I absolutely loved Kahhori and her story. As noted by Uatu, what made Kahhori so distinctive was her conviction to stay true to her nature in the face of the cruelty of evil and the riches of the good. She helped shaped not just her own world, but also helped the Mohawk descendants who benefited from the Space Stone in their Sky World. By bringing those two worlds together, she completely changed the course of history and hopefully for the better.
I love the craft and dedication and care in bringing this episode together. I'm thrilled that the showrunners wisely brought in the proper people to help shape this episode on all levels, from the writing to the music to the artwork to the acting, which helped properly represent the Mohawk people, their culture, and their history. I hope this is only just the beginning of Kahhori and her story and that we'll see more of her, not just in What If...?, but well beyond the show to further tell her story in all forms.
My only complaint about the episode, and I knew this was coming thanks to the opening credits, was the closing scene with Supreme Strange arriving to collect Kahhori for whatever greater goal that he has now (which undoubtedly will involve Captain Carter and 1602).
I love the craft and dedication and care in bringing this episode together. I'm thrilled that the showrunners wisely brought in the proper people to help shape this episode on all levels, from the writing to the music to the artwork to the acting, which helped properly represent the Mohawk people, their culture, and their history. I hope this is only just the beginning of Kahhori and her story and that we'll see more of her, not just in What If...?, but well beyond the show to further tell her story in all forms.
My only complaint about the episode, and I knew this was coming thanks to the opening credits, was the closing scene with Supreme Strange arriving to collect Kahhori for whatever greater goal that he has now (which undoubtedly will involve Captain Carter and 1602).
Oh, right, duh, of course. That makes much more sense. Especially considering how 1602 originated in the comic story (I mean that Peggy's arrival there is a wink to that, not as the reason for 1602's origins). I feel like a dunce for not seeing that before.That's late Renaissance/early Enlightenment era, not Medieval. They're setting up an adaptation of Marvel Comics' "1602" alternate reality.
Kahhori and her story were created for this episode.The latest episode was strange. I don’t know who that person is at all. The tesseract can give you force powers it seems
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