AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |
Back to Blog
![]() What follows in the six-episode first season was a bold new corner of the MCU never shown before. After disapperaing in 2012 after the events of Avengers: Endgame, 2012 Loki ( Tom Hiddleston) is abruptly abducted by the TVA (Time Variance Authority). Loki is the most important project in regards to the Multiverse at this point. This tampering of realities could be something addressed in her next appearance, 2022's Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness. This is foretold in the end credits scene for Wanda Vision, which shows the Scarlet Witch in possession of the Darkhold, seemingly on a search for a way to obtain her children that were created in her "Hex" reality. Eventually, in the show itself, it's hinted that Wanda herself is a "nexus being," meaning her immense power could affect not only this universe, but others. The commercial describes the medication as helping ground you back into "your reality". The last commercial we see is a play on a medication ad for a pill called Nexus. Throughout the show's sticom-styled episodes, commercial breaks hint at Wanda's darker past. While the gtreater plot of the show has more to deal with Wanda coming to grips with her trauma, there's something more intense at work in regards to Wanda's power. WandaVision has an extremely important hint to something greater and more dangerous at play in Marvel's Phase 4. While not entirely explored, The Avengers still go through different points in time, creating alternate timelines until Steve Rogers returns the infinity stones to their respective timelines at the end of the film. This is shown to the audience through the imagery of diverging branches, which is important to remember as similar imagery takes place in another project down the line. More specifically, if the Infinity Stones are not returned to the point in time from which the Avengers are obtaining them, darker and more twisted realities could take form. When Bruce Banner ( Mark Ruffalo) attempts to take the time stone from the Ancient One, the audience is treated to somewhat lengthy exposition in which the branching of realities that could take place is explained to Bruce Banner. ![]() The film has one critical scene taking place in New York in 2012. RELATED: ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ Coloring Book Shows Off Possible Villains/Heroes in MCU FilmĪvengers: Endgame is filled to the brim with exciting new concepts that have long-lasting effects on future projects, even though it serves as a bookend to the story that started with Iron Man in 2008. Before No Way Home, let's take a look at what we know about the Multiverse so far from the projects that it has been referenced in. ![]() Up until this point, the Multiverse isn't something that has been explored on the film side of MCU Phase Four projects rather, the groundwork for the Multiverse is something that has been laid in the Disney+ projects that are a part of Marvel's Phase Four. One of the most intruiging parts of No Way Home is the fact that the Multiverse, in one way or another, seems to be playing an intergral role in the film. Unfortunately, in usual Parker luck, the spell to do so goes horribly wrong, and instead results in Multiversal chaos that finds villains from the likes of Doctor Octopus ( Alfred Molina) making his way to the MCU. ![]() This third installment finds Peter Parker ( Tom Holland) turning to Doctor Strange for help in reversing the reveal of his identity to the world. "The Multiverse is a concept about which we know frighteningly little." Those are the words spoken by Doctor Strange ( Benedict Cumberbatch), resident sorcerer of the MCU and the latest to inhabit a mentor-like role in the Sony-MCU Spider-Man series of films, in the trailer for Spider-Man: No Way Home. ![]()
0 Comments
Read More
Leave a Reply. |