[8.2/10] What a blast this is. I’m impressed both at how well WandaVision is able to replicate the 1950s sitcom vibe, especially for supernatural-themed comedies like Bewitched mixed with The Dick van Dyke show, while also including a subtle but palpable sense of existential terror beneath the three camera confines of the show.

I really enjoy how this first episode plays on the classic sitcom tropes: a couple not remembering an important date on the calendar, a wacky neighbor, a boss coming over for dinner who needs to be impressed. The show does a nice spin on them, while also feeling true to the sitcoms it’s paying homage to. I’m particularly stunned by the cast, who are able to replicate that acting style, and the editors and other behind the scenes craftsmen, who are able to replicate the rhythm, to such perfection.

What’s neat is that the episode works pretty perfectly separate and apart from its larger MCU connections as a solid old school sitcom pastiche. There’s a lot of nice setup and payoffs of gags, like Wanda repurposing a magazine's “Ways to please your man” article to distract her husband’s boss and his wife, or Vision singing “Yakety Yak” after decrying it earlier. Even the lobster door knocker routine was a fun and comical grace note to an earlier bit. As cornball as it is, there’s something charming about this sort of thing, right down to the “What do we actually do here?” gag about the computer company. And despite the light spoofing at play, this works as a solid meat and potatoes sitcom episode.

But the show goes a step further and has real fun with the fact that its leads are a self-described witch and a magical mechanical man respectively. There’s tons of amusing gags, starting with the intro, about the pair using their powers in trifling 1950s household sorts of ways. At the same time, it does well with the jokes about hiding their true identities. Vision writing off Wanda’s behavior as “European”, Wanda reassuring her neighbor that her husband is human, and Vision taking offense when a coworker tells him he’s a “walking computer” are all entertaining bits that make the most of the weird premise.

And yet, what really elevates this episode is the unnerving hints that there’s something terribly wrong going on here. It’s not hard to guess that after the events of Endgame, there’s still concerns about what happened to vision. The show plays with the melodic rhythms of the sitcom form to suggest something off at the edges here, in a really sharp way.

For instance, there’s an interstitial commercial featuring a Stark toaster, and not only does it feature the only bit of color in the black and white presentation with the beeping light, but the toasting takes just a beat too long for comfort. Likewise, the fact that Wanda and Vision can’t remember their story or how they got married is initially played for laughs, but then it becomes creepy when Mrs. Hart demands answers.

The peak of this comes when Mr. Hart chokes on his broccoli and the artifice freezes for a moment, leaving everyone paralyzed by the departure from how things work in this sort of situation. It’s a great piece of work, of a piece with the likes of Twin Peaks and Don’t Hug Me I’m Scared in its quiet horror.

I’ll refrain from speculating about who’s watching the broadcast we see or who’s in the monitoring room we seem to have an eye on, but the hints at what's really going on, and how that influences the images the audience witnesses, creates a great organic mystery and another layer to the proceedings.

Overall, this is a boffo debut for the series, and I’m excited to watch more!

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@andrewbloom Insightful commentary, all this from just one episode. I don't pick up on as much of the decade-specific references so I appreciate these in your reviews, but I still notice the deliberate acting styles, awkwardness introduced by design rather than deficit, and feel similarly in regards to the unusually subtle, sinister signs of problems in a cinematic universe known for world-ending threats through violence.
Looking forward to seeing how it unfolds only slightly more than I'm looking forward to reading more of your reviews! Thank you!

@princerules64 Thank you so much for the kind words! It's great to have a show like this one with so much to dig into and analyze. And the unsettling nature of the deliberate awkwardness just keeps getting creepier!

@andrewbloom Aye happy to see you reviewing this series! Always glad to see your name to get your perspective as with the clone wars :smile:

@andrewbloom the events of Endgame? -not as familiar with comic books

@andrewbloom The look the girl gives during the toaster moment... that was dead on

@ryanmcshane Thanks Ryan! I really appreciate it!

@dewdropvelvet Spoilers for Avengers: Infinity War and Avengers: Endgame, but in those films Big Bad Thanos basically has to kill Vision and steal the gem in Vision's forehead in order to complete his plan to take over the world. At various points, Vision asks Wanda to remove and destroy the gem so as to thwart Thanos, but she refuses because it would likely result in Vision's death. When push comes to shove, she bites the bullet and does it, but Thanos just rewinds time, kills Vision again, and takes the gem anyway. It's a fairly harrowing sequence that we never really got to see the aftermath of, beyond Wanda participating in the ensuing grand battle against Thanos.

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