gwyn: (hawkeye)
gwyn ([personal profile] gwyn) wrote2021-01-18 02:36 pm

Persistence of memory & 31 flavors The Avengers

Thanks to a friend who's given me access, I was able to catch the first few episodes of WandaVision this weekend. It's...I don't know. Okay? I'm somewhat irritated with the pacing and I really hope that there will be less overall of the whole sitcommy hijinks of each episode and more of the sinister stuff we saw in the trailers. The few bits of sinister stuff were fun, especially the way color crept in in small spots (the light on the toaster in ep 1 and the helicopter and blood in ep 2), and Debra Jo Rupp is truly the MVP of TV comedy if you ask me. I don't know enough about Wanda as a character or have the deep background in Avengers to know if that sword logo on the helicopter was intended to be (durr SWORD, I meant, don't know why the brain blip), or if the beekeeping guy was supposed to be AIM or a character I don't know of called Swarm. But those were the most interesting bits, to me.

It was also nice to see Emma Caulfield again--I feel like I haven't seen her since her Anya the Vengeance Demon days. Paul Bettany is dead to me because of all that shit with Depp, so I was meh on him anyway but he didn't exactly make me any more of a Vision fan than I was (which was nil), but I like Wanda slightly more and so she's the one draw here for me. I'm really curious to see where Kathryn Hahn's character goes, maybe more than the leads. The umlaut on Strucker is driving me nuts. So I don't yet feel like I have a lot of deep thoughts on it, but at least it's something new to watch.

But I think the real thing I'm wondering is--and I have to rewatch that second episode to see if I'm wildly off base or not--whether or not that voice on the radio saying "Wanda. Who's doing this to you, Wanda?" was Jeremy Renner. It sure sounded like him in the moment last night, but maybe I'm really wrong about that. It'd be interesting though, right? Clint was the most protective of her, closest to her.


Since I'm talking about Wanda, I thought I'd make today's rec about her.

Pour Back the Ocean by [archiveofourown.org profile] imperfectcircle (The Avengers, 10,907 words, T)
Summary: After the events of Age of Ultron, Wanda has to find a new place in the world. Contains team training exercises, expected grief and unexpected kindness.

This came out after Age of Ultron, and gives Wanda a believable journey toward integrating with the team and finding some peace after the loss of her brother. I really appreciated its accurate portrayal of what losing a twin feels like.
kore: (Default)

[personal profile] kore 2021-01-19 12:32 am (UTC)(link)
I def couldn't have been able to tell who it was if everyone hadn't been like "It's Jimmy Woo!" including Feige I think, lol. You can see him really quick in the second trailer (no spoilers in this article) https://comicbook.com/marvel/news/wandavision-trailer-features-return-of-randall-park-jimmy-woo/ That's the one tracked to "Daydream Believer." It's around the one-minute mark, after Vision says "Then let's fight for it." We also see Darcy for a hot second, so maybe she's with the FBI? Or SWORD? Or Thor is involved? (Wait no, Thor is off with the Guardians. I don't think Jane is in this series?)

That Wanda story was really neat, altho gosh was it accurate about grief. I dunno why the second anniversary of my dad's death hit me so hard this year -- no, 2020 was last year now --, altho I think part of it was thinking how much he would have liked to have seen Trump defeated. (He wouldn't have liked Biden, tho. And I don't know if he was compos mentis enough at the end to really know what was happening around him anyway.)