Yeah I pretty much had the same thoughts. It's concerning. What I wonder is why they put her on covers to sell those, but not in the actual pages of comics? They did it with Fearless Defenders, A-Force and now Fearless. Marvel #1000 just had one image, no dialog. It's so odd.
Love is for souls, not bodies.
I want more of her dance-like movement. Joss Whedon “invented” that, but apparently the Russo Brothers won’t have it. In the raw material taken by bystanders at the shooting in Edinburgh, one can even see Lizzie doing stuff like that, but none made it into the final cut. Just in that regards I am glad that the Russo’s take a break from the MCU.
At least I want more like, in Endgame right after the “Woman only” – scene ( ), she blasted a group of enemies from the distance, effectively acting like an artillery canon. The blast should be much more devastating, though.
I'm really split on this. On one hand, I'm glad they're not forcing a character down our throats for once just 'cuz movies. But as a Wanda fan, BOOO! Where is Wanda?!
I was a bit miffed that he'd changed her powers for the movies but the dance bit I liked. I had never considered that Wanda (and certain other characters) might have more fluid movement before that.
Well, she'll always have the Lady Liberators, even if the conclusion of that story is a little erm... outdated.
I feel like Wanda missed what should have been her prime synergy period because of that stupid feud with Fox. She was simultaneously an MCU character and someone whose movie rights were partly controlled by Fox (even though Fox never used her). It led to her being left out of a lot of tie-in stuff and in general Vision was pushed harder in that period than she was, so he got to be part of the main Avengers lineup again and she didn't, I think, largely because he was a pure Disney-owned character and she wasn't.
Of course Wanda's luck as a character has not been all bad: she did get her own book in that period (but it was a low-budget book edited outside the Avengers office). She did figure prominently in the last Avengers weekly event although no one has seen or mentioned her since. Her luck is sort of middle-of-the-pack by current Marvel comics standards, where some characters often disappear for months while other characters get used in 300 different books. I wish they would take a hint from the MCU that people want to see her for more than a few seconds at a time.
I liked what the Director, Matt Shakman said about Wanda and Vision. He views both characters sympathetically. It's such a contrast with the popular view among comics writers and YouTube that Wanda and Vision's relationship is "wrong" and "creepy" and "weird".
I do think the parallel world is what enables Vision to feel emotion. I think outside of it Vision is emotionless.
I think a big part of the narrative we are going to see is Chthon and Agatha both teaching Wanda how to use Chaos Magic. Chthon being the selfish, cruel father figure, manipulating for his own ends, Agatha being the honest, kind mother, seeking to empower Wanda to find her own destiny. Chthon's prophecy gives the title "WandaVision" one of its meanings. On one level its a battle of wits between Chthon and Agatha. Wanda learning about her magic and becoming a Witch is all about empowerment. In defying Chthon, and the destiny he wrote for her, Wanda truly becomes the Scarlet Witch. She wields dark magic for good. That makes her very like the Ancient One, who used dark magic to protect the world. I see Multiverse of Madness being about Stephen and Wanda becoming friends. I feel their relationship is going to get far more exploration than it has ever had in the comics. Strange being a man who shuts away his emotions ties into him not knowing what Chaos Magic is, and Wanda changing the way he views human emotions.
I can imagine Agatha saying "you'll fit in perfectly" and teleporting Darcy into Wandaworld lol.
I think WandaVision has a kind of Pan's Labyrinth aspect, where we see two parallel realities telling two connected stories. Chthon is operating within the Wanda-world, I think Eric Williams/Grim Reaper is one of the Darkholders (his jealousy and of his movie star brother Simon, perhaps Nathan Fillion in brief cameos throughout the series) whose mission is to seek ways to agitate and goad Wanda toward darker emotions, with Modred the Mystic or Morgan Le Fay being higher up in the scheme. I take the quote about Vision seeing the world as it is, as a hint that it is Vision who will have to persuade Wanda to "wake up" from her fantasy.
Chthon as a sort of evil Larry David makes me chuckle.
Last edited by Relugus; 09-01-2019 at 03:53 PM. Reason: Added a couple of things