The final moments of WandaVision episode 2 fully introduce color into a world that was previously black-and-white. The Marvel show presented its first two episodes in black-and-white as an ode to sitcoms of the golden era of television. But that changed when Wanda desperately needed it to.
The entire first episode of WandaVision is given this monochromatic look, leading fans to question whether the whole show would be shot in black and white. However, while the series initially keeps this aesthetic as it jumps forward a decade to the 1960s, we do get our first splash of colour in episode two.
"Now in Color" is the third episode of the American television miniseries WandaVision, based on Marvel Comics featuring the characters Wanda Maximoff / Scarlet Witch and Vision.
Marvel specifies that the WandaVision crew filmed in black and white for a few of the episodes, but the whole show isn't monochromatic: The trailers and promos for WandaVision show a lot of action filmed in vibrant color.
Who is White Vision? Spoilers ahead for the WandaVision finale. In its final two episodes WandaVision introduced an intriguing new character to the MCU – "White Vision," aka the original body of Vision reprogrammed and brought to life with some of Wanda's magic and intended to be a deadly weapon.
In the comics, while White Vision cannot feel love for Wanda, he always respects their relationship as man and wife. It's likely that we'll see Westview Vision stick around too.
Wanda was only interested in getting her kids back, but they were never with Vision, who likely would have been their father as he was in WandaVision. Olsen also revealed to Collider that the decision was made for her character to only seek out a universe where it was just her and her kids.
When Wanda finally pulled down the Hex, it erased him, and the twins, and the house that they lives in, from existence. And the White Vision, built from Vision's destroyed body by Hayward and S.W.O.R.D., is still alive and well.
Elizabeth Olsen and Paul Bettany are the highlights of the series, they make a very good couple with their characters. WandaVision is a series that begins as a fun comedy and then offers the dose of special effects that are never lacking in Marvel installments. My rating for this series is 8/10.
if you look at her hands you can see they turn black when she uses the darkhold. her blackened fingers are her price. the reason her fingers are affected is because of how she useed the darkhold energy the most.
The last line in the sequence came from Danvers: "Your mum's lucky. When they were handing out kids, they gave her the toughest one." This gave Monica the strength to push through, and she emerged into Westview with glowing blue eyes and heightened vision.
The special effects team realized that Vision's purple skin didn't transition well into black-and-white, testing with footage from past MCU movies but finding it didn't look like him., Because of that, they tried out a few options until they found the correct shade of blue that would allow for his appearance to look ...
She stands in opposition to Tony Stark, blaming Stark Industries for her parents' deaths. Eventually, she swaps sides and becomes an Avenger—and her hair signals this transition. In Age of Ultron, Wanda has brown hair. It lightens a bit and goes almost auburn in her next appearance, Captain America: Civil War.
"WandaVision" is Marvel's first ever Disney Plus TV show. Each episode is made in the style of famous sitcoms from the decade in which the episode is set.
Wanda initially comes into conflict with the Avengers but later joins them, becoming one of their most powerful members. Elizabeth Olsen as Wanda Maximoff / Scarlet Witch in the WandaVision episode "The Series Finale" (2021).
You can pretty much watch Phase Four of the MCU in any order. The best watch strategy here, if you haven't been following along, is to focus only on the titles that interest you. If you like the Scarlet Witch, watch WandaVision. If you like Loki, watch Loki.
Avengers: Endgame
WandaVision takes place a few weeks after this film, so you really get the emotional impact coming out of this movie and jumping right into WandaVision. You will really understand the trauma.
The canon proves that Wanda Maximoff does become a villain several times, but she almost always finds her way back to the side of heroism. She awakens from a brainwashed state and decides to spend time in solitude after the events of Avengers Disassembled, but officially returns to the Avengers in Avengers vs. X-Men.
By manipulating Wanda and feeding into audiences' prejudice, Marvel has all the ingredients to perpetuate an infinite multiverse to prop up its male heroes: Create a woman protagonist that isn't able to fully comprehend her own emotions or powers, exploit her naivety and mental health, manifest her trauma as a ...
A new Wanda is on the way
Earth-838 Wanda is alive after the events of the movie, and if she returned, it gives us another in to bring Billy and Tommy into the Young Avengers.
Wanda was neither an evil being nor was she the real antagonist. Wanda was only a villain because the Darkhold corrupted her. Compared to the threat of a Sinister Strange in the making, the Scarlet Witch was only grieving on her terms.
Scarlet Witch's power goes beyond what Doctor Strange or any other character in the MCU could imagine, so with that in mind, she might have been more resistant to other physical consequences of the Darkhold, as is the third eye.
While speaking with Collider, Olsen revealed why Wanda set her sights solely on her children rather than her husband in Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness. She explains that with Wanda having become a mother in WandaVision, that is now her main driving instinct.
Wanda couldn't make anything. She could only alter reality. Hence, she had to create a separate dimension, out of the real world, just like sorcerers don't create power, they only draw power from other dimensions.