OR, was there something wonky with this trial? I keep thinking it has to do with Agatha's mother.
I saw it suggested elsewhere that maybe the trial isn't over yet, and it's actually Billy's trial, not Agatha's.
OR, was there something wonky with this trial? I keep thinking it has to do with Agatha's mother.
He was the one wearing the crown at the end of the episode.I saw it suggested elsewhere that maybe the trial isn't over yet, and it's actually Billy's trial, not Agatha's.
Yes. It was particularly bad in the opening.Did anyone else have any brightness issues?
Glad it wasn't just me!Yes. It was particularly bad in the opening.
I thought this episode was a return to form after the previous one was a bit flat. This one really moved things forward.I feel like I'm liking each subsequent episode less and less. Hopefully it picks up a little.
I've definitely seen this pointed out before, although the music analogy is a new one for me...and I like it.An observation, perhaps not particularly timely or original
Teen's coming into power reminded me of how Witchcraft seems to be represented by Olsen's "finger dancing" when magical energies are being manipulated. Which of course dates back to Wanda's pre-witch appearances in the Avengers' films. This to my eyes is a contrast to the way magic is manipulated by Sorcery in Doctor Strange. Witchcraft is more wild, fluid and unpredictable. Sorcery is controlled, geometric and precise in it's movements. You learn Sorcery in schools and monasteries. You pick up Witchcraft on the streets. Witchcraft is Rock and Roll. Sorcery is Classical.
This has been a strange trend in a lot of streaming series. Netflix, MAX and Disney have all been guilty of this. One scene in House of the Dragon was done in just one brightness unit (sorry don't remember the technical term) and can be ridiculously dark especially on OLED/HDR screens.Yes. It was particularly bad in the opening.
Some pretty big shocks in this one.
Alice's death was the big one, I definitely didn't expect that.
And now we know who "Teen" is. Him turning on the other was a shock too, but I'm assuming there's something more going on with him.
I was a little shocked they were so quick to turn on Agatha at first, but I realized that they have pretty much just been tolerating her presence, so it wasn't quite as shocking as I thought at first.
"Iron Lad"?“Wiccan” and “Hulkling” are probably among the worst named heroes in recent memory.“Speed” is pretty bad as well.
I'm not sure Strange would agree with that analogy, as apt as it may be. You see, he likes rock and roll.An observation, perhaps not particularly timely or original
Teen's coming into power reminded me of how Witchcraft seems to be represented by Olsen's "finger dancing" when magical energies are being manipulated. Which of course dates back to Wanda's pre-witch appearances in the Avengers' films. This to my eyes is a contrast to the way magic is manipulated by Sorcery in Doctor Strange. Witchcraft is more wild, fluid and unpredictable. Sorcery is controlled, geometric and precise in it's movements. You learn Sorcery in schools and monasteries. You pick up Witchcraft on the streets. Witchcraft is Rock and Roll. Sorcery is Classical.
I like this!An observation, perhaps not particularly timely or original
Teen's coming into power reminded me of how Witchcraft seems to be represented by Olsen's "finger dancing" when magical energies are being manipulated. Which of course dates back to Wanda's pre-witch appearances in the Avengers' films. This to my eyes is a contrast to the way magic is manipulated by Sorcery in Doctor Strange. Witchcraft is more wild, fluid and unpredictable. Sorcery is controlled, geometric and precise in it's movements. You learn Sorcery in schools and monasteries. You pick up Witchcraft on the streets. Witchcraft is Rock and Roll. Sorcery is Classical.
A similar, although more crude, analogy comes from Firefly, where even Inara admitted that there was a difference between a "companion", which required training, a license and a guild membership, and a, well, I'm going to use the word "prostitute" rather than the word that the show used.
From "Heart of Gold"...You mean the word Mal Reynolds used within the show, which represented his own attitudes, not his creators'. Joss Whedon created Mal specifically because he wished to explore writing a character whose values he strongly disagreed with.
In the comics it turned out Wanda used parts of Mephisto to create Tommy and Billy, and after they were eventually erased the souls ended up being reborn as the current versions of Billy and Tommy, who end up becoming Wiccan and Speed.And where is Billy from? Is he a Billy from another universe because I thought the Billy and Tommy in our universe were constructions of Wanda's imagination and faded away at the end of WandaVision.
Wibbly Wobbly Timey WimeyIn the comics it turned out Wanda used parts of Mephisto to create Tommy and Billy, and after they were eventually erased the souls ended up being reborn as the current versions of Billy and Tommy, who end up becoming Wiccan and Speed.
Obviously since Mephisto still hasn't been introduced in the MCU they can't use him, but I could see them still using the basic idea of them having real souls who were then reincarnated after they were erased at the end of WandaVision. The only issue with that is the fact that Billy is a teenager and not 5 years old, I'm not sure how the comics addressed this if they did at all.
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