All the Biggest Questions Answered By ‘WandaVision’ Episode 4
The following post contains SPOILERS for WandaVision Episode 4.
This week’s “WandaVision” is titled “We Interrupt This Program,” a reference to the line networks use when they break into their scheduled broadcasts to air an important news bulletin. It’s a particularly appropriate name for Episode 4 of
WandaVision, because this is the moment the show finally tore down its vintage sitcom facade and revealed how the woman we know as Monica Rambeau (Teyonah Parris), daughter of Captain Marvel’s best friend Maria Rambeau, wound up in
WandaVision’s phony town of Westview as “Geraldine.”
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Finally, we get some answers! There are no new sitcom parodies on this week s episode of
WandaVision, but there are a couple old friends we haven t seen in awhile.
The episode title is perfect: We Interrupt This Program. Like a news bulletin cutting through a sitcom broadcast, this episode rewinds time to show us what s been going on outside of Westview while these
WandaVision hijinks have been occurring in sitcom land.
We open in a hospital room set at the climax of
Avengers: Endgame, when Thanos snap was undone by the Avengers. Monica Rambeau, apparently, is one of the people who got blipped and came back. When the snap happened, she had been watching over her mother, Maria, in the hospital. When she re-materialized in the same hospital five years later, she discovered that her mother had died in the interim; the kind of death there s no coming back from. R.I.P. Maria! I would say Captain Marvel will surely be bummed when she
Rolling Stone ‘WandaVision’ Recap: Behind the Screens
The sitcom setting is abandoned in an episode that explains who’s controlling Wanda’s world and why
By Marvel Studios
A review of this week’s
WandaVision, “We Interrupt This Program,” coming up just as soon as I get the commemorative T-shirt…
As its title( ) suggests, “We Interrupt This Program” takes a break from the weekly sitcom pastiche
WandaVision has offered so far. We get glimpses of events from the first three installments most notably an expanded version of Wanda expelling “Geraldine” from Westview, now presented on widescreen film rather than part of a
Image: Marvel Studios
Another week, another wild theory about what’s really going on in the idyllic but ominous sitcom life of
But after the revelations in episode 4, “We Interrupt This Program,” there’s one thing viewers are turning their eyes to: hexagons.
Yes, hexagons. And if the comic book viewers reading between the lines are right, the shapes could be a signal of a new villain in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
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WandaVision through episode 4.]
Image: Marvel Studios
Hexagons are a shape with six sides and six corners. When all the sides are of equal length, each corner forms a 120-degree angle. Hexagons have one other pretty interesting quality, which is that they tessellate hexagons with sides of equal length can lay next to each other like tiles without any gaps between them. And of the equal-sided shapes that tessellate, hexagons have the most surface area for their size.
Scarlet Witch Isn t the Villain in WandaVision: She s the Biggest Victim 166 Shares
If there s one thing that Marvel s
WandaVision has already perfected in four short episodes, it s confusing the hell out of its viewers. Every installment adds another theory to our pot while debunking three others, and yet the answer to the biggest question of them all has only been hinted at. In episode four, appropriately titled We Interrupt This Program, viewers finally get to see what s been going on in the real world during the first three episodes and learn how Monica came to be in Westview. When she returns from a harsh ejection courtesy of the new mother with magical abilities, Monica says one thing, It s all Wanda.