Tag Archives: Marvel

This Marvel Comics Storyline Could Spoil WandaVision — and MCU Phase 4

A classic Marvel Comics storyline starring Scarlet Witch and the Avengers could be the key to figuring out WandaVision — and Phase 4 of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. In WandaVision, the first original series from Marvel Studios, unusual couple Wanda Maximoff (Elizabeth Olsen) and Vision (Paul Bettany) relocate to the suburbs of Westview after the events of Avengers: Endgame. As Wanda channels decades of sitcoms in a reality seemingly of her own making, magically creating a happily ever after with her dead spouse and newborn twin sons Tommy and Billy, they begin to suspect that everything is not as it seems in TV Land.

After the Avengers traveled through time and parallel dimensions in Endgame to reverse the Thanos (Josh Brolin) snap that erased half of all life in the universe, Marvel Studios head Kevin Feige confirmed Multiverse connections would unfold before and after Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness. Feige also revealed WandaVision forms a loose trilogy with Spider-Man 3 and the Doctor Strange sequel, where sorcerer Stephen Strange (Benedict Cumberbatch) mentors the reality-bending Wanda.

Multiverse of Madness also directly connects to the coming Disney+ series Loki, which could introduce the time-defying Kang the Conqueror (Jonathan Majors) before he appears on the big screen in Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania.

If Wanda’s nosy neighbor Agnes (Kathryn Hahn) is secretly Agatha Harkness, an ages-old witch and mentor to Scarlet Witch in the Marvel comics, WandaVision has three of the key characters needed for the story setting up Avengers Disassembled and House of M. When Episode 4 introduces the possibility that Wanda might be the secret villain of WandaVision, it recalls the Darker than Scarlet storyline that ran through Avengers West Coast in the late 1980s:

Normal in Every Way

Agatha expresses concerns about Thomas and William, the offspring of a mutant and a synthezoid, shocking Wanda with the revelation that her children disappear when she’s not thinking about them (Avengers West Coast #51). Wanda rejects Agatha’s accusation that the twins aren’t normal children, refusing to believe Thomas and William “simply cease to exist” when Wanda is preoccupied. 

(Photo: Marvel Comics)

When Master Pandemonium attacks the Avengers with a horde of demons and kidnaps the twins, the villain reveals the super-demon Mephisto scattered his soul after splitting it into five pieces. When Wonder Man mentions Bewitched — one of the classic sitcoms influencing WandaVision — an enraged Wanda loses control and lashes out at fellow Avenger the Wasp. 

Watching from afar is Immortus, one of the identities of Kang the Conquerer. 

prevnext

One Small Step Beyond Illusion

Agatha reveals Wanda’s children were born out of her desire for a normal home, making them manifestations of Wanda’s will through a combination of magic and her mutant powers. Because Vision is a sophisticated machine, Agatha explains, Wanda used her probability-altering powers to make it possible for the couple to start a family — but even Wanda’s immense powers can’t create life (Avengers West Coast #52). 

(Photo: Marvel Comics)

The Avengers confront Master Pandemonium, who kidnapped Wanda and Vision’s children to replace the missing pieces of his soul — only to discover that Thomas and William are pieces of Mephisto’s soul once thought destroyed by Franklin Richards (Fantastic Four #277). When the demon reabsorbs his missing pieces, restoring his essence at the cost of Wanda losing her children, Agatha defeats Mephisto by erasing the twins from Wanda’s memory. 

prevnext

As If They Never Were

Agatha explains: “Wanda longed all her life for the kind of normal existence forever denied her by her mutant powers. She so greatly desired a family — in her mind the perfect symbol of a peaceful, happy life — that she suffered what in a human woman would have been a hysterical or imaginary pregnancy. In such cases there is usually no child to be born… but Wanda’s power to change probabilities created Thomas and William. Twins, you see, to double the fulfillment of her dream. Since her power cannot create true life, she reached out unconsciously to snare anything which would function as souls for the newborns. What she caught, still much weakened by their recent separation, was two of the missing pieces of Mephisto!” 

(Photo: Marvel Comics)

To spare Wanda the pain of losing her children, Agatha closes that corner of her mind — making it so that the twins “never were” for Wanda (Avengers West Coast #52).

prevnext

Darker Than Scarlet

Left almost comatose after weeks of turmoil (Avengers West Coast #53), Agatha watches over an unresponsive Wanda when Magneto — Wanda’s mutant supervillain father, a relation that would be retconned decades later — takes her away from Earth (Avengers #313). Wanda’s nervous breakdown turns villainous when she returns to California and attacks the Avengers (Avengers West Coast #55).

(Photo: Marvel Comics)

 Attempting to reason with her pupil, Agatha tells Wanda that her mind is unhinged because of recent tragedies. Relishing her newfound power, Wanda tells the captured Avengers that her ability to alter probabilities means she can reshape the universe at will (Avengers West Coast #56). With just a thought, Wanda can transform her slightest whims into reality. 

prevnext

From Pawn to Queen

After leaving with Magneto and her twin brother Pietro (Avengers West Coast #57), Wanda allies with Magneto despite Quicksilver’s attempt to save her. Immortus continues his plot to rule centuries as the master of time, placing Wanda under a trance during a battle with the Avengers.

(Photo: Marvel Comics)

Just as Quicksilver begins to suspect Magneto was manipulated by someone more powerful than himself, the time traveler reveals himself and takes Wanda as his queen (Avengers West Coast #60).

prevnext

Revelations

Immortus transports the Avengers to Limbo, where he pits Earth’s mightiest heroes against “zombified” enemies making up the Legion of the Unliving to keep them from interfering with business that is “vital to the timeliness of many realities — including, most especially, this one” (Avengers West Coast #61).  

(Photo: Marvel Comics)

Agatha half-sensed Immortus was behind Wanda’s misfortunes — her increased powers, her growing alienation from humanity, and her nonexistent children — and is aware that Earth’s timelines are in danger of unraveling.

Immortus reveals that an omnipotent trio called The Time Keepers — who could enter the MCU in Loki — appointed him custodian of the time stream for the period he lived as Kang: from 3000 B.C. to 4000 A.D. His task: to monitor all time travel spanning seven millennia while untangling realities brought about by various Kangs in exchange for total mastery over seventy centuries. 

prevnext

The Final Fate of the Scarlet Witch

Finally, Immortus reveals he’s been manipulating Wanda’s life for years because the Scarlet Witch is a Nexus being, one that belongs equally to all possible timelines and all realities and divergences. Through Wanda’s power, all futures can be safeguarded and controlled by Immortus, the self-declared master of time. 

(Photo: Marvel Comics)

Immortus explains that his orchestration of Wanda’s tragedies, and the resulting trauma, would make her susceptible to becoming his powerful and indispensable puppet (Avengers West Coast #61 and #62). 

prevnext

Dooming the Multiverse

Agatha’s astral form attempts to reach the entranced Wanda, who is turned into a living power source for Immortus. Urging her to rid herself of the excess power bred in her by Immortus, Agatha desperately tells Wanda she will be useless to him without the ability to alter the probabilities of cosmic timelines. When Wanda’s love for her teammates stirs her from her trance, Immortus curses Agatha for creating new divergences that he says will “wreak irreversible havoc across uncounted realities already in existence” — potentially dooming the entire Multiverse. 

(Photo: Marvel Comics)

As Wanda attempts to draw that power back into herself, thereby preventing a cosmic calamity, the Time Keepers interfere and prevent her from reabsorbing those powers (Avengers West Coast #62). 

prevnext

Future Jeopardy

The Time Keepers tell Immortus his only duty was the eventual transmutation of a particular Nexus being — the Scarlet Witch — into a source of power. They explain: Immortus would then use that power over probabilities to safeguard key events that must occur in various timelines to assure a certain future, including one in which the Time Keepers have a vested interest (Avengers West Coast #62).

(Photo: Marvel Comics)

The trio reveals Immortus could only utilize a pre-existent Nexus being, not create one. When Wanda managed to reject her hex power, they were forced to intervene. “If that power were allowed to cause chaos among the timelines,” they warn, “all futures would be in jeopardy — including that in which we ourselves came into being!” 

prevnext

The Greater Good

When Immortus reveals that the Time Keepers never told him precisely what future he was protecting, they tell the Avengers their unselfish actions were for “the greater good of the cosmos.” 

(Photo: Marvel Comics)

“Should we cease to exist because of befouled timelines, the loss to the Multiverse would be profound,” say the Time Keepers, who send the mutant energy expelled by Scarlet Witch into Immortus. They doom him to an unmoving existence in limbo, transformed into the very same all-powerful energy receptacle he intended Wanda to be, and Wanda returns to the Avengers (Avengers West Coast #62).

New episodes of Marvel’s WandaVision premiere Fridays on Disney+.

If you haven’t signed up for Disney+ yet, you can try it out here. Note: If you purchase one of the awesome, independently chosen products featured here, we may earn a small commission from the retailer. Thank you for your support.

prev

Read original article here

WandaVision episode 3 Easter eggs and Marvel references on Disney Plus

Vision and Wanda are now in full color.


Disney Plus

Episode 3 of Marvel’s WandaVision bursts into color as the suburban sitcom surrealness hits the 1970s. From Quicksilver to SWORD, what Easter eggs and Marvel references does the third installment of the Disney Plus series uncover? Let’s dive in to the mysterious reality of witchy Wanda Maximoff (Elizabeth Olsen) and awkward android Vision (Paul Bettany). 

But be warned: Spoilers for all episodes ahead!

https://cnet2.cbsistatic.com/img/r_4zUzKeDdh16YGo5b4Sx529HPQ=/1092x0/filters:gifv()/2019/04/26/0d76509f-f1e7-4632-8adf-cb898fd43ea0/into-the-spoilers-we-go.gif

Marvel Studios

Welcome to Westview 

All signs point to Wanda and Vision being trapped in some kind of constructed reality. Like, actual literal signs: The billboard welcoming visitors to the town of Westview hints at that artificial nature with the tagline “Home is where you make it.” 

For the children

Vision wants to call the baby Billy, after William Shakespeare, and offers another reference to the artificial nature of the reality (“All the world’s a stage…”). Wanda prefers all-American name Tommy.

They’re in luck, because it turns out they’re having twins! In the comics, Wanda’s desire for children has led to several dramatic (and tragic) storylines. Her twin boys were revealed to be fragments of the demon Mephisto, who may or may not make an appearance in the show. More recently, Wanda’s grown-up sons Billy and Tommy joined the Young Avengers team as heroes Wiccan and Speed.

In episode 3, the unusual nature of Wanda’s pregnancy is clear from its unnervingly accelerated progress, but there are also hints that the babies are in some way artificial. Throughout episode 3, Wanda unconsciously brings life to various inanimate things, including paper butterflies and a painting of a stork. She’s also in some way linked to the technology and infrastructure of the Brady Bunch-style setting, her contractions affecting household gadgets and blowing out the power.

The rewind

The moment Vision actually voices suspicions about the strange reality in which they live, the show glitches. Vision is skipped back a few seconds, but this time his suspicions are gone. It’s not clear how that happened, but when the beekeeper emerged from the manhole in episode 2, we clearly saw it was Wanda who did the rewinding. The question remains whether someone else is in charge of reality and blocked Vision seeing the truth, or whether Wanda herself is in charge — and she’ll even manipulate her beloved Vision to block out harsh reality.

The ads

In episode 1 we saw a Stark Industries toaster. In episode 2 it was a Hydra watch. And in episode 3 the evil Hydra brand returns with a commercial for Hydra Soak Luxury Bath Soap. The first two adverts seemed to be drawn from Wanda’s memories, whereas this one seems linked to the stress of impending parenthood.

The voice-over again hints at an artificial reality (“Escape to a world all your own…”). Meanwhile the ad’s tagline is “Find the goddess within.” That could mean two things: Wanda could free goddess-like power within herself, or it could mean that a goddess is in some way trapped within something — perhaps referring to the constructed reality Wanda and Viz live in.

Once again the actors in the ads are Victoria Blade and Ithamar Enriquez. The recurring presence of the same man and woman in Wanda’s memories suggests it could be her parents.

No home 

Geraldine gets kicked out of Westview in episode 3.


Disney Plus

Geraldine is described as having “no home.” We have no idea the significance of her story about marshmallow moon-men and her hiccuping boss — the name “Haddox” doesn’t come up in the comics that we can think of. Geraldine is, however, the only person in the show who recalls real-world events. Wanda remembers her twin brother Pietro (AKA Quicksilver) but it’s Geraldine who reminds her he was killed in Avengers: Age of Ultron. Wanda coldly ejects Geraldine out of the sitcom reality, yeeting her past some kind of forcefield to land in a field where she’s swarmed by armed agents. It seems likely this official-looking installation is something to do with SWORD, the organization that appears to be observing events and whose symbol Geraldine wears.

Played by Teyonah Parris, Geraldine is reported to be a grown-up version of Monica Rambeau, last seen as a young girl in the movie Captain Marvel. If she’s now in the real world, we may get some answers in episode 4.

The songs

Each week a pop song from the era offers some kind of deeper meaning. Although the show seems to have skipped to the 1970s, this week it’s 1967 hit Daydream Believer by The Monkees. Lines like “Cheer up, sleepy Jean” suggest some kind of enforced sleep or that the setting is some kind of dream or imagined reality. Though the line “Oh, what can it mean?” could refer to viewers trying to figure out what’s going on. 

The paint

Obviously, whenever you see any object or text on screen it’s worth taking a closer look — that’s how eagle-eyed fans spotted the pivotal comics reference on the wine bottle in episode 1. In this installment, the paint cans used by Wanda to decorate the nursery bear the name “Simser.” Another reference to Marvel continuity? No, it’s the name of the show’s storyboard artist Jeremy Simser. Not everything is a clue.

Read original article here

WandaVision episode 3 Easter eggs and Marvel references on Disney Plus

Vision and Wanda are now in full color.


Disney Plus

Episode 3 of Marvel’s WandaVision, streaming now, bursts into color as the suburban sitcom surrealness hits the 1970s. From Quicksilver to SWORD, what Easter eggs and Marvel references does the third installment of the Disney Plus series reveal?

New chapters of the nine-part Disney Plus show arrive every Friday. Starting with episodes 1 and 2, we’re recapping each episode and diving into the mysterious reality of witchy Wanda Maximoff (Elizabeth Olsen) and awkward android Vision (Paul Bettany). 

Here are the Easter eggs we’ve spotted in episode 3. But be warned: Spoilers for all episodes!

https://cnet2.cbsistatic.com/img/r_4zUzKeDdh16YGo5b4Sx529HPQ=/1092x0/filters:gifv()/2019/04/26/0d76509f-f1e7-4632-8adf-cb898fd43ea0/into-the-spoilers-we-go.gif

Marvel Studios

Welcome to Westview 

All signs point to Wanda and Vision being trapped in some kind of constructed reality. Like, actual literal signs: The billboard welcoming visitors to the town of Westview hints at that artificial nature with the tagline “Home is where you make it.” 

For the children

Vision wants to call the baby Billy, after William Shakespeare, and offers another reference to the artificial nature of the reality (“All the world’s a stage…”). Wanda prefers all-American name Tommy.

They’re in luck, because it turns out they’re having twins! In the comics, Wanda’s desire for children has led to several dramatic (and tragic) storylines. Her twin boys were revealed to be fragments of the demon Mephisto, who may or may not make an appearance in the show. More recently, Wanda’s grown-up sons Billy and Tommy joined the Young Avengers team as heroes Wiccan and Speed.

In episode 3, the unusual nature of Wanda’s pregnancy is clear from its unnervingly accelerated progress, but there are also hints that the babies are in some way artificial. Throughout episode 3, Wanda unconsciously brings life to various inanimate things, including paper butterflies and a painting of a stork. She’s also in some way linked to the technology and infrastructure of the Brady Bunch-style setting, her contractions affecting household gadgets and blowing out the power.

The rewind

The moment Vision actually voices suspicions about the strange reality in which they live, the show glitches. Vision is skipped back a few seconds, but this time his suspicions are gone. It’s not clear how that happened, but when the beekeeper emerged from the manhole in episode 2, we clearly saw it was Wanda who did the rewinding. The question remains whether someone else is in charge of reality and blocked Vision seeing the truth, or whether Wanda herself is in charge — and she’ll even manipulate her beloved Vision to block out harsh reality.

The ads

In episode 1 we saw a Stark Industries toaster. In episode 2 it was a Hydra watch. And in episode 3 the evil Hydra brand returns with a commercial for Hydra Soak Luxury Bath Soap. The first two adverts seemed to be drawn from Wanda’s memories, whereas this one seems linked to the stress of impending parenthood.

The voice-over again hints at an artificial reality (“Escape to a world all your own…”). Meanwhile the ad’s tagline is “Find the goddess within.” That could mean two things: Wanda could free goddess-like power within herself, or it could mean that a goddess is in some way trapped within something — perhaps referring to the constructed reality Wanda and Viz live in.

Once again the actors in the ads are Victoria Blade and Ithamar Enriquez. The recurring presence of the same man and woman in Wanda’s memories suggests it could be her parents.

No home 

Geraldine gets kicked out of Westview in episode 3.


Disney Plus

Geraldine is described as having “no home.” We have no idea the significance of her story about marshmallow moon-men and her hiccuping boss — the name “Haddox” doesn’t come up in the comics that we can think of. Geraldine is, however, the only person in the show who recalls real-world events. Wanda remembers her twin brother Pietro (AKA Quicksilver) but it’s Geraldine who reminds her he was killed in Avengers: Age of Ultron. Wanda coldly ejects Geraldine out of the sitcom reality, yeeting her past some kind of forcefield to land in a field where she’s swarmed by armed agents. It seems likely this official-looking installation is something to do with SWORD, the organization that appears to be observing events and whose symbol Geraldine wears.

Played by Teyonah Parris, Geraldine is reported to be a grown-up version of Monica Rambeau, last seen as a young girl in the movie Captain Marvel. If she’s now in the real world, we may get some answers in episode 4.

The songs

Each week a pop song from the era offers some kind of deeper meaning. Although the show seems to have skipped to the 1970s, this week it’s 1967 hit Daydream Believer by The Monkees. Lines like “Cheer up, sleepy Jean” suggest some kind of enforced sleep or that the setting is some kind of dream or imagined reality. Though the line “Oh, what can it mean?” could refer to viewers trying to figure out what’s going on. 

The paint

Obviously, whenever you see any object or text on screen it’s worth taking a closer look — that’s how eagle-eyed fans spotted the pivotal comics reference on the wine bottle in episode 1. In this installment, the paint cans used by Wanda to decorate the nursery bear the name “Simser.” Another reference to Marvel continuity? No, it’s the name of the show’s storyboard artist Jeremy Simser. Not everything is a clue.

Read original article here

WandaVision Episode 3 Cast Guide: Every Marvel Character

WandaVision episode 3 is now out on Disney+ and stars Scarlet Witch (Elizabeth Olsen) and Vision (Paul Bettany). Here’s who else appears.

Warning: SPOILERS for WandaVision episode 3.

The cast of WandaVision episode 3 features the returns of the show’s cast members and introduces a few new characters too. Phase 4 of the Marvel Cinematic Universe officially started with the debut of WandaVision on Disney+. The series brings back Wanda Maximoff aka Scarlet Witch (Elizabeth Olsen) and Vision (Paul Bettany) but places them in a brand new setting. WandaVision‘s first two episodes showcased the beginning of their new suburban lives together in Westview.

After introducing several residents of Westview in the previous episodes, WandaVision episode 3 tells a slightly more contained story. Episode 3 explores the quick pregnancy of Wanda, as she starts showing and gives birth in around 24 hours. Since most of the episode deals with Wanda and Vision preparing for their growing family, they are even more so the focus of WandaVision in episode 3. But, with the show continuing to unravel some of the mystery at its center, there are also plenty of Westview residents who return and some new ones.

Continue scrolling to keep reading
Click the button below to start this article in quick view.

Related: WandaVision: How Is Vision Alive After Infinity War?

WandaVision episode 3 didn’t include any major surprise characters or cameos, but it still featured some of the people Wanda and Vision (and audiences) are starting to get familiar with. There are also a few newcomers who have small roles for the time being. Here’s every character who appears in WandaVision episode 3 and who plays them.

Elizabeth Olsen As Wanda Maximoff Aka Scarlet Witch

Elizabeth Olsen once again stars as Wanda Maximoff aka Scarlet Witch in WandaVision episode 3. MCU viewers know her quite well after four movie appearances, but Olsen is also known for roles in Godzilla and Ingrid Goes West. With WandaVision episode 3, Wanda spends her time trying to cover up her impending pregnancy from suspecting neighbors.

Paul Bettany As Vision

WandaVision episode 3 sees Paul Bettany suit up as Vision once more. Vision is busy in this episode trying to figure out how Wanda is suddenly pregnant and begins to suspect that not all is right in Westview. Bettany has physically appeared in three previous MCU movies and voiced JARVIS in several others. Outside of his android role, Bettany is known for his roles in A Beautiful Mind and Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World.

Kathryn Hahn As Agnes

Kathryn Hahn returns as Agnes for a smaller role in WandaVision episode 3. After having a bit more screentime in the first two episodes, Hahn only briefly appears in the latest episode. Hahn is best known for roles in the Bad Moms franchise and Private Life.

Related: WandaVision Theory: Mephisto (Marvel’s Devil) Is The Real Villain

Teyonah Parris As “Geraldine” Aka Monica Rambeau

Teyonah Parris returns as “Geraldine” in WandaVision episode 3. Following her introduction in episode 2, “Geraldine” plays a much bigger role in the newest WandaVision episode. Of course, “Geraldine” is really the adult version of Monica Rambeau from Captain Marvel. Parris is best known for roles in Chi-Raq and If Beale Street Could Talk.

Randy Oglesby as Doctor Nielson

The biggest new character introduced in WandaVision episode 3 is Randy Oglesby as Doctor Nielson. He consults Wanda and Vision about the upcoming pregnancy. Oglesby has a long career of appearing in movies and TV shows, with some of his most recent credits including GodlessSharp Objects, and Magnum P.I.

WandaVision Episode 3 Guest Stars & Cameos

Emma Caulfield Ford As Dottie – Emma Caulfield Ford appears for a short scene as Dottie in WandaVision episode 3. The actress is best known for her role as Anya in Buffy the Vampire Slayer.

David Lengel as Phil Jones – David Lengel returns as Phil Jones in WandaVision episode 3 alongside Dottie. He previously appeared in episodes of Bosch.

David Payton as Herb – David Payton has a few unnerving scenes as Herb in episode 3. Payton recently had roles in Waves and Chicago P.D. before joining WandaVision.

Ithamar Enriquez as Commercial Man – Ithamar Enriquez returns as the mysterious Commercial Man for episode 3. He can be seen in Lady Bird and A Series of Unfortuante Events.

Victoria Blade as Commercial Woman – Victoria Blade returns as the Commercial Woman in episode 3. She previously appeared in episodes of Doom Patrol and The Outsider.

Wesley Kimmel as Commercial Boy – Wesley Kimmel joins WandaVision in episode 3 as Commercial Boy. The young actor previously appeared in The Rookie and Good Girls.

Sydney Thomas as Commercial Girl – Sydney Thomas appears in WandaVision episode 3 as Commercial Girl. She recently had a role in Netflix’s Tall Girl.

Rose Bianco as Mrs. Nielson – Rose Bianco joins WandaVision in episode 3 as Mrs. Nielson, the wife of Doctor Nielson. Bianco most recently appeared in Cobra Kai as Rosa, the grandmother of Miguel Diaz.

MORE: WandaVision Is Boring? Why Some Marvel Fans Don’t Like The Show

  • Black Widow (2021)Release date: May 07, 2021
  • Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings (2021)Release date: Jul 09, 2021
  • Eternals (2021)Release date: Nov 05, 2021
  • Spider-Man: Homecoming 3 (2021)Release date: Dec 17, 2021
  • Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness (2022)Release date: Mar 25, 2022
  • Thor: Love and Thunder (2022)Release date: May 06, 2022
  • Black Panther 2 (2022)Release date: Jul 08, 2022
  • Captain Marvel 2 (2022)Release date: Nov 11, 2022

WandaVision Proves Fuller House’s Biggest Missed Opportunity


About The Author



Read original article here