• magnetosphere@fedia.io
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    5 months ago

    Funny timing. I just finished rewatching WandaVision the other day. I remember liking it the first time, but it’s better once you’ve seen the films that come afterwards and know more about her character.

    • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Knowing her character from the comics also helps fill out the narrative. I thought the leap from WandaVision to Dr Strange was a jarring heel turn, and I was hoping to get more of the conflicted and confused Wanda in VisionQuest, but now I don’t want her to be in it at all.

      • VerseAndVermin@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        If anything I thought the show treated her with kids gloves by the end. She did monstrous things to the people of the town. I cannot recall the exact line, it’s been a while, but they described the type of torment it was.

        • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          The show was told from her perspective. She did monstrous things, but subconsciously. She was as much a victim as any of the other residents (save Agatha of course) and chose to sacrifice her family in order to release her victims. Even the memory-constructed Vision had the morality and humanity to talk her down from the horror she had created.

      • cmbabul@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        It was for sure an abrupt heel turn but I thought it was pretty well telegraphed. But I also do know her comics character so I could’ve just had a bias

        • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          It was definitely telegraphed, but it felt like they wanted to make it some crazy twist rather than actually show her character transition from tormented and chaotic to murderous villain.

      • BigFig@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        I took her character as more being corrupted at that point than a “heal turn” honestly. Like she wasn’t fully in control of herself by the time of MoM

        • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          I know they were going for corruption via the Darkhold, but considering the movie begins with her murdering Doctor Strange, it just felt abrupt to me. Like, we’re fresh off the heels of her feeling really bad about what she inadvertently did to a bunch of innocent people in Westview, and then all of the internal conflict is just gone.

          • BigFig@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            Hmm, idk she felt conflicted but certainly not BAD imo. She was internally still able to justify her actions. And then the post credit scene of Wandavision was her pouring over the darkhold and her hands started to get fucked up if I remember. If she’s willing to use the darkhold then she surely stopped feeling bad if she ever did to begin with. Then not long after that is MoM

            Certainly they could have paced things better, but it was just like everything else in this most recent phase, too fast and not enough explanation

          • Omega@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            TBF, she felt bad about torturing the town. But she was fully aware that they were being held captive. She was just delusional about them being happier under control without freedom. Once she accepted her reality, it didn’t seem like a huge leap to her MoM self.

            • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              I’d have to watch it again, but my take was that she had subconsciously created Westview, and even when she realized what was happening, she was in deep denial and couldn’t really control it. She didn’t murder innocent people, especially friends and kids. She didn’t even kill the soldiers threatening her family and desecrating her husband’s corpse.

              • Omega@lemmy.world
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                5 months ago

                I don’t know if she could control it. But she also never tried to. Regardless, she totally knew that they were trapped and she didn’t care.

                However, she was in denial about herself being good. She thought the trapped people were happy. Hence she also didn’t murder. That delusion broke at the end of WV. People just assumed she would go good rather than going further off the deep-end. But with the Darkhold there was only one direction to go.

        • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          If you know the character, you expect it.

          If you know what the Darkhold is, you understand what’s happening in that cabin.

          But at the end of Westview, Wanda makes a heroic sacrifice. She’s unwilling to keep a town enslaved to keep her family. She has to let go of her husband and her children to do the right thing.

          Smash cut to MoM five minutes later, and she’s murdering Doctor Strange, trying to murder America Chavez for her reality hopping power, and planning to murder her variant in another universe. It’s not quite Anakin cutting down younglings, but it was unexpected based on what we actually see in the show and the movie.

          WandaVision did a great job with her pathos and conflict. Multiverse of Madness skipped over the rest of her descent into the literal multiverse of madness. Sure, it’s a straight line if you extrapolate all the interesting things that happened off screen. But that’s the movie I wanted to see. Evil Scarlet Witch is just another generic villain with no redeeming qualities.

          Imagine a version of that movie where Wanda starts as an actual ally, influenced by the Darkhold but still reeling from what she did, and what she lost, in Westview. She meets Chavez and realizes what she can reclaim. She reluctantly turns on the sorcerers of Kamar Taj, and then we see, rather than told, that she has been merciful up until that point. We see, rather than are told, the influence of the Darkhold, so that we understand what happens when Darkhold Strange shows up at the end, and what Hero Strange is risking by using it.

          I liked the movie. It was OK. I just felt like they sacrificed a better movie to include a first act twist that everyone saw coming anyway.

  • BluesF@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    The Marvel TV shows have imo been much better than the films for a while now. Moon Knight, Falcon and the Winter Soldier, What If?.. All great.

    • Damage@feddit.it
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      5 months ago

      FatWS had a great premise, but kinda went nowhere with it. Of course Daniel Brühl makes everything better, but good actors can’t make up for bad script.

      • BluesF@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Personally I really liked the story it told pretty much throughout. It’s a while since I saw it, but I remember enjoying the more serious tone & challenges. It was nice seeing issues that the characters didn’t just have to punch haha.

        • Damage@feddit.it
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          5 months ago

          Problem is, in the end they made it so the solution was punches, by making the so-far-nuanced flag smashers suddenly evil

          • BluesF@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            I wasn’t really considering the flag smashers, honestly, they didn’t leave much of an impact. I was thinking more about Sam & Bucky’s separate personal struggles - Sam with becoming a black Captain America, and Bucky with making amends. To me the real interesting conflict was not the one with the flag smashers - that just forms a standard comic-book backdrop to the more interesting look at America itself.

      • jacksilver@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        I think the issue is that they clearly wrote themselves into a corner with the pseudo 5 year timeskip. They still want the world to feel like the present, but have to deal with the fact that literally nothing would look anything like the present if half the population disappeared for 5 years. It’s hilarious when movies like Spiderman almost completely ignore those events.