WandaVision Reportedly Has A Luke Skywalker-Sized Cameo Coming Up
WandaVision would blow your mind, and he wasn’t too far off. “We Interrupt This Program” did largely that, diverting away from the strange goings on in WestView to give some backstory as to how S.W.O.R.D. ended up there in the first place, and it’s all tied back to Thanos, from Monica Rambeau’s five-year absence to Wanda Maximoff mourning the death of Vision in a very unique fashion.
Of course, Vision continues to edge closer and closer to the truth before Wanda pulls him back into her fabricated version of reality, but we’re still not even halfway through the series yet. That makes it pretty clear that things are going to get much weirder and a lot bigger in terms of scope, scale and spectacle, something that’s already been teased in the mid-season trailer.
WandaVision Episode 4 opened the door to a whole bunch of new reveals - with so much more to come. Titled We Interrupt This Program, the fourth chapter explored the world and events outside of Wanda s (Elizabeth Olsen) bubble of faux sitcom reality, which has taken over the town of Westview. [.]
Kevin Smith Thinks Wandavision Could Be Setting up Fantastic Four
When it comes to theories about Marvel Studios
WandaVision might just be setting up for the MCU introduction of the Fantastic Four. Smith offered up his thoughts about the matter during a recent episode of
Fatman Beyond where he and Marc Bernadin broke down their take on the most recent episode, We Interrupt This Program .
In We Interrupt This Program , the series makes a bit of a departure from the sitcom-inspired world that has dominated the previous three episodes and instead viewers find out a bit about what s happening in the real world. Specifically, the episode gets us up to speed on what s going on with Monica Rambeau (Teyonah Parris), revealing that Monica was among those lost (and subsequently brought back) in the Blip. It also revealed that Monica is an agent of SWORD and that the organization no longer sends manned missions to space and instead is focused on the quantum realm and unmanned missions
Kevin Smith Thinks WandaVision Is Setting Up The Fantastic Four
We’re not even halfway through
WandaVision yet, but the Marvel Cinematic Universe’s first Disney Plus exclusive series has already generated more fan theories than the majority of their feature-length blockbusters combined. The mystery may have been peeled back ever so slightly in last week’s episode, but there are still a lot more questions than answers surrounding WestView.
Wanda constructing an elaborate fictional reality to shield herself from all of the trauma she’s suffered throughout her life is pretty heavy subject matter for a superhero show, even one that’s dived headfirst into sitcom laugh tracks and slapstick pratfalls over the last few weeks. Every Friday we see a little bit more of Wanda’s dark side coming out, too, and there’s been no shortage of speculation that she could lose control of her powers in an event that would have catastrophic consequences for the rest of the MCU.
Image: Mike Machlan, Bill Oakley, Bob Sharen/Marvel
WandaVision’s creative team
to draw from while conceiving the story for Disney+. Because there’s been relatively little of the Scarlet Witch or Vision in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, one of the biggest questions heading into the streaming series was which chunks of the characters’ comics canon it
might incorporate, and how the show would go about it.
Advertisement
Everything about the way
WandaVision’s premise was advertised from its jumps through multiple decades of American sitcoms to the not-s0-subtle hints about Wanda Maximoff’s mental state made it easy to see shades of stories like Brian Michael Bendis’