Found this cute animation on twitter.
https://twitter.com/Gomiidd/status/1...953717251?s=19
Screenshot_20210508-201943~2.jpg
Found this cute animation on twitter.
https://twitter.com/Gomiidd/status/1...953717251?s=19
Screenshot_20210508-201943~2.jpg
~ Oberon ~
Comic-book reading Witch and Pagan since 1970
I came for Kate, I stayed for Bette Love Fantastic Four, Namor, Batwoman, Dr.Strange.... i love them all
[Quote Originally Posted by Thor-El 10-15-2020 12:32 PM]
"Jason Aaron should know there is already a winner of the Phoenix Force and his name is Phoenixx9."
Like a Red Dragon, The Phoenix shall Soar in 2024!
I'm glad they avoided Wanda being with someone that reminds her of her brother. That's too weird.
Love is for souls, not bodies.
Not a big fan, but Wanda was young/naive combo and it was good that he was close. Of course I think it was exagerated and he was too vigilant.
At least it defined when she becae her own woman and doesnt need validation from Pietro
it would never last, she already had to deal with Pietro and then having to deal with same personality with namor, she would quit. namor also push boundaries too much, they would see that they look for different things on the relationship
This is from Mark Brooks, I get this could be a cover with Wanda. Maybe for Darkhold
Last edited by Rang10; 05-08-2021 at 04:46 PM.
a popular trope from my younger years was that Men tended to marry their mothers (ie; someone like them) and women, someone like/their father. I can see this being true in many of the lives I've known
But another popular trope, is that opposites attract (still could be the same thing, right, tee-hee).
And don't get me started on brother/sister 'relationships' because yes, very weird and does happen.... (oh wait, they covered that with Ultimates, which I never read)
~ Oberon ~
Comic-book reading Witch and Pagan since 1970
I came for Kate, I stayed for Bette Love Fantastic Four, Namor, Batwoman, Dr.Strange.... i love them all
Comics have been a part of the cultural paradigm and 'zeitgeist' for decades. Even, perhaps, since their inception, nearly a hundred years ago (well, 80).
So it is Americana mostly. This ties in well, with my theories on serialized fiction as having more to do with character arcs/changes/personalities. My/others main 3 roles for main characters: Victim, victimizer and redemptionist.
Wanda is a great example of this, as she has played all the parts, though *we* fans argue that these stories show her being not in charge of this agency at times.
~ Oberon ~
Comic-book reading Witch and Pagan since 1970
I came for Kate, I stayed for Bette Love Fantastic Four, Namor, Batwoman, Dr.Strange.... i love them all
Entirely, yes. And though I like and would appreciate more female focus, I may be guilty of enabling the older mindset of male writers.
but I always liked the stories where Sue, Wanda, Jean, and even Jan (a Marvel Team up upgraded her way back?) increased their powers. Not so much where they lose them.
~ Oberon ~
Comic-book reading Witch and Pagan since 1970
I came for Kate, I stayed for Bette Love Fantastic Four, Namor, Batwoman, Dr.Strange.... i love them all