent James Wu of Randall Park officially became a recurring MCU role. We met FBI agents in the 2019 "Ant-Man and the Wasp", when Woo was in charge of looking after Scott Lang (Paul Rudd), and Lang violated the Sokovia agreement in "Captain America: Civil War" Under house arrest. In WandaVision, he is an FBI agent waiting for Monica Rambeau to help him deal with his missing persons case. They introduce each other including Easter eggs in his first MCU scene.

We first saw Woo because he was leading a group of agents to search Scott Lang's house. To prove how long he went to entertain his daughter when he couldn't leave his property, Scott used a trick to make a playing card appear out of thin air. Later, Woo leaned against Scott and whispered ominously: "How did you do it, Scott?" You might think Woo was suggesting that Scott did something illegal, but it turns out that he just wants to know how to play cards.

Well, whether he learned it from Scott or someone else, "We interrupted this program" reveals that Woo has been studying his magic skills since Ant-Man and The Wasp. When he first approached Monica, he used the same technique to make his business card.

During the montage showing us the progress of the Joint Task Force investigation, we saw several photos of Agent Woo taking notes on the dry erase board. In the title "What's Behind This?" Woo once wrote "Skrulls (Skrulls?)". We met the deformed Skrulls for the first time in Captain Marvel—or, more accurately, as far as we know, when we first met them—what we know about them so far This makes the Woo symbol very interesting.

Although the Skulls are traditionally villains in the comics and were set up as similar villains at the beginning of Captain Marvel, we will soon learn that they just want to survive the annihilation by the Cree. Captain Marvel and her allies help the aliens. In "Spider-Man: Far From Home", they seem to be working with Nick Fury and S.H.I.E.L.D.So why would Agent Woo or anyone else suspect something evil about them? ? 

It may be that the relationship between the Earth and the Skrulls has changed. Another possibility is that although Captain Marvel seems to imply that its Skrews are the last people not to be wiped out by the Cree, there may be more shapeshifters who are not as friendly as the people who worked with Nick Fury. . Considering that we know that the "Secret Invasion" series will be released soon, this must be the case. 

The conclusion of "We interrupted this show" implies that Wanda is behind all the weird things in Wanda Vision-at least, this is Monica's theory. When Wanda used her power to throw Monica out of the border of Xijing City and joined the joint task force, Monica said: "It's Wanda. It's all Wanda." The episode ends with Wanda and Vision and them. The newborn twins sat together watching TV while playing the 1968 song "Voodoo Child (Slight Return)" by Jimi Hendrix Experience. 

For several reasons, this song is the perfect ceiling for "Let's Discontinue This Show". Although the word "Voodoo" can refer to any number of things, including about six different religions worldwide, it is usually associated with witchcraft in American pop culture, which makes this song just an increasing reference to witchcraft One of the things. series. 

More importantly, there are opening lyrics. Hendrix sang: "Well, I'm standing next to a mountain/I cut it down with my hand." Then, behind this verse, we heard "Well, I picked up all the pieces and made An island/may even raise a little sand."

If Monica is right, and Wanda is the driving force behind everything that happened in Westview, then the image of someone cutting down a mountain and using debris to build an island is a perfect fit for the series.

Although "We interrupted this show" temporarily brought us out of WandaVision's strange sitcom reality, we returned to it in a "very special episode...", all hostages of Wanda, Vision and Westview / Residents have entered the prime time programming of the 80s. In particular, "In a very special plot..." the introduction borrowed family bonds. In addition, "Family Bonds" is famous for making young Michael J. Fox famous before he became a time traveler in "Back to the Future" in 1985. Fox played Alex P. Keaton, an arrogant young Republican who was known for jumping back on the kitchen counter and was once beaten by a drunk Tom Hanks.

The most eye-catching feature of the series was the initially colorless portrait, which began to be colored with brushes controlled by Wanda. The introduction of Family Ties's first three seasons included a similar portrait. Just like in the introduction of WandaVision, in the introduction of family relations, the brush entered the frame-although the painter did not color the husband's head on the right side of the screen, but started their work on the left side of the screen of Elyse Keaton (Meredith Baxter -Birney) Shoulder. This is a clever visual hint to Wanda's grey and lifeless Vision's "coloring" method that was briefly discovered at the end of WandaVision's fourth episode.

"In a very special episode..." has its references from the 1980s. But they do not all stay in the 80s. 

When Agnes visited Wanda and Vision, she told them that she was passing by on the way to Sir Sith. Jazzercise was founded in the late 1960s and still exists today, reaching its peak in the mid-1980s. We got another pure 80s reference at the end of the episode. In the kitchen, Wanda told Vision, “Well, the pace of life in the suburbs is very fast.” This sounds a lot like Matthew Broderick’s famous quote in 1986 Ferris Bueller’s Day Off: “The pace of life is very fast. If you stop every now and then Look around, you might miss it." 

But some of these references did not really find a home in the 1980s. At the beginning of this episode, Agnes yelled: "Fuzzy babies, come and meet steel buns!" Although the Buns of Steel exercise video technically originated in the late 80s, it didn't really become a boom until the early 90s. We got a similar moment when Noam (Asif Ali) quoted Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles by saying "Cowabunga, man!" To the vision. Although turtles can be seen in comics and cartoons in the 1980s, it was not until the early 1990s that they made the leap to feature films and truly ubiquitous pop culture.

These inconsistencies may be intentional. They may indicate that just as Vision is becoming more and more aware of Wanda's hallucinations, the integrity of her dream world is deteriorating.

Few viewers who have watched the 2016 Vision comics will be surprised to hear the barking of the bubbles behind Billy and Tommy in the "very special episode...". 

In the comics, Vision lives in the suburbs with the wife, son, and daughter of a synthetic man. In the second half of Vision #1, the villain Grim Reaper waited until Vision left before attacking his family. He almost killed Vision's daughter, but Vision's wife Virginia killed Death before he finished his work, then buried the super villain in her backyard and lied to Vision. In Vision #6, their neighbor's curious dog Zeke dug up the body and accidentally electrocuted himself with the power sickle of the god of death. Vision transplanted the brain of the dead Zeke into the body of a green-haired synthetic dog and gave him as a gift to his children. After two issues, we learned that the dog was aptly named Sparky. 

Sparky is not only Vision's callback, but also his close calls to the kitchen power outlet (although obviously this is more effective for him than Zeke). Just like WandaVision's Sparky, Sparky in the comics initially encountered a sad — although more cruel — ending. However, he was eventually taken back to the land of the living. Ironically, considering Wanda's decision in "A Very Special Episode...", Scarlet Witch is one of the heroes who brought Flying Dog back to life.

In a "very special episode..." WandaVision's strange advertiser is back. This time, the advertisement is aimed at Lagos, the tissue brand. The ad shows Lagos wiping off the same spills that the "leading brand" is trying but failed to clean. The ad reflects a Bounty ad from the 1980s that touted their tissues as a "faster selector upper layer" ".

The name Lagos is a blatant reference to Captain America: Civil War. Wanda accidentally killed Wakanda volunteers in Lagos, Nigeria, inadvertently triggering a clash in the movie. The ad did not refer to Lagos as a "faster upper-level picker", but ended with "Lagos-because you didn't mean to make a mess when you messed up". Appropriately, the juice cleaned up by the towel resembles blood. 

One thing that is easy to miss in an ad is a reference to what is happening in Vision. Just before the end of the advertisement, the husband overturned a glass of beer. The wife handed him a few towels, and the narrator said: "The husband can also use it, you know." This not only reflects how Vision started to assert himself, but also how episode 5 showed that he has a certain degree of control over hallucinations. For example, he was able to temporarily liberate Nome from Wanda's telepathy. This may also be the reason why Agnes was so flustered when she was not sure whether she should hold a baby early in the series-because she got conflicting signals from Vision and Wanda.

Then, of course, the revelation at the end of the "very special episode..." will undoubtedly be one of the most important TV moments in 2021. 

The doorbell rang when Wanda quarreled with Vision. After Wanda opened the door, we were greeted with a familiar face, but the familiar way was beyond our expectations. Before we saw the visitor's face, we saw the back of his head. His hair looked a lot like that of Peter Roman Maximov. Wanda's brother died heroically in the Age of Avengers: Ultron. Indeed, Wanda’s brother greeted us, but he was different from what most viewers expected. Instead of Aaron Taylor Johnson, who played Pietro in the MCU movie, Wanda found himself facing Evan Peters-his X-Men in 2014: The Future and the last two films in the Fox X-Men series Played Peter Maximov in the movie.

Not only does this have a potentially huge impact on the structure of the MCU-not only a momentary classic moment to break the fourth wall-but it is definitely a perfect tribute to sitcoms. As Darcy pointed out when he noticed the changes, Peter Romanksimov has been "recast," alluding to the fact that American sitcoms are known for their sometimes sudden recasts. One of the most memorable examples comes from the mirror in the second episode of the sitcom "Wanda Vision"-Confusion. When Dick York was replaced by Dick Sargent in the sixth season of the series, the protagonist’s husband Darling was reshaped.

Although episode 5 pays tribute to the 80s sitcom "Family Relations", WandaVision's sixth episode-"A Brand New Halloween Ghost!"-spans the 90s and saves us into the early days. With its man-made home camera works and popular punk themes, the introduction of episode 6 echoes the introduction of the sitcom Malcolm in the Middle, which premiered in early 2000 and ended in 2006. 

As usual, the prelude contains lyrics that reflect bizarre events in Westview, such as "Don't try to fight chaos" and later "What if all this is an illusion?" Ironically, considering Vision's growing interest in Wanda Growing mistrust and lyrics such as "You are not my boss now, and you are not that big", it’s hard not to think that this song actually kicks off Malcolm in the middle-they might Will become the "my boss" of the Giants. 

As Malcolm often does with his protagonist, episode 6 begins with Billy (Julian Hillard)'s narrative, although his inner dialogue does not continue beyond the first scene.

Young Avengers fans undoubtedly hope that Billy and his brother Tommy (Jet Klein) will eventually grow into their super comic book counterparts. In the comics, Billy is a mysterious hero and one of the founding members of the Young Avengers, even though he was originally called an Asgardian. At the same time, Tommy, like Fast Silver, is a mutant with a talent for speeding, code-named Extreme Speed.

Regardless of whether Billy and Tommy appear in the MCU after WandaVision, fans can at least say that they have the opportunity to see them use their power and wear them-in most cases-comic book-accurate costumes. Billy's costume-he wears throughout the series-is the costume of Viken in the comics. Pietro gave Tommy a smaller outfit of his own, which was not worn by Speed ​​in the comics, but it was still appropriate considering his power. 

You may also notice that just before Pietro started raging around the suburbs with his nephew, he and Tommy shared a Top Gun reference, clapped their hands and yelled "I feel I need...speed!"

After the heavy cameo at the end of episode 5, episode 6 showed us some scenes between Pietro and Wanda. Unsurprisingly, there were many obvious callbacks in the Avengers: Age of Ultron in 2015. Sokovia has been mentioned many times, including Wanda's saying that her costume is "Sokovia's fortune teller", and a quick flashback to young Wanda and Pietro's trick or treat in their hometown. Wanda mentioned the orphanage where they grew up. After she said Pietro had a bad influence, her brother fought back: "Who put more effort into your borscht?" — The borscht comes from the same part of Europe, where you will be Find Sokovia, is this true? After that exchange, the twins asked each other about the disappearance of their accent-Wanda mentioned this briefly in the last episode.

Of course there is also a mention of Pietro's death. At the beginning of this episode, Tommy made fun of Billy, saying that his twins were afraid that Pietro was a vampire-a creature that might be neither dead nor alive like Pietro. In the panic in the city square, Pietro told his sister that he remembered that he was “shot like a fool”, and then she briefly saw him pale and full of bullet holes. 

One thing worth noting is that Pietro said that he was “shot like a fool for no reason.” In fact, in Era of Ultron, he tried to rescue Hawkeye and a Sokovia boy from Ultron. And sacrificed myself.  

Compared with previous episodes, episode 5 seems to be an unusual reference combination in the 80s and 90s. We think this may be a sign that the integrity of Wanda's illusion is collapsing. If we are right, or if this is a sign of something else, then things will be more confusing than judged from the references in Episode 6 and the different eras they came from.

The first batch of reference materials are related to games and toys of Wanda and Visionary. Tommy briefly recalled Billy's dominance in a dance revolution game in their bedroom-this game could have been released in the United States in the early days.

Soon after, when the boys approached Pietro sleeping on the sofa, a strange mixture appeared on the coffee table in the living room. There is a Rubix cube and a mostly disassembled Jenga suit-both are from the 80s. Nearby-partially obscured by a coffee cup-seems to be one of the earliest GI Joe dolls, dating back to the 1960s.

"Brand new Halloween Spooktacular" finally let us see the appearance of Wanda and Vision in their old-school Marvel comic books. This pair of photos in half-baked costumes is one of the first photos released in the series. Billy aptly thinks his mother is dressed as "Old Red Riding Hood", and Pietro compares Vision to a traffic light, half-husked corncob and booger. 

We don't necessarily expect to see an accurate Quicksilver costume from a comic book, but we still got one. After Pietro suggested that he join Wanda and the boys for Halloween, Wanda said that he had no costumes, prompting Peter to use his speeding to get himself and Tommy in matching costumes, which reflected what Kuaiyin used to wear in Marvel comics. clothing. The silver lightning comes directly from the funny book, the smooth back, and so does the Wolverine-style hair. Why do Marvel’s artists apparently think that so many heroes and villains — owls seem to go to the Daredevil villains of the same stylist — would choose hairstyles that look like they have stood in front of powerful fans since the day they were born, We may never know.

At the beginning of episode 6, after Wanda and Vision went downstairs, Pietro shared a stereotypical male intimacy moment with the boys, which seemed to be a reference to the Marvel hero of the 90s, he was lucky not to be killed faster than the star One of the Trek Red Shirts in Deadpool 2 in 2018. 

Decided that he obviously wants them to have skills that might prove important when they join any party-centric college fraternity, Pietro teaches Billy and Tommy how to "shotgun" soda-a type that is usually only used for beer Technology. This soft drink is called "Kane Coke", which may be a callback to X-Force hero Garrison Kane. 

When you consider who Kane is, the possibilities are even greater. Kane was introduced as a member of a group of assassins including Cable, Domino, and Bloodstrike. Group name? It is called "six packs" (just like six packs of soda or beer?). Kane is also the youngest member of the six pack abs, which is not only related to the twins' youth, but also to Billy's narrative that Pietro is a "boy".

Some fans hope that the appearance of Evan Peters in WandaVision may be the beginning of the X-Men's entry into the MCU, which is understandable. Although it is too early to say whether this is the case, Episode 6 has a few X-Men references early in the story. 

When the couple argued over whether Vision would trick or treat Wanda and the boys, Pietro took over as a synthesizer. He said, "Don't worry, sister. I got the XY chromosome." No, biological males have nothing to do with mutants or X-Men, but Pietro mentioned that his DNA and the letter X are clearly established for Professor X Reference of the team.

There is another X-Men reference, which is easier to miss earlier. When Vision explained that he was going to patrol the local neighborhood at night, he told Wanda that the watch was "the only thing between trees and toilet paper." When he said "tree" and "toilet paper", he pointed in the opposite direction and crossed his forearms to form a big yellow X.

One of the most curious Easter eggs in episode 6 is also one of its most obvious. Wanda warned the boys not to pass Ellis Avenue. Later, after encountering Agnes who stopped at the crossroads, the Vision crossed the same street and then penetrated the boundary of the six-pointed star. 

This may be just a tribute to the history of the MCU itself. In "Iron Man 3" in 2013, we met President Matthew Ellis, played by William Sadler. This is a tribute to the comics writer Warren Ellis, who created the Iron Man comics that originated from the storyline of Extremis. Therefore, in the MCU, a street named after President Ellis is no different from a street named after any American president. 

But there may be another meaning. Although Warren Ellis has not written any Marvel comics focused on Wanda or Vision, this street may refer to Warren Ellis' 1995 miniseries "Ruins." This comic book imitates the popular mini-series "Marvel" by Kurt Busick and Alex Rose, and shows the history of the Marvel universe through the eyes of the journalist Phil Shelton of the Daily Horn . In contrast, the ruins are like every dystopian future comics mixed together. All of Marvel’s heroes are either dead, evil, or terribly mutated. So since Wanda’s Xijing representative-as Pietro said in episode 6-"Shangri-La", the border street may be named after the person who wrote the ruins, because metaphorically speaking, the ruins are what Wanda thinks is waiting for the other side. East-west.

The "New Halloween Spooktacular" ad is probably the strangest man-made ad we have seen on WandaVision. It is the first to not fully follow the advertising logic on which it is based.

The ad uses stop-motion animation to show us a boy trapped on an island in the middle of the ocean. A talking shark came in with a surfboard, gave the boy a "Yo-Magic" yogurt snack, and then left. The boy seemed unable to open the container, and although the sun seemed to be roasting him, his teeth clicked as if he was going to freeze. Time hastened, he has been trying to open Yo-Magic snacks, but has been failing. Eventually he withered and became a skeleton. The ad ended with Yo-Magic packaging and the slogan "Yo-Magic! Snacks for survivors!"

The ad appears to incorporate at least a few similar snacks from the 90s and early days of different brands. The packaging is reminiscent of Yoplait's Go-Gurt, and the ad itself borrows heavily from YoGo Yogurt, which uses stop motion animation in its ad. As for magic is essential for survival? The news seems obvious.

Panic in the city square, a movie subtitle gave us more Easter eggs, and like many other references, there is a little time interval between them. 

Two movies are showing at the Coronet Theatre in Westview. The first act is "The Incredibles" released in 2004. Considering that at the end of episode 6, every member of the Wanda and Vision family has superpowers, this is a suitable movie reference. In fact, not long after we saw the big tent, Tommy discovered his super fast speed.

Screen 2 shows the "Parental Trap". However, assuming we are talking about a remake and not the original version of 1961, it was released six years before 1998's "The Incredibles". Both versions of this movie feature twins who were separated at birth. This is an appropriate reference, considering how Pietro and Wanda separated after the death of the former, and how things would progress with Billy and Tommy Like the way they do in the comics-the young Maksimov twins will be separated in the near future.

The seventh episode of WandaVision-"Breaking the Fourth Wall"-brings us to the late 00s/early 2010 sitcom reference. The world of Westview puts Malcolm in the middle because it feels more like the modern family that premiered in 2009. Wanda, Vision, Agnes, and even Darcy participated in the conversation. They talked directly with the audience, reflecting the simulation style of sitcoms such as modern homes, offices, parks and entertainment. This makes sense, because, well, things at Westview have become less meaningful. Wanda’s fantasy is losing its integrity, so it is appropriate for her to talk to us directly. 

Although the style used in episode 7 feels most like a modern family, this is not the source of the introduction. Computer screens, calendars, and I Love Wanda coffee cups and other things you hope to find in the workplace flash by-plus derivative theme music-it feels more like an introduction to the office. 

Speaking of office comedy-just before the theme started, Wanda tried to laugh at the strange things that happened in her home with "this may just be Monday", quoting the phrase prepared by the protagonist of the comedy office space in 1999 to murder colleagues and Restaurant waiter.

In episode 6-"The New Halloween Spooktacular"-we see Billy wearing a more comic book style costume, and Pietro gives Tommy a small version of costume that looks like his own, as well as Awkward hairstyle makeover. In the next episode, the twins look more like their counterparts in the source material.

"Breaking the Fourth Wall" does not show the brothers' costumes, but the color scheme of their costumes does reflect the color scheme of their comic costumes. Tommy's green and white costume looks more like the clothes he wears as a young superhero Speed. 

who knows? Maybe before WandaVision kicks off, we will finally see the brothers dressed in mature superhero costumes, Wiccan and Speed. If this happens, will the young Avengers movie or TV series fall far behind?

The subtle hint we saw in the previous episodes is that the integrity of Wanda's fictional world is collapsing with reference materials and Easter eggs of the wrong era, becoming more apparent in "Breaking the Fourth Wall". The first major example of this angered Billy and Tommy and ran upstairs in a panic to find their mother. 

After Tommy told Wanda that their game was "terrified", we got a quick flashback to see what they were talking about, where the twins were playing video games while using Wiimotes. When Wiimotes became a Nintendo GameCube controller and then an Atari joystick in the 80s, they were confused. Finally, this illusion made all parents who hate video games happy by changing the joystick to Uno cards.

Later we saw Billy and Tommy use Wiimote for some tug-of-war matches, so the cards may change back at some point, giving millions of gamers in the audience a reason to breathe a sigh of relief.

When Wanda ate breakfast, she was shocked by the several deformations of the milk container, which is understandable. Once it turned into a cardboard box with a picture of a missing child on the back, although we could not see the child's face. In the mid-80s, it has become a habit to put pictures of missing children on milk cartons, so it is interesting to remember that WandaVision handled an episode of the 80s-episode 5, "a very special episode... ..."-also happened in the same episode as Vision pointed out that Westview's child was missing. 

Wanda’s cereal is also very interesting-although unlike milk, it does not seem to be deformed. First, the brand’s mascot is a cartoon clown, and at the end of the previous episode, Wanda’s ever-expanding hexagonal radius turned the SWORD agent into a circus clown. Secondly, there is a name "Sugar Snaps". If you do not consider the most notorious moment-Thanos kills half of the universe, it is impossible to see or hear the word "moment" in MCU production. 

Since Wanda quickly expanded the hexagonal radius at the end of episode 6, unlike most SWORD agents who became clowns, Agent Monty (Alan Heckner) became a circus strongman. Now, to be clear, Monty is unlikely to be portrayed as any type of superhero, but at the same time, when we see a person in a comic TV show wearing colorful tight clothes with a big S on his belt , A good opportunity, what does it mean. 

When you combine S with the blue and yellow color scheme, you can refer to several different superheroes, and they are all very powerful. One possibility is Guido Carosella, the mutant hero. When he first joined the new version of X-Factor, Guido, like the rest of the team, wore a blue and yellow uniform. 

Another possibility, and a more appropriate one, is the sentinel. Just like Monty’s costume, the sentinel’s original costume is yellow and blue, with an S on his belt. In addition, although he was not introduced until The Sentry #1 in 2000, it was revealed that this hero has existed since the early days of Marvel, but the whole world has forgotten him, including Sentry himself—just like Monti had forgotten him. Who is the same. 

Understandably, due to reports that Elizabeth Olsen’s Wanda Maximov will be an important part of the upcoming Crazy Multiverse Doctor Strange, fans have been inferring that Wanda Vision will interact with Marvel’s massive multiverse related. One of the most obvious signs we received in the story itself was the advertisement in episode 7.

Although the men and women who often appear in WandaVision's artificial ads did not appear in Episode 6, they returned in "Breaking the Fourth Wall" because of an ad that mimics antidepressant ads. The brand name of this drug is Nexus-this word has two meanings in Marvel comics, both of which are related to the multiverse. 

There are all the realistic Nexus of Marvel, which exists in the Florida Everglades in the main universe of the comics, guarded by scary human figures. As the name suggests, Nexus is the gateway to other Marvel realities.

Then Wanda himself. In the comics, Wanda is the main space-time hub in Marvel's reality. As a hub being, Wanda reflects the decisive characteristics of her reality and can change the flow of the future. In the 1998-89 miniseries "The Avengers Forever", we learned that the powerful Immortus knew Wanda was a Nexus person and worried that she might give birth to a stronger child than her. He manipulated the event to pair Vision and Wanda into a pair, hoping that the combination of Wanda and the robot would never produce offspring.

In "We Interrupted This Program", we heard the echo of Captain Marvel in 2019 because Monica was resurrected during Blip. We heard these sounds again in episode 7 because Monica forced through the hexagonal barrier. And this time, Monica seemed to have heard their voices. 

 In most cases, we heard young Monica and her late mother talking about helping Carol Danvers. We heard Nick Fury of Samuel L. Jackson tell her that if she "learns to shine" like her "Aunt Carol", she can only follow adult heroes . We know in the comics that she does shine. We also heard different people, such as Dr. Harley and Jimmy Woo talking about the death of Monica's mother. We heard Captain Marvel tell Monica again that when "they handed out the children", they gave her mother "the toughest one". It was these words that gave Monica the power to push the rest of the way through the barrier. 

Of course, there is also the title of this episode-"Breaking the Fourth Wall". Breaking a wall is exactly what Monica is doing. Although we can't say that the wall is numbered, there are four alternative versions of Monica walking through the wall with her before merging with her.

As fans have always wanted to see, episode 7 shows us that Monica has officially joined the super ranks. Piercing the hexagonal barrier gives her strength, although the exact meaning of these strengths is still unclear. We saw her eyes emit blue light many times. At the end of episode 7, she recovered from Wanda's attack so quickly that even Wanda was shocked. 

In the comics, Monica is one of the most powerful heroes in Marvel. She has many aliases. The most recent one is Spectrum. After she was bombarded by another dimension of energy, she gained the ability to transform into any form of energy at will. 

So far, her power in WandaVision has not been defined, and she has not chosen any code name. But obviously, piercing the hexagonal barrier completely changed her. We have seen four alternative versions of her merge with her in the barrier, so the power she transmits may be power from different fields of the multiverse.

Agnes is one of the characters that fan theory has been spinning before the premiere of WandaVision. By the end of "Broken Four Walls", many fans' guesses seemed to have been confirmed. When Agni brought her home, Wanda's own suspicions were aroused, and Wanda noticed that the twins were missing. Then she saw a big and noisy insect on the curtain. She asked Agnes where the boys were, and Agnes replied that they "may be just playing in the basement." Wanda went down to the basement to search for them, and we got the biggest inspiration from this episode. 

All this unfolds like a tribute to the silent lamb. Towards the end of that movie, the hero Clarice Starling thought she was just conducting a routine interview with the first victim of the notorious serial killer Buffalo Bill. She is talking to a man who now lives where the person she wants to interview used to live. She was already suspicious of his behavior and some of the things she saw in his house. But when she noticed a huge exotic moth-the murderer left it in the victim's throat-it made the deal. She pulled the gun on him, and he ran...Where? Go to the basement, where they have the final battle.

When they face each other in the basement of Agnes, we know that Agnes is not Agnes. She is the witch Agatha Harkness. 

Set to the tune of "Agatha has always been", it sounds a lot like the theme of the monster imitating sitcom The Munster family, and when it reveals that Agatha is manipulating the event, we get the montage throughout the series. However, it is not yet clear what Agatha is pursuing. Harkness is not the villain in the comics. In fact, at different times, Harkness has always been Wanda's ally and even a mentor. Although not a superhero in the traditional sense, she appears from time to time to help superheroes in different mysterious crises. 

Therefore, although Agnes is finally confirmed to be Agatha, we still don't know why she is there. When she said it was her "always", she didn't know what she meant. We saw her arrive at Westview in black and white, as if it existed before her arrival. So did she manipulate Wanda to create Westview, or Wanda did it herself and Agnes was taking advantage of this situation?

One more thing may not be quoted intentionally, but if it is not, it must be an interesting coincidence. Agatha ended her song with the news that she killed the dog Sparky in episode 4. At the same time, the actress Catherine Hahn, who played Agatha, played a memorable repetitive role in sitcom Park and Entertainment, and her role suggested that Amy Poller’s Leslie Knopp was a " Dog killer."

Just before Agatha appeared in the basement, Wanda noticed a large book that looked very serious, gleaming with crimson energy. 

We are not sure what this is, although it may be a dark fortress. Darkhold is probably the most notorious magical masterpiece in the history of Marvel comics, and it is sought after by people like Doctor Strange and even the Vampire King Dracula. The problem is that we have seen the dark fortress in the MCU-among S.H.I.E.L.D. agents and fugitives-but it doesn't look like this. But on the other hand, it is not entirely clear about the normative weight of many Marvel TV series in the MCU.

Whatever it is, when we see Agatha using magic, it is accompanied by purple energy. On the other hand, the energy emanating from the book is red like Wanda. In addition, the design on the cover of this book has two sets of adjacent rings, a bit like... twins? The children of Wanda are nowhere to be found. No matter what this book is—whether it is a dark fortress or whatever—it may serve as a prison for twins.

In the 8th episode of WandaVision, Wanda saw her life on the night when Sokovia was torn apart. Before a fatal explosion, she and her family were watching her favorite Dick Van Dyke show-Season 2, Episode 21 "It May Look Like A Walnut." This is a classic episode of the series, because Rob Petrie (Dick Van Dijk) is watching a science fiction movie about the invasion of the earth by aliens obsessed with walnuts. The next day, all the events in the movie seemed to come true. First, his wife became a space invader, and then Rob himself began to become an alien because his thumb and sense of humor disappeared.

This episode is an imitation of the sci-fi classic invading the body predator, with only movie star Danny Thomas as the leader of the aliens. The Easter egg playing is Dick Van Dyke. This episode is really just a nightmare. Rob's wife was not taken away by the aliens. He didn't lose his thumb or his sense of humor (for a comedy writer like Rob Petrie, this is worse than losing a finger). Similarly, Wanda turned all the bad things she had ever had into a nightmare, easily wishing to disappear and reset. 

Thanks to Agatha Harkness, Wanda experienced vivid memories of her childhood in episode 8. We saw for the first time the events that radicalized Wanda and Pietro and prompted them to join Hydra. In the middle of the TV night, a missile penetrated their house and killed their parents. Pietro grabbed Wanda and pulled her under the bed to keep her safe. But at this moment, another missile landed three feet in front of them...but it did not fire. 

The siblings were trapped under the bed for two days before daring to move. As the two pointed out in "Avengers: Age of Ultron", the Rockets have a word on the side: Stark. This aroused their hatred of Tony Stark and everything he represented, pushing them into the arms of Hydra because they volunteered to experiment to empower them. 

However, we haven't heard of this tragic incident until this episode. But the scene in WandaVision is more detailed, including revealing that the shell actually says "Stark Industries". More importantly, Agatha asked Wanda if she had ever wondered if it was a coincidence that the bomb did not explode. From her point of view, Wanda is obviously a "witch", subconsciously using a spell that changes the probability to prevent explosives from exploding. 

In one of the flashback sequences in episode 8, we saw the Soul Gem reach out and touch Wanda. As a result, the psychic hero witnessed the image of a silhouette of a woman with flowing hair and a headband different from the classic scarlet witch costume. None of this was recorded by HYDRA's camera, it just showed her in the room, flashing light, and then Wanda on the floor. What exactly this refers to is not yet clear. Did the Soul Gem see Wanda's future, where she fully accepted her identity as the Scarlet Witch? Or is this a reference to her legacy? 

In the comics, Wanda only recently learned that her mother was actually Natalia Maksimov, a member of the Scarlet Witch. Will Wanda in the TV series be like this? Regardless of the situation, this is where Wanda first plays its role. However, it was obvious from the beginning that she never had a good grasp of how she was able to do what she did, all thanks to the influence of the Heart Gem. It is possible that the mind gem just unlocked her own innate ability.  

In "Previously On", after touching the soul gem, Wanda sat down to watch an episode of the Brady family. In this special part, young Cindy Brady has a dispute with her brother Bobby about her beloved Kitty Karry-All doll. It turns out that the doll that Vision used to practice diaper changing in episode 3 is exactly the same as Kitty Karry-All. Interestingly, the episode of Brady Bunch was so popular that it launched an accessory product for this doll. Yes, you can also have Kitty Karry-All! 

As for the plot of that particular Brady Bunch plot, the doll is gone, and Cindy blames Bobby. The little boy claimed to be innocent, and their quarrel spread to the rest of the family before the real culprit—their dog—was revealed. That episode is a subtle reminder that things are not always what they seem. If we are not careful, we often ignore the real culprit and cause undue blame. In other words, Wanda was blamed for certain things she had not done, and Agatha happily took her away. Kitty Karry-All also symbolizes that the twins for Wanda and Vision are not what they look like. 

In episode 8, Wanda recalled the moment she visited the SWORD headquarters. In this heartbreaking scene, she was taken to the body of Vision and allowed to examine it. When she stroked his head with magic, she mumbled softly: "I can't feel you." This is a callback to the last words Vision said to her in Avengers: Infinity War. When she used her power to kill her lover (hoping to stop Thanos), Vision said softly to her: "You will never hurt me. I just feel you." Wanda revisited that route at SWORD HQ It was a sad acknowledgment of the end of their contact. This makes her sadness more real. 

However, the step that seemed to be taken in the right direction in the process of grief prompted Wanda to do an incredible thing-to change reality and make her feel the illusion again. Ironically, by doing so, she shut down the feelings of other people in Westview, forcing them to conform to her fantasies. Vision's statement is a kind of grace and forgiveness, twisted by Wanda into delusion and revenge. When she recreated the illusion and could really feel him again, she completely changed its meaning.

In the end caption scene of episode 8, SWORD director Taylor Hayward revealed that his team had made a breakthrough. They use energy directed from objects directly affected by Wanda's magic to power the dead visionary body. It turns out that what Hayward has always wanted is a way to resurrect and control this sentient weapon. This resurrected illusion is a ghostly white color, directly referring to the period when the illusion was completely vivisectioned by dark forces in the late 1980s and then reassembled by Henry Pym. 

In the comics, the ghostly barefoot vision has no emotions for many years. To make matters worse, due to his flawed control crystal, he controls all the computers in the world, which gave him an arrogant utopian plan inspired by the Titanic artificial intelligence ISAAC. Fortunately, he gave up his conspiracy at the last minute, thanks to his friends. Vision then removed the crystal, for the first time unaffected by the outside world. But as a result, the government's severe questioning led Wanda and Vision to resign from the Avengers and move to New Jersey. 

The government gangsters were not satisfied with this, and under the control of Imothus, they tore him to pieces. This helped drive Wanda crazy for the first time and made her an immortal pawn. However, Vision rejoined the Avengers, and as he used the brain model of a scientist named Alex Lipton, and finally combined with the remnant brain model of the superhero Simon Williams, Slowly recovered his mood and memory. Therefore, for die-hard comic fans, seeing this kind of spectral vision in the MCU is a big gain for fans over the years. 

WandaVision is not exactly an action spectacle, but its ending begins with a loud noise. Back on the suburban streets of Westview, Agatha took Billy and Tommy hostage. The opening sequence of this episode saw Agatha and Wanda clash. Although Wanda won’t show what she can really do until the latter part of the episode, in the early days of fighting with the older witch, Wanda used the skills she learned to fight Iron Man in Captain America: Civil War—— Instead of using her power directly on Agatha, she used her telepathy to pick up a car from behind Agatha and slam into her. The car flew into the front of the house, seeming to be carrying Agatha.

When Wanda approached the house to see what happened to her opponent, she saw Agatha's boots sticking out from the bottom of the car. When she got closer, she saw that the boots were empty. This moment refers to the 1939 "Wizard of Oz", which includes the visual effect of the famous house landing on the evil witch of the East. Of course, unlike the witches in the early classics, Agatha was neither dead nor defeated.

There are many rumors that Benedict Cumberbatch may appear as a cameo in the finale of Wanda Vision as Doctor Strange. Well, the ending came and went, there was no sign from the residents of 177A Bleecker Street, but that didn't mean he was completely forgotten. 

As the battle between Wanda and Agatha moved to the center of Xijing Town, Agatha confirmed the speculation of many of us since the end of episode 7 that the large tome she kept in the basement was the notorious dark fortress. . Before revealing the book itself, Agatha told Wanda that there was "a whole chapter" dedicated to the Scarlet Witch in the Dark Fortress, the "Book of Curses." Ignoring Wanda’s protest, Agatha reads from the book that Scarlet Witch “is not born, she is a fake. She has no parties and does not need spells.” Perhaps the most impressive thing Agatha has read It is Wanda's power that "surpasses the power of the wizard's supreme."

As we all know, Doctor Strange is the supreme magician, not to be underestimated. It can be said that all heroes are one-on-one with Thanos driven by Infinity Gems in the Avengers: Infinity War, and no one performs as well as Doctor Strange. Of course, when Wanda appeared in Endgame to settle her score with the purple big man, she did her best, but still-it's important to say that Wanda is stronger than weird.

Among the many things Wanda did in the battle with Agatha, she tried some things we haven't seen in a long time. Appearing behind Agatha, she sneaked into Agatha's mind at an astonishing speed to eradicate her nightmare. Things did not go exactly as planned. Although Wanda did discover the illusion that Agatha's old witch would try to kill her, the more experienced witch managed to reverse the situation. 

This is reminiscent of "Avengers: Age of Ultron", when we saw Wanda use this power on almost all of the Avengers. Although she appeared in the next three movies and was involved in fierce battles in each movie, this is the first time we have seen her use this ability. Not only is it a callback to the early movies, but it also shows us how much Wanda is willing to put in to defeat Agatha. After all, the last time she used this power before this scene was when she was allied with the genocidal Ultron, using it to cause the Hulk's fatal rampage in Johannesburg.

We can see Wanda's exact dress in the comic book "New Halloween Spooktacular!" But—as it often happens in MCUs—that costume was deliberately made to look silly. Similarly, the costumes worn by Vision and fake Pietro will not fall off like you would expect to see the Avengers wearing when defending the earth. 

But, although we got hints in the penultimate episode, we won't see Wanda wearing her new and improved comic accurate costume until the end of the series, which is worth the wait. When Wanda was in Agatha's nightmare, we first saw the energy profile formed by the headdress. After Wanda placed the power rune on her witchcraft boundary-canceling Agatha's power-and she accepted her identity, we finally saw her transformation begin. Once she regained her power from Agatha, she would land over Westview in a costume that reflected her comic book outfit-and it didn't look like she was pieced together for a fancy dress party at the last minute.

In his last moments with Wanda, Vision provided words of comfort and hope, speculating that perhaps—even so—this would not be the last time they met. Vision said to Wanda: "I have always been a voice without a body, a body but not a person, and now the memory has become a reality. Who knows what I will be next?"

When he referred to himself as "a voice without a body," Vision was referring to the time he spent as Tony Stark's artificial intelligence assistant, JARVIS. Although he did not personally appear in the MCU until Avengers: Ultron, Bettany has voiced Jarvis in the first two Iron Man movies and the first two Avengers movies. Unlike his comic book counterpart whose brain waves are based on the brain waves of superhero Wonder Man, Vision’s personality is a fusion of different characters, including Jarvis 

It is not an obscure fact that JARVIS helped create Vision. But considering how much this role has experienced since then, it is easy to forget that, in a sense, Vision has been accompanied by the MCU's narrative from the beginning.

By the end of WandaVision, we still didn't fully understand what Monica Rambeau did to her after repeated contact with Wanda's Hex. In episode 7, after she broke the Hex boundary for the second time, it was obvious-physically-she was stronger than before. What is not clear is what this actually means. We have seen her eyes glowing with blue light many times, and she recovered from Wanda’s attack faster than you think. But in the series ending, we got a clue that her abilities may be close to her comic book opponent. 

In the comics, Monica Rambo has the ability to transform herself into any form of energy. Especially in the 80s, when she first appeared, Rambeau would often be golden when she turned into light. In addition to allowing her to move quickly, when she is in this state, solid objects will pass through her without harming her. 

We have something that is not exactly the same but similar in the "series ending". When Hayward tried to kill Billy and Tommy, Monica stood between the director and the boy, her eyes gleaming. When the bullets reached her, they passed through her harmlessly. At the same time, the bullet also slowed down-Monica's entire body showed a translucent golden appearance. 

Going back to "We interrupted this program," Jimmy Woo listed Skrulls as one of the possible culprits behind Westview Hex. It turns out, of course, they have nothing to do with this. But this does not mean that they will completely ignore what is happening. 

In the mid-credits scene of the series finale, when a woman brought Monica into the theater under false pretences, the authorities were finishing off in Xijing City. The lady finally made it clear that she was from Scroo and told Monica: "I was sent by an old friend of your mother." She told Monica that her old friend wanted to see her. When Monica asked where, the Scroo pointed upwards meaningfully. 

Most likely, the "old friend" the Skrull refers to is Talos (played by Ben Mendelssohn). This Skrull interacts with Monica’s mother Maria and Carol in "Captain Marvel". Danvers collaborated with Nick Fury, and then cameo in the film Spider-Man: Far From Home. It could also be Fury himself.

On the one hand, this is likely to be related to the upcoming "Captain Marvel 2", on the other hand, it really makes us wonder how the Skrull people want Monica to meet Talos. Chances are, the Skrulls have arranged a trip, but in the comics, Monica—just like Carol Danvers—can travel through space on her own.

So you think-like Vision Wanda created in Westview-the end of Hex will be the end of her sons Tommy and Billy? 

If you stay not only in the scenes at the end but also in the scenes at the end, then you will see Wanda in a hut in a remote wilderness—it looks a bit similar to Bruce Banner’s invincible Hulk hiding at the end of 2008. Place. The guard hut is a "normal" Wanda illusion, and inside the building, we see that the astral form of the Scarlet Witch is using her power and carefully studying the dark fortress, presumably to listen to Agatha’s advice and more Know who she is and her abilities. 

Just before the end of the scene, we heard Billy and Tommy asking for help from Wanda. This is very important because in the comics, although Wanda's twins are revealed as the structure of her power, they are reincarnated as boys and become heroes Wiccan and Speed. Although it is too early to draw conclusions, it seems that this may be the reason that led Wanda to join forces with the Supreme Magician of Doctor Strange in the crazy multiverse.

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