So, Wandavision?

It's not necessary. People are overthinking this.

The idea that Wanda, an immigrant from eastern Europe, has fantasies inspired by classic American television . . . . I don't find that odd or in any need of explanation.

Yeah, I don’t think it’s necessary. But I don’t think there’d be any drawback to including something like that. Especially since it would only need a minute or so of time.

And especially if there wind up being other reasons to have such a flashback or similar scene.
 

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@Dire Bare: What if we want to overthink it? What if we derive pleasure from overthinking it? Is that wrong?

Another thought I had in the shower just now: If we assume that Vision is real (regardless of the specifics) and that Wanda is in control of this fantasy land, then what she is doing to him, while perhaps born out of love, is essentially a kind of abuse. When (not if) Vision finds out the truth, it seems unlikely he is going to want to continue his relationship with her. If what we are seeing is Wanda's descent into madness-induced villainy, then Vision's awakening and subsequent rejection of her could be what ultimately breaks her.
 





If what we are seeing is Wanda's descent into madness-induced villainy, then Vision's awakening and subsequent rejection of her could be what ultimately breaks her.
Either that or ultimately when the fiction breaks and Fiction Vision is consumed alongside with it. I feel like the Your dead trailer line could be what sets Fiction Vision to seek out the truth even more and start confronting Wanda about what she's doing.
 

Yeah: during that segment she "broke character" when that happened.
I'm not hearing it. She sings a lullaby to the babies in "Sokovian" but when she's speaking, it all just sounds American (except for the way she pronounces her brother's name). Is there a specific line I should be listening to?
 

Either that or ultimately when the fiction breaks and Fiction Vision is consumed alongside with it. I feel like the Your dead trailer line could be what sets Fiction Vision to seek out the truth even more and start confronting Wanda about what she's doing.
Maybe, but, as I mentioned earlier, we already know from Monica’s expulsion that things changed on the inside stay changed on the outside.
 

I'm not hearing it. She sings a lullaby to the babies in "Sokovian" but when she's speaking, it all just sounds American (except for the way she pronounces her brother's name). Is there a specific line I should be listening to?
Starting with “I had a brother.” Mostly, it’s the cadence.
 

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