Suburban Sitcom Surrealism dates back to the 1970s, when Marvel’s episode of Vendavision took on 3 colors. How do Easter Egg and Marvel references come out of the third installment of the Disney Plus series, from Quixilever to Sdb Ord? Let’s dye to the mysterious reality of the witch Wanda Maximoff (Elizabeth Olsen) and the awkward Android Vision (Paul Betny).
But be warned: Sp Sp Ellers for all episodes ahead!
Welcome to Westview
All signs point to Wanda and Vision being trapped in some kind of constructed reality. Namely, real literal hints: a billboard welcoming visitors to the city of Westview, with a T Home line on Artificial Nature, signals “Home is where you make it.”
For children
Vision wants to call the child Billy, after William Shakespeare, and another reference to the artificial nature of reality (“all stages of the world …”). Wanda prefers the all-American name Tommy.
They are in luck, as it turns out they are having twins! In the com mix, Wanda’s desire for children led to many dramatic (and tragic) storylines. Her twin boys turned out to be pieces of the Mephisto monster, which may or may not appear on the show. Most recently, Wanda’s older sons Billy and Tommy joined the Young Avengers team as Weeks and Speed.
In episode 3, the unusual nature of Wanda’s pregnancy is evident from her pale accelerating progression, but there are also indications that the babies are somehow artificial. Throughout Episode 3, Wanda unconsciously brings to life a variety of inanimate objects, including paintings of paper butterflies and storks. She is also somehow connected to the technical and infrastructural features of a brisk crowd-style setting, her shrinkage affecting home gadgets and draining out power.
Rewind
The moment Vision really raises doubts about the strange reality in which the show resides. The vision is left behind for a few seconds, but this time his doubts are gone. It’s not clear how that happened, but when the beekeeper came out of the manhole in episode 2 we clearly saw that it was Wanda who did the rewinding. The question remains whether someone else is in charge of reality and blocking the vision as to whether Wanda herself is in charge – and she will also manipulate her favorite vision to block the harsh reality.
The ads
In episode 1 we saw Stark Industries Toaster. In episode 2 it was the Hydra Watch. And in episode 3 the evil Hydra brand Hydra Sook returns with the professional of bath soaps. The first two commercials seemed to be drawn from Wanda’s memories, while this one seemed to be associated with a strained paternalistic tension.
The is-over again hints at artificial reality (“Run into your own world …”). The ad’s tagline, meanwhile, is “Find the Goddess Inside.” It could mean two things: Wanda could release a goddess-like power within himself, or it could mean that somehow a goddess is trapped in something – perhaps the constructed reality is mentioned in Wanda and Viz.
Once again the ads feature actors Victoria Blade and Ithamar Enriquez. The frequent presence of the same man and woman in Wanda’s memories suggests that he may have been her parents.
Not home
Geraldine’s description is “not home.” We don’t care about his story about the marshmallow moon-men and his swinging boss – the name “Haddox” we can’t think of in a mix. Geraldine, however, is the only person on the show who remembers real-world events. Wanda remembers his twin brother Pietro (AK Quixilever), but it’s Geraldine who reminds him that he was killed in the Avengers: Yute of Ultron. Wanda took Geraldine out of the cool of the Siratcom reality. In her past, some kind of forcefield led her to land in an area where she was armed by armed agents. This may seem to have to do with the official-looking installation, the organization that appears to be overseeing events and whose symbol Geraldine wears.
A grown version of Geraldine Monica Rambou, played by Teonah Paris, is said to have last appeared in the movie as a young girl. Captain Marvel. If it’s in the real world now, we might find some answers in Episode 4.
Lyrics
One pop song of the age every week provides some kind of deep meaning. Although the show seems to go back to the 1970s, this week it will hit Daydream Brillier by the Monkeys in 1967. Lines like “cheer up, sleep gene” indicate some kind of implementation sleep or that setting is a kind of dream or imaginary reality. Although the line “Oh, what does that mean?” May refer to viewers trying to figure out what’s going on.
Paint
Naturally, whenever you see an object, object or text on the screen, it’s worth a closer look – in the same way Garuda-eyed fans referred to the main com mix on the wine bottle in episode 1. In this installment, cans of paint were used by Wanda to equip. The name in the nursery is “Simsar”. Another reference to Marvel Continuity? No, that’s the name of the show’s storyboard artist Jeremy Simser. Not everything is the key.
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