WandaVision below
Here s all the big Marvel comic book and movie easter eggs that you might have missed in
WandaVision.
The Blip Disney+
Right at the beginning of the episode, Monica Rambeau wakes up in the hospital, she soon realizes that she has actually be gone for 3 years due to the Blip. For the first time in the Marvel universe, we see what happened the moment when the Blip was undone and everyone returned.
Welcome to S.W.O.R.D. Disney+
Fans are finally getting their first glimpse into S.W.O.R.D. AKA the Sentient Weapon Observation and Response Division. However, the biggest surprise is that in this universe, Maria Rambeau, Monica s mother, is the founder for S.W.O.R.D.
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.”
WandaVision Episode 4 Reveals What s Really Going On With The Show s TV Sitcom Reality
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WandaVision may have left Marvel fans divided over its initial premiere episodes, but episodes 3 and 4 have certainly deepened the intrigue in a major way. The end of
WandaVision episode 3 ended with the reveal that Geraldine broke free of Wanda s illusionary TV world to remember the traumatic events of
Avengers: Age of Ultron. Well,
WandaVision episode 4 picks up that baton and runs with it, revealing a much bigger picture (literally and figuratively) of why the series faux sitcom format is what it is. As it turns out, Wanda s retro TV world isn t just a stylistic choice - it s a unique new energy signature!
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
The Review:
Where’s my X-Files reboot under the MCU with Kat Dennings and Randall Park already?
WandaVision changes things up with this episode, as expected, by tackling the events of the first three episodes from the outside. But, more importantly in some ways, it helps to further cement some elements from the greater MCU that desperately needed to be dealt with. Spider-Man: Far From Home covered the Blip to some degree with all the kids that came back and some of the problems and comedy that came from it, but it did touch upon the real issues of what happens when people are thought dead for five years and then return. WandaVision deals with that by showing us that Monica Rambeau was dusted herself during Infinity War while at the hospital with her mother, Maria, who was being treated for cancer. Her blipping back in is shown as her body comes together – along with presumably hundreds of others in this hospital, blowing capacity in a bad way and creating absolutely nothing but