Thomas Shey
Legend
I will just note the Darkhold didn't come out of nowhere; that was set up in Wandavision.
It’s only in the Agents of Shield that the Darkhold is really shown. WandaVision has it, but we are only told that it is evil. We aren’t shown. And, while Agnes is evil, she seemed that way before getting the book, and didn’t seem to be worse for having it.I will just note the Darkhold didn't come out of nowhere; that was set up in Wandavision.
It’s only in the Agents of Shield that the Darkhold is really shown. WandaVision has it, but we are only told that it is evil. We aren’t shown. And, while Agnes is evil, she seemed that way before getting the book, and didn’t seem to be worse for having it.
If folks knew that Wanda had the darkhold, they out to have convened at her location as if she had an un-exploded hydrogen bomb.
TomB
The key phrase her is "if". To the best of our knowledge, the only people who knew about it being there were her and Agnes.
And as to being told and not shown--at a certain point, I'm really hard pressed to require filmmakers to unpack every statement they make on screen. If someone says that a particular bioweapon is singularly deadly, they don't have to show me that it is for me to take them at their word.
Not every statement, sure. But key plot points should be shown. (I think this is good point to be made for designing adventures.)
There is a scene at the beginning of “The Rock” with Nicholas Cage where a deadly biotoxin is being stolen. There is an accident and some of the toxin is released. Some of the thieves are sealed in a bunker and left to die. We see the fast acting toxin kill them in seconds as they foam at the mouth and their skin blisters.
Further, there is another scene where the Cage character attempts to diffuse a bioweapon. His parter accidentally sets it off and they have to take extra-ordinary steps to save themselves.
The lethality of the stolen biotoxin is a key plot point. We are not just told. We are very clearly shown the lethality of the toxin. This really helps to propel the story.
TomB
This is a fair point. Agatha doesn't really seem "corrupted" by the book anymore than she was already, and she might have had the thing for years for all we know. On the other hand, I think the movie does a good job in its own scences highlighting how destructive and corrupting the book is....by its affects on other strange's in other multiverses. So I think the movie is consistent within itself, its just not necessarily consistent with Wandavision. On the other other hand, perhaps the fact taht Agatha was already pretty twisted means the book didn't have much it needed to do.It’s only in the Agents of Shield that the Darkhold is really shown. WandaVision has it, but we are only told that it is evil. We aren’t shown. And, while Agnes is evil, she seemed that way before getting the book, and didn’t seem to be worse for having it.
If folks knew that Wanda had the darkhold, they out to have convened at her location as if she had an un-exploded hydrogen bomb.
No-price explanation: since the effect was both limited by and bounded by the hex, it wasn't detectable outside of it to sorcerous methods. We do see that when the Vision tries to leave, he starts disintegrating because he just doesn't exist in the outside world.The note about the "unexploded hydrogen bomb"....I do feel like one major element that was completely missing from Wandavision and this movie is... the utter incompetance of Kamotajj. There was a major magical event on Earth, and not a peep from them. Hell when Thor and Loki come to earth looking for Odin, Dr Strange immediately picks up on them. But an entire town gets mindcontrolled by chaos power and they are like..."meh".
I love that explanation.... except Agatha found it using sorcerous methodsNo-price explanation: since the effect was both limited by and bounded by the hex, it wasn't detectable outside of it to sorcerous methods. We do see that when the Vision tries to leave, he starts disintegrating because he just doesn't exist in the outside world.
The Crazy Woman trope is old, and tired, and sexist.