E.H. Ruddock wrote:It's Tony Stark, duh
I was wondering was it him doing it and trying to contain her but he’s obviously dead
So maybe not
E.H. Ruddock wrote:It's Tony Stark, duh
It was a Luke Skywalker moment for her character.dimejinky99 wrote:wease wrote:Olsen clearly didn’t understand the significance of Luke appearing in The Mandalorian.
We shouldn’t assume it was the brother showing up that she was referring to. Majority of people didn’t know who he was as far as I can tell.
Agatha Harkness?VinylGuy wrote:there is some else involved....havent you heard Agatha?
yeah, but so far its Agnes.wease wrote:I think you were still correct.
Back when I was teaching, at least once a semester, I would get a paper that would start with: "These different parts of the story symbolize the different stages of grief." Before reading the next sentence, my eyes would roll back in my head, and I would fall on the floor in a fit, only to wake up hours later covered in my own piss. So what I'm saying is that I don't think it's that.dimejinky99 wrote: I had thought the time jumps were something to do with states of grief but I’m not sure now.
McParadigm wrote:lol
BingoVinylGuy wrote:yeah, but so far its Agnes.wease wrote:I think you were still correct.
Depends on how close they adhere to the comics. They were real using pieces of the soul of Master Pandemonium and Wanda’s powers but were erased later on.dimejinky99 wrote:Raises another question. The kids aren’t real. Or are they?
What’s she gonna be Like coming out of this
Look at the lyrics to the theme song:Simple Torture wrote:Back when I was teaching, at least once a semester, I would get a paper that would start with: "These different parts of the story symbolize the different stages of grief." Before reading the next sentence, my eyes would roll back in my head, and I would fall on the floor in a fit, only to wake up hours later covered in my own piss. So what I'm saying is that I don't think it's that.dimejinky99 wrote: I had thought the time jumps were something to do with states of grief but I’m not sure now.
I think it's nearly the opposite: Wanda is moving through different eras of television in order to live through the different stages of her life she could've had with Vision if he had lived, from the honeymoon phase to trying to explain the unfairness of life to kids (made even tougher when you have the power to do nearly everything, but can't do the one thing they want). The time jumps happen so quickly because I think Wanda wants to experience everything and assumes she has a limited amount of time; in this most recent episode, I think things are moving even faster than she wants (kids growing, dog dying, etc.), probably stemming from the fact that even an all-powerful mutant isn't made to organize a whole universe, and it's getting away from her.